Family Guy Peter Rips His Face Off Propane

26th episode of the fourth flavor of Family Guy

"Petergeist"
Family Guy episode
Episode no. Season four
Episode 26
Directed by Sarah Frost
Written by Alec Sulkin
Wellesley Wild
Production code 4ACX29
Original air date May 7, 2006 (2006-05-07)
Guest appearances
  • Phil LaMarr
  • Lori Alan equally Diane Simmons
  • Adam Due west as Mayor Adam W
  • Carrot Top every bit himself
  • Bob Costas as himself
Episode chronology
Previous
"You May Now Kiss the... Uh... Guy Who Receives"
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"The Griffin Family unit History"
Family Guy (season 4)
List of episodes

"Petergeist" is the 26th episode from season four of Fox blithe series Family Guy. Peter decides to build a multiplex to summit Joe'due south new home theater, but comes across a Native American skull in his backyard and desecrates it. As a event, a poltergeist haunts the Griffins' house and spirits drag Stewie abroad to the other side, followed by even stranger events.

The episode was written by Alec Sulkin and Wellesley Wild and information technology was directed by Sarah Frost. This episode features guest appearances from Phil LaMarr, Lori Alan, Adam West, Carrot Pinnacle, and Bob Costas as well as several recurring vocalization actors for the series.

The episode's name comes from and the plot closely follows that of the movie Poltergeist. The episode received mixed reviews.

Plot summary [edit]

Afterwards Joe builds a home theater system, Peter decides to build a multiplex in his lawn out of spite. While excavation, Peter finds the skull of a Native American buried in the backyard. Peter names it Chief Diamond Phillips. Brian frequently urges him to render the skull to its resting place, but Peter treats it as a novelty (playing with information technology, urinating in information technology, wearing it as an athletic cup, etc.).

That night the Griffins start experiencing strange paranormal activity: Stewie talks to the Boob tube static, the chairs and fridge stack themselves upside downward on the kitchen table, Peter rips at the mankind on his face until he uncovers Hank Colina'southward confront, and Chris gets scared by the McDonald'due south clown, Ronald McDonald and he then gets attacked past an evil tree earlier beingness saved by Herbert. Lois is in denial of the events until Stewie gets sucked into his closet and disappears.

To notice Stewie, the Griffins hire a spiritual medium (Bruce the Performance Artist in ane of his many jobs) to contact the other side, and learn that the archway to the spirit world is Stewie's cupboard, while the exit is "Meg's ass". Unable to expect for Stewie to come up out of the closet (he is manifestly reluctant to exit from Million's rear stop), Lois enters the portal and rescues Stewie. The enraged spirits emerge and ravage the Griffin house, sucking it into their world. As the Griffins bulldoze off, Peter dumps the Native American skull in a garbage can.

Now homeless, Peter and Lois effort to detect a style to get their business firm back, and learn the Native American skull has to be put back in its resting place. After searching through the city dump, a garbage man tells them that the skull would be in the human remains bin, but it was cleaned out by Carrot Top for things to utilise every bit props. They get to Carrot Peak'south mansion and, later a chase through a hall of mirrors, they recall the skull and rebury it, thereby getting dorsum their house and returning life to normal. At the end, Lois takes the Idiot box and moves it outside the front door just Peter comes out, retrieves it and puts Meg exterior instead.

Product [edit]

A closeup of a man with his head looking forward, smiling and wearing a backwards baseball cap.

"Petergeist" is the 26th episode of the quaternary season of Family Guy. The episode was written past veteran writers and recurring voices for the bear witness Alec Sulkin and Wellesley Wild. This is the third episode written by Sulkin and Wild to air, the first ii being "Petarded" and "PTV" respectively.[1] [2] It was directed past Sarah Frost who is as well a veteran of the show.[one] Directors Peter Shin and Pete Michels acted every bit supervising directors, helping Frost straight this episode.[1] Kirker Butler worked every bit the executive story editor, while Patrick Meighan, John Viener and Ruby Chevapravatdumrong worked as story editors. Mark Hentemann and Tom Devanney acted as consulting producers.[i] Show creator Seth MacFarlane, David A. Goodman and Chris Shreidan worked every bit executive producers, Danny Smith was the co-executive producer of the episode and Steve Callaghan, Alec Sulkin, Wellesley Wild, Alex Borstein and Mike Henry all acted as producers of the episode.[1]

Similar many episodes of the series, it used an orchestra organized by MacFarlane; the orchestra used in "Petergeist" had 55 members, which was big for the series. Composer Ron Jones "spent months" studying and recreating the original music sheets from the 1982 horror film Poltergeist composed past Jerry Goldsmith. The photocopies of the music sheets cost Jones Usa$400.

"Petergeist," along with xiii other episodes from Season 4, were released on a iii-disc DVD set in the United states of america on November 14, 2006.[iv] Special features include commentary on every episode, multi-angle scene studies, deleted scenes, 3 featurettes, unrated audio, and a DVD-ROM link to exclusive content.[4]

In add-on to the regular cast, sports commentator Bob Costas and comedian Carrot Top guest starred in the episode. Recurring vox actors Lori Alan, voice actor Phil LaMarr, author Danny Smith writer Alec Sulkin, actress Jennifer Tilly, and author John Viener fabricated minor appearances. Recurring invitee voice actors Adam Due west and Patrick Warburton as well made guest appearances equally well.[1] [5] [half-dozen]

The DVD version includes some scenes that were edited from TV:[four]

  • When the Griffins leave the firm (with Peter tossing the skull in the trash), Herbert the pedophile and the tree demon he fought earlier in the episode climb out of the hole and apologize for fighting. FOX objected to the scene because of the implication of anal sexual practice when Herbert asks the tree demon if he's a "giving tree or a receiving tree."
  • When Lois tells Stewie to come out of the spirit globe by going through Meg's donkey, Stewie shouts in an incredulous tone, "Have you lost your heed?!" in the Boob tube version. On DVD, at that place's an alternate scene where Stewie adds that getting out of the spirit world through Meg's donkey was but as probable as anyone remembering the 1980 cast of Saturday Night Live, followed past a mock-up of the season six opening featuring bandage members Denny Dillon, Gail Matthius, Ann Risley, Yvonne Hudson, and Patrick Weathers, musical invitee Jack Bruce and Friends, and host Scott Colomby. (The scene contained inaccuracies- Colomby has never hosted SNL, and Hudson and Weathers were featured players, thus their names weren't subtitled.)

Cultural references [edit]

This episode may comprise the highest amount of cultural references in a single ambulation, many of which are in rapid succession in the commencement half. In the beginning of the episode, when they are in Joe's home theater, Joe appears rolling across the ground in a parody of the 1984-1993 TriStar Pictures logo. The television evidence that Peter and Lois lookout man entitled Fast Talking Loftier Trousers, which parodied 1940s films, was conceived by Wellesley Wild. The episode'southward title and plot references the horror moving picture Poltergeist. The episode references the finale of the NBC sitcom Friends and its sequel Joey,[7] also referencing the counterfoil of Joey.[7] To cheer himself up, Stewie at one signal imagines himself on the testify Jackass. In one scene, Chris is frightened by Ronald McDonald, and is saved from an evil tree by Herbert, who fights the tree in a The Lord of the Rings-style battle. When Peter is clawing at his confront, he transforms into Hank Loma from King of the Hill. While trapped inside the spirit world, Stewie learns he can communicate through the TV, and he sings the second poetry of the Phil Collins vocal "In the Air This night" with the aforementioned fuzzy reverb vocal effect used in the recorded song. While shooting golf assurance through the portal, Peter remarks "we are going to go those terrorists, now watch this drive." A reference to a televised interview on a golf course in which President George W. Bush said the aforementioned affair before hitting a ball. Peter also references Bugs Bunny by sticking his head out of Meg'southward butt and claiming he took a incorrect plough at Albuquerque. The scene of Peter taking the TV back in and putting Meg out referenced the terminate of the original film Poltergeist, where the family'due south father removes the television set subsequently the family flees to a cabin room. JAG is also shown, commenting how the show has run its course, the terminal episode of the series having aired on April 29, 2005. When the Griffin family unit approaches Carrot Top's mansion, the theme from Dorsum to the Future is used. A cutaway gag refers the Dick Cheney hunting accident, which Cheney shooting downwardly Peter multiple times, afterwards claiming he thought he was a deer. While feeding the skull, Peter says, "Desire some more than Peas Chief Diamond Phillips", a reference to Actor Lou Diamond Phillips who is function Cherokee Indian. Towards the end of the episode, Stewie mentions that he met Jesus and he was Chinese with the concluding name Hong. This could perchance be a reference to the Taiping Rebellion, which was led past a man who believed himself to be the brother of Jesus with the name Hong.

Reception [edit]

The episode was watched by 8.4 million people, making it the 42nd most watched show of the calendar week, tied with The Simpsons.[8]

The episode received mixed reviews. Bob Sassone from Television receiver Team praised the episode'south humor, proverb that he loved the Poltergeist takeoffs in the episode, even the music and special effects, especially when Peter plays around with the portals that are in One thousand thousand's butt.[7] IGN staff writer Michael Drucker gave a more disquisitional review, proverb that the jokes "quickly get former once you realize the episode blows its load xv minutes into the show".[9]

References [edit]

  1. ^ a b c d east f "Family Guy: PTV". Film.com. Retrieved 2009-06-21 .
  2. ^ "Family Guy: Petarded: Cast & Coiffure". MSN. Archived from the original on May 22, 2011. Retrieved October 26, 2008.
  3. ^ a b c "Family Guy four". Movieweb. Archived from the original on 2011-06-10. Retrieved 2010-08-03 .
  4. ^ "Phil LeMarr:Credits". TV Guide . Retrieved October 27, 2009.
  5. ^ "Danny Smith:Credits". Tv set Guide . Retrieved October 27, 2009.
  6. ^ a b c "Family Guy: Petergeist". TV Squad. Archived from the original on 2007-12-29. Retrieved October 5, 2009.
  7. ^ "Weekly Program Rankings". ABC Medianet. May 9, 2006. Retrieved 2009-10-05 .
  8. ^ "Family Guy — Book Four". IGN . Retrieved October 5, 2009.

External links [edit]

  • "Petergeist" at IMDb

beltstrue1978.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petergeist

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