The best Rick and Morty The episodes feature self-contained stories and a few additions that really advance their overarching plot. The humor is often funny, creative, and very clever, looking at more than just pop culture references and easy-on-the-eye jokes from other adult animated shows. Instead, the attention to detail and world-building that takes place in the episodes brings jokes when viewers least expect them, and with the quirky time travel and alternate worlds, the stories are never-ending.
Created by Dan Harmon, Rick Sanchez is a brilliant mad scientist who has created devices that can wreak havoc and also travel to alternate worlds and takes his grandson, Morty, with him, often to the chagrin of his parents. However, nothing is as it seems. The episodes take things in unexpected directions, offering brilliant sci-fi stories, absurdist humor, and jokes that go deeper than almost any of its contemporaries. The best and most important Rick and Morty episodes are also some of the best adult animated episodes of any show.
10
The Ricks must be crazy
Season 2, Episode 6
The name of this episode is related to the 1980 film The gods must be crazy. This film shows a tribe of hunter-gatherers who find a Coca-Cola bottle fallen from a plane and they think it is a gift from the gods. In "The Ricks Must Be Crazy", Rick and Morty travel to a micro-universe that exists in the battery of Rick's spaceship. While there, the rivalry between Rick and his rival Zeep Zanflorp takes a dangerous turn. Fans see why Rick's drumming helps keep his dimensional leap possible.
There's also a subplot where the spaceship does everything it can to keep Summer safe. The episode works so well thanks to the fact that Zeep is a perfect foil for Rick, as the two are mostly intellectual equals, and he even created his own Teenyverse; Just as Rick created his world, they begin to fight each other for superiority. Morty makes it clear when he tells the idolaters of the microuniverse that their “Gods are a lie” before returning to his world.
9
Mortynight Race
Season 2, Episode 2
During most of Rick and Mortyyoung Morty increasingly loses his innocence. He learns over time that there is chaos and terrible people and beings throughout the universe. This happens in the episode “Mortynight Run” like almost no other. Morty sees Rick sell a gun to a notorious intergalactic assassin named Krombopulos Michael. This surprises Morty, who can't understand why Rick would help in an assassination attempt, so Morty decides to save the target.
The fact that Morty is trying to save a telepathic gas being whose nickname is Fart (Jermaine Clement) is a huge joke in itself. There's also a David Bowie-inspired musical number that's better than almost anything else anywhere. Rick and Morty episode. Add the terror of Morty thanks to your arcade game experience Roy: A Life Well Livedand this might be one of the most savage and nihilistic episodes of the adult animated series.
8
Auto Erotic Assimilation
Season 2, Episode 3
"Auto Erotic Assimilation" is a Rick and Morty summer adventure episode. Rick, Morty and Summer head to a planet where an entity known as Unity (Christina Hendricks) is in control. It doesn't help that Unity is Rick's ex. This leads to one of the most twisted moments in the adult animated series, when Rick and Unity's billion hosts enter into a hedonistic party of excess. It was clear why Rick and Unity were better off apart and should never be together.
The episode shows just how bad of a human Rick Sanchez really is. The party turns into a race war and Summer and Morty must find their way through the horror before Unity abandons the planet because she knows she can't be with Rick because of his self-centered and self-destructive nature. This is the episode where Rick sees for himself how much his bad tendencies can harm others, and it almost leads him to end things once and for all. This was a deeply effective episode.
7
Close Rick counters of type Rick
Season 1, Episode 10
This episode delves into the multiverse of Rick and Morty while the Council of Ricks captures Rick and Morty (from the main world) and puts them on trial for murdering alternate Ricks and kidnapping alternate Mortys. The accusations are mostly false, but this is a very important episode because This is where the show introduces one of the series' biggest villains, Evil Morty - the person behind all the crimes that this world's Rick and Morty have been accused of.
This is the episode of the first season where the producers reveal that anything is possible...
This is the first season episode where the producers reveal that anything is possible, nothing is as it seems and everything can be changed to represent something else, no matter how bizarre. This is how the multiverse works Rick and Morty, and it's one where a person can be a pickle, which is seen in the last few episodes. But at the same time, the show never gets lost in its absurdities because there are still heartfelt moments that make it all worth the frustration.
6
Ricklantis' confusion
Season 3, Episode 7
Also known as “Tales from the Citadel”, Rick and Morty take a trip to none other than Atlantis in this season 3 episode. Interestingly, the duo spends their off-screen time in the lost city. Instead of, viewers can see what is happening at the Citadel of Ricks after the death of the Council of Ricks. Evil Morty is growing in power and has finally managed to take on the role of dictator of the Citadel. This is something that changes the overall story arc to put all of Rick and Morty in danger.
This may be the best performance of the entire series for former co-showrunner and co-creator Justin Roiland, who provides almost all of the episode's voices. It's really impressive that this was such a fantastic episode, as it really ignored Rick and Morty (the ones in the real world) for almost the entire episode and still delivered an inspired story. The ending was also huge and set up a huge showdown that would happen two seasons later in season 5. In the end, it's one of the best in the series.
5
Rixenta minutes
Season 1, Episode 8
There have been a few episodes involving the Interdimensional Cable, but “Rixty Minutes” was the first to tackle the subject and remains the best of the best when it comes to that storyline. Morty reveals to Summer the truth about his identity (after the events of Rick Potion #9) and then delivers one of his most disturbing lines when he says “everyone is going to die” before asking her to watch TV with him.
The fact that The entire episode shows the characters watching television shows how brilliant writing and dialogue can go a long way in making something that seems boring on the outside still intriguing and inspired. The episode shows Rick's interdimensional decoder displaying some strange clips and bizarre characters (the best being Ants in My Eyes Johnson). There are also some profound moments involving Jerry and Beth, when they see little glimpses into their alternative lives. The episode sets up a lot of things in a unique way.
4
Rick Potion #9
Season 1, Episode 6
In the first five episodes of Rick and Mortythe mad scientist and his reluctant grandson go on sci-fi adventures that seem wild and fun. However, the entire series shifts to something different and darker in the sixth issue, “Rick Potion #9.” The episode starts like most others like it, with a science fiction theme that gets out of control. Morty wants to use a love potion, but soon everyone on Earth loves himand he has to flee the planet to save himself when the world goes to war to show his love.
This is the episode where Morty changes drastically as his perspective on the world around him changes.
This is where everything gets really weird and sets up the multiverse in an unexpected way. They travel to an alternate Earth, kill Rick and Morty there, bury their bodies, and assume their identities. It's a dark, morbid ending that shows these two are now willing to do anything, even killing versions of themselves, to protect their existence. This is the episode where Morty changes drastically as his perspective on the world around him changes forever.
3
Meeseeks and destroy
Season 1, Episode 5
Although the sixth episode of the first season changes everything viewers know about the world of Rick and Mortythe previous episode showed how dark and disturbing the episode can really be. Rick Sanchez needs to leave and knows he needs to leave something behind to protect his family. He then introduced the Meeseeks box, which creates a happy blue creature (known as Meeseeks) that will do anything the person asks before disappearing in a puff of smoke.
This was the first episode that saw Rick and Morty going on an adventure in a medieval fantasy land. However, the best part of the episode saw the rest of the family use the Meeseeks for their own lazy and often selfish purposes, without ever considering what it means when the creatures disappear in a puff of smoke. When Beth wants them to help her find fulfillment in life, the Meeseeks ask other Meeseeks for help and soon the family is overrun by the creatures until they have to destroy themselves to survive.
2
Pickles Rick
Season 3, Episode 3
Even people who have never watched an episode of Rick and Morty I've probably heard the term “Pickle Rick” before, even if just as a meme or a term thrown around randomly by someone on social media. The third season episode of the same name introduced the idea, and it's much more than just a joke for a visual gag. Rick doesn't want to go to family therapy, so he does the only thing that seems to make the most sense to him at that moment. Rick turns into a pickle.
However, when Pickle Rick is knocked down the drain, he has to find a way to survive and eventually creates a suit of armor out of exoskeletons from dead cockroaches and rats until he can transform back into a human. The entire theme of the episode is the lengths Rick will go to avoid discussing his problems, and even here he only slightly admits that he may have gone too far to avoid talking. The installment took a serious look at Rick's insecurities and won an Emmy Award for the third season.
1
Total Rickall
Season 2, Episode 4
The Season 2 episode "Total Rickall" ranks as one of the best, if not the best Rick and Morty episode of all time. This is a largely standalone installment that sees the entire Smith family forced to fight a legion of parasites infesting their home. They then have to kill all the parasites, even those who appear to be family and friends. The episode actually goes a long way toward introducing some bizarre new characters as well, including Ghost in a Jar and Sleepy Gary to Duck with Muscles.
The episode goes a little deeper than just sight gags and crazy characters, as these characters take root in the hosts and create false memories. He even introduced a fan-favorite character that remained Mr. Poopybutthole. This installment has all the best Rick and Morty Episodes range from wild and creative ideas to absurd characters to the Smith family ending up beside themselves and fighting for their lives. This keeps you above the rest.
Rick and Morty is an animated science fiction/adventure series that follows the intergalactic and interdimensional adventures of supergenius Rick Sanchez and his below-average grandson, Morty Smith. Rick's daughter Beth, his granddaughter Summer, and his hated stepson Jerry also take center stage more often. Coming from creators Justin Roiland and Dan Harmon, the series mixes comedy with science fiction as a way to explore a wide variety of themes aimed at an adult audience.
- Release date
-
December 2, 2013
- Seasons
-
7