Review: 'Rick and Morty: Solaricks' (2024)

The season 6 premiere for Adult Swim’s Rick and Morty indicates a much-needed shift in attitude for the series. As well-regarded as it is, Rick and Morty has had a shaky run with the award-winning highs of “The Vat of Acid Episode” and the confusing lows of “Rickdependence Spray.” The series has returned with “Solaricks,” and if it’s any indication of what’s to come, this could be set on a promising path for the future.

[Warning: Spoilers from Rick and Morty: Solaricks are below!]

Rick and Morty‘s Inconsistency and “Solaricks” promise to do better

The massively popular animated series spent its infancy dealing in the angsty teenager-oriented adult animated territory, focusing more on jokes that laugh at the mere existence of “things” like lore or storylines. But it never seemed entirely dedicated to that idea. Sure, episodes like “Never Ricking Morty” would be entire shrines to anti-lore ideas, but you’d still end up with the final three episodes of season 5 built around developing characters and storylines.

But now, we’ve arrived at the antithesis, and “Solaricks” presents a new day. Those final three episodes of season 5 no longer feel like an out-of-place trek into serialized storytelling, but an omen for what’s to come. Ricky and Morty: Solaricks is all about building upon what came before, and further building out the development for Rick that we saw in the back half of season 5.

Rick and Morty: Solaricks creative scheme

The narrative device in “Solaricks” is rather creative, simultaneously kicking the story into action and highlighting just how far the characters in the series have come since its inception. In an attempt to “reboot the portal index” and undo the havoc wreaked by Evil Morty in the season 5 finale, Rick accidentally causes all people who have traveled via portal gun to get sent back to their original dimension.

Review: 'Rick and Morty: Solaricks' (1)

The episode splits into 3 narratives, the foremost story following Rick as he returns to his original universe where he bore witness to his wife and daughter’s tragic deaths. Returning to the flashback that the season 3 premiere gave us and confirming its truth was actually exciting. In the very same episode where that piece of the story came to light, it was shrugged off as a possible misleading attempt from Rick to avoid giving the Federation information.

A hero’s(?) journey

In order to “torture” himself, as Rick says, he has programmed the voice of his dead wife Diane to speak to him perpetually “just a room away.” He also programmed the surrounding neighborhood to be stuck in a time loop, presumably to relive that terrible day over and over again. We’ve seen Rick stoop to devastating lows, but by the end of the episode, we’re shown just how far he’s grown mentally when he risks his life just to reunite with the people he now calls his family.

Morty spends the episode traversing the Cronenberg-monster-riddled world left behind in “Rick Potion #9.” We had already revisited this world in “The Rickshank Rickdemption,” so it’s not much of a surprise when it’s revealed that Jerry is the buff masculine sole survivor of this hell world. It’s initially just a sad glimpse into Rick and Morty’s past mistakes, but the episode eventually reveals that Morty’s first Rick was the Rick responsible for Beth and Diane’s death in front of our Rick. A huge hint for what is to come in the remainder of the season.

Summer, Beth, and Beth

The episode’s weaker half is an unavoidable one, following Summer, Beth, and Space Beth as they work together to bring Rick and Morty back to their dimension. There is some fun rapport that allows the characters to play with the dynamic between the three from all angles. “What is it like for a child to have two of the same parent who are distinctly different, and what is it like from those two’s perspectives?” But ultimately the real meat of the episode lies on the back of Rick’s journey, and the Summer/Beth/Beth Again storyline just ends up feeling like an obligatory and unexciting addition.

Review: 'Rick and Morty: Solaricks' (2)

The show was practically allergic to being sincere for a time, but episodes like “The Rickshank Redemption” and “The Ricklantis Mixup” were able to masterfully balance the sheer hilariousness of its situations with occasional moments of genuine emotion. “Solaricks” is not perfect, but the series is presenting itself in a refreshing light. No longer will they spend their time pretending to be something they aren’t while running away from what it will inevitably become. It just unapologetically IS.

https://youtu.be/WOkeB4ZTjFM

“Solaricks” seems to turn the page for the series, and hopefully we can look forward to more science fiction comedy adventure stories that aren’t afraid to dig a little deeper and look further inward. New episodes of Rick and Morty release on Adult Swim Sunday nights at 11 PM est. Have you watched the episode yet? Let us know your thoughts on social media! And if you haven’t checked it out already, Diego Peralta shared his thoughts about how Evil Morty is the right villain for this series!

Be sure to check out our two-part interview with Loki and Rick and Morty writer Eric Martin!

Part 1 / Part 2

Review: 'Rick and Morty: Solaricks' (2024)

FAQs

Why is Rick and Morty rated so high? ›

While every Rick and Morty episode features a hilariously outlandish plot, it is moored back to Earth thanks to the complexity of its main characters. Rick and Morty are wholly human characters with clear strengths and flaws, hurdles to overcome, and lessons to learn.

Why did evil Morty scan Rick's brain? ›

Rick explains that Evil Morty needed his brain scan to obtain schematics for the Citadel's dimensional drive so he could penetrate the Central Finite Curve - while he promises to explain after they escape, Morty is unsatisifed and refuses to go on - Rick caves and gives Morty a brain-scanning device that shows him his ...

Is Rick and Morty season 6 worth watching? ›

Bookended by some memorable serialized developments, Rick and Morty's sixth season has a lot of fun in between as it explores whether the universe's most toxic genius can actually grow as a person.

How old is Rick Sanchez? ›

Rick Sanchez is seventy years old. Born on January 26, 1943. very little is known of his life before he moved in with the Smith family. What is known is that he and his siblings had a complicated relationship with their parents.

Is Rick the original Rick? ›

The show's original Rick identifies himself as "Rick Sanchez of Earth Dimension C-137", in reference to his original universe, but this does not apply to any other member of the Smith household.

What age group likes Rick and Morty? ›

But, overall viewership for the current season is up 81% over the previous season, and the series is the number one comedy on TV so far this year in the coveted demographics of adults 18-24 and adults 18-34, based on Nielsen ratings that track live viewership plus streaming and on-demand viewing over an initial week- ...

Who killed Rick's wife? ›

Rick Sanchez from Earth (Dimension C-137) is the widowed father of Beth Smith, and the maternal grandfather of Morty and Summer Smith. In the fifth season, it is revealed that his daughter Beth and wife Diane in his home reality were killed by Rick Prime, another Rick from another universe, out of pettiness.

Who is smarter Evil Morty or Rick? ›

It's Evil Morty. He outsmarted an entire citadel worth of Ricks, played them like a fiddle, he outsmarted Rick Prime who outsmarted C-137.

Why did Evil Morty need Mortys? ›

In the episode, it was revealed that he was controlling his Rick and it was possibly his idea to capture Mortys in order to hide from the Citadel of Ricks.

What happened to Justin Roiland? ›

Roiland was arrested and charged with felony domestic violence in 2020 in connection with an incident involving an anonymous woman he was dating at the time, though his arrest was not public knowledge until a January 2023 NBC News report in January, 2023.

What is season 7 of Rick and Morty on? ›

Watch Rick and Morty — Season 7 with a subscription on Hulu, Max, or buy it on Fandango at Home, Prime Video, Apple TV.

What is the most famous Rick and Morty episode? ›

Arguably one of the most well-known episodes of Rick and Morty, “Pickle Rick” sees Rick literally turn himself into a sentient pickle to avoid going to family therapy.

What are the best Rick and Morty episodes to watch while high? ›

BEST RICK AND MORTY EPISODES TO WATCH HIGH
  • Morty's Mind Blowers (S3E8) Do you want a bunch of good jokes back to back to back and so forth? ...
  • The Vat of Acid Episode (S4E8) This episode gives a great view into how terrible Rick is and also provides plenty of time for Morty to shine. ...
  • Mort Dinner Rick Andre (S5E1)
Dec 11, 2022

What is the best Morty in Rick and Morty? ›

The best versions of Morty include Morty Rick, Big Morty, Lawyer Morty, Campaign Manager Morty, Cop Morty, The One True Morty, Hammerhead Morty, Roy: A Life Well Lived Morty, Evil Morty, and Morty Prime.

Is Pickle Rick the best episode? ›

For a while “I'm Pickle Rick!” was an inescapable echo in the zeitgeist. If you hadn't seen any of the show, you thought it was dumb. If you had, you knew it was dumb. But by taking the gimmick super-seriously, “Pickle Rick” becomes Emmy Award–winning funny.

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