Just as the main series was reaching its apogee, so it was with the Halloween Specials. Once again, Treehouse Of Horror V begins with Marge delivering her customary warning before being informed that Congress has forbade the show from going ahead and suggested screening the John Ford western “200 Miles to Oregon” instead. It’s a mischievous nod to the fact that producer David Mirkin chose to make the stories considerably more graphic (for example, the repeating motif of Groundskeeper Willy being murdered with an axe) in puckish response to complaints about excessive violence in previous shows. John Ford’s (entirely fictional) Western is short-lived however as Bart and Homer seize control on the transmission in a nod to “The Outer Limits”. There’s also one final tombstone, announcing the end of ‘Amusing Tombstones’ and giving way to a grisly, horror-themed variation on the usual opening credits cavalcade of characters. Also gone: the wraparound framing story – from here on out, the vignettes would stand on their own.

The Shinning

“That’s odd…usually the blood gets off at the second floor.”

treehouse of horror v the shinning review

It was a challenge to pick a headline quote from this, perhaps the Treehouse Of Terror’s greatest ever single segment. An acutely observed spoof of Stanley Kubrick’s iconic movie, it’s a parody which manages to extract every ounce of wit and humour by marrying the source material perfectly to the Simpson’s characters. The only fault of the segment – if indeed it has one – is that it’s too short and gives way to other segments when you’d be forgiven for wanting it to last the whole episode or even forever and ever and ever. No TV and no beer may make Homer go crazy, but you’d have to be insane not to rate this spooky story highly.


Time And Punishment

“Hmm. Fabulous house, well-behaved kids, sisters-in-law dead, luxuryy sedan. Woohoo!”

treehouse of horror v time and punishment review

More classic American literature, this time the Ray Bradbury story “The Sound Of Thunder”, provides the inspiration for this story of temporal tinkering. The quasi-fascist Flanderstopia is a fun parallel to the original story but it’s when the episode repeatedly cycles through the butterfly effects of Homer’s time travelling that it really starts delivering on the gags – especially the quick-fire rapid montage. Hard to pick the best moment between Homer’s too-hasty rejection of his best life (ironically, for want of a doughnut) or his ‘meh, close enough’ acceptance of a slightly imperfect version of what he once had.


Nightmare Cafeteria

“I believe I’ll start as you’ve so often suggested: by eating your shorts…”

treehouse of horror v nightmare cafeteria review

Loosely referencing “Soylent Green”, this is perhaps one of the darkest and grisliest of the early Treehouse Of Horror tales. While there’s plenty of gore on screen, there’s a lot more suggested off-screen and it’s particularly ruthless in picking off Bart and Lisa’s classmates with relish (and occasionally mustard and ketchup). Treehouse Of Horror V is probably most remembered, though, for its abrupt, dark ending which segues directly into a brief coda featuring a fog that turns people inside out and a gloriously gratuitously gory song and dance number. Happy Halloween indeed!

treehouse of horror v review


Hi there! If you enjoyed this post, why not sign up to get new posts sent straight to your inbox?

Sign up to receive a weekly digest of The Craggus' latest posts.

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.

logo

Related posts

Moonlight (2017) Review

Moonlight (2017) Review

Moonlight shines its melancholy light on a life in three acts. Beautifully structured and elegantly restrained, Barry Jenkins’ deceptively simple three act coming of age drama "Moonlight" packs a powerful emotional punch as we follow Chiron, a disaffected young black man growing up and...

Doctor Who: Under The Lake Review

Doctor Who: Under The Lake Review

Underwater base being haunted by ghosts? Doctor Who you gonna call? Well, that was a deliciously retro treat, wasn’t it? Since “Doctor Who” returned in 2005, I don’t think there’s been an episode which evoked the original series in quite so pure a form as “Under...

Blackhat (2015) Review

Blackhat (2015) Review

Even Edward de Bono would struggle to find anything good to say about this Blackhat. Veteran director Michael Mann’s latest takes the charismatic screen presence of Chris Hemsworth and the white-hot topicality of computer hacking and combines them into "Blackhat", a muddled and painfully...

13 Reasons Why Season One Review

13 Reasons Why Season One Review

Mister X says 13 Reasons Why is not for the faint-hearted. One day Clay Jensen arrives home from Liberty High School to discover a curious package on his doorstep. Upon opening the box he discovers seven audio cassettes that serve as an explanation for his close friend Hannah Baker’s...

xXx: Return Of Xander Cage (2017) Review

xXx: Return Of Xander Cage (2017) Review

xXx: Return Of Xander Cage puts the 'exXxtreme' in 'exXxtremely bad' We may be marking the return of Xander Cage, but did anyone really notice he was away? 2002’s “xXx” was a dumb but fun extreme action-adventure, a 90’s ‘attitude’ hangover given a last millennial hurrah. Cage...

Fantastic Beasts And Where To Find Them (2016) Review

Fantastic Beasts And Where To Find Them (2016) Review

Avada Kadisappointing A few years back, having brought the “Harry Potter” series to a successful conclusion, Director David Yates boldly declared he would be making a new “Doctor Who” movie, with a new actor in the role and a new continuity, separate from the long-running TV...

Treehouse Of Horror XXVI

Treehouse Of Horror XXVI

Treehouse Of Horror XXVI opens with another guest-artist couch gag. This time it's "Ren & Stimpy" creator John Kricfalusi who digs up one-and-unfortunately-not-done character Frank Grimes (although without the tombstone to tell you his name you'd never know to look at him) to prey...

Death Do Us Part (2019) Review

Death Do Us Part (2019) Review

There's nothing like a zombie apocalypse to put a marriage to the test. With a set-up that feels eerily familiar to present-day real life, a couple whose marriage is on the brink of breaking up suddenly find themselves locked down as an unspecified zombie outbreak ravages the UK in...

2 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments