The Man Who Flew Too Much/References
Wikisimpsons - The Simpsons Wiki
|
|
|
|
780 "The Man Who Flew Too Much"
|
|
|
Cultural references
- The episode title is a reference to the film The Man Who Knew Too Much.
- Part of the episode is based on the 1993 film Alive. Marge watched the movie in "Fear of Flying".
- "Bowl Me to the Moon" is a parody of "Fly Me to the Moon" by Frank Sinatra.
- Kent Brockman refers to the Pin Pals as "Super Bowlers".
- Comic Book Guy has figures of "the Unsellable X-Men", modified to represent the Pin Pals.
- At the ceremony, the band plays "For He's a Jolly Good Fellow", with a modified version sung by the people at the church at the end.
- Ned says "O captain, my captain" when introducing Homer on stage, referencing the poem "O Captain! My Captain!" by Walt Whitman.
- The mascot on Moe's peanuts is a parody of Mr. Peanut, the mascot for Planters.
- "Blackhawk Dead" is a reference to the book Black Hawk Down.
- Luigi tells Chief Wiggum that the cops put his daughters through college. He then says "Seven Sisters", but clarifies that he means he had seven daughters and that he wasn't referring to the Seven Sisters colleges.
- Moe tells Bart he'll use his intestines as violin strings to play "Flight of the Bumblebee", adding that he'll go Rimsky-Korsakov on him.
- Moe mentions people getting frostbite at Buffalo Bills games.
- Moe refers to Barney as "Optimist Prime," referencing Optimus Prime from Transformers.
- "Silent Night" plays when Marge is decorating the house for Christmas.
- The Pin Pals discuss the Cowardly Lion, the Scarecrow, and the Tin Man from The Wizard of Oz, with Homer misremembering what each character wanted from the Wizard.
- When Homer tells Ned he hasn't called him "Stupid Flanders" once while on the mountain, Ned asks if Homer wants a Nobel Peace Prize.
- Mona appears to Homer as if she is in Hell with Machiavelli, Che Guevara, and Casanova.
- The scene where Homer frees himself from the snow is inspired by the opening of the comic The Amazing Spider-Man #33.[1]
- The First Church of Springfield marquee reads "Four funerals and a funeral," referencing the film Four Weddings and a Funeral.
- Fausto's fate is based on Beck Weathers, a survivor of the 1996 Mount Everest disaster.[2]
- Homer says "That'll do, Flanders. That'll do," referencing the ending of Babe.
Trivia
- Marge mentions that Grampa is 87 years old.
- Moe has a peanut allergy.
- During the Gracie Films gag, the sound of a bowling strike is heard.
Continuity
Goofs
References