My Mother the Carjacker

My Mother the Carjacker
"My Mother the Carjacker"
The Simpsons episode
My Mother the Carjacker.png
Mona puts Homer to bed.
Episode no. 315
Prod. code EABF18
Orig. airdate November 9, 2003
Show runner(s) Al Jean
Written by Michael Price
Directed by Nancy Kruse
Couch gag The Simpsons sit on the couch as normal, but then begin to decay and turn to dust.[1]
Guest star(s) Glenn Close as Mona Simpson

"My Mother the Carjacker" is the second episode of The Simpsons' fifteenth season and first aired on November 9, 2003.[2] Homer receives a cryptic message in the newspaper informing him to come to a certain place at midnight, and soon discovers that the person who wrote the message is his mother, Mona Simpson. It was written by Michael Price and directed by Nancy Kruse.[2] Glenn Close makes her second of three guest spots as Homer's mother.[2] It is the second in the Mona Simpson-trilogy, and has a direct link from the season seven episode, "Mother Simpson".[3] It was nominated for a Writers Guild of America Award in 2004.[4] In its original run, the episode received 12.4 million viewers.[5]

Contents

Plot

Homer, Bart and Lisa are cleaning the back garden when Marge orders the family inside to watch TV. On Kent Brockman's Channel Six "Oops Patrol" segment, he displays a humorous headline ("Mayor Displays Erection to Cheering Crowd"), noticed and submitted by Marge, for which she received a free T-shirt. When Doctor Hibbert offers Marge special health treatments such as a new heart because he likes her shirt, an envious Homer asks Marge if he can have it. When she refuses, he attempts to find his own funny headline so he too can win a T-shirt, to no avail. Homer spends the following night with newspapers plastered over his bedroom wall, exhausting himself in trying to find a funny headline. While searching, he finds an attractive article entitled "World's Biggest Pizza". Oddly enough, however, it is not the headline that attracts Homer's attention: the first letter of each line spells "HOMER". Homer wakes Marge and tells her that someone or something is communicating with him, telling him to meet him at Four Street Overpass at midnight. He discovers that it is today's paper, and wakes Bart up so they can both go. When they reach the overpass, the mystery person arrives, frightening Homer and Bart. Bart tries to attack with a lunging karate kick, only to land right through and into a sweater with the words "World's Best Grandson." The stranger then reveals herself to be Mona Simpson, Homer's mother, and Homer hugs her after first hugging a bum trying unsuccessfully to steal his bottle of wine.

Burns depicted on a 19th century woodcut scaring children.

Homer reunites with his mother again. At the Overpass Diner, she apologizes for the cloak and dagger, and explains that it was because the government is still hunting for her because of her 1960s crime of sabotaging Mr. Burns' germ warfare lab. Her liberal links at the Springfield Shopper published the story of the giant pizza to lure Homer, knowing that pizza was the first food Homer choked on. Bart questions why Mona came back, and she reveals that it was because of nostalgia aroused by a macaroni pencil case Homer had made for her when he was five. Just then Chief Wiggum, Lou, and Eddie arrive at the diner, and Lou recognizes Mona. Hora, the lunch lady, lets Homer, Mona, and Bart to escape through the back after they increase her tip. In the car, Homer vows not to let the cops get Mona again, but due to a lapse of concentration, he ironically rams right into the police station, where Mona is arrested. Despite the fact that Mona had done many useful community service acts, Mr. Burns insists she be put on trial. When the trial goes unsuccessfully, Homer is put on the stand and, after a long clueless pause, he miserably gives a heartfelt request that they don't take his mother away from him again. The jury, deeply moved, decide to acquit Mona. Mr. Burns is infuriated by the outcome, which contradicts his belief that justice should favor the rich.

A montage follows of Mona catching up on Homer's missed childhood; giving Homer a bath, watching Homer in the school play, knitting for Homer, teaching Homer how to ride a bike, and seeing a reenactment of the birth of Bart. Mona also catches up with Lenny, Carl, and Moe. To make Mona more welcome, Homer steals a whole room from Ned Flanders's house so she could have her own private bedroom. Mr. Burns renames his Germ Warfare Laboratory the "Grandma Simpson Peace Museum and Kid-teractive Learnatorium", to a crowd of cheering onlookers. Mr. Burns asks Mona to be the first to sign the museum's guest book. As she signs, she unwittingly mentions she had been signing false names when visiting state parks, and prodded by Burns, says she also did so at national parks, which is a federal offense. The FBI jump out and arrest her for supplying false information on a national park register. They handcuff Mona, and take her away in a car. A distraught Homer runs after the car, whose drivers keep stopping periodically again and again to taunt him. Back at home later, a miserable Homer reminisces about the times he and Mona had caught up on, looking over photos of him and Mona, including one in which Homer strangles Bart as Mona strangles Homer. Lisa tells Homer she disagrees with what the government did with Mona, and unintentionally gives Homer the idea to break Mona out of prison.

The next day, as the bus transfers Mona and other female convicts to a federal prison, Homer and Bart trick the bus into pulling over by changing a sign overhead to display a warning of a snowstorm ahead (despite the perfect weather). As the drivers get off to put chains on the tires, Homer steals the bus and liberates all the convicts except for Mona, who all sarcastically promise to return to prison. Suddenly, police cars appear and give chase. Mona doesn’t want Homer to be imprisoned and leave his children like she did, so she electrically shocks him and pushes him out of the bus onto an abandoned bed. As the bus nears a cliff with the police in hot pursuit, Homer watches in horror as the bus flies off the cliff into a lake, blows up, and is covered by a rockslide. The Simpsons hold a funeral for Mona and pay their respects, but then the coffin suddenly slides away and into a forest and a grief-ridden Homer vents his frustration by kicking down Frank "Grimey" Grimes' tombstone. Later at night, he pores over newspaper headlines, hoping his mother survived and left another message for him, since her body was not in the coffin (Homer says it was instead filled with "Last week's garbage"). He finds a random article in which the first letter of each row spells out "IMOK" over the front and back side of the page. Taking this to be another message from his mother and reassured by his family (who believe she is dead), he goes to sleep. However, he overlooks an article about a giant taco, in which Mona encoded a long message that explains that she escaped from the bus before it crashed and hitched a ride out of town.[3]

Cultural references

The title is a reference to the TV series, My Mother the Car.[6] The song Mona sings with the convicts is "I Fought The Law".[6] The song played during the '60s montage is Jimi Hendrix's version of "All Along the Watchtower".[6] The montage concludes with John Wayne as a guest on Rowan and Martin's Laugh-In saying "You bet your sweet bippy", a catch phrase of the show. During the scenes with Homer re-enacting his childhood for his mother, the song being played is "The Mother and Child Reunion" by Paul Simon.[7] When Homer is having prints of pictures of his mother made, the song played is "Mother" by John Lennon. Homer's line of "Bless the loom that fruited you," is a reference to Fruit of the Loom.[7] Homer's line of "We'll hide you where there's no people - Disney's California Adventure", is a reference to how a park in Disneyland had poor attendance. The scene of the Homer pinning newspapers to the wall and letters jumping out and deciphering hidden messages is a homage to similar scenes in "A Beautiful Mind". When Homer is showing the family headlines is a parody of the Headlines segment on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno.

Callback

When Homer realizes Mona has gone, he knocks over Frank Grimes' tombstone, (from "Homer's Enemy", and Frank Grimes is seen in a flashback in "The Great Louse Detective").

Reception

During its original run, the episode gained 12.4 million viewers, losing to a rerun of "Three Gays of the Condo" (12.6).[5] The episode was nominated for a Writers Guild of America Award.[4] IGN ranks Glenn Close's performances as the twenty-fifth best guest appearances in the show's history.[8]

References

External links


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