Brian & Stewie
- Episode aired May 4, 2010
- TV-14
- 30m
Brian and Stewie get locked in a bank vault where they are forced to deal with each other on a whole new level.Brian and Stewie get locked in a bank vault where they are forced to deal with each other on a whole new level.Brian and Stewie get locked in a bank vault where they are forced to deal with each other on a whole new level.
- Brian Griffin
- (voice)
- …
- Lois Griffin
- (voice)
- (credit only)
- Chris Griffin
- (voice)
- (credit only)
- Meg Griffin
- (voice)
- (credit only)
- Cleveland Brown
- (voice)
- (credit only)
- …
Featured reviews
It inspired me with so many ideas for other kinds of shows that could have bottle episodes like this where Brian and Stewie do random things in 1 room for 28 minutes. It's like that movie Saw where Adam and Lawrence did random things in 1 room for 100 minutes, but much less violent. Although Brian and Stewie itself doesn't shy away from disgusting or violent moments, it's a lot more downplayed than Fresh Heir and Herpe the Love Sore.
For all its disgusting moments, it's a surprisingly sweet story at its core, and the episode excels at telling a 28-minute story with no music or cutaways the would detract from the experience. They argue, they do dangerous fun things together, and they confess their feelings for each other. That's the least I can say without spoiling any details. It's still less impressive than Road to Rhode Island or Crimes and Meg's Demeanor, but another episode I can leave feeling happy at the end even when the plot is minimal, kind of like Frink Gets Testy.
By the way, this isn't the 150th Family Guy episode. It's only the 146th.
It's one of my favourite Family Guy episodes ever, because of the different ranges of depth it indulges in. We get to know both characters in a very deep and intimate way, as if they were absolutely real people with real-life troubles and concerns. The humour is still there, and it's funny as always, but the episode is not meant to be your typical FG episode; it goes beyond that and shows us what these two characters (and people in general) are really made of.
Not liking the episode is one thing. Dismissing it entirely because it goes against the wave of the very controversial and often criticized style of a typical "Family Guy" episode makes no sense to me. Nearly every negative review says the same things. "Where's the cutaway gags?" "It didn't make me laugh once!" Answers: "They aren't there" and "It wasn't trying to." Okay, so maybe the momentary way over-the-top gross-out humor and drunk Stewie gags were meant to elicit laughs, and I'll admit that on the former it failed to do so. But I can forgive it. I loved this episode. It is the first time "Family Guy" has really challenged viewers intellectually and spiritually. It is by far the darkest and most existential of any episode. It is the first time that you could actually close-read an episode of it (Brian reading David Copperfield to Stewie as a bedtime story is completely loaded with meaning, FWIW.) So yeah, feel free to expect one thing from "Family Guy" and be disappointed if you are not satisfied with the radical shift in tone. But it's perplexing to see someone say "It didn't make me laugh!" or "There were no non-sequiturs!" Those points are not inherent demerits. For one episode, just one, they were kind of the point.
"The 150th episode should be the funniest!"
You've put Family Guy in a shallow box, and Seth did exactly what he should've: shattered your expectations. For the rest of us with an expanded view of genres and their place in the world, this was a great episode.
Did you know
- TriviaBrian and Stewie are the only characters featured in this episode and both are voiced by Seth MacFarlane. Hence, MacFarlane is the only actor with dialogue and the entirety of the episode consists of him talking to himself.
- Quotes
Stewie Griffin: I like you lot. I guess you could say I... really like you. I would... even dare to go a little further, perhaps. I... care a great deal about you. Very great deal. Maybe even... deeper than that. I... I... I love you. I mean, you know, not in like a, "Hey, let's, you know, let's have an underpants party," or whatever grownups do when they're in love, but I mean, I mean, I love you as one loves another person whom one simply cannot do without.
Brian Griffin: Well I... I love you, too, Stewie.
Stewie Griffin: You give my life purpose, and maybe, maybe that's enough. Because that's just about the greatest gift one friend can give another.
- Crazy creditsThe usual intro is not played. Instead, the Family Guy logo is seen against a black background.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Family Guy: 200 Episodes Later (2012)