A Clockwork Origin

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Season 6 episode
Broadcast season 7 episode
A Clockwork Origin
Human Evolution.png
Professor Farnsworth and Dr. Banjo arguing about the human evolution.
No.97
Production number6ACV09
Written byDan Vebber
Directed byDwayne Carey-Hill
Title captionThis time, it's personal
First air date12 August, 2010[1]
Broadcast numberS07E09
Title referenceA Clockwork Orange
Additional
Commentary
(Transcript)
Transcript

Pictures

Season 6
  1. Rebirth
  2. In-A-Gadda-Da-Leela
  3. Attack of the Killer App
  4. Proposition Infinity
  5. The Duh-Vinci Code
  6. Lethal Inspection
  7. The Late Philip J. Fry
  8. That Darn Katz!
  9. A Clockwork Origin
  10. The Prisoner of Benda
  11. Lrrreconcilable Ndndifferences
  12. The Mutants Are Revolting
  13. The Futurama Holiday Spectacular
  14. The Silence of the Clamps
  15. Möbius Dick
  16. Law and Oracle
  17. Benderama
  18. The Tip of the Zoidberg
  19. Ghost in the Machines
  20. Neutopia
  21. Yo Leela Leela
  22. Fry Am the Egg Man
  23. All the Presidents' Heads
  24. Cold Warriors
  25. Overclockwise
  26. Reincarnation
← Season 5Season 7 →

"A Clockwork Origin"[1] is the ninety-seventh episode of Futurama, the ninth of the sixth production season and the seventh broadcast season. Professor Farnsworth, fed up with Creationists in New New York, moves to the Robot Planetoid to escape the ignorance of humanity. Only to inadvertently create mechanical life which evolved from small robots designed to clean tainted water on the rock. The crew goes with him, but leaves Zoidberg and Cubert on Earth.

The Story

Act I: "I don't want to live on this planet anymore."

Professor Farnsworth finds out that his clone Cubert was unable to go to school due to the large mob of Creationist protesters outside. Outraged, he quickly takes the Planet Express Ship to Cubert's school, the Wozniak Nerd Academy. Once there, the Professor gets into a huge argument with the protesters and meets a talking orangutan called Dr. Banjo. The doctor claims that if evolution was possible, then there wouldn't be a "missing link," in the chain between the Great Apes and Homo Sapiens. The professor aims to prove him wrong and has the crew fly to Olduvai Gorge in Africa to find the missing missing link. While in the gorge, Farnsworth finally finds the fossilized skull of a previous unknown hominid that fills in the gap. He names it Homo Farnsworth (which is a misnomer, since the hominid was too far back in the chain to actually be from the genus Homo), and takes it back to display at a museum. However, at the museum, Dr. Banjo returns and convinces the patrons that the Homo Farnsworth actually disproves evolution. Upset at everybody's ignorance, he makes the crew (except Zoidberg who stayed on Earth to take care of Cubert) drop him off at a lifeless planetoid where he will spend the rest of his days with only an inflatable shack, four grand pianos, and some pizza. He pours some Nanobots he invented into a nearby pond to eat up all the toxic minerals and give him a fresh source of water. However, before the crew could leave, the nanobots evolve into land mobile Trilobots, which eat the entire Planet Express Ship, thus trapping all of them on the planetoid.

Act II: "Look out for the next thing!"

The crew run into a nearby cave to hide from the matter-eating Trilobots. Having no edible pizza (due to all the pizzas having pineapple on them), the only food they have left is some dehydrated steak that Leela brought, but they need water. The crew run out of the cave to get to the pond, only to find that the Trilobots have gone and a huge robotic jungle is now growing. They eat some steak, but are the crew is then attacked by Robot Dinosaurs which the Trilobots evolved into. Fry is dragged off by a robotic pterodactyl, while the rest are attacked by land dinosaurs. However, they are all saved by a magnetic solar flare, which destroys all the robotic dinosaurs, but was harmless to any biological beings, as well as smaller robots, hiding in caves, such as Bender. The Professor manages to build a new spaceship out of the parts of the dinosaurs, but they must wait to the next day to use it since it is solar powered. However, Leela and Amy are kidnapped by Robot Cavemen. Meanwhile on Earth, Zoidberg is trying to take over as a father figure for Cubert, but is constantly put down by him. Cubert feels bad about this, so he goes to Zoidberg's dumpster and apologizes, saying that he makes fun of people because he is always getting picked on by bullies. Brett Blob shows up and threatens to beat the two of them up, but Zoidberg protects them by pretending to be as pathetic as possible. In doing so, he gains Cubert's respect.

Act III: "You're under arrest for crimes against science"

The next morning on the planetoid, the crew wake up to discover that Leela and Amy have been captured by robo-cavemen and forced to be their wives. Professor Farnsworth is able to make a slingshot but because it took him twelve hours to do so, they must spend another night on the planetoid before they can rescue the women. However, once they get up, they find that Amy and Leela were already free of their own means and that the cavemen dissappeared. They then meet a fully evolved, sentient, humanlike robot named Dr. Widnar who discovers them as the first carbon-based lifeforms that their society has ever seen. She takes to their Museum of Natural Robo-History, where the Professor gives a speech. However, when he reveals that he invented the nanobots in the first place, he is arrested for speaking against evolution and believing in creationism, and is put to a trial. At the trial in the Superior Gort, Bender replaces Leela as Farnsworth's lawyer and claims that Farnsworth is innocent by terms of insanity. It then all comes down to the jury's opinion, which they wouldn't have decided until the next day. The crew are forced to sleep in the Gort. The next day, the crew discovers that all the robots have further evolved into highly intelligent Robotic gas forms. The gas forms believe that all physical lifeforms are yokels compared to them and that the trial they had was pointless in the grand scheme of things. They allow them to leave the planetoid. Once they return to Earth on the ship made of dinosaur parts, Farnsworth talks to Dr. Banjo and show him holographic pictures he took of the evolution on the planetoid, to prove that it is possible for small lifeforms to evolve into more complex ones. Dr. Banjo counters in saying that evolution on the planetoid was in fact put into action by an intelligent creator: Professor Farnsworth. In the end, they compromise on the fact that both their theories are feasible.

Reception

In its original American broadcast, "A Clockwork Origin" was viewed by an estimated 1.926 million households nearly identical to That Darn Katz! [2]

Additional Info

Trivia

  • We learn that Zoidberg is Cubert's godfather.
  • Professor Farnsworth's statement that his father wasn't actually his biological father would seem to imply that he is related to Fry through his mother.
    • Although, the milkman may have been Yancy's descendant. Farnsworth didn't seem to know he was related to the Philip J. Fry that was Yancy's son, although he was famous enough to be remembered in the 31st century.
      • We're talking about a thousand year span between the two. That's 30 generations between them. Unless EVERY descendant only had one child, it's likely there were hundreds of descendants, and only in the year 3000 was it down to one. Being the great^30 grandson of a famous person doesn't mean anything to anyone other than a genealogist.

Allusions

  • Fry says the Professor's water supply looks like diet Dr. Pepper, a 21st century soft drink.
  • The "NANDerthal Cave Painting" exhibit at the robot museum is a pun on the Neanderthal, an extinct hominid, and a NAND gate, a basic electronic logic gate.
  • The "Ascent of Bot" displayed in the robot museum includes R2-D2, a robot from the Star Wars movies.
  • The iFad is a reference to Apple's iPad.
  • USB Today is a reference to USA Today. USB is presumably a shortening for the United States of Bot or similar. USB is also a reference to the USB ports (Universal Serial Bus) for computers.
  • The Superior Gort is a play on words, being a reference to both the Supreme Court and Gort, a robot in the science-fiction film The Day the Earth Stood Still. Gort was designed as part of an interstellar police force created to maintain peace in the universe.
  • The Flying Spaghetti Monster is a reference to the god of the Pastafarians. This is a double joke because the FSM and Pastafarianism started with a letter to the Kansas School Board parodying the idea of creationism being taught in schools.
  • Fry's fan dance is a reference to Lt. Uhura's fan dance in Star Trek.
  • The relationship between Zoidberg and Cubert in this episode is similar to the relationship between Homer and Bart on The Simpsons.
  • Much of the trial is a reference to Inherit the Wind.
  • The idea of a manmade society evolving rapidly (eventually beyond current humanity) was explored in The Genesis Tub, which borrowed from a Twilight Zone episode.
  • The way the crew's clothes are ripped references One Million Years B.C..

Continuity

Goofs

  • The "missing missing link", Homo farnsworth, fills the gap between "apes" and the Darwinius masillae, and would not fall under the genus Homo, which appeared much later.
Bender is seen twice in the same frame
  • In the courtroom, when Bender tells the jury to find The Professor guilty for reason of insanity, Bender can be seen twice when the court gasps. He can be seen both near the jury and between Fry and Leela.
  • Despite what was established in the precedent episode, "That Darn Katz!", the Earth appears to be turning in the right direction again when the Planet Express Ship goes to the Wozniak Nerd Academy.
    • A solution could have been found to return the planet's rotation to normal.
  • Before landing "somewhere in Deep Space", Professor Farnsworth exclaimed it was an asteroid; but in the next scene, Leela said it was a planetoid.

Characters

(In alphabetic order)

References

  1. ^ a b "Futurama: Episode Guide". MSN. Retrieved on 23 June 2010.
  2. ^ [1]