All the Presidents' Heads
"All the Presidents' Heads" | |
---|---|
Futurama episode | |
Episode no. | Season 6 Episode 23 |
Directed by | Stephen Sandoval |
Written by | Josh Weinstein |
Production code | 6ACV23 |
Original air date | July 28, 2011 |
Episode features | |
Opening caption | Apply viewing oil now |
Opening cartoon | Zoich (2010) |
"All the Presidents' Heads" is the twenty-third episode in the sixth season of the American animated television series Futurama, and the 111th episode of the series overall. It originally aired July 28, 2011 on Comedy Central. The episode was written by Josh Weinstein and directed by Stephen Sandoval.
Plot
[edit]Fry goes to his night job at the Head Museum where he feeds the preserved heads of the presidents of the United States. He invites the Planet Express crew to the museum for a party, where they become drunk and begin ingesting the preservative fluid inside the jars. Doing so causes them and everyone standing nearby to temporarily travel back in time to the eras each head originally came from. Professor Farnsworth reasons that this time travel effect is caused by the rare powdered crystalline opal used to make the fluid, which keeps the heads alive in a temporal bubble. After learning from George Washington's head that one of his own ancestors, David Farnsworth, was one of American history's most nefarious traitors during the American Revolutionary War, Professor Farnsworth becomes determined to salvage his family's reputation. He dumps a vial containing the world's entire powdered opal supply into Washington's jar and licks his head, transporting himself, Fry, Leela, and Bender back to colonial-era New York in 1775. The four learn from the Continental Congress that David Farnsworth works at Benjamin Franklin's print shop in Philadelphia, where David would forge counterfeit money that would threaten to destroy the country's economy should it enter circulation. Though they do not find David at the shop, they discover a fake Massachusetts halfpenny made of worthless tin and determine he has gone to Paul Revere's silver shop in Boston. They capture David just as Revere begins his ride to alert Lexington of the imminent British attack that would start the American Revolution. However, Fry unwittingly takes one of the two lanterns hanging at the Old North Church to burn the forged money, causing Revere to wrongly warn of the British attack "by land" rather than "by sea". The four are suddenly sent back to 3011 and find that history has been altered: Great Britain has won the Revolutionary War and taken over all of North America, turning it into "West Britannia". In this alternate timeline, David Farnsworth killed George Washington by smothering him with his wig and was rewarded with a dukedom, making Professor Farnsworth a noble landowner and consort of the Queen of England. Having depleted the world's crystalline opal supply, Farnsworth despairs that there is no way to travel to the past to fix their mistake until he notices the Andamooka Opal on the queen's crown. After stealing and crushing it, the four are able to use the preserved head of David Farnsworth to return to colonial times and restore the timeline. Once they return to 3011, everything is restored as it was before history was first altered, with one change: in place of the Gadsden flag hanging in the Head Museum is a similarly designed flag displaying Bender and a colonial spelling of his catchphrase, "Bite my shiny metal ass".
Cultural references
[edit]- The opening sequence features Zoich, a proposed Russian XXII Winter Olympics mascot, which itself was inspired by Futurama's Hypnotoad.[1]
- Among the U.S. presidents who are depicted in this episode are John Adams, Chester A. Arthur, George H. W. Bush, George W. Bush, Jimmy Carter, Grover Cleveland, Bill Clinton, Calvin Coolidge, Dwight D. Eisenhower, Millard Fillmore, Gerald Ford, Warren G. Harding, Rutherford B. Hayes, Herbert Hoover, Andrew Jackson, Thomas Jefferson, Lyndon B. Johnson, Abraham Lincoln, James Madison, Franklin Pierce, James K. Polk, Ronald Reagan, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Theodore Roosevelt, William Howard Taft, Martin Van Buren, John Tyler and George Washington.
Benjamin Franklin, Alexander Hamilton, Walter Mondale, Paul Revere and Henry Kissinger are also depicted.[2]
Reception
[edit]Zack Handlen of The A.V. Club gave the episode a B−.[3]
References
[edit]- ^ "Создание Зойча" [Creation of Zoich]. Retrieved 2011-06-24.
- ^ "All the Presidents' Heads" at the Infosphere, the Futurama Wiki.
- ^ Zack Handlen (2011-07-28). "Futurama: "All The President's Heads"". Retrieved 2022-02-15.
External links
[edit]- "All the Presidents' Heads" at the Infosphere, the Futurama Wiki.
- "All the Presidents' Heads" at IMDb
- Futurama season 6 episodes
- 2011 American television episodes
- Television episodes about the American Revolution
- Alternate history television episodes
- Television episodes about time travel
- Fiction set in 1775
- Fiction set in 1776
- Cultural depictions of presidents of the United States
- Cultural depictions of George Washington
- Cultural depictions of Abraham Lincoln
- Cultural depictions of Benjamin Franklin
- Cultural depictions of Andrew Jackson
- Cultural depictions of Warren G. Harding
- Cultural depictions of Theodore Roosevelt
- Cultural depictions of Franklin D. Roosevelt
- Cultural depictions of Dwight D. Eisenhower
- Cultural depictions of Lyndon B. Johnson
- Cultural depictions of Henry Kissinger
- Cultural depictions of Gerald Ford
- Cultural depictions of Ronald Reagan
- Cultural depictions of George H. W. Bush
- Cultural depictions of George W. Bush
- Cultural depictions of Bill Clinton
- Cultural depictions of Paul Revere
- Cultural depictions of Andy Warhol
- Cultural depictions of Alexander Hamilton
- Television episodes set in the 1770s
- Caricatures of presidents of the United States
- Cultural depictions of Chester A. Arthur
- Cultural depictions of John Quincy Adams
- Cultural depictions of Jimmy Carter
- Cultural depictions of Grover Cleveland
- Cultural depictions of Calvin Coolidge
- Cultural depictions of Rutherford B. Hayes
- Cultural depictions of Herbert Hoover
- Cultural depictions of Thomas Jefferson
- Cultural depictions of James Madison
- Cultural depictions of William Howard Taft
- Cultural depictions of Harry S. Truman
- Cultural depictions of Martin Van Buren
- Cultural depictions of James Monroe
- Cultural depictions of Ulysses S. Grant