
Rick and Morty Season 4 may not be the most consistent in overall quality, but it does boast several of the series' best episodes. Beth is the one character who almost always seems underused by the writers, and this episode could have gone a long way toward changing things. While this episode manages to avoid rehashing the old Space Beth storyline, it does seem strange not to more directly reference the events of those episodes or make the two Beths a bigger part of the plot. The fact that Space Beth makes a quick cameo at the end highlights that problem.

Rick has crossed dimensions and been killed and remade so many times that the question of whether he's "real" is pretty much irrelevant now. Granted, there is the lingering uncertainty over whether the last surviving family is the real deal or simply the one decoy family lucky enough to be off-world, but that's not quite enough to build a proper conclusion. There really needed to be something more to help the episode stick the landing. The various families wind up killing each other off and. The premise really needs one last big swerve in the climax, but that final twist never comes. Unfortunately, "Mortyplicity" does suffer from a pretty common problem for the series. The post-credits scene is just sublime, especially with that Queen needle drop heightening the absurdity of this Jerry's existential plight. That's to say nothing of Ventriloquist Dummy Jerry, who quickly comes to rival Cronenberg-verse Jerry as the show's most entertaining Jerry offshoot. Jerry's unique brand of self-serving cowardice never fails to entertain. While "Mortyplicity" is mainly Rick-focused, it's worth pointing out this is another of those episodes where Jerry manages to steal the show whenever he does take center stage. The fact that both Season 5 episodes have delivered quick Interdimensional Cable references is probably a sign we won't be getting a dedicated clip show installment this time around. The "When-Wolf" clip is among the more memorable faux-shows introduced so far, to the point where it really deserves its own spinoff. Sidebar - this episode's nod to the Interdimensional Cable format is a welcome treat. The episode also builds on its little gags in amusing ways, whether through clever nods to films like Blade Runner and Highlander or the various ways each family differs slightly from the next. That chaotic, fast-paced approach works well. No sooner do we touch base with one family than they're taken off the board and the focus shifts to the next family. It gradually evolves from a story about mysterious, squid-like aliens hunting Rick to a Battle Royale among countless decoy families. "Mortyplicity" excels at keeping the viewer off-guard with its premise. But in execution, "Mortyplicity" proves to be a silly and extremely violent addition to the new season. By all rights the end result should feel like a bland retread.

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"I believe if they have the full 10 episodes, they'll release them without a split, but I honestly have no idea," Roiland said back in 2020.It's actually surprising this episode works as well as it does considering the close conceptual similarities to the Space beth subplot introduced back in Season 3's "The ABC's of Beth." Once again we have a storyline built around doppelgangers and the question of whether the Smith/Sanchez family can ever be certain they're real. We don't know if the episodes will run without interruption, every Sunday for 10 weeks, but co-creator Justin Roiland told Slash Film he doesn't think Adult Swim will force another months-long midseason break. Mark your calendars: Rick and Morty will return June 20, and the season is 10 episodes again. The show was renewed for a whopping 70 new episodes back in 2018, so there are at least 60 more to go.

The controversial sixth episode, Never Ricking Morty, even included a mention of the virus, with Rick telling his grandson to look "straight into the bleeding jaws of capitalism" and buy things, since "no one is out there" shopping. Five episodes aired in 2019, but the latest five weren't shown until spring 2020, airing as the world faced the coronavirus outbreak. Season four ended in July 2020, but it really didn't seem like a full 10-episode season, thanks to a weird four-month split in the middle and a world that changed dramatically in between the two halves.
