Summary

  • The Simpsons is evolving in season 36, focusing more on character-driven comedy over zany gags, pleasing critics and fans alike.
  • Season 36 will feature a special Treehouse of Horror episode paying homage to Ray Bradbury, signaling a potential new direction for the series.
  • The series has found success by taking formal risks in recent seasons, reinvigorating the show and proving its ability to adapt.

Although The Simpsons’ usual retcons.

As YouTuber The Simpsons season 36 promises more surprises, with the series premiere implying the characters might start to age.

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The Simpsons Season 36 Includes A Treehouse of Horror Presents Episode

The Season Will Parody Three Classic Ray Bradbury Stories

Sideshow Bob looking scared and Lisa looking threatening both wearing orange prison jumpsuits in The Simpsons season 35 Treehouse of Horror

However, the most exciting news about season 36 came from The Simpsons at San Diego Comic-Con 2024. There, The Simpsons creators revealed that season 36 would include a Treehouse of Horror Presents tribute to the work of Ray Bradbury, something the show has only attempted once before. Season 34, episode 5, “Not IT,” was a full-episode parody of Stephen King’s famous horror novel IT and its movie and television adaptations. This ambitious outing may soon be bested by “Simpsons Wicked This Way Comes,” a tribute to the legendary actor Bradbury that parodies three of his famous stories.

“Simpsons Wicked This Way Comes” proves that the Treehouse of Horror Presents banner could become a regular fixture in the series.

On the face of it, this episode's announcement was always going to be exciting. Bradbury is one of the most influential genre authors of the twentieth century, and he even penned some of The Twilight Zone episodes that early Treehouse of Horror outings parodied. However, it is the changes to The Simpsons formula that make this announcement truly great. While “Not IT” was an exciting one-off experiment that stood out as one of season 34’s strongest episodes, “Simpsons Wicked This Way Comes” proves that the Treehouse of Horror Presents banner could become a regular fixture in the series.

The Simpsons Season 34’s Stephen King Spoof Broke The Show’s Rules

The Season Was The First To Include Two Treehouse of Horror Episodes

What made “Not IT” so notable was not just its clever parody of King’s work and the inventive ways The Simpsons used its existing cast as stand-ins for IT’s heroes. It was the revelation that The Simpsons can successfully change its formula even after so many years on the air that made this episode a season 34 standout. The Simpsons broke its own rules with “Not IT” as the series had never included two Treehouse of Horror episodes in one season before, and this gamble paid off when the episode received stellar reviews. Now, the show can repeat this feat.

The Simpsons’ future-set episodes prove that the show has always excelled when it changes its formula.

“Simpsons Wicked This Way Comes” has a harder job since the series will be spoofing an author whose work has been out of the limelight for some time. In contrast, King’s IT was adapted into a billion-dollar franchise only three years before “Not IT” arrived on screens. That said, this shouldn’t deter the show’s creators. ’ future-set episodes prove that the show has always excelled when it changes its formula and tries out risky formal experiments. Meanwhile, the fact that Rick and Morty parodied Bradbury years earlier makes The Simpsons season 36’s success more likely.

The Simpsons Needs To Change Its Formula

Seasons 34 and 35 Gained Acclaim By Taking Formal Risks

After years of stagnation, seasons 34 and 35 of The Simpsons proved that the show still had fresh ideas when it came to its formula. This was evidenced not just by season 34's two Treehouse of Horror episodes (which were among the outing’s best), but also by other formally experimental episodes like season 34, episode 3, ”Lisa the Boy Scout.” This bizarrely meta episode not only acknowledged that The Simpsons was a TV show but also made light of its critical decline and its place in pop culture history. Season 34, episode 6, “Treehouse of Horror XXXIII,” pulled off something similar.

In this outing’s final segment, the eponymous Springfield family finds themselves stranded in a theme park that is dedicated to all things The Simpsons. They encounter fans of the show, recreate famous scenes, and address the many memes that The Simpsons has spawned throughout its existence. While The Simpsons has been replaced as both TV’s edgiest cartoon comedy and the medium’s sweetest animated sitcom, this segment proved that the show has one thing over its competitors. The Simpsons is part of cultural history and, since the show is still on the air, the series can comment on its meta-impact.

Early on in its history, the Treehouse of Horror episodes were the first Simpsons outings to split their runtime into shorter subplots.

The Simpsons Treehouse of Horror Is An Ideal Conduit For Experimentation

The Long-Running Show Shines When The Simpsons Changes Its Rules

The Simsons 3D Homer in 1995's "Treehouse of Horror VI," surrounded by a landscape of shapes and equations

The reason that season 36’s Treehouse of Horror Presents episode is so exciting is because The Simpsons has always used its annual Halloween specials to push the envelope and experiment. Early on in its history, the Treehouse of Horror episodes were the first Simpsons outings to split their runtime into shorter subplots. This format was eventually adopted by the series more broadly as, from seasons 10 and 11 onward, the first act of a given episode would often be a self-contained story. In its Golden Age, The Simpsons used the Treehouse of Horror banner to push censorship boundaries.

While The Simpsons has retconned character deaths, the show is usually slow to kill off even minor ing characters. This changes with each year’s Treehouse of Horror special since these Halloween outings allow the creators to let loose without fear of canon inconsistencies. This results in gorier, stranger episodes that embrace riskier storytelling strategies. In season 7, episode 6, “Treehouse of Horror VI,” The Simpsons even utilized 3D animation at a time when it was still cutting-edge technology. This willingness to shake up the show’s format proves that The Simpsons' Treehouse of Horror episodes are vital to its success.

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The Simpsons
Release Date
December 17, 1989

Network
FOX
Cast
Andrew Shue, Chris Elliott, Courtney Thorne-Smith, Jack Lemmon
Franchise(s)
The Simpsons
Seasons
36