Dog of Death

All you want to know about Dog of Death

The Simpsons episode
"Dog of Death"
A gravely ill Santa's Little Helper undergoes surgery
Episode no. 54
Prod. code 8F17
Orig. airdate March 12, 1992
Show runner(s) Al Jean & Mike Reiss
Written by John Swartzwelder
Directed by Jim Reardon
Chalkboard "I saw nothing unusual in the teacher's lounge"
Couch gag Homer gets there first and lies down. The rest of the family arrive and sit on him. Homer flails his arms.
DVD
commentary
Matt Groening
Al Jean
Jim Reardon

"Dog of Death" is the 19th episode of The Simpsons' third season. It was first broadcast in North America on March 12, 1992

Contents

Plot

Springfield is "in the grip of lottery fever" with a $130 million jackpot and, as a result, an ailing Santa's Little Helper is ignored.

Once he is discovered to be sick, the family rushes him to the hospital to undergo an emergency operation of bloat. Homer is saddened to tell Bart and Lisa that they just can not afford the $750 for the operation, but seeing how much everyone (including himself) loves the dog, he resolves to find a way to pay for it.

To save up the money, everyone must make sacrifices and give up their small luxuries. Among other things, Homer has to give up buying beer, Marge has to forgo her weekly lottery ticket, Bart has to have his hair cut for free at Springfield Barber College, Lisa has to forgo the 4th edition of Encyclopedia Generica (Copernicus to Elephantiasis), and Maggie's clothes have to last a little longer.

These sacrifices put a great strain on the family: in the next lottery, Marge's regular numbers would have won $40,000; Homer has to beg drinks of beer at Moe's by singing; Lisa has to do a report on Copernicus using a dog-eared third rate reference book; Maggie's clothes rip to shreds leaving her in a modified Crown Royal potato sack; and Bart suffers from an awful haircut. All the family members take their resentment out on the dog.

Feeling unloved, Santa's Little Helper runs away from home and goes off on an adventure, only to be captured, taken to the pound, and adopted by Mr. Burns, who trains him to become one of his vicious attack hounds. After a long brainwashing process, consisting of the Ludovico technique, and Santa's Little Helper being trained by attacking Smithers who is in a protection suit, Santa's Little Helper in turn becomes a bloodthirsty killer.

The family begin to regret all the nasty things they said about the dog, Bart decides that his mission is to get Santa's Little Helper back. When Bart goes to Burns's mansion to retrieve his dog, Santa's Little Helper (along with other vicious dogs) tries to attack him but remembers all the good times they had and snaps out of his brainwashed state. After that, the other vicious dogs try to attack Bart, but Santa's Little Helper growls at them to leave Bart alone. The dog then returns to the family who starts loving him again.

The episode ends with a disclaimer: "No dogs were harmed in the filming of this episode. A cat got sick and somebody shot a duck, but that's it."

Cultural references

  • Lisa corrects Homer, indicating Nixon's dog was named Checkers.
  • The veterinarian bears a striking resemblance to Vince Edwards, who played Ben Casey on the 1960s drama of the same name.
  • Among the books that end up in the Simpsons' fireplace are The Lottery by Shirley Jackson, Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury (which, aptly enough, centers on a society where firefighters are hired to burn books and institutionalize anyone who owns them), Fatherhood by Bill Cosby and a book entitled "Canine Surgery". Fatherhood was heavily referenced in the episode Saturdays of Thunder earlier this season.
  • When we see Santa's Little Helper fighting the bear it seems to match the similar scene in The Fox and the Hound
  • The scene in which Mr. Burns and Smithers brainwash Santa's little helper is a parody of Stanley Kubrick's 1971 film A Clockwork Orange, complete with Beethoven's "Ode to Joy". The film uses footage of a kind that would aggravate a dog: a dog being hit with a rolled-up newspaper, a shoe kicking a water dish, a kitten playing with a ball of string, a tank running over a doghouse, a dog being hit on the head by a falling toilet seat, and finally "footage" of Lyndon Johnson holding his dog up in the air by the ears (he really did this). Interspersed with this footage are scenes more typical of the "Clockwork Orange" reference, including a nuclear explosion and "footage" of the Hindenburg disaster.
  • Music from Peter and the Wolf, a children's story composed by Sergei Prokofiev, is played over the wanderings of Santa's Little Helper through Springfield's outer domains.
  • This episode contains some references to facts or rumors about Michael Jackson; for example, Kent Brockman's butler telling Kent that his pet llama bit Ted Kennedy, and Mr. Burns is sleeping in an iron lung as part of his longevity treatment.
  • A quick cutaway shows that Mr. Burns lives on the corner of Mammon and Croesus. Both refer to his wealth and avarice.

Previous episode references

External links

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