Read about how Eyepatch Morty torturing other Mortys for his own personal needs is a form of self harm/suicide/self hatred, which... I thought it was obvious?
No offense, ofc. The point is, while he does say that he's sick of Ricks in general, he also obviously hates the idea of a Morty(i.e, a human shield). Like, he says he's sick of Ricks, but other than becoming president and changing the rules of the Citadel, what has he really done to stop it happening to other Mortys? It's why he's cold, calculated, and intelligent, he wants to be less "Morty-like", so to speak.
He hates Rick, but he hates the idea of a Morty, and therefore, hates being a/being seen as a Morty.
I don't think that he thought that the abuse of Mortys was inevitable, so he didn't do anything, cuz him being president means he CAN stop it/slow it down. I think he just doesn't like Mortys. Cuz they're sidekicks who do nothing to stop it.
It's also why he has some sort of soft spot of Morty Prime, cuz MP is one of the Mortys who went against their Rick, is intelligent, and is overall, really fucking capable.
Basically: Eyepatch Morty hates Mortys, and hates being a Morty/being seen as a Morty/Mortys who act like sidekicks without actually doing anything to against it.
@glitteringcrab had made a post a while back about Evil Morty getting comforted by Summer, he just needs someone, and that’s been stuck in my head for a while now. I supposed this is the confrontation before the comfort.
I want to discuss about "There's Something About Morty" along with a brief analysis
Whether you liked the episode or not, please read this
I'll get straight to the point: Was the idea good? Yes. Did it actually work? No. Was it funny anyway? Yessss but the more I think about the long-term impact the more hopeless I feel.
I'm going to break down my opinion into points:
A) EVIL MORTY'S CHARACTERIZATION
There are two stances about Evil Morty's characterization in this episode: those who defend it and those who consider it out of character.
I think both are right to some extent.
Many interpreted the new dynamic as Evil Morty enjoying having power over Rick, being the one who could make decisions and set boundaries he never could before, where he could finally release, in some way, the resentment he had been accumulating for years. And that's where the implication comes in that he not only enjoyed being in charge for once but also the connection they were forming, even if he refuses to admit it.
That's fine, because there's no a single way to feel about your aggressor or to deal with it; you can hate them and at the same time crave their presence and/or validation, that's normal.
The problem with Evil Morty is that this internal struggle didn't exist until now.
Years were spent building his character as someone distant, cold, one of the few who could mess with Rick because he understood him on a level no one else could and that's why he got away with it. But now just because he had a few adventures with him and seeing how "good" he is, not only tolerates but actually likes him.
I'm not saying it's impossible; my problem is with how it was done. The fact that it happened off-screen completely ruined his character because it appeared out of nowhere.
You can give me a thousand justifications for why Evil Morty ended up sympathizing with Rick. That doesn't change the fact that, as a fandom, these ideas are used to justify the biggest and most important change in a character's attitude, personality, and perception that wasn't even show. It was too abrupt. And if that many people feels that Evil Morty was out of character then something is clearly wrong with the execution of the idea.
No one had ever said "this doesn't feel like something he would do" until now, so the coherence with who he was and his motivation was lost.
B) THE MORTYS
Many fans justify the rivalry that forms between Evil Morty and Morty as a good twist because it was "predictable that they would team up", but I don't understand the point of this. Throughout the episodes, there was a kind of truce between them; it was something that had been building, and that's why many of us expected it to happen.
Besides, I don't like those who justify this twist as "this is Evil Morty's more Morty-like side"
Why, if there are countless universes, if there are so many possibilities, if destiny doesn't exist and Rick and Morty's bond across the multiverse is an illusion, an artificial creation, why should someone like Evil Morty fall into the trap of "needing Rick"? You're already doing that to the protagonist, don't do the same to someone who defined himself as independent from the start.
And with that thought, I move directly to the next point.
C) WHY MANY PEOPLE HATE IT (ME INCLUDED)
It's simple, taking this abrupt turn with such a relevant character destroyed his concept by not taking the time to develop it.
Even if the reason behind this is revealed in the next episodes it doesn't erase how badly they left him. I'm sure this episode is meant to start Morty's arc, but this arc has come at the expense of one of the most relevant characters in the series.
And I swear, I didn't care that they kicked his ass, I don't think he was nerfed, as Rick said all of this is a consequence of his own ego. The problem is that I keep seeing the series fall into the same shit: reducing Morty to his attachment to Rick.
In the Citadel episode, Morty gave a speech:
"We're Mortys. We're not defined by our relationship to Rick. Our destiny is our own!"
And Evil Morty was the proof of this.
But now this episode imply that he wanted to become Rick's new Morty???? to make Morty jealous just for the sake of it??? sorry but if you put it that way it doesn't make sense. He never care about this before and doing it this way turned out as a strange obsession, a crush as they said, because although his feelings are a logic turn, they exaggerated his behaviour to such an extent that he ended up being reduced to the typical villain
What happened to the criticism that the series itself did, at given how ironic it is to call him evil?
Like, I understand wanting to give him flaws, but hating Rick was never one of them.
D) HOW COULD IT BE BETTER?
I'm still complaining so instead of just whining like a little bitch I'm going to tell you how I THINK they could make it better...
Do you know Lapis Lazuli? yeah the one from Steven Universe, THAT'S a good example of a victim missing a toxic relationship.
That's my solution, you're welcome.
CONCLUSION!!!
What made Evil Morty so special was being the only sheep who escaped the flock. The exception.
The idea that he still feels the need for a connection with Rick is great, but they didn't know how to make it (waste of potential as usual in this show)
I think the problem is that they keep forgetting an important factor:
The Rage of Morty.
Using a character like Evil Morty (created to shatter the illusion that Mortys are nothing without Rick) to illustrate the narrative that Morty is emotionally dependent on his grandfather is what leads to discontent, because it ignores the fact that however "good and healthy" Rick and his dynamic with Morty may have become, this resentment and repressed violence that Morty harbors against him has been building since the BEGINNING OF THE SERIES.
Morty's origin always seemed peculiar to me. He was originally made as a punching bag for Rick and that was it. It wasn't until someone on the team said "the joke is gonna get boring and repetitive" that they gave him a bit more agency. Why? Well, as Lazzo said: Morty is the deepest character because he has to deal with the most.
Forgetting this reduces him to a punching bag again, regardless of the stage of evolution of the dynamic or what kind of Morty we're talking about.
Evil Morty isn't only known for his intelligence or ability to face danger; Prime Morty and Arcade Morty have shown us that this is a trait other versions have too. Evil Morty stands out because he's resentment put into action.
Off topic but I need to be honest fot a second... This is a thought I've had for quite a time now, but it's not supported by any kind of argument, just what I feel so don't take it seriously.
I feel they’re trying to sell us a redemption that Rick doesn’t deserve yet.
For example, in the past there was this little problem where Rick was portrayed as too cool because he was the smartest and always right, and that's why many fans admired him for his "superiority", because no matter what, Rick always won and there were no real consequences. "NOTHING IS REAL SO NOTHING MATTERS!!!"
I don't think that's the case now, but things still revolve around him. He's always the center of everything. But the show is called Rick AND MORTY for a reason, and like... just because he goes to therapy does that mean everyone have to like him? after everything he's done??
This bothers me especially with Evil Morty because he knew the truth about the Citadel, he was aware that the Ricks clone and sell Mortys as if they were objects and not people. He's so traumatized and felt so desperate that he went to the extreme of losing his compassion and morals just to free himself!!
That's why I think resentment should be the central theme. I don't want Morty to hate Rick, but resentment is a logic consequence that's need a resolution before establishing Rick as a better person and keep falling into one-side of emotional dependency (one-sided? yes!! because morty is always the one who feel jealous)
oh but what do I know.
ok that's all I'm tired. Ty for reading!! You're free to have your own opinion. I accept any counterargument or anything, ANYTHING!!! I just really want to talk about this with other fans.
Things that don't add up in "There's something about Morty"
I'm still suspicious of it being the fake reality episode the creators had mentioned, for the following reasons:
1. Eyepatch Morty's motivation doing a U-turn, and him getting into trouble just so he could have the final word
2. Eyepatch Morty being sick of Rick vs trying to steal Rick C-137 (?!?!?!)
3. Eyepatch Morty saving Morty Prime vs EM trying to kill him
4. Eyepatch Morty being super cautious vs showing off his lair and the Omega Device
5. Eyepatch Morty's sad music motif not making an appearance
6. Eyepatch Morty's standard flat expression getting replaced by this smartass one
7. Beth and Jerry getting along despite Jerry being kinda pathetic as usual
8. Usually hyper-competent Summer doing nothing
9. Rick not being drunk at all
10. Rick no longer holding Eyepatch Morty in high regard
11. Rick not protecting Space Beth
12. The writers calling him the main villain "Evil Morty is actually the more powerful villain and powerful villains don't just hide from you or fight you; they own you"
and then him just LOSING the Omega Device
13. I will also add the Smiths having a pool, but that COULD be canon from now on
If this IS the canon episode, then what on earth were all those OTHER moments in the show? Did EM's motivation never meant anything all along? Him asking Morty Prime to come with him, and just accepting his refusal? Him being ultra cautious and covering all his bases was thrown out the window in favor of him antagonizing a Rick, something he really didn't have to do? Rick C137 making up with his daughters was just forgotten? The option to make Summer interact with this version of her brother was not even explored?
If this is the fake reality episode, then it's BRILLIANT.
It gives the fans what they want, and the writers can build up Eyepatch Morty's actual backstory and the repercussions of his abuse in the following seasons. BRILLIANT, I tell you!
If this is NOT the fake reality episode, then it's just horrible writing. Not only because it felt like cheap, superficial, cliché fan wish-fulfillment and a poorly written fanfic forcing two interesting characters to act out of character in order to interact, but because ALL EMOTION, ALL MOTIVATION, EVERYTHING they had built up until now never meant anything.
Not to mention how damaging and demeaning it is to show a victim of abuse just returning to the abuser like that. Sure, trauma bonding and hoovering are things that happen, but presenting them like that was terrible. It doesn't happen out of the blue. The abuser makes promises, reaches out, appears to try to change, guilt-trips the victim...
And I have no interest in watching a show that depicts abuse and trauma bonding so poorly.
okay now that i've given my zoebrina take i might as well to do one i disagree with a lot of people on. that disagreement being that most people think them being sherlock+moriarty style enemies is complexity enough and i don't think that's true. anyway
They need to put those damn bee akumatizations for Chloe down. I'm sick of it. There's nothing we could gain by reinforcing the fact that she misses being Queen Bee for the ten millionth time. Just let her have another color please? Or a different justification for all the spikes? I have nothing against making her a haughty Baroness-type villain in a dress. That should be the connective tissue now. No more bees. NO MORE!