A Regular Epic Final Battle

Last updated
"A Regular Epic Final Battle"
Regular Show episodes
A Regular Epic Final Battle Part 1.webp
A Regular Epic Final Battle Part 2.webp
A Regular Epic Final Battle Part 3.webp
Title cards
Episode nos.Season 8
Episodes 28–30
Directed byCalvin Wong (supervising director)
Written by
Story by
  • J. G. Quintel
  • Matt Price
  • Patrick Baker
  • Gina Ippito
  • Sean Szeles
Featured music "Heroes" by David Bowie
Production codes1045-262
1045-264A
1045-264B [1]
Original air dateJanuary 16, 2017 (2017-01-16)
Running time33 minutes (combined)
Episode chronology
 Previous
"Cheer Up Pops"
Next 
Regular Show season 8
List of episodes

"A Regular Epic Final Battle" (subtitled "Part 1" and "Part 2") and "The Power" form the three-part series finale of the American animated television series Regular Show . [2] [3] It originally aired on Cartoon Network in the United States on January 16, 2017. All parts are 11 minutes long.

Contents

The series revolves around the daily lives of two 23-year-old friends, Mordecai (a blue jay), and Rigby (a raccoon). They work as groundskeepers at a park, and spend their days trying to slack off and entertain themselves by any means. This is much to the chagrin of their boss Benson (a gumball machine) and their coworker Skips (a yeti), but to the delight of park manager Pops (a man with a lollipop-shaped head). Their other coworkers, Muscle Man (an overweight green man) and Hi-Five Ghost (a ghost with a hand extending from the top of his head) serve as their rivals.

1.33 million viewers watched Part 1 and 1.37 million viewers watched Parts 2 and 3, [4] making it the most viewed episode of the eighth season.

Plot

"A Regular Epic Final Battle"

Part 1

Pops has a nightmare about his upcoming fight with his brother Anti-Pops, and Mordecai and Rigby comfort him. A short time later, the park crew arrives at Lolliland. They meet a group of Lolliland natives: Frivola-Kranus, Quadravi-Kranus, and Weird Mushroom Guy. The natives explain that Pops is the perfect creation of their planet called Mega-Kranus and Anti-Pops was created as his opposite to maintain balance in the universe called Malum-Kranus, respectively. The natives show the park crew ancient tapestries of the previous battles between Pops and Anti-Pops, which detail prior incarnations of the park crew fighting alongside Pops. Knowing that all the prior battles have ended in a stalemate (resulting in the universe resetting), Mordecai comes up with setting traps for Anti-Pops to give Pops an upper hand, which he didn't have in previous battles. Pops reluctantly agrees to do so. After Anti-Pops and his bounty hunters arrive in an Uber-like taxi following the destruction of most of the former's ship, Pops tries to convince him not to fight because they are brothers. Anti-Pops refuses and attacks Pops but is caught in the traps laid by the park crew. The victory is short-lived, however, as Anti-Pops quickly escapes the traps.

Part 2

To ensure his friends' survival, Pops makes a deal with Anti-Pops: whoever lands the first blow in battle gets to decide the fate of the universe. Pops successfully injures Anti-Pops, but Anti-Pops breaks the agreement and continues the fight. Streaming, who still has his sights on destroying the Disc Masters, suddenly arrives with his Stream Box Bot minions and aids Anti-Pops in the battle. Meanwhile, the park crew, HD DVD, Blu-ray, the Baby Ducks, Toothpick Sally, Recap Robot, Chance Sureshot (whose prior "death" in "Space Escape" is revealed to be that of a clone), the Guardians of Eternal Youth, Gary, Carter and Briggs, Death, Party Horse 42699, and the Guardian of Lolliland (who is supposed to remain neutral) fight against Anti-Pops's minions, Streaming, and the Stream Box Bots (who merge with their master to power him up) and manage to defeat them. However, Anti-Pops assumes his titan form and begins erasing Lolliland. The erasing of Muscle Man and Hi Five Ghost causes Pops to assume his titan form as well. Anti-Pops proceeds to erase the rest of Pops' allies and friends except Mordecai and Rigby, and kick his brother into a portal. Mordecai and Rigby realize that the only way to stop time from resetting is to get in between them while they are about to punch each other. As the two brothers' punches collide (with Mordecai and Rigby between their knuckles), it obliterates the entire universe and resets time.

"The Power"

Part 3 begins precisely like the first episode of Season 1, "The Power," seemingly "resetting" time back to the series' beginning. However, Rigby quickly remembers the events of the prior episodes and the rest of the series. However, Mordecai does not remember, so Rigby shows him the stash of buried Blu-rays (from the previous episode "Cheer Up Pops"), which triggers his memories of the series' events after touching it. Realizing that time didn't correctly reset, they use the Power to take them to the future and back to the battle between Pops and Anti-Pops. Anti-Pops attacks them, destroying the Power in the process. As Pops continues to fight, it becomes clear that fighting Anti-Pops will inevitably lead to another stalemate, which he realizes through flashbacks to the first two parts of the episode and "Kill 'Em with Kindness." Pops grabs Anti-Pops and flies toward the sun, telepathically comforting Mordecai and Rigby. Anti-Pops reconciles with his brother, and the two are finally at peace before they fly into the sun. With the resetting cycle broken, the effects of Anti-Pops' erasing are reversed, and the erased workers and allies are revived. After three years in space, the park workers fly back to Earth, where they reunite with their friends and families and are welcomed as heroes.

The park workers and Mr. Maellard erect a memorial statue in honor of Pops and mourn him. After six years of working at the park, Mordecai and Rigby quit their jobs and move on with their lives. Mordecai becomes a successful artist, marries a female bat, and has three children with her. Rigby and Eileen get married and raise two daughters. Muscle Man and Starla move into a better trailer in the park and have many children, who adopt many of his mannerisms (like taking off their shirts and yelling). High-Five Ghost and his girlfriend, Celia, become party DJs touring in Prague and later have a son. Benson, who has now become the park owner after Mr. Maellard's death, reunites with and marries his girlfriend, Pam (who becomes co-manager alongside her husband), and the two adopt five cats along with Applesauce, Benson's pig. Skips continues happily working in the park, but ditches his trademark jeans for jean shorts. At their 25th anniversary reunion, the park crew raises a statue of the now-deceased Mr. Maellard next to the one of Pops and take a picture in front of it with their families. As the reunion party commences, Mordecai and Rigby (now 54-years-old) reminisce on Pops' sacrifice and how none of them would have been able to lead such beautiful lives without him. They decide to play some old arcade games in the shed before saying their catchphrases and laughing about how immature they used to be. It is then revealed that Pops is watching his friends in what seems to be an afterlife (presumably Heaven) on a VHS tape labeled " Regular Show ". He ejects the video and says "Jolly good show".

Development

Regular Show was renewed for an eighth and final season on July 7, 2015, [5] with release date of the three-part series finale announced at San Diego Comic-Con, and the season premiered on September 26, 2016. The writers and storyboard artists were Benton Connor, Madeline Queripel, Casey Crowe, Owen Dennis, Minty Lewis, Ryan Pequin, Sam Spina, Gideon Chase, Alex Cline, and newcomer Sean Glaze. Kacie Hermanson served as the new main character designer, [6] with Calvin Wong serving as supervising director, J. G. Quintel, Sean Szeles, Gina Ippolito, Patrick Baker, and Matt Price serving as story writers, and the latter serving as story editor, while being produced by Cartoon Network Studios. Szeles also served as supervising producer, while Ryan Slater served as producer. The finale also marked the return of former Regular Show writer and storyboard artist Andres Salaff. After production on the series wrapped up, several crew members continued to work with Quintel on his next series, Close Enough .

Mordecai's wife, introduced during the closing montage of the finale, was not given a name in the show. Head writer Matt Price, on Reddit, gave her the name Stef when asked about it, [7] and writer Owen Dennis stated on Tumblr that there had not been previous plans to give a name to the character. [8]

Broadcast

The episode premiered on Cartoon Network on January 16, 2017, [9] at 6:00pm ET/PT. It was viewed by 1.33 million viewers in part one and 1.37 million viewers each in parts two and three, making it the most-watched episode of the eighth season.

Reception

Eric Thurm of The A.V. Club praised the finale, stating that the finale was "a fight that cyclically bookends the destruction and rebirth of the Regular Show universe. Thurm also praised the finale for the future lives of the characters who have their own brief sendoff, and describes Regular Show itself as two things: "a frequently surreal, borderline adult show on a network primarily for children", and "a product of ’80s nostalgia that preceded a boom in similar, less inventive shows, and found much of what was fun in that era’s pop culture." [10]

Lorinda Marrian of Screen Rant places all three parts of the finale at the top of the "15 Best Episodes Of Regular Show, According To IMDb", claiming that the first part was the perfect start to the finale and that the last part, in his own words, "was an action-packed and heartfelt sendoff to one of Cartoon Network's best shows." [11]

Cultural references

"Heroes" by David Bowie is played during the montage at the end of the third part.

During the fight scene between Pops and Anti-Pops towards the end of Part 2, many fourth wall breaks occur, one of which being Pops interacting with himself from the Regular Show pilot short "The Naive Man from Lolliland." [12]

Related Research Articles

Regular Show is an American animated sitcom created by J. G. Quintel for Cartoon Network. It ran from September 6, 2010, to January 16, 2017, over the course of eight seasons and 245 episodes. The series follows the daily lives of two 23-year old friends, Mordecai and Rigby, who work at a local park as groundskeepers. Their coworkers are Skips, Muscle Man and Hi-Five Ghost. Other characters include: Pops, a lollipop-shaped man and the park's manager, and the duo's boss Benson, a gumball machine. The duo spend their days slacking off and avoiding work to entertain themselves by any means, which leads to surrealistic, extreme and supernatural misconduct.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">J. G. Quintel</span> American animator

James Garland Quintel is an American animator, storyboard artist, director, writer, producer, and voice actor. He is best known as the creator of the Cartoon Network series Regular Show (2010–2017), in which he voiced Mordecai and High Five Ghost, and the HBO Max series Close Enough (2020–2022), in which he voiced Josh.

<i>Regular Show</i> season 1 Season of television series

The first season of the American animated sitcom Regular Show, created by J. G. Quintel, originally aired on Cartoon Network in the United States. Quintel created the series' pilot using characters from his comedy shorts for the canceled anthology series The Cartoonstitute. He developed Regular Show from his own experiences in college. Simultaneously, several of the show's main characters originated from his 2006 animated short films "2 in the AM PM" and "The Naïve Man from Lolliland". The season's production officially began on August 14, 2009, was produced by Cartoon Network Studios, and ran from September 6 to November 22, 2010.

The second season of the American animated television series Regular Show, created by J. G. Quintel, originally aired on Cartoon Network in the United States. Quintel created the series' pilot using characters from his comedy shorts for the canceled anthology series The Cartoonstitute. He developed Regular Show from his own experiences in college. Simultaneously, several of the show's main characters originated from his animated shorts 2 in the AM PM and The Naïve Man from Lolliland. Following its first season's success, Regular Show was renewed for a second season in 2009, ahead of its premiere. The season ran from November 29, 2010 to August 1, 2011, and was produced by Cartoon Network Studios.

<i>Regular Show</i> season 3 Season of television series

The third season of the American animated television series Regular Show, created by J. G. Quintel, originally aired on Cartoon Network in the United States. Quintel created the series' pilot using characters from his comedy shorts for the canceled anthology series The Cartoonstitute. He developed Regular Show from his own experiences in college. Simultaneously, several of the show's main characters originated from his animated shorts 2 in the AM PM and The Naïve Man from Lolliland. Following its second season's success, Regular Show was renewed for a third season on November 16, 2010, ahead of its second-season premiere. The season ran from September 19, 2011 to September 3, 2012, and was produced by Cartoon Network Studios.

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The fourth season of the American animated comedy television series Regular Show, created by J. G. Quintel, originally aired on Cartoon Network in the United States. Quintel created the series' pilot using characters from his comedy shorts for the canceled anthology series The Cartoonstitute. He developed Regular Show from his own experiences in college. Simultaneously, several of the show's main characters originated from his animated shorts 2 in the AM PM and The Naïve Man from Lolliland. Following its third season's success, Regular Show was renewed for a fourth season on October 26, 2011. The season ran from October 1, 2012 to August 12, 2013, and was produced by Cartoon Network Studios.

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References

  1. References for season 8 production codes:
  2. "Steven Universe Returns with a Bomb on Jan 30! Plus More Cartoon Network Premieres - The Geekiary". December 21, 2016. Retrieved January 21, 2017.
  3. Desk, TV News. "Cartoon Network Rings in 2017 with Brand New Episodes of Fan-Favorite Shows" . Retrieved January 21, 2017.
  4. "Updated: Showbuzzdaily's Top 150 Monday Cable Originals & Network Finals: 1.16.2017 | Showbuzz Daily". Retrieved on January 18, 2017.
  5. "'Adventure Time,' 'Regular Show,' 3 More Renewed at Cartoon Network (Exclusive)" Archived 2015-07-10 at the Wayback Machine . Retrieved on 28 December 2016.
  6. Hermanson, Kacie. "Kacie Hermanson - I am so incredibly excited to announce that I am..." Archived 2016-10-13 at the Wayback Machine
  7. Price, Matt (18 January 2017). "One: we never named Mordecai's wife. I guess we should. JG loves Goonies so I'm going to say her name is Stef". Reddit . Retrieved 2019-11-13.
  8. Dennis, Owen. "Oh, Hey, Hello. – I somehow get the feeling you're not being "merely..." Owen Dennis Official Tumblr. Retrieved 2019-11-13. In almost all western kids shows leading up to this point,[...]Sheri (EDIT: I mean Stef. See? Clearly [...] we didn't plan this)[...]imilla reblogged this from skeez-queen13 and added: lol mordo's wife has two names..?? im so confused, Matt says "Stef" and Owen says "Sheri"…????[...]oweeeeendennis said: Oh whoops, Stef. See? Clearly we didn't plan this[...]
  9. "Regular Show Season 8 episodes". TV Guide .
  10. Thurm, Eric (January 16, 2017). "The epic, emotional Regular Show finale is anything but regular". The A.V. Club . Retrieved February 10, 2017.
  11. Marrian, Lorinda (July 3, 2021). "15 Best Episodes Of Regular Show, According To IMDb". Screen Rant .
  12. Marrian, Lorinda (April 20, 2020). "Regular Show: 10 Hidden Details Everyone Completely Missed". Screen Rant .