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Then BOOM, something goes wrong with his computer, wiping out his thesis completely. With Lampy back at the master's residence, Rob is finishing his thesis when he's disrupted by a big guy named Mack who's pretty much, spoiler alert, the bad guy of this movie.Īs Chris tags along, Rob apologizes for forgetting their lunch date. Ratso heads off alone after badmouthing the appliances' worth, bringing this to question their use among themselves. With each of these animals, their stories are explained in song as they and the appliances help tidy the place up. The sleazy obnoxious Ratso, the cat Maisie who's a mother of three, a chiuaua named Alberto, the slithery Murgatroid and an elderly simian named Sebastian with a bad arm. It's also here we meet the animals all around them. We enter inside a dark room in the college where we see our friendly appliances present and accounted for.
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It's during this small talk that he drops her off as he drives off to finish his thesis. We begin with Rob and Chris driving onto college, where they discuss graduating on their anniversary. So without any further rambling about this case of topsy turvy, let's get right on to the movie at hand. While "Goes to Mars" was finished first and released in 1998, this film was done but a year later and was dubbed the final chapter of the trilogy, thus screwing up any sense of continuity that could've been stable for the series had they played their cards right.īut, history is history as the saying goes. Today is gonna be the film that was actually the followup of the first film, as we cover the college days of their master as well as see how he and his domestic partner's relationship develops. The parallels are pretty strong, but the reference stands out as a particularly adult one, given that much of the novel is composed of borderline pornographic descriptions of drug-feathers being forced down people’s throats.So last week I reviewed what was supposed to be the final chapter of the Brave Little Toaster series, a sequel that in all honesty was pretty unneccessary from my perspective.
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Dick-esque novel were the protagonists take drugs by tickling the backs of their throat with multi-coloured feathers, sending them into a virtual world that’s like a computer game-turned-interactive TV programme. Why a feather? Well, the writers of Adventure Time saw fit to reference Vurt by Jeff Noon, a Philip K. It works (obviously), and the “Main-Brain-Game-Frame” is activated, sending them into the virtual world. They decide to do it anyway, tricking BMO into pressing the button by tickling it with a colourful feather Jake pulls out of his mouth.
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In the episode Guardians of Sunshine, Finn and Jake want to be transported into a computer game they’re playing, but BMO refuses to do it for them because going inside the game is too dangerous.
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