BoJack Horseman | |
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Season 4 | |
Starring | |
No. of episodes | 12 |
Release | |
Original network | Netflix |
Original release | September 8, 2017 |
Season chronology | |
The fourth season of the animated television series BoJack Horseman premiered exclusively via Netflix's web streaming service on September 8, 2017. Season 4 consists of 12 episodes. [1]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original release date | Prod. code |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
38 | 1 | "See Mr. Peanutbutter Run" | Amy Winfrey | Peter A. Knight | September 8, 2017 | 401 |
In 1992, Mr. Peanutbutter stumbles onto the set of what will become his show and gets the role of the lead by complete accident. Three months after the events of the third season, he does not get the signatures required to be eligible for a gubernatorial candidate, but Diane unintentionally encourages him to challenge current governor Woodchuck Coodchuck-Berkowitz to a ski race for the position. Woodchuck easily triumphs over Mr. Peanutbutter in the race, but Todd, who is gifted a "drone throne" by Emily using her share of the cab company money, accidentally wins the race. He immediately resigns, forcing Woodchuck to vacate the seat and win it back through a new election, which Mr. Peanutbutter pledges to partake in. As Diane watches the crowd rally around him, she leaves BoJack another voicemail, having done so throughout the episode, but finds that his mailbox is full. Princess Carolyn finds out she is pregnant but miscarries, and Ralph asks her to move in with him. | ||||||
39 | 2 | "The Old Sugarman Place" | Anne Walker Farrell | Kate Purdy | September 8, 2017 | 402 |
In the 1940s, Beatrice's brother Crackerjack is killed in World War II, and her mother Honey has an emotional breakdown during a celebration of the end of the war. Drunk, she has Beatrice drive them home, but she crashes the car. Her father Joseph has Honey lobotomized, and she asks Beatrice to never love anyone as much as she loved her son before sending her outside to play. In the present, BoJack almost joins the wild horses, but is distracted by a call from Diane and watches as they pass by him. He drives out to his mother's lake house in Michigan, which has become dilapidated. Grumpy and flightless dragonfly Eddie helps BoJack fix it up, but BoJack intentionally tricks him into flying when he notices how depressed Eddie is. Enraged, Eddie reveals that his wife died in a flying accident and almost kills them both, and BoJack saves him from drowning. He finally calls Diane back and their banter inspires him to have the house torn down and abandon Eddie, hurt by how he was almost responsible for their deaths. | ||||||
40 | 3 | "Hooray! Todd Episode!" | Aaron Long | Elijah Aron & Jordan Young | September 8, 2017 | 403 |
Todd barely makes it to his part as a triangle player in an orchestra, and afterwards, the members tell tales of his exploits, the oboe player wishing he would take time off from all his responsibilities. Todd accidentally registers Mr. Peanutbutter as pro-fracking against Diane's wishes, and encourages her to stay true to her honest career path when she expresses doubts about her journalism. Princess Carolyn asks him to pose as the boyfriend of actress Courtney Portnoy, and he accidentally starts his own fashion line in the process while Courtney announces their engagement. He is approached by the teenage horse looking for BoJack, a girl named Hollyhock, claiming to be his daughter and wanting to find her mother. Todd tests their DNA and finds that they match, and after explaining to BoJack that he is Hollyhock's father, they have a conversation about Todd's value and he comes out to BoJack as asexual. He chooses to go to an asexual meetup group, something he had expressed anxiety over earlier, and does not show up for the orchestra, something the oboe player is happy to see. | ||||||
41 | 4 | "Commence Fracking" | Matt Garofalo | Joanna Calo | September 8, 2017 | 404 |
BoJack and Hollyhock visit the president of his fan club who he had sex with, and Hollyhock takes her list of women BoJack has slept with while he has sex with the woman to distract her. As they go through the list, BoJack unintentionally insults Hollyhock while degrading himself, causing her to run off and forcing him to look through the list to find her. He lies about her mother still being out there to get her to stay, and invites her to live with him. Princess Carolyn buys a watch that informs her when she is at peak fertility, and she and Ralph get arrested while trying to speed home during one of these windows, forcing them to have sex in the back of a police car. Mr. Peanutbutter is unable to have sex with Diane because of the campaign, leaving both of them frustrated and unfocused. She writes a hit piece on him after he allows fracking in their house and sends it while they fight, and they end up having sex. | ||||||
42 | 5 | "Thoughts and Prayers" | Amy Winfrey | Nick Adams | September 8, 2017 | 405 |
Courtney's new action movie is jeopardized by a series of mass shootings. Diane is initially anti-gun, but after Courtney uses her handgun to fend off a creepy guy in front of her, she quickly becomes pro-gun against Mr. Peanutbutter's wishes and popularizes the idea of women owning guns, causing them to again have sex after a publicized debate. When a woman perpetrates a shooting, the California Legislature votes on banning all guns rather than helping women feel more safe. BoJack and Hollyhock visit a dementia-stricken Beatrice in her nursing home after he reveals he lied about her mother, where she calls BoJack "Henrietta" and identifies old pictures of him as Crackerjack. Upset when he notices her laughing at Horsin' Around, BoJack decides to put on a live performance to see if she recognizes him, which only makes her react violently and get thrown out of the nursing home. She moves in with him and Hollyhock assures him he will be able to tell his mother how much he hates her someday. He almost puts his hand on her back, but decides against it. | ||||||
43 | 6 | "Stupid Piece of Sh*t" | Anne Walker Farrell | Alison Tafel | September 8, 2017 | 406 |
BoJack's self-loathing thoughts follow him throughout the day, represented by crudely animated sequences depicting what he is imagining. He is wounded to see Beatrice caring for a horse doll and throws it over his deck in a rage, causing her to fall into a depression. He has Mr. Peanutbutter pick up its scent and gets it back from his neighbor Felicity Huffman on the condition that he appears on her show. Princess Carolyn and Courtney's agent, Rutabaga Rabitowitz, learn that Meryl Streep is retiring on the same day as Courtney and Todd's wedding, and so they bait Streep into taking a new role. Todd, worried that the wedding will conflict with his asexuality, learns that he can still be in love with people but ultimately decides he is not comfortable fake marrying somebody. Hollyhock admits to BoJack that she has her own negative thoughts and asks if they go away, and he lies to her and promises that they do. | ||||||
44 | 7 | "Underground" | Aaron Long | Kelly Galuska | September 8, 2017 | 407 |
The foundation of Mr. Peanutbutter's house collapses during a fundraiser, sending the house underground with only Todd and Princess Carolyn not trapped inside. Enraged that Mr. Peanutbutter continued to frack, Diane locks herself in her bedroom with BoJack, who she has not seen since he returned, and drinks excessively with him while admitting how unhappy she is. Woodchuck tunnels in to save the occupants, but they accidentally cause a rockslide that cuts off their exit and crushes his hands. When he tries to take charge, Katrina manipulates the crowd into subduing him and supporting Mr. Peanutbutter, who allows everyone to eat their rations. Jessica Biel burns Zach Braff alive and the survivors eat his flesh for sustenance, planning to kill Mr. Peanutbutter next. Diane and BoJack rupture a pipe to give everyone water, but only end up flooding the house, and are narrowly saved by a colony of ants Princess Carolyn strikes a deal with. | ||||||
45 | 8 | "The Judge" | Otto Murga | Elijah Aron & Jordan Young | September 8, 2017 | 408 |
BoJack guest stars on "Felicity Huffmans' Booty Academy L.A." to fulfill his favor, and Hollyhock immediately falls for an intern that BoJack distrusts. He tries to expose the intern's supposed scumminess by getting a contestant to sleep with him, but she goes to the wrong person and BoJack is fired from the show. The intern approaches him and promises to leave Hollyhock alone if BoJack reads a script of his, leading BoJack to realize he was right all along. Todd starts a new venture involving clown dentists to make children less afraid of dentists. Mr. Peanutbutter drops out of the race and puts his full support behind a hospitalized Woodchuck, so Katrina has Biel run for governor in his stead. Princess Carolyn accompanies Ralph to meet his family during an anti-cat tradition, which makes her uncomfortable. Ralph initially says nothing, but tells off his family eventually and proudly reveals that he is having a baby with her. | ||||||
46 | 9 | "Ruthie" | Amy Winfrey | Joanna Calo | September 8, 2017 | 409 |
In the distant future, a cat named Ruthie tells her class of the worst day of her ancestor Princess Carolyn's life for a school project. Courtney fires her for mishandling her action movie and the wedding, the clasp on her family heirloom necklace breaks, and she miscarries again but does not have the heart to tell Ralph. She learns that her necklace is actually cheap, painted over jewelry, and that Judah rejected an offer to merge with another agency on her behalf, causing her to fire him. She goes home to her old apartment and gets drunk with Todd and the clown dentists, and breaks up with Ralph when he finds her. She goes to her office to sleep and gets a call from BoJack, who has spent the day stuck in court searching for Hollyhock's mother and complains about his problems. She reveals that "Ruthie" is a story she tells herself whenever she feels bad. | ||||||
47 | 10 | "lovin that cali lifestyle!!" | Anne Walker Farrell | Peter A. Knight | September 8, 2017 | 410 |
Woodchuck nearly loses the race when his new hands are discovered to be those of a serial killer, but Diane has lunch with Biel and leaks to the public that she hates avocados, tanking her popularity and winning Woodchuck the seat of governor. Princess Carolyn is visited by screenwriter Flip McVicker who pitches a thriller series called Philbert, the name of the child she and Ralph were going to have, and Todd uses his clown dentists to get her a meeting with Lenny Turtletaub. He requests BoJack play the lead role, and when Princess Carolyn cannot reach him, she reluctantly forges his signature on the contract. Todd is warned by axolotl Better Business Bureau employee Yolanda that he needs to shut down the clown dentist venture, so he releases the employees into the woods. Hollyhock overdoses on pills and her fathers warn BoJack to never talk to her again. He blames himself until he finds that Beatrice was spiking her coffee with weight loss pills, and he moves her to a poor quality nursing home and insults her before moving to leave until she says his name. | ||||||
48 | 11 | "Time's Arrow" | Aaron Long | Kate Purdy | September 8, 2017 | 411 |
Beatrice re-experiences important events of her life through disoriented, dreamlike flashbacks as BoJack drives her to the nursing home. After Honey's lobotomization, Beatrice contracts scarlet fever and Joseph burns her horse baby doll to stop the spread of infection. As a teenager, he attempts to force her into a relationship for business reasons at her debutante ball, where she meets Butterscotch Horseman, a drifter and aspiring novelist that she falls for. She finds that the man Joseph wanted her to be with is actually kind and intelligent, but Butterscotch has already impregnated her. Fueled by the trauma of seeing her doll burned, she refuses to abort the child, has a shotgun wedding with Butterscotch, and gives birth to BoJack. After BoJack leaves home, Butterscotch impregnates their maid Henrietta, and Beatrice forces her to give her horse daughter up for adoption. In the present, she recognizes BoJack but does not understand where she is, so BoJack lies to her and claims they are at her Michigan house and eating ice cream with him and her family, something she was never allowed to do as a child. | ||||||
49 | 12 | "What Time Is It Right Now" | Tim Rauch | Raphael Bob-Waksberg | September 8, 2017 | 412 |
Princess Carolyn gets Philbert picked up by the website WhatTimeIsItRightNow.com and gets BoJack's approval to have him star in it. Todd and Yolanda discover that the clown dentists have contracted rabies, which Todd turns into another business venture that gets cleared by Yolanda. Having developed feelings for him, she reveals she is also asexual and asks him out on a date. After buying a new house, Diane and Mr. Peanutbutter go on a road trip, where she reveals she always wanted a Beauty and the Beast inspired library. She returns home to find Mr. Peanutbutter had it built for her, but is heartbroken that he took her private fantasy away from her. BoJack discovers that Hollyhock is Butterscotch and Henrietta's daughter, and he gives Henrietta's number to Hollyhock's fathers. She calls him at the airport, off to meet her mother, and asks if they can accept each other as siblings instead of father and daughter, and BoJack smiles. |
The fourth season received critical acclaim. The review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes gave the season an approval rating of 97%, based on 35 reviews with an average score of 8.7/10. The site's critical consensus states: "BoJack Horseman's fourth season finds the show continuing to traverse the emotional gamut - with results that are heartbreaking as often as they are hilarious." [2] On Metacritic, the season has a weighted average of 87 out of 100, based on 5 reviews, indicating "universal acclaim". [3]
IndieWire gave the season an A grade, commenting that "by the end of the season, we know these characters, and this show, far better than ever before. BoJack's signature tropes — the background visual jokes, the animal puns, the brutal moments of sadness — remain reliably consistent, but turns the focus largely inward, ensuring that some of the more outlandish plots support and highlight the more emotional storylines". [4] The Washington Post lauded the season, praising the installment as "moving and unexpected" and that "it offers hope but never ignores the sorrows that are inevitable in real life". [5] The New York Times also gave a positive review, commenting that the "material has the snap and the poignancy we've grown accustomed to" and that "while nothing matches the adventurousness of Season 3's underwater awards show episode, Season 4's ninth episode — narrated from the future by a distant descendant of Carolyn's — is a devastating example of what BoJack can do at its best". [6]
BoJack Horseman is an American adult animated psychological tragicomedy-drama television series created by Raphael Bob-Waksberg. It stars the voices of Will Arnett, Amy Sedaris, Alison Brie, Paul F. Tompkins, and Aaron Paul. Set primarily in Hollywood, the series revolves around the anthropomorphic horse BoJack Horseman (Arnett), a washed-up star of a 1990s sitcom who plans a return to relevance with an autobiography to be written by ghostwriter Diane Nguyen (Brie). It also chronicles his contentions with his agent, Princess Carolyn (Sedaris), former rival Mr. Peanutbutter (Tompkins), roommate Todd Chavez (Paul), and his declining mental health. The series is designed by cartoonist Lisa Hanawalt, a longtime friend to Bob-Waksberg who previously collaborated on the webcomic Tip Me Over, Pour Me Out.
The first season of the animated television series BoJack Horseman premiered exclusively via Netflix's web streaming service on August 22, 2014. The season consists of 12 episodes.
The third season of the animated television series BoJack Horseman premiered on Netflix on July 22, 2016. As with the first two seasons, season 3 consists of 12 episodes.
The second season of the animated television series BoJack Horseman premiered exclusively via Netflix's web streaming service on July 17, 2015. Like the fist season, the second season also consists of 12 episodes.
BoJack F. Horseman is a fictional character and the titular protagonist of the Netflix animated comedy television series BoJack Horseman (2014–2020). He is voiced by Will Arnett and was created by Raphael Bob-Waksberg. Prior to the time the series takes place in, BoJack had starred in a fictional hit 1990s sitcom called Horsin' Around. After the show ended, BoJack struggled to find acting work, instead living off residuals from Horsin' Around's syndication.
The fifth season of the animated television series BoJack Horseman premiered on Netflix on September 14, 2018. As has been the norm in the first four seasons, season 5 also consists of 12 episodes.
"Stop the Presses" is the seventh episode of the third season of the American animated television series BoJack Horseman, and the 31st episode overall. It was written by Joe Lawson and directed by Adam Parton. The episode was released in the United States, along with the rest of season three, via Netflix on July 22, 2016. Angela Bassett, Candice Bergen, Abbi Jacobson, Margo Martindale, J. K. Simmons, and Anna Deavere Smith provided voices in guest appearances in the episode.
"BoJack Horseman: The BoJack Horseman Story, Chapter One" is the series premiere and the first episode of the first season of the American animated television series BoJack Horseman. It was written by Raphael Bob-Waksberg and directed by Joel Moser. The episode was released in the United States, along with the rest of season one, via Netflix on August 22, 2014.
"Say Anything" is the seventh episode of the first season of the American animated television series BoJack Horseman. It was written by Joe Lawson and directed by Martin Cendreda. The episode was released, along with the rest of season one, on Netflix on August 22, 2014. The episode follows BoJack Horseman's agent Princess Carolyn as she struggles with competition from her rival Vanessa Gekko as well as having difficulties in managing BoJack.
"Hank After Dark" is the seventh episode of the second season of American animated television series BoJack Horseman, and the 19th episode overall. It was written by Kelly Galuska and directed by Amy Winfrey, and was released in the United States, along with the rest of season two, via Netflix on July 17, 2015. Philip Baker Hall, Keegan-Michael Key, Lisa Kudrow, and Scott Wolf provide voices in guest appearances in the episode.
"That's Too Much, Man!" is the eleventh and penultimate episode of the third season of the American animated television series BoJack Horseman, and the 35th episode overall. It was directed by J.C. Gonzalez and written by Elijah Aron and Jordan Young, and was released in the United States, along with the rest of season three, via Netflix on July 22, 2016.
"Ruthie" is the ninth episode of the fourth season of American animated television series BoJack Horseman, and the 45th episode overall. It was written by Joanna Calo and directed by Amy Winfrey, and was released in the United States, along with the rest of season four, via Netflix on September 8, 2017. Kristen Bell, Kristin Chenoweth, and Sharon Horgan provide voices in guest appearances in the episode.
"Stupid Piece of Sh*t" is the sixth episode of the fourth season of American animated television series BoJack Horseman, and the 42nd episode overall. It was written by Alison Tafel and directed by Anne Walker Farrell, and was released in the United States, along with the rest of season four, via Netflix on September 8, 2017. Fielding Edlow, Sharon Horgan, and Felicity Huffman provide voices in guest appearances in the episode.
This is a list of episodes from the sixth and final season of Netflix's animated comedy-drama television series BoJack Horseman. Unlike the five previous seasons that had 12 episodes each, season 6 consists of sixteen episodes and is divided into two parts of eight episodes each. The first part was entirely released into Netflix's streaming service on October 25, 2019. The second part was released on January 31, 2020.
"Nice While It Lasted" is the series finale of the American animated comedy-drama television series BoJack Horseman. It is the sixteenth episode of the sixth season and the 76th episode overall. The episode, written by series creator Raphael Bob-Waksberg and directed by Aaron Long, was released on Netflix on January 31, 2020, alongside the second half of the sixth and final season.
"The View from Halfway Down" is the fifteenth episode of the sixth season of the American animated television series BoJack Horseman, and the 75th episode of the series overall. Written by Alison Tafel and directed by Amy Winfrey, the episode was released on Netflix on January 31, 2020, alongside the second half of the sixth and final season. Guest stars in this episode include Stanley Tucci, Kristen Schaal, Wendie Malick, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Brandon T. Jackson, and Zach Braff.
BoJack Horseman (Music From The Netflix Original Series) is the soundtrack album to the adult animated black comedy-drama series BoJack Horseman (2014–2020). The soundtrack for the series released by Lakeshore Records in digital and physical formats on September 1 and 29, 2017. It includes several songs, among them the full version of the main theme, Patrick Carney and Michelle Branch's version of America's "A Horse with No Name", Sextina Aquafina's "Get Dat Fetus, Kill Dat Fetus", the themes from Horsin' Around and Mr. Peanutbutter's House, and the entire score for the episode "Fish Out of Water". A vinyl edition was released on January 12, 2018, and a second re-issue was released in September 2020.