A Star is Burns

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The Simpsons episode
"A Star is Burns"
Dr. Hibbert arriving at the film festival thinking that the Rocky Horror Picture Show was on that night.
Episode no. 121
Prod. code 2F31
Orig. Airdate March 5, 1995
Show Runner(s) Al Jean & Mike Reiss
Writer(s) Ken Keeler
Director(s) Susie Dietter
Couch gag The family reverses size, with Maggie as the biggest and Homer as the smallest.
Guest star(s) Jon Lovitz as Jay Sherman
Maurice LaMarche as Anthony Hopkins, William Shatner and George C. Scott
DVD commentary by James L. Brooks
Al Jean
Mike Reiss
Ken Keeler
Dan Castellaneta
Jon Lovitz
Susie Dietter
SNPP capsule
Season 6
September 4, 1994May 21, 1995
  1. Bart of Darkness
  2. Lisa's Rival
  3. Another Simpsons Clip Show
  4. Itchy & Scratchy Land
  5. Sideshow Bob Roberts
  6. Treehouse of Horror V
  7. Bart's Girlfriend
  8. Lisa on Ice
  9. Homer Badman
  10. Grampa vs. Sexual Inadequacy
  11. Fear of Flying
  12. Homer the Great
  13. And Maggie Makes Three
  14. Bart's Comet
  15. Homie the Clown
  16. Bart vs. Australia
  17. Homer vs. Patty & Selma
  18. A Star is Burns
  19. Lisa's Wedding
  20. Two Dozen and One Greyhounds
  21. The PTA Disbands!
  22. 'Round Springfield
  23. The Springfield Connection
  24. Lemon of Troy
  25. Who Shot Mr. Burns? (Part One)
List of all Simpsons episodes...

"A Star is Burns" is the 18th episode of The Simpsons' sixth season. It involves a crossover with the short-lived animated television series The Critic for which it has been subject to some controversy.

Contents

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.
Barney's film.
Barney's film.

Springfield adopts Marge's proposal to launch a film festival, and she is placed on a panel to judge each short film produced by the townspeople. Also on the panel is the New York City critic Jay Sherman, who is the star of Gracie Films' other animated series, The Critic. Sherman's stay at the Simpsons' house proves problematic, as Homer begins to suspect Marge prefers Jay and does not really respect Homer. Thus, Marge gives him a spot on the panel, in place of Martin Scorsese. On the night of the festival, the panel comes into deadlock, between members bribed by the untalented contestant C. Montgomery Burns and those who honestly support Barney's touching film about alcoholism, titled Pukahontas. Homer, originally supporting Hans Moleman's film Man Getting Hit by Football (which he liked because it was funny, even though it was just a clip of Moleman being hit in the groin with a football), is convinced to look into his heart and resolve the deadlock by voting for Barney's film (which he initially missed before the deadlock occurred when getting a beer). Later on, Burns' attempt to buy an Academy Award loses out to another version of Man Getting Hit by Football, starring George C. Scott.

  • This is the first of many episodes which is executive produced by earlier show runners Al Jean and Mike Reiss during another showrunner's term. Other episodes include "'Round Springfield", "Simpson Tide" and "Lisa's Sax".
  • Syndication cuts the scene where Bart is selling "maps to movie stars' homes" to Japanese tourists, who find Moe's house and mistake him for Drew Barrymore because of how unkempt and hungover he is.
  • The films shown at the festival are:
    • Bright Lights, Beef Jerky ("Directed" by Apu Nahasapeemapetilon): Security camera footage from the Kwik-E-Mart featuring Apu, Snake, and Chief Wiggum.
    • Moe Better Booze (Directed by Moe Szyslak): Moe does a musical number, dancing on top of his bar. He wears garish makeup and man's evening dress, reminiscent of the "Master of Ceremonies" character from the musical Cabaret.
    • Man Getting Hit by Football (Directed by Hans Moleman): As the title suggests, the film simply focuses on a football hitting Hans in the groin. A remake starring George C. Scott (the film appears in his filmography) later wins the Academy Award for Best Picture.
    • Pukahontas (Directed by Barney Gumble): A dramatic black and white film about Barney and his alcoholism. Contains a cameo by Lisa Simpson in a scene where Barney mistakes a girl scout meeting for an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting.
    • A Burns for All Seasons (Directed by Senor Spielbergo for Montgomery Burns): A epic-style movie that clearly rips off other material such as the Creation of Adam painting and the movie Ben-Hur.
    • Four Funerals and a Wedding (An Itchy and Scratchy short): Itchy replaces Scratchy's bride with a dummy bride made of bombs. Scratchy manages to have bomb-children and live to old age before the dummy explodes.


The episode has been subject to some controversy, as some viewers saw it as a mere thirty-minute advertisement for The Critic. Indeed, James L. Brooks was involved in the production of both shows. Among the fiercest critics of the Simpsons episode was creator Matt Groening himself, who promptly removed his name from the credits. In response, Brooks labelled Groening a "gifted, adorable, cuddly ingrate."[1] On the sixth season DVD, Groening is absent from the cast and crew commentary on this episode.

  1. ^ Brennan, Judy (1995-03-03). Matt Groening's Reaction to The Critic's First Appearance on The Simpsons. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved on 2007-03-02.

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