![]() Without the scene, no such promise is made, and the tension is significantly decreased. The scene promises that-maybe…just maybe-The Monarch is going to be more successful this time around. Without this scene, the episode makes no distinction at all between this particular raid and any other that had come before. He is not going to squander his opportunity. Thanks to the events of The Lepidopterists, The Monarch has arching rights once more, and this additional scene makes all the difference: he’s planning it better. While the “twist” is intentionally obvious (Brock Samson’s severed head sailing across the Venture hangar gives it away hilariously early) it sets up The Monarch’s eventual raid on the compound as being better planned and more rehearsed than usual. The two extra minutes, I feel, really help shape the episode better. Adult Swim, in their infinite wisdom, decided instead to cut this footage into a much shorter teaser…this time a teaser for the full, uncut teaser which could be found on their website instead. Evidently this additional scene (which opens the show) was delivered to the network to air as an extended teaser for the two-part finale. Oddly enough, the "uncut" version of this episode features a lot more severing.įirst of all, watch this episode on the site if you can-it contains an extra two minutes (or so) of footage. Venture again? Would the Moppets make their power play against The Monarch? Could it be that, maybe, with all the flashbacks this season, we’d close on some big historical reveal? Whatever happened to Sergeant Hatred? Isn’t it about time for Phantom Limb to step back into the action? So much happened this season (and so much didn’t happen) that there was really no way to know where the show would pitch its finale.Īnd so we’ve ended up with an episode that takes for its main action (at least so far) a brand new problem: Brock’s termination from the Office of Secret Intelligence. Would it have to do with Brock discovering that Dermott is his long-lost son? Would it involve The Monarch arching Dr. There seemed to be a unanimous agreement that the show was building toward something big in the finale, but with a season as varied as this one, it was impossible to predict just what it would be. (Even season one concluded with a two-parter in all but name.) This is the event that the fans have been waiting for. TVLine’s Cable Scorecard has been updated to reflect Venture Bros.‘ cancellation.Ah, the two-part finale. Its Season 7 finale, which will now have to serve as a series finale, aired way back on Oct. In addition to McCulloch and Urbaniak, who voiced Hank and Thaddeus, the cast included Michael Sinterniklaas ( Marvel’s Future Avengers) as Dean and Patrick Warburton ( Family Guy) as Brock Samson. first debuted in February 2003, with its pilot, and Season 1 kicked off 18 months later. and have been working with and to find another way to continue the Venture Bros. In a statement to our sister site Variety, Adult Swim said, “We also want more Venture Bros. The cancellation news would signal the latest in a string of renewal reversals (following truTV’s I’m Sorry and Netflix’s The Society) - though it appears that Adult Swim had never officially announced an eighth-season order. ![]() McCulloch and fellow EP Doc Hammer reportedly announced at the 2018 San Diego Comic-Con that they had started work on Season 8 concurrently with their work on Season 7, and that it would consist of 10 episodes.
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