The Simpsons Season 33 Episode 7 Review: A Serious Flanders (Part 2)

The whole town is rocked by the killings, which Anchorman Kent Brockman calls a “terrible metaphor for a world without justice.” The focus then shifts to the nervous Ned, who is torn between his faith, his duty to his neighbor Homer, and the fierce competition on GoFundMe for a kidnapping ransom appeal. He is also bound by an oath of humility and justice to his grandfather, whom he considers a saint, healthy and indestructible. It’s a “sterling reputation” carefully nurtured by “the town’s favorite sheriff,” as is the custom on the show. Fargo, Where it seems to be, except when it seems unlikely. This argument will be further complicated by the apparent supervillain Costas when he tells Ned to expect his visit when he has the least expectation … right now.

“It’s bribery time,” goes to the hair shop while the Szyslak brothers’ crime gang, the Mono family, goes downstairs to pick up a little from the top. They have been partnered with Capital City mobs, and are filling the streets with amphetamines aka “truckers milk,” “brain-fizz” and “Texas tooth-losers.” Looking at the source material, we knew something like this was coming up, but we didn’t know it would be accompanied by Bobby Blend’s song “Good Time Charlie,” and we certainly had no clue that he had a habit of licking frogs.

It seems that Ned’s “paw paw,” sheriff Ned Flanders The First (Timothy Oliphant), is indeed the ghost of every male law enforcement agent. Fargo. All squares would fall out of Ned’s hair if he really knew. The former sheriff of Springfield, in fact, says less to God, “You can only send me to hell once.” The irony of this ideology in Ned’s past is painfully clever. His paw-claws had already admitted that he had been raised in an orphanage, and we know that Ned’s parents were a bit of a clichd bitch. Adding to this explains all the side and dudley, and probably why the good neighbor Ned Sideshow rekindles his love affair with Mel’s wife Barb (Christine Milleotti). She rekindles her love for the spear.

This is just one of the two hot sequences in the episode. It turns out that Guest Hench-People, International Sycos Seamus (Chris O’Dowd) and his violent wife Colette (Jessica Pere), are a married couple, and we are treated to a wonderfully rough romantic scorer. It begins when he lays out a trail of rose petals to celebrate his anniversary, and ends in a very crushing hug with a charbroil hug. But it is somewhat similar to Marge and Homer’s cold reunion. As noted, he is very much an amateur in this two-party, but he is also a professional-grade critic who has discredited Homer as the most selfish man on earth.

FX series Fargo The northern states make excellent use of the natural terrain and icy winters, and The Simpsons Faithfully imitates his cinematography. There are whole sequences that serve as both a tribute to the camera craftsmen of the comedy and suspense series. When Homer is overwhelmed by his constant pursuers, he travels to Wyoming in more and more foreign disguises, ranging from a rogue biker to a wealthy capitalist who never loses a place on the monopoly board. But it is his “Mariachi on the rollercoaster” that is his most insanely appropriate outfit.

The episode also confidently recreates the spirit of suspenseful buildups. The music lays a perfect foundation, and the animated closeups wriggle through tight situations. Of course, these dangerous measures are minimized by humorous details, such as the dynamite-numbing swinging sizzling cousins ​​or eggs and Goldfinger Derby is thrown into a deadly arsenal, but it is presented effectively and efficiently. Similarly, Ned’s moral dilemma is masterfully captured, but when he prepares to steal from the orphanage he reaches a high level of pleasure where the orphan wears all “Ned is # 1” T-shirts. Ned also proceeds quickly from sin through the illustration of Lucifer and Millipede.

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