Summary

AlthoughRick and Mortyseason 7 was a lot of fun, I could see some of the problems that plagued other adult animated hits in the outing.Rick and Mortyborrows inspiration from a lot of sources, but the show’s success is unique. Most earlier animated comedies followed entirely different routes to their cult classic status.The Simpsonswas a massive pop culture phenomenon from early on, whileFamily Guywas canceled before it could gain a foothold, only to be revived and endlessly renewed in the decades that followed.Futuramawas never a huge ratings hit, but still merited two revivals.

In contrast,Rick and Mortystarted as a modest success, only to become Adult Swim’s biggest show ever within a few seasons. ByRick and Mortyseason 8, the show has become a pop culture staple but still enjoys better reviews than the similarly anarchic, R-ratedSouth Parkdid at that stage.Rick and Morty’s season 7 endingproved that the series still has plenty of clever, subversive sci-fi stories to tell.Rick and Mortywas already renewed through to a tenth season, meaning the show’s fate is no mystery. However, I’m still concerned about its future.

Rick looking worried at the fridge in Rick and Morty season 7

Rick and Morty Season 8 Can End 1 Hilarious Character’s Disappointing 7-Year Trend

Rick and Morty season 8 must give an underrated supporting character their first great episode in 7 years when the series finally returns in 2025.

Rick and Morty Season 7 Borrowed From Two Classic Episodes

“That’s Amorte” and “Rickfending Your Mort” Imitated Earlier Outings

WhenRick and Mortyfirst began airing, it felt like every episode was more subversive than the last. I remember being blown away by the show’s verve and invention, the way that it played with tropes and subverted viewer expectations by flipping clichés on their heads.Rick and Mortydidn’t just expect viewers to know the rules of sitcoms and sci-fi shows, but it also wanted the audience to keep up as it twisted these familiar forms into new, surreal shapes. The third episode wasn’t just a parody ofFantastic VoyageorJurassic Park, but a mashup of both.

The same episode was also a masterclass in cringe comedy, and somehow simultaneously a Christmas special.Rick and Mortywas one of the most consistently inventive shows I had ever seen,with its storylines never taking the shape viewers anticipated. However, season 7 saw that change. Episode 6, “Rickfending Your Mort,” featured a silent sequence with Morty stranded on a desert island that closely resembled the iconic montage from season 4, episode 8, “The Vat of Acid Episode,” while the ending of episode 4, “That’s Amorte” mirrored the “Roy: A Life Well Lived” gag from season 2, episode 2, “Mortynight Run.”

Three Mortys looking angry in Rick and Morty

Rick and Morty Risks Repeating Itself Too Much

The Simpsons Struggled With This Around The Same Era

Season 7’s willingness to borrow from earlier outings reminded me of another show’s meta-jokes and how these uneasily tread the line between fond self-referentiality and lazy rehashing.

It is understandable thatRick and Mortyoccasionally revisits crowd-pleasing joke formats.Rick and Morty’s season 7 Stephen King parodyeven borrowed fromBob’s Burgers, much like one season 6 episode riffed on an earlier outing ofAmerican Dad. These references, like the show revisiting its greatest hits, are all part of the comedy’s loose, freewheeling appeal. However, season 7’s willingness to borrow from earlier outings reminded me of another show’s meta-jokes and how these uneasily tread the line between fond self-referentiality and lazy rehashing. I’m old enough to remember whenThe Simpsonsfirst joked about its repetitive plots.

Rick and Morty after crashing into The Simpsons couch gag

In season 11, episode 13, “Saddlesore Galactica,” and season 13, episode 17, “Gump Roast,”The Simpsonsmocked its writing shortcuts in a way that felt newly cynical to me. Comic Book Guy pointed out the plot’s repetitive nature, only for Homer to shout him down. The show included a parody of Billy Joel’s “We Didn’t Start the Fire” that used outlandish potential future storylines as its lyrics. The show had mocked itself before, but this was different. The joke’s target was no longer the network or the show’s writers, but viewers. This was the first sign ofThe Simpsons’ decline.

Rick and Morty Can Still Reinvent Itself

Season 7 Proved Rick and Morty Remains Inventive

I saw the same thing crop up inFuturama’s 2023 revival, where numerous episodes were just sequels to existing outings. Luckily, I don’t think thatRick and Morty’s peak has necessarily passed yet. The fact thatRick and Morty’s highest-rated episode in yearscame at the end of season 7 proves that the series still has the potential to surprise viewers, but this requires a level of ingenuity and invention that some sequences lacked. Luckily, with outings like episode 5, “Unmortricken,” and episode 10, “Fear No Mort,”Rick and Mortyproved it still has plenty of narrative ambition.

Ultimately,Rick and Mortyneeds a new direction if the show is to avoid the fate ofThe Simpsons.The downfall ofThe Simpsonshas been blamed on many factors, including the popularity of its competitorsSouth ParkandFamily Guy, its excessive self-referentiality, and its repetitive storylines. These are all fair critiques, but I feel like they miss out on the overarching issue.The Simpsonsstopped caring about its characters, resulting in plots that rehashed existing storylines, decisions that felt wildly out of character, and episodes with no stakes.Rick and Mortyaltering the show’s routine would avoid this issue.

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Rick and Morty Can Avoid The Simpsons’ Mistakes

Rick and Morty Season 8 Can Reinvent The Show’s Formula

Now that Rick Prime is finally gone for good,Rick and Mortycan afford to give its two heroes more episodes apart.

AlthoughRick and Mortyseason 8’s biggest problemseems to be the show’s lack of a grand narrative after Rick Prime’s death, this could secretly be great news for the series. The introduction of Rick’s nemesis Rick Prime in season 5’s finale made much of seasons 6 and 7 feel redundant. The Smith family went on zany adventures, butanything that didn’t contribute toRick and Morty’s larger canon storyline felt like a waste of time. Now that Rick Prime is finally gone for good,Rick and Mortycan afford to give its two heroes more episodes apart.

This would fundamentally reshape the appeal of the series in a way thatThe Simpsonswas never quite able to pull off. At the end of the day,The Simpsonsis still the same show about the same family after 760 episodes. Its title provides the parameters that have limited the scope of most episodes, even if I must concede that it is still one of the most ambitious shows ever created. In contrast,Rick and Mortyseason 8 no longer needs to be about Rick and Morty’s adventures together. Instead,Rick and Mortycan finally move past its original premise.