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"Treehouse of Horror IV" was directed by David Silverman and co-written by Conan O'Brien (his final assignment for The Simpsons; by the time this episode aired, his brand-new late night show on NBC had been on for a little over a month), Bill Oakley, Josh Weinstein, Greg Daniels, Dan McGrath, and Bill Canterbury.
The original "Treehouse of Horror" episode aired on October 25, 1990, and was inspired by EC Comics Horror tales. [1] From "Treehouse of Horror" (1990) to "X" (1999), every episode has aired in the week preceding or on October 31; "II" and "X" are the only two episodes to air on Halloween.
"Treehouse of Horror III" "Treehouse of Horror V" The Simpsons Trick or Treehouse: Springfield Murder Mysteries: September 5, 2000 "Black Widower" "Cape Feare" The Simpsons Trick or Treehouse: Heaven & Hell: September 5, 2000 "Bart Sells His Soul" "Lisa the Skeptic" The Simpsons.com: November 27, 2000 "Das Bus" "Itchy & Scratchy Land" "Homer ...
Gutierrez and composer Juan Carlos Enriquez have put together an intro/couch gag to “Treehouse of Horror XXXV” (or in this case “El Treehouse del Horror XXXV”) that includes a version …
"Treehouse of Horror XIX" received mixed reviews from critics. Rick Bentley of the Seattle Times described it as a "paint-by-numbers episode". [ 15 ] Robert Canning of IGN gave the episode a 7.9/10, calling it "funny, entertaining and even nostalgic [which] only makes this yearly tradition that much better."
In the third Treehouse of Horror episode, the Simpson family holds a Halloween party and several family members tell scary stories: "Clown Without Pity" : In Lisa's story, Homer buys Bart a Krusty doll which turns out to be evil and tries to kill Homer.
“Treehouse of Horror XXXIII. 20th TelevisionThere are two kinds of The Simpsons fans: ones who believe the show hasn’t been good since the turn of the century, and ones who just keep watching ...
Treehouse of Horror episodes typically consist of four parts: an opening and Halloween-themed version of the credits, followed by three segments.These segments usually have a horror, science fiction or fantasy theme and quite often are parodies of films, novels, plays, television shows, Twilight Zone episodes, or old issues of EC Comics.