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Michael Moran of The Times and Emily VanDerWerff of Slant Magazine both ranked "Cape Feare" as the fourth-best in the show's history. [23] [24] Cast member Hank Azaria cited this episode as his favorite in the series. [25] [26] IGN ' s Robert Canning gave the episode a perfect score of 10 out of 10 and named it the best Sideshow Bob episode of ...
Ben Rayner of the Toronto Star listed "Cape Feare", "Sideshow Bob's Last Gleaming" and "Brother From Another Series" among the best episodes of the series, writing "forget Frasier, these are Kelsey Grammer's best roles." [77] "The Italian Bob" and its writer John Frink won a Writers Guild of America Award in 2007 in the animation category. [78]
"Sideshow Bob Roberts" is the fifth episode of the sixth season of the American animated television series The Simpsons. It originally aired on Fox in the United States on October 9, 1994. [ 1 ] Kelsey Grammer returns in his fourth major appearance as Sideshow Bob , who, in this episode, wins the Springfield mayoral election through electoral ...
The Simpsons killed off Sideshow Bob in this year's twisted Treehouse of Horror special. One of the show's most-loved and longest-serving characters, Bob - voiced by Kelsey Grammer - finally meets ...
Cape Feare" is the second episode of The Simpsons' fifth season, which premiered on the Fox network on October 7, 1993 after being held over from season four. The episode features Sideshow Bob trying to kill Bart Simpson after getting out of jail. It is a spoof of the 1962 film Cape Fear as well as its 1991 remake, but alludes to other horror ...
Bart tries to tempt Walt to sing "Three Little Maids From School Are We" from The Mikado; the same song was also used in an earlier episode, "Cape Feare", which also featured Sideshow Bob. Later in the show, when Sideshow Bob reveals his true identity, he exclaims he is now "able to sing all the Gilbert & Sullivan I damn well please", followed ...
Even though the episode aired during the beginning of the fifth season, "Cape Feare" was the last episode written by the original team of writers and guest starred Kelsey Grammer as Sideshow Bob. [3] Compared to previously produced episodes, the episode featured several elements that could be described as cartoonish. [2]
75 years after that, Cape Feare is performed as a musical in a theater dedicated to The Simpsons. The characters, plot and morals have changed into more serious and epic forms. For example, Mr. Burns has been combined with Sideshow Bob (the actual Cape Feare villain) and is now a supernatural avatar of death and destruction.