

Summer’s recently had her heart broken again, so when Morty abandons Rick to pursue Planetina, it provides a rare opportunity for some grandpa-grandaughter bonding time. Rick ad Summer’s B-plot adventure is way more fun.

This all culminates in a bland story about climate change, juvenile love, and graphic extreme violence. The main plotline of "A Rickconvenient Mort" focuses on Morty’s romance with Planetina, a female version of Captain Planet who’s become a money-making slave to the four children (now adults) who summon her with elemental rings. Rick runs down all three impending apocalypses. So is this a coincidence? Or did Loki head-writer Michael Waldron steal a few secrets before he left Adult Swim for Marvel? Let’s take a closer look. Rick and Morty takes a similar look at the end of the world in Season 5 Episode 3. Loki Episode 3 reveals that Sylvie spent most of her life running from the Time Variance Authority by hiding in impending apocalypses across time.
#DAILYMOTION RICK AND MORTY SEASON 2 EPISODE 11 TV#
But if this B-plot sounds weirdly familiar, it’s probably because you’ve been watching another dimension-hopping TV show: Loki. In Rick and Morty Season 5 Episode 3, “A Rickconvenient Mort,” Rick and Summer decide to blow off some steam by party-hopping through the apocalypse, visiting three alien planets all doomed for extinction on the same night. What would you do if you knew the world was about to end and there was nothing you could do to stop it? Would you cower in fear? Or would you party your way into the apocalypse? Two of the best science fiction shows out right now are both asking the same question - but with very different answers.
