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Season 6 episode Broadcast season 7 episode
Rebirth
Rebirth preview screenshot (skeleton shot).jpgThe Planet Express crew in a skeletal state over the birthing machine.
No. 89
Production number 6ACV01
Writers Teleplay & storyDavid X. CohenStoryMatt Groening
Directed by Frank Marino
Title caption Rebirth
First air date 24 June, 2010
Broadcast number S07E01
Opening cartoon Silvery Moon (1933)
Additional
Commentary(Transcript)TranscriptAnimaticStoryboard Pictures
Season 6
Rebirth In-A-Gadda-Da-Leela Attack of the Killer App Proposition Infinity The Duh-Vinci Code Lethal Inspection The Late Philip J. Fry That Darn Katz! A Clockwork Origin The Prisoner of Benda Lrrreconcilable Ndndifferences The Mutants Are Revolting The Futurama Holiday Spectacular The Silence of the Clamps Möbius Dick Law and Oracle Benderama The Tip of the Zoidberg Ghost in the Machines Neutopia Yo Leela Leela Fry Am the Egg Man All the Presidents' Heads Cold Warriors Overclockwise Reincarnation ← Season 5Season 7 →

"Rebirth" is the eighty-ninth episode of Futurama, the first of the sixth production season and the first of the seventh broadcast season. It aired on 24 June, 2010, on Comedy Central. After the crash of the Planet Express ship, Fry awakes to find himself and the Professor the only ones left. But luckily, the Professor has a way to give rebirth to the remainder of the crew.

The Story

The PE crew dies in a horrid crash.

Cold Opening: "Yeah, we're back."

In the original airing of this episode, the Hypnotoad appears on screen, and Bender's voice announces that people will forget the series was ever cancelled "by idiots" and later revived "by bigger idiots." The scene changes to Fry walking into Professor Farnsworth's laboratory, asking why his hair is frizzy and why he is covered in burns. The Professor explains that when the crew entered a wormhole at the end of Into the Wild Green Yonder, they emerged near Earth through the "Panama Wormhole", Earth's main channel for shipping. Zapp Brannigan, aboard the Nimbus flagship, damages the Planet Express Ship, causing it to crash in a large explosion with the Nimbus outside of the Planet Express headquarters. Professor Farnsworth survives due to his full body "safety sphere device", suffering only "tribial bray dablage", while Fry appears to be undamaged, save for severe burnmarks.

The rest of the crew - not so lucky at all, as revealed to Fry.

Act I: "Move over God - Prepare for rebirth!"

The Professor revives everyone killed in the crash using adult stem cells (harvested from perfectly healthy adults he killed to get these stem cells) and a birthing machine, except Leela, who enters an irreversible coma. Bender also experiences difficulty during the rebirth. The Professor fits one of his doomsday devices to power him. The device generates excess power, and Bender is forced to continue partying endlessly or else he will explode.

Act II: "Can you believe she wore a tank top to my funeral?"

Fry, in his despair over Leela, makes a robot version of her at the Build-A-Bot Workshop. Using recordings made by surveillance cameras all over the Planet Express building, Hermes recreates Leela's personality and memories for the robot. The robot Leela is now horrified to learn of the human Leela's predicament.

As Farnsworth cannot wake the human Leela, she is taken, pursuant to her final wishes, to a planet where she will be eaten by a Cyclops-devouring monster known as the Cyclophage. At the service, Bender's obnoxious partying wakes Leela, who is shocked to see Fry kissing Robot Leela.

Act III: "So that's why I'm so amazed by these things I already knew!"

The Cyclophage approaches, and the crew escapes in the ship. As the ship takes off, the Cyclophage attaches itself to the underside of the ship, unbeknownst to the crew.

Back on Earth, Fry begins to question that either Leela loves him. Leela hears him telling himself that he only loved Robot Leela because she was so much like the real Leela. He also says that he thought Leela loved him, but was wrong as usual. Leela appears to him and convinces him otherwise. Robot Leela sees this, and a fight breaks out between the two Leelas. Fry is handed a gun by Amy and told to shoot one, but accidentally shoots himself, only to expose that he too is a robot.

The Professor then reveals what really happened when the ship crashed. Fry, attempting to shield Leela, was almost completely obliterated by the explosion. The Professor attempted to revive Fry in the birth machine, but this did not have any discernible effect. Leela, in her despair over Fry's death, made a robot version of him and generated his personality for the robot. However, a malfunction caused Leela to receive a severe electric shock, putting her into a coma, and the robot Fry to be badly burned and lost his memory.

At the end of this exposition, Human Fry unexpectedly emerges from the birthing machine, having finally absorbed the stem cells. Robot Fry and Robot Leela declare their love for each other, and leave together, leaving the human Fry and Leela to each other.

Bender decides he is fed up with constant partying and begins to vibrate with the excess energy. The Cyclophage suddenly emerges, and attempts to eat Leela. Bender's severe vibrations cause one of his eyes to fall out, and the Cyclophage swallows him, believing Bender to be a cyclops. The device explodes, killing the creature. Bender emerges intact and the Professor declares that Bender expended his excess energy, making it unnecessary for him to keep partying. The crew leave in order to celebrate, and Zapp Brannigan emerges from the birthing machine with a "wheeee!"

Production

Further information: Season 6#Production

As the first episode of a new run, the production first and foremost focused on continuing from Into the Wild Green Yonder's cliffhanger ending. David X. Cohen explained in an early interview, before the confirmation was even near, that he did consider what to do with the position they ended in, almost daily,[1] which Matt Groening called "painted [themselves] slightly into a corner".[2] While disagreeing on the ease, they were both in agreement that it could and should be resolved in respect with the film.[1][2]

At the San Diego Comic-Con 2009, Matt Groening and David X. Cohen were asked once again about the issue. Matt Groening wanted to ignore it entirely by then, while Cohen stated that they would address it, but only for a single episode.[3]

The first table read for this episode began on 7 August, 2009, according to Maurice LaMarche and Katey Sagal,[4][5] the following week, Maurice LaMarche revealed that the recording session was under way.[6] And as of 20 August, 2009, the recording sessions for this episode have ended, and moved on to the table readings of the next episode.[7]

In a 28 August interview, David X. Cohen revealed that the first episode was tentatively named "Rebirth",[8] and in an October interview, he confirmed it was the title they were using.[9]

On the Animation SuperCon in Florida on 4 October, David X. Cohen along with the male cast, gave a sneak peak of the first three minutes of the first episode's animatic.[10][11]

A full color trailer of this episode first aired during the premiere of Ugly Americans on Comedy Central on 18 March, 2010.[12]

Beginning on 6 May, 2010, Comedy Central's online newsletter, Comedy Central Insider, began releasing various pictures to tease the premiere every weekday until 24 June, 2010.

Original concept

According to the commentaries for the episode, David X. Cohen and Matt Groening had a completely different idea for the return of the show. In it, the crew would appear in another universe, or a distant part of our universe, as a result of passing through the wormhole at the end of Into the Wild Green Yonder. Fry and Leela would wake up in a beautiful paradise of natural beauty, and are just about to start kissing and making out when they realize that they are in a zoo inclosure.

An alien race has captured the crew, and want to breed humans. While Leela is turned off by this and loses interest, Fry is even more turned on by the crowds watching them. The alien race then throws in Zapp Brannigan to have two males fighting over one female. At this point, Matt Groening "very wisely" suggested that the crew would return to Earth, instead, and that the series would pretty much continue where it left off.[13]

The "humans in a zoo" concept was later used in the episode "Fry and Leela's Big Fling".

Reception

Viewers

"Rebirth" aired 24 June, 2010, 10pm EST on Comedy Central followed by "In-A-Gadda-Da-Leela", and, according to Nielsen Ratings, was watched by 2.923 million viewers.[14][15] It received a 1.8/3 household rating and 1.6/5 of adults between 18 and 49.[14] Indeed, the airing of "Rebirth" tied for most adults between 18 and 49 watching television that Thursday evening.[16] Comedy Central went on to comment that it was the highest rated Thursday night that year and the highest Thursday primetime in the history of the network.[16]

As expected, seeing as it was the debut episode, "Rebirth" was the most viewed Futurama episode of broadcast season 7.

Reviews

"Rebirth" received positive to mixed reviews. IGN's Robert Canning rated it 7.5 (good),[17] and noted that "[w]hile the big laughs may be few, 'Rebirth' still delivers an interesting story using many of the familiar tropes of this amazingly well rounded sci-fi world".[17] IF Magazine's Carl Cortez graded both episodes together a B+,[18] Firefox News' Ariel Ponywether gave it an A+,[15] Paste Magazine gave it 8.0 (commendable)[19] and UGO's Alex Zalben called it "good".[20]

Overall, reviewers agreed that "Rebirth" had issues with its story with issues noted to its pace[21] and being many things at once,[15] but generally felt it was a decent episode. Though, as IGN's Robert Canning noted, they weren't certain if this was the return to the Futurama they "knew and loved".[17]

Themes

Themes appearing in this episode include the Fry-Leela relationship, identity, and as usual, injury and death.

Additional Info

A promo pic showing Bender dancing at Studio 1²2¹3³.

Trivia

Continuity

Censorship

Allusions

Goofs

Bender has two eyes after coming out of the Cyclophage.

Quotes

[The Hypnotoad is shown on screen.]
Bender: [Voice over.] On the count of three, you will awaken feeling refreshed, as if Futurama had never been cancelled by idiots and then brought back by bigger idiots. One... two... [Snaps fingers.]

[First lines of the episode, Fry comes in with his hair in an afro like in "Hell Is Other Robots".]
Fry: Professor, my Fry-fro's all frizzy.
Farnsworth: Okay.
Fry: That's all.

Bender: [Casually, while filing his "nails".] Yeah, we're back.
[Everyone else cheers.]

Farnsworth: Come on, stem cells, work your astounding scientific nonsense!
Fry: Fetal stem cells? Aren't those controversial?
Farnsworth: In your time, yes. But nowadays... shut up! Besides, these are adult stem cells harvested from perfectly healthy adults, whom I killed for their stem cells.

Bender: [Sounding weak and covered in stem-cells.] Aagh, I'm dying... I need mouth-to-ass resuscitation.
Fry: I'm on it.
[Fry moves his head to Bender's ass. Blowing sounds are heard.]
Fry: It's not working.
Bender: [Laughing.] I die happy knowing you fell for that.

Fry: I need cheering up Bender. I dunno... you wanna go party tonight?
Bender: I hate partying. If only I didn't have so much crunk in my ba-dun-ka-dunk!

Leela: There's no room for two captain's butts in this chair!
Robot Leela: There would be if you'd have taken a spin class instead of lounging around in a coma!

The Professor: ...and destroyed both of their short-term memories!
Robot Fry: So that's why I'm so amazed of these things I already knew!

Robot Fry: Fry!
Fry: Oh, I'm sorry, I didn't realize I was already here. Wait, what's with all the Leelas?
Robot Fry: Trust me, don't ask.
Fry: Okay, dork.

Fry: Poke harder, damn it!
Farnsworth: I'm poking as hard as I can!

Leela: Bender, shut the hell up!
[Bender and everyone but Fry and robot Leela stare in amazement. Bender vibrates with the doomsday device.]
Farnsworth: Bender! Stop shutting the hell up!
Bender: Oh, right. Leela's back, as if I care. Woooo.

Characters

(In alphabetic order)

References

  1. ^ a b White, James (20 February 2009). "9 Odd Things We Now Know About Futurama". Totalfilm. Retrieved on 11 June 2009.
  2. ^ a b Ryan, Kyle (25 March 2009). "Matt Groening". A.V. Club. Retrieved on 11 June 2009.
  3. ^ Iverson, Dan (25 July 2009). "SDCC 09: The Future of Futurama". IGN TV. Retrieved on 26 July 2009.
  4. ^ "Smarty" (07 August 2009). "By Hawking's chair! Futurama is back! (News thread) (No spoilers)" (Page 15). (PEEL.) Retrieved on 07 August 2009.
  5. ^ Keller, Joel (07 August 2009). "Katey Sagal talks about contentious Futurama negotiations - TCA Report". TV Squad. Retrieved on 07 August 2009.
  6. ^ Sánchez, JavieR (13 August 2009). "Into the Wild Green Yonder premiere at Comedy Central". The Futurama Point. Retrieved on 16 August 2009.
  7. ^ "i_c_weiner" (20 August 2009). "By Hawking's chair! Futurama is back! (News thread) (No spoilers)" Page 17. (PEEL.) Retrieved on 21 August 2009.
  8. ^ Lovece, Frank (28 August 2009). "'Futurama' finds a new future on Comedy Central". Newsday. Retrieved on 28 August 2009.
  9. ^ Fritz, Steve (15 October 2009). "Back To The FUTURAMA W/ Co-Creator David X. Cohen". Newsarama. Retrieved on 07 November 2009.
  10. ^ Sneak Preview on YouTube. (YouTube.) 04 October 2009. Retrieved on 04 October 2009.
  11. ^ Piccoli, Sean (01 October 2009). "Animation Supercon to feature Futurama reunion, sneak peak at new episodes". Sun Sentinel. Retrieved on 01 October 2009.
  12. ^ JavieR (18 March 2010). "Futurama new season teaser trailer from Comedy Central". The Futurama Point. Retrieved on 18 March 2010.
  13. ^ DVD Volume Five: Commentaries for "Rebirth".
  14. ^ a b "TravisYanan" (25 June 2010). Thursday 6/24/10. (MediaWeek.) Retrieved on 26 June 2010.
  15. ^ a b c Ponywether, Ariel (25 June 2010). "Review -- Futurama: "Rebirth" and "In-A-Gadda-Da-Leela"". Firefox News. Retrieved on 26 June 2010.
  16. ^ a b "It was tied for the highest-rated show in adults 18-49 in all TV on Thursday's primetime, and was the highest-rated show among men 18-24 and men 18-34. Comedy Central said it helped the network to its highest-rated night in 2010 and its highest-rated Thursday primetime in the history of the network."
    Gough, Paul J. (28 June 2010). "'Futurama' returns with strong ratings". Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved on 28 June 2010.
  17. ^ a b c Canning, Robert (21 June 2010). "Futurama: "Rebirth" Review". IGN. Retrieved on 26 June 2010.
  18. ^ Cortez, Carl (24 June 2010). "Early Review: FUTURAMA - SEASON SIX - 'Rebirth'/'In-A-Gadda-Da-Leela' - Season Premiere". IF Magazine. Retrieved on 26 June 2010.
  19. ^ Gandert, Sean (25 June 2010). "Futurama Review: "Rebirth" 6.1". Paste Magazine. Retrieved on 26 June 2010.
  20. ^ Zalben, Alex (24 June 2010). "Futurama’s Back – And It’s Good!". UGO. Retrieved on 26 June 2010.
  21. ^ S., Susan (25 June 2010). "Futurama "Rebirth" Season 6 Episode 1- Review". Gather Entertainment. Retrieved on 26 June 2010.