Morty ultimately solves this conundrum by realizing the parasites can only create positive memories, using this to suss out the actual members of his family and arm them to kill the rest. While it may seem easy to us as viewers to decipher who’s too ridiculous to be real, these characters think they have full-fledged relationships with everyone in the room, meaning Rick or Beth may just as easily be a parasite as Frankenstein or Tinkles the Magic Ballerina Lamb.
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Every flashback makes it even more difficult to determine who among them is real, while introducing a series of bizarre personalities like Pencilvester, Hamurai and Photography Raptor. In “Curriculum Unavailable,” it was the characters questioning their own sanity, and here it’s actually not all that different. Harmon seems to realize that this sort of story can only work when the frame story can maintain its own tension while doing something useful with the cut-aways. Thus much of the rest of the episode plays out in flashbacks, each time of a zany invented memory, each time introducing a new strange character, and each time bringing that character into the real world with it.ĭan Harmon worked as showrunner of Community for years before creating Rick and Morty, and this episode shares a lot of DNA with Community‘s excellent “Curriculum Unavailable” in taking the format of the clip show but only flashing back to new material.
These creatures propagate by extending additional iterations of themselves into new memories, then appearing in the house once the family becomes sure of their existence. He explains that Steve was a parasite who created memories of his existence in the minds of the rest of the family. The family shares a cheerful breakfast with Uncle Steve, whom Rick murders on sight.
But even so, this episode remains complex, fascinating, and even horrifying. Over the course of these recaps, I’ve continued to praise Rick and Morty for its ability to frame extreme science fiction scenarios in ways that comment on legitimate human problems, from Rick’s dysfunctional relationship in “Auto Erotic Assimilation” to Morty’s coping with the permanent and damaging consequences of his actions in “Mortynight Run.” “Total Rickall” doesn’t relate to real life the same way it’s unlikely that any of us will have to deal with a parasite infestation posing as a series of wacky characters and inserting themselves into our memory, and it’s also hard to see how this could act as a metaphor for something more significant. Synopsis for 2×04: An ever-growing group of parasites have infested the Smith household, and the family has to figure out who’s real and who’s an impostor.