The Mutants Are Revolting

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Season 6 episode
Broadcast season 7 episode
The Mutants Are Revolting
Mrs. Astor and Mayor Poopenmeyer decide to grant the Sewer Mutants their freedom.jpg
Mrs. Astor and Mayor Poopenmeyer decide to grant the Sewer Mutants their freedom.
No.100
Production number6ACV12
Written byEric Horsted
Directed byRaymie Muzquiz
Title caption100
First air date2 September, 2010[1]
Broadcast numberS07E12
Special guest(s)Mark Mothersbaugh as Himself
Additional
Commentary
(Transcript)
Transcript

Pictures

Season 6
  1. Rebirth
  2. In-A-Gadda-Da-Leela
  3. Attack of the Killer App
  4. Proposition Infinity
  5. The Duh-Vinci Code
  6. Lethal Inspection
  7. The Late Philip J. Fry
  8. That Darn Katz!
  9. A Clockwork Origin
  10. The Prisoner of Benda
  11. Lrrreconcilable Ndndifferences
  12. The Mutants Are Revolting
  13. The Futurama Holiday Spectacular
  14. The Silence of the Clamps
  15. Möbius Dick
  16. Law and Oracle
  17. Benderama
  18. The Tip of the Zoidberg
  19. Ghost in the Machines
  20. Neutopia
  21. Yo Leela Leela
  22. Fry Am the Egg Man
  23. All the Presidents' Heads
  24. Cold Warriors
  25. Overclockwise
  26. Reincarnation
← Season 5Season 7 →

"The Mutants Are Revolting" is the one hundredth episode of Futurama, the twelfth of the sixth production season and the seventh broadcast season. This episode was branded as the season finale for the seventh broadcast season, as well as episode 100 of the series. It aired 2 September, 2010 on Comedy Central. After Leela is banished to the sewers along with the other mutants, she and the Planet Express crew lead a revolution for mutant rights.

The Story

Leela is deported to the sewers when Fry spills her being an illegal Mutant.

Act I: "Good news, everyone!"

The Planet Express crew has been hired for their 100th delivery and Bender plans the party of the millennium. Mrs. Astor, the person they are supposed to deliver it to, lives in the Waldorf Asteroid. Once the mission is complete, she invites Fry and Fransworth to her fundraiser in the New New York Historical Society building. Fry invites Leela along but, during the fundraiser, which supports the United Mutant Scholarship Fund, Fry accidentally spills that Leela is not an alien but a mutant who illegally lives on the surface. Leela is banished to the sewers and sees the horrors of living down there. In an attempt to rectify his mistake, Fry, along with the rest of the crew (except Bender), go to Citihall. Finding out that they've harbored a mutant, Mayor Poopenmeyer sentences them to 2 weeks below the surface. Meanwhile, Bender organises a giant party with a lot of people. However, when he realises that he misses the rest of the crew, he orders everyone out and wallows in self-pity. Fry thinks living beneath the surface will be a good thing as he will now understand what being a mutant feels like. Leela is angry at Fry (and all surface people for that matter) and states that if he wants to understand he should jump in Lake Mutagenic and become one.

Fry, Amy, Zoidberg, Hermes and the Professor find the remains of Land Titanic.

Act II: "You are all surface."

Fry comes up with an excuse not too and Leela is left angry at him. Whilst walking the sewers, the crew stumble on the Land Titanic, a land bus in the shape of the Titanic which struck a mail box and sunk beneath the surface. After looking through the ship for a while, they find a safe containing a rare Quantum Force Gemerald and a list of passengers on board the vessel, including Astor's late husband. The crew decide to stay in one of the cabins. Fry, unable to sleep, walks towards the toxic lake. Leela, feeling guilty about how she treated Fry, goes to look for him to apologize. She find him and tries to stop him but Fry, thinking she's still mad at him, jumps in anyway. She goes out on the lake and pulls him out, only to find now that he is severely mutated. Having enough of the situtation, Leela, along with Fry and the rest of the crew, starts a revolt against the street dwellers. Fry returns to the surface for Bender, so that he can bend the Westside Pipeway to resend all the sewage back up the pipes. This leads to the streets of New New York being covered with sewage. Mrs. Astor demands something to be done, and the Mayor orders an Antarian to send all the waste to Madison Cube Garden.

Leela leads a giant army of Mutants to freedom.

Act III: "What goes down must back up!"

The mutants go up onto the surface with Leela in charge, and demand equal rights. Mrs. Astor orders her butler to fire an I See BM missle, which misses the mutants and hits the cube garden, sending a tidal wave of sewage at them. Just before they are covered, Fry appears and uses the jewel to separate the sewage (a lot like Moses and the Red Sea). Fry reveals to Mrs. Astor that they found the wreckage of the Land Titanic, along with a list of passengers, which included mutants. Fry reveals an old and aged mutant, who was a young worker on the Land Titanic when it sunk. She reveals Mr. Astor gave his seat up for her and her mother. Mrs. Astor asks for the mutants to be allowed to the surface, in which Mayor Poopenmeyer agrees. Leela states she now has the stomach to kiss Fry for all he's done. When they kiss, Fry returns to normal and the body of another mutant is formed. It turns out that Mr. Astor fell into the toxic lake and mutated many years ago and, when Fry jumped into the lake, he lodged himself into his mouth. Mr. and Mrs. Astor are united once again and hug. The crew returns to the Planet Express headquarters with Leela's family and celebrate their 100th delivery by dancing with each other.

Production

The cover of the script for "The Mutants Are Revolting".

A photo of Mike Rowe's production script have been uploaded by Mike Rowe onto his Facebook page. The cover of the script highlights it as the 100th episode, as well as revealing the title, "The Mutants Are Revolting". This episode was dedicated to the memory of Alex Johns, a producer of Futurama who passed away at 43 years old.

Additional Information

Trivia

  • This is one among few Futurama media featuring its title.
  • The title of this episode has double meaning, which is referenced in a newspaper headline in the episode - the first being that the mutants revolt against the humans, and the second being that the mutants look revolting. This may be a reference to the stonewall riots, a well known New York event in the gay rights movement where a sign with the words "homosexuals are revolting" was featured in many news articles of the event.
  • This is the second time Futurama makes a reference to the Titanic, the first being in "A Flight to Remember".
  • The narrator of "The Mutant" documentary is the same voice that narrated the fictional documentaries "I Dated A Robot" and "Global Warming".
  • This is the first time that a Futurama theme caption pops out over the main title.
  • The episode's title caption is 100 using bent girders to spell it to signify that this is Futurama's 100th episode.
  • The song playing at Bender's party is "The Boogie That Be" by the Black-Eyed Peas.

Allusions

The Westside Pipeway is a reference to the Great Machine in Metropolis.
  • When H. G. Blob enters the 100th delivery party, he says "Hey, Hey Hey", much like Fat Albert.
  • The Land Titanic's name and appearance, how it sunk, and its old ballroom floor, as well as finding a huge diamond in a safe, are all references to the famous Titanic incident.
  • Dwayne asks Devo to play "Whip It", which is probably Devo's most famous single.
    • The song that Devo plays instead of "Whip It" is "Beautiful World", another popular single by them.
    • When Dwayne asks, "Are we not men now?", he's making another Devo reference to the song "Jocko Homo", specifically the lyric "Are we not men? We are Devo!"
  • The song playing at the end that the Planet Express Crew dances to is "Bend It" by Dave Dee, Dozy, Beaky, Mick & Tich.
  • The Million Mutant March is a reference to the Million Man March.
  • A location in the sewers that Leela's parents show her is Ol' Filth-ful, a reference to Ol' Faithful.
  • The missile that is fired at Madison Cube Garden is an I See BM, a reference to an ICBM, which stands for Inter-continental Ballistic Missile.
  • Mutant Fry declaring, "Let my people stay" and using a toilet plunger to part the massive sewage is a reference to the story of Moses in Exodus and the parting of the Red Sea. More specifically, the scene is a parody of the scene from The Ten Commandments.
  • The Westside Pipeway resembles the Great Machine from Fritz Lang's movie Metropolis. The film is about a future where the rich and powerful live on top a city, while the exploited workers live a life of austerity underground.
  • The "2, 4, 6 eyes..." chant is a reference to the well known "2, 4, 6, 8..." chant.
  • The most famous scene of The Seven Year Itch is parodied, as previously done in "Attack of the Killer App".
  • The "Waldorf Asteroid" is a parody of the Waldorf-Astoria, a famous luxury hotel.
  • In addition, Mr. Astor is probably a direct reference to John Jacob Astor IV of the RMS Titanic, who is rumored to have selflessly sacrificed his spot in a lifeboat for a young immigrant named Louis.
  • When mutant Fry says, "What goes down, must back up!", the line is a reference to Newton's Law Of Gravity: "What goes up, must come back down."
  • After getting washed away by the westside pipeway's explosion, Leela's dad says that those mutants are "with the C.H.U.D.s now," a reference to the 1984 B-horror film, C.H.U.D. (an acronym for "Cannibalistic Humanoid Underground Dwellers"). The ninth season episode of The Simpsons, titled "The City of New York vs. Homer Simpson", also has a couple of references to the C.H.U.D.s.
  • The Michael Collins Mix references Michael Collins and the famous Collins Mix. As the drink was seen in the context of the Devolution Revolution, it is likely that it is a parody of Michael Collins, who was an Irish revolutionary leader.
  • Twice in the episode, a mutant with three breasts can be seen, a possible homage to the character Mary from the science fiction movie Total Recall. The only difference is that the mutant is less human in appearance.

Continuity

A priceless can of Angry Norwegian (bottom right) is seen in the sewers. In "A Fishful of Dollars", Fry had the last known can in existence.

Goofs

  • When Mr. Astor lifts his hat for the first time, his head is full of hair. When he lifts it for the second time, however, he's bald.
  • During the documentary on Mutants, a poodle is seen walking by (and the narrator states "below poodle feet") even though in an earlier episode, Farnsworth established that Christmas trees were "gone with the way of the poodle", meaning poodles no longer existed.
    • It is possible that poodle remains were found since then and that the poodle was cloned, bringing them back to life. This is suggested to be possible in "Jurassic Bark", where the remains of Seymour, Fry's dog, are almost used to clone him.
    • Actually, at the end of Into the Wild Green Yonder, various extinct species were brought back from extinction.
  • The Nude Bartender from Planet XXX is seen attending Bender's party even though, supposedly, he was censored with the rest of the planet in "In-A-Gadda-Da-Leela".
    • He was probably on another planet at the time.

Characters

(In alphabetic order)

References

  1. ^ Comedy Central (02 June 2010). "Futurama Season Premiere 24 June". Comedy Central. Retrieved on 03 June 2010.