Dan Harmon Says 'Rick and Morty' Doesn't Have An Endgame
Rick and Morty used to dwell in the “one and done” style of storytelling absent from most [...]
Don't Out-plan The Audience
But Rick and Morty has a slight conundrum with its immense popularity and countless YouTube theories about what it all means, and Harmon is aware of those expectations.
"Our viewers are in the millions and they're able to analyze the show even better than people who are paid to do so for nine hours a day," Harmon said. "I don't consider it my job to outthink and out-plan the audience.
"I've seen examples in television of [showrunners] trying to keep ahead of the audience and blow their minds with a finale that fans already decoded in episode 1."
Without naming the shows directly, mystery plots from Westworld and Mr. Robot spring to mind, and Harmon doesn't believe Rick and Morty will fall into those same trappings.
"Maybe some [writers] can do that, maybe that ups the ante for a new breed of chessmaster, but we still consider Rick and Morty a largely modular timeless show and you can pick up and watch any episode and that crack rock will get you just as high as any other crack rock. Unlike a truly serialized show like Game of Thrones, there's a backbone to the show where it's Rick and Morty going on adventures and it's fun, like Doctor Who," Harmon said.
prevnext"That's life, brother."
Harmon added that the show doesn't want to plan too far ahead so they're painted into a corner.
The interviewer wondered what the overall point to the show is, given that it balances ridiculous comedy with intense character-driven moments of development. When asked if there was permanent growth or consequences for the characters, Harmon had a poignant response.
"This is going to be the most pretentious answer, but I mean it with the smirk I'm delivering it with: You just described life, brother," Harmon said. "And I prefer it that way because [the show] has the maximum shelf life and the minimum shark-jumping possibility if you just commit to that fact — which is that sometimes you can't tell if your best friend really turned a new leaf or he's just a serial leaf-turner."
Modern shows tend to push characters down a path and show how they grow after certain events, and viewers have since been conditioned to expect and anticipate those moments. But real life isn't like that.
"You don't know among the real people of your world when their 'story' has changed, when they're really growing, or just engaged in some new cycle or habit. It makes me happy to hear a relatively new viewer like yourself is confused about whether there's real growth happening," Harmon said.
The season finale of Rick and Morty airs this Sunday on Adult Swim.
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