Stewie, Chris, & Brian's Excellent Adventure
"Stewie, Chris, & Brian's Excellent Adventure" | |
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Family Guy episode | |
Episode no. |
Season 13 Episode 7 |
Directed by | Joe Vaux |
Written by | Alex Carter |
Original air date | January 4, 2015 |
Guest actors | |
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"Stewie, Chris, & Brian's Excellent Adventure" is the seventh episode of the thirteenth season of the animated sitcom Family Guy, and the 238th episode overall. It aired on Fox in the United States on January 4, 2015, and is written by Alex Carter and directed by Joe Vaux.
In the episode, Stewie and Brian take Chris back in time so he can perform well in a history exam.[1] The title is a play on the time travel film Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure.
Plot
Chris Griffin gives his parents Peter and Lois a note stating that Principal Shepherd wants to speak with them. At school, Principal Shepherd tells Peter and Lois that Chris will have to repeat the 9th grade unless he passes his history class finals overseen by Mr. Harpington. Peter tries to coach him through to no avail. With Chris left to his own devices, Stewie and Brian quiz him and realize he needs extreme help. Stewie decides to take him for a tour of history in the time machine. Sneaking into his room, they tell him he is dreaming and take off for the past. Upon their departure, Rupert tells the other stuffed animals "Just so you know, I'm straight."
Stopping off in 1803 as one of the locations in Chris' history finals, they observe U.S. President Thomas Jefferson trying to convince the U.S. Congress to approve the Louisiana Purchase. In Paris during 1920, they meet Ernest Hemingway who is in good spirits until Brian's prattle drives him to suicide. Though Brian does manage to get his pen. Brian and Stewie then take Chris to Brazil before the invention of the soccer ball, Australia before the invention of the shark-tooth necklace, and Italy before the invention of pasta where Stewie calling the Italians a ridiculous people, causing a live-action sequence where Tony Sirico, angered at the Italian joke that was made, warns Stewie about it. Then they visit 1776 during George Washington's crossing of the Delaware River where George Washington is wearing arm floaties. They visit 1944 on D-Day where they witness "Double D-Day" as big-breasted females in bikinis cause the Germans to stop shooting while the Warrant song "Cherry Pie" plays. The boys stop to visit Jane Austen to release their time-travel farts. While there, they find that she is attracted to the farts which help inspire her to write Pride & Prejudice. Arriving in the 1990s, Stewie, Brian, and Chris witness a man dancing to Go West's "King of Wishful Thinking". During the time travel, Brian takes a detour to kill Ivan Pavlov for his experiments on dogs. After an unseen visit to the British Parliament, Stewie gives money to a young Adolf Hitler (whom he mistakes him for a young Charlie Chaplin). When they find Chris has learned nothing from the trip, Stewie calls Chris a moron. This angers Chris so much that he leaves and boards the RMS Titanic with Stewie's return pad, leaving them to board the ship to stop him.
Barely catching a mooring rope, they climb aboard and split up to search for Chris where Stewie telling Brian to go down to the steerage and wade through the "gross angry Italians", leading the live-action Tony to warn Stewie a second time: "That's two." Brian searches the lower parts of the deck containing Peter Griffin look-a-likes and makes his way to the ball room where he finds Stewie dining at the Captain's Table with Captain Edward Smith. The two of them then find Chris at another table and convince him to return. Chris wants to know why they cannot avoid the disaster as Stewie tries to find a way to cover up the part of not altering the past. Before Stewie, Brian, and Chris can return to the present, the ship strikes the iceberg and the return pad is destroyed by the rushing water. They find they need to get it to dry land to repair it. Dressing as women, they head for the lifeboats, but find they are too late. This causes Chris to force room for them all in the last boat by throwing a crew member overboard where he comments that he can't swim without his striped one-piece. Stewie apologizes for calling him a moron and admits his strength is physical.
Repairing the return pad and returning to the present, Chris returns to sleep briefly and wakes up still not knowing history after explaining his "dream" to Brian and Stewie. While going on the computer to look up the casualties of the Titanic, Brian and Stewie find out that the crew member that Chris threw overboard was Nigel Harpington, the ancestor of his history teacher Mr. Harpington. As the result of this, Chris ends up with a new hippie history teacher named "Teacher Doug" who does not believe in tests as Chris says "Yay." Words then appear stating "All history facts in this episode were gathered by quick glances at Wikipedia. To learn more about history, check out Yahoo! Answers."
Production
In an interview ahead of the start of the season, Family Guy executive producer Steve Callaghan told Entertainment Weekly “I don’t want to spoil the episode too much, but I can say this: Toward the end of the second act, Chris ends up separating himself from Stewie and Brian, and ends up boarding the Titanic.”[2]
Reception
The episode received an audience of 5.53 million, making it the third most watched show on Fox that night after The Simpsons episode "The Man Who Came to Be Dinner" and Brooklyn Nine-Nine.[3]
References
- ↑ "Family Guy on Fox". The Futon Critic. Retrieved January 4, 2014.
- ↑ Snierson, Dan (September 28, 2014). "Peter gets 'Taken,' Stewie gets pregnant, and more 'Family Guy' scoop". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved January 4, 2015.
- ↑ Bibel, Sara (January 7, 2015). "Sunday Final Ratings: 'The Simpsons', 'Madam Secretary', 'Brooklyn Nine-Nine', 'The Celebrity Apprentice', 'Bob's Burgers' and 'CSI' Adjusted Up". TV by the Numbers. Retrieved January 7, 2015.
- The plot description was copied from Stewie, Chris & Brian's Excellent Adventure at Family Guy Wiki, which is available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike License 3.0 license.