Michael Scott
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Rick and Morty: Season 8
Movie:
Video:
Audio:
Extras:
Final Score:
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Movie:

Video:

Audio:

Extras:

Final Score:

AV NIRVANA is member and reader-supported. When you purchase an item using our links, we might earn an affiliate commission.
Like many of you, I was rather worried about how Rick and Morty was going after last year. Not to rehash too much, but with the show losing co-creator Justin Roiland (who also voiced both Rick AND Morty), the 7th season was a bit subpar. Not bad by any stretch of the imagination, but the overall season arc was plagued with some slightly boring episodes amidst all of the culminating major themes that had built up over the last 7 years, ending on an anticlimactic finale. I was just a bit worried that Rick and Morty had gone over the top of the bell curve and were on a possible downward trajectory. Well, those fears were put to rest with season 8, which solidified a new change in the show’s “prime” directive, as well as a return to form with some of the more oddball episodes.
The show’s driving force, and biggest boon (but also its biggest hurdle), happens to be Rick and Morty’s lack of adherence to a major serialized plot. Sure, some big thematic elements have crossed over season to season, but the series thrives on the one-off episodes that go COMPLETELY bonkers. And the series has definitely been able to keep the creativity up over the years. The “ahem” dragons, assassin Beth, crazed maniacal time jumpers, and countless more spring to mind. This season, by far, has some of the best side episodes that the series has to offer, peaking with the Easter episode, where Jerry turns into the Easter Bunny, with dire consequences (the most dire consequence would be me nearly throwing my back out from laughing so hard).
Rick and Morty loves being meta, and this season is no different in that aspect. It indulges in all of the insanity while winking directly into the camera with glee. I was a bit worried last season with Justin Roiland being replaced, but both Harry Belden and Ian Cardoni have done REALLY good jobs replicating the voices of Mory and Rick, respectively (though I think Ian does a nearly seamless job, while with Harry, you can actually tell that it’s not Justin voicing Morty some of the time). The show still has plenty of fire left in its belly, and with the finale, we get a nice setup for what is to come.
Rating:
Rated TV-MA by the MPAA
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As I said above, I was genuinely worried that Rick and Morty was on a downward trajectory after season 7, and the even worse received Rick and Morty: The Anime side project that was pretty painful to watch. But this season seems to have righted the ship, with a return to classic form for Rick and his grandson. Rick, having had a MAJOR plot point wrapped up in the finale of season 7 made for an interesting attempt at his character being reinvented, and while it’s kind of weird, it still works out for the most part. Warner Bro’s Blu-ray release looks and sounds great as usual, but this time the extras are nearly nonexistent (if I could give a ¼ star for the 9-minute extra found on the disc, I could). But all in all, technical merits are great and the show is a blast, so collect away.
Technical Specifications:
Starring: Ian Cardoni, Harry Belden, Chris Parnell, Spencer Grammer, Sarah Chalke, Kari Wahlgreen
Created by: Dan Harmon, Justin Roiland
Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1 AVC
Audio: English: DTS-HD MA 5.1, French, DD 2.0, German DD 5.1
Subtitles: English SDH, French, German, Dutch
Studio: Warner Bro's
Rated: TV-MA
Runtime: 223 Minutes
Blu-ray Release Date: November 11th, 2025
Recommendation: Decent Watch for the Fans
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