Family Guy Star Wars Blue Harvest
Welcome to Stylin Online! Check out our Family Guy Star Wars T-Shirts and other Family Guy Star Wars products below! Laugh It Up, Fuzzball: The Family Guy Star Wars Trilogy has now been translated by the intergalactic scientists at the Stylin Online lab into killer Family Guy Star Wars T-Shirts! The parody the Star Wars films A New Hope, The Empire Strikes Back, and Return of the Jedi. The first episode, 'Blue Harvest', aired in honor of the original film's 30th anniversary. It was followed by two direct-to-video sequels: 'Something, Something, Something, Dark Side' and 'It's a Trap!'
, which were subsequently aired on television. Now you can get in on the fun and pick up any of these stylish Family Guy Star Wars shirts!
Parents need to know that this cartoon satire of has some very adult-oriented humor (more verbal than visual), with references to sex, pedophilia, and drug use. The spoof of Star Wars' opening text prologue includes a recommendation of a lesser-known movie for its graphic sexual content. A few borderline swear words are used. Violence, at about the level of that in the live-action Star Wars (except it's all cartoon) includes spaceship and planet explosions, blaster shootings, and a few light saber decapitations. Newcomers to the F amily Guy universe might not 'get' a lot of insider references and characters. FAMILY GUY: BLUE HARVEST is an episode of the nothing's-off-limits cartoon comedy, taking a full hour to retell the story of the 1977 blockbuster.
Family Guy Star Wars Blue Harvest Full Movie
'Blue Harvest' is the hour-long premiere of the sixth season of. For those of us who know Family Guy better than Star Wars. ↑ Family Guy: Blue Harvest (Blu. I've had the last two family guy 'star wars' parodies on blu-ray for a while now but could never find 'Blue Harvest' in blu-ray format except to purchase the trilogy.
A sudden power outage ends a session of slack-jawed TV viewing in the household of rotund, loudmouthed Rhode Islander Peter Griffin, but the family guy rises to the occasion by telling his brood a tale of 'fathers and sons' - the storyline of Star Wars: Episode IV: A New Hope. In this version, the Griffins, their friends, neighbors, Adam West, and recurring gag characters from the cartoon take on the roles of Luke Skywalker, Darth Vader, Princess Leia, and a disquietingly dirty-old-man-like Obi Wan-Kenobi. Viewers may be surprised by this extended episode of the animated sitcom that sometimes seems so full of pop-culture references and mini-parodies that the stories barely hold together. Not surprisingly, series creator and the vocal cast seem to be having tons of fun with the Force, delivering big laughs at light speed; too bad they end the thing on a somewhat sour note, with young Chris Griffin/Luke Skywalker calling his storyteller father 'a big jerk' and leaving (this is an inside-inside joke about Peter/Seth MacFarlane belittling cable TV satire, done by Chris' voiceover actor Seth Green). What's unexpected are some sequences that don't have gags at all but are just dead-on recreations of classic Lucasfilm moments, as the gag script follows the original storyline faithfully. Revelation: The Family Guy gang actually loves and respects George Lucas' history-making saga, and this spoof is as much a tribute as it is puns and non-sequitur references to and.
I've had the last two family guy 'star wars' parodies on blu-ray for a while now but could never find 'Blue Harvest' in blu-ray format except to purchase the trilogy.
Among the DVD extras is a sit-down dialogue between Seth MacFarlane and George Lucas, who says his staff got a kick out of Blue Harvest. Families can talk about the humor on display here. Sometimes Family Guy exhibits a pretty mean spirit when it spoofs popular culture, but the tone here is generally affectionate, maybe even.respectful. What accounts for the difference?. Ask kids about satires like Mel Brooks' or Woody Allen's Shadows and Fog; can you sense the gagster's genuine fondness for the original material?.
With a bit of a video search, you can put together a home mini-festival of Jedi parodies - many created brilliantly outside the Hollywood system by low-budget amateurs, some of which gained the approval of George Lucas himself ( Hardware Wars, TROOPS, George Lucas in Love, etc.).