Episode no. Season 2Episode 7 Production code RS5-8 | Directed by John K. | |
Original air date January 14, 1993 (1993-01-14) |
"Son of Stimpy" (originally titled "Stimpy's First Fart") is an episode of The Ren & Stimpy Show. It originally aired as Episode 7 of Season 2 on January 13, 1993.
Contents
Plot summary
When Stimpy farts, he believes that he has given birth. He tells Ren about the incident, but Ren won't believe him. Stimpy pines for "Stinky" and relentlessly tries to find him. He eventually finds his fart and joins Ren for Christmas.
Production
The episode's story was thanks to John Kricfalusi, Vincent Waller, & Richard Pursel, storyboarded by Peter Avanzino, and directed by the show's creator John Kricfalusi. John Kricfalusi originally conceived "Son of Stimpy" as a parody/critique of popular Hollywood melodramas (Bambi, E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial) and "fake pathos", which he describes an act of manipulation performed by film directors that involves using audio-visual cues and tricks, mainly music and cinematography, to trigger melancholy emotions in audience members. Kricfalusi, infuriated by this practice, referred to it as "cheap", "contrived" and "a dirty trick", while asserting his belief that real drama should come from engaging characters and believable acting, not from editing techniques. He also vented his frustration that dramatic features of this type ultimately gain more acclaim and recognition than simpler comedic films, which are generally seen as inferior. When writing this episode, he deliberately gave it the most ridiculous premise he could think of (Stimpy not being able to fart a second time) and used as many of the aforementioned filmic tricks as he could think of, to prove how easy it is to force viewers into crying over something that has little to no real substance.
Censorship
Responses
In An Introduction to Film Studies the episode is used as a case study and comments on the motifs in the episode.
"The 'Son of God' motif which underpins the cartoon, signalled in its title and its Christmas setting and soundtrack, allies the sacred and profane in a way that some might find provocative. Kricfalusi does not make this a coherent analogy, however, but self-evidently uses the 'openness' of the animated vocabulary for subversive purposes."
A. J. Carson of tvdvdreviews.com praised the episode as "pitch-perfect send up of maudlin Christmas specials".
In 2007, the episode was ranked #96 in the 100 Greatest Nicktoon Episodes countdown.