Since Rick and Morty season 7’s ending proves the show hasn’t lost its appeal yet. Season 7, episode 10, “Fear No Mort,” was an inventive, creepy, and hilarious outing that fleshed out Morty’s character more than ever before.

Since the series is faring so well with critics and fans alike, with “Fear No Mort” earning Rick and Morty its best Rick and Morty: The Movie has been in the works for years, and series co-creator Dan Harmon has occasionally commented on his ideas for the feature-length spinoff. However, despite how fun it might sound, Rick and Morty’s spinoff movie should not be in live-action, even though this would represent a major medium shift for the series.

Christopher Lloyd As Rick Was All We Needed From A Live-Action Rick And Morty

The Back to the Future Star Was A Perfect Live-Action Rick

Before Rick and Morty’s season 5 finale aired in 2021, the show’s creators released a promo that teased a fictional live-action version of the series. Back to the Future series star Christopher Lloyd played the live-action Rick, while Jaeden Martell of It and Y2K fame played his long-suffering sidekick Morty. The promotional videos featuring Christopher Lloyd offered the best possible live-action take on Rick and Morty, both because of their ingenious premise and their merciful brevity.

Viewers had wanted to see a live-action version of Rick and Morty for years, and casting Lloyd as Rick was an ingeniously clever bit of meta-humor. After all, disgraced series co-creator Justin Roiland originally based Rick and Morty on Doc and Marty from the Back to the Future movies, so it was a full circle moment to have Lloyd play the character. However, outside this neat casting gag, the premise of a live-action Rick and Morty doesn’t have as much potential as it appears to.

The show’s plentiful comedic gore and gross-out moments could easily cross the line into unpleasant grotesquerie if translated from its cartoon world into live-action reality.

This was evident from the promos, as the show’s anarchic humor doesn’t translate well to the limitations of live-action. Some of Rick and Morty's best episodes are based on premises, like a literal plot device or a talking pickle, that come to life in animation but could easily look cheap, bizarre, or plain off-putting in live-action. Not only that, but the show’s plentiful comedic gore and gross-out moments could easily cross the line into unpleasant grotesquerie if translated from its cartoon world into live-action reality.

A Full Rick And Morty Episode Or Movie In Live-Action Would Never Work

Rick and Morty Really Relies On The Medium of Animation

Christopher Lloyd Rick and Morty

Despite how fun these promos were as self-contained comedy skits, a live-action Rick and Moryy movie would be a terrible idea. Seeing actual teenagers playing Morty and Summer would make the situations that the characters end up in seem far more inappropriate, and the general level of chaotic violence in the series would seem darker and more brutal in live-action. The live-action format would also mean that Rick and Morty would need to spend a lot of money on practical effects and CGI to create convincing alien creatures, mutants, monsters, and other assorted ing cast .

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In the Rick and Morty season 7 premiere alone, Rick hung out with the small yellow alien humanoid Mr. Poopybutthole, the talking cat alien Squanchy, the aptly named Birdperson, a Predator, Hugh Jackman, and a robot/human hybrid named Gearhead. It is tough to imagine how, even with an unlimited budget, Rick and Morty’s live-action movie would bring all these characters to life in a way that does justice to their original cartoon designs. Put simply, the inherent cartoonishness of Rick and Morty makes it ill-suited to a long-form live-action adaptation.

The Rick And Morty Movie Will Happen Eventually, Just Not In Live-Action

Rick and Morty’s Movie Shouldn’t Be Live-Action For The Sake Of Budget And Tone

Judging by Harmon’s comments, it is only a matter of time before the Rick and Morty movie happens. Considering how successful episodes like Rick and Morty’s “The Vat of Acid Episode” and “Pickle Rick” were at taking a seemingly simple premise and turning it into something surprisingly profound, I have no doubt that the show’s long-awaited jump to the big screen will be worth all the delays. Clearly, the creative team isn’t pursuing a movie before they have a story that is worth changing formats for.

I don't think that Rick and Morty’s movie would benefit from switching to live-action as there are precious few traditional 2D animated movies being released in cinemas.

That said, not everything necessarily needs to change for the spinoff. I don't think that Rick and Morty’s movie would benefit from switching to live-action, as there are precious few traditional 2D animated movies being released in cinemas, and even fewer that become major studio hits. As such, Rick and Morty's movie should help to bring back this dying art form by eschewing live-action in favor of the medium that allowed the show to thrive and build its fan base in the first place.

Source: IMDb

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Rick and Morty
Release Date
December 2, 2013
Network
Adult Swim
Showrunner
Dan Harmon
  • Headshot Of Spencer Grammer
    Summer Smith (voice)
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Justin Roiland
    Rick Sanchez / Morty Smith

WHERE TO WATCH

Streaming

Directors
Bryan Newton, Dominic Polcino, Anthony Chun, John Rice, Stephen Sandoval, Jeff Myers
Writers
Tom Kauffman, Wade Randolph, Eric Acosta, David Phillips, Erica Rosbe, Sarah Carbiener, Matt Roller, Michael Waldron, Caitie Delaney
Franchise(s)
Rick and Morty
Creator(s)
Justin Roiland, Dan Harmon