The Devil Wears Nada/References
Wikisimpsons - The Simpsons Wiki
< The Devil Wears Nada
Revision as of 10:30, January 31, 2021 by SolarBot (talk | contribs) (→Cultural references: replaced: {{w|Jim Morrison}} → Jim Morrison)
|
|||||||||
|
|
|
Cultural references
- The episode title is a pun on the 2003 novel by Lauren Weisberger and 2006 film directed by David Frankel, The Devil Wears Prada. "Nada" is Spanish for "nothing".
- The whole episode is also a parody of the story, as they are both about someone who has a controlling and despotic boss and is in a new job which leaves them no time to spend with their partner.
- Other scenes, such as when Homer and Carl go to France and Homer has to remind Carl the names of the people at the party, are also parodies of the book.
- In the Title screen gag, Homer floats across the screen in a lawnchair with a bunch of balloons attached to it, referencing the 1982 flight of Larry Walters (nicknamed "Lawnchair Larry"), who reached an altitude of 15,000 feet by attaching 45 helium-filled weather balloons to a patio chair.
- Lenny, Carl and Homer imagine themselves racing through the power plant in MINI Coopers, very similar to a scene from the 2003 caper film The Italian Job.
- Homer and Marge visit "Smooches on the Beach" hotel for a romantic getaway, which is a parody of the real Shutters on the Beach Hotel in Santa Monica, California. (http://shuttersonthebeach.com/)
- Carl asks Homer to get him a room "with a view of Jim Morrison's grave": that would be in the famous Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris, which would not however be viewable from Carl's hotel.
Goofs
- When Marge has Homer roll the love dice, the words on the faces (and their positions relative to each other) change with every roll.
- The Louvre Museum is actually closed on Tuesdays and not on Mondays as Carl and Homer believed.