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The Ren & Stimpy Show (Western Animation)

http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/WesternAnimation/TheRenAndStimpyShow

Western Animation » The Ren & Stimpy Show

(aka: Ren And Stimpy)

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Happy happy, joy joy!

Ren: At last I have control of TV Tropes! Are you receiving me?

Welcome to our secret headquarters.


Stimpy

: Thousands of miles below the Earth's crust.


Ren:

Shut up, you fool! How do we know we can trust - them?


Stimpy:

We can make them take the oath!


Ren:

Perfect, the oath! Put your hand on the screen, and repeat after me...


"I do hereby promise only to read

The Ren and Stimpy Show

page, to make under-leg noises during the good parts, to wear unwashed lederhosen, every single day, of the rest of my life!"
Ren

: That's it! You're in our secret club. Alright, Stimpy, they're okay,

show 'em the stuff

.

Who in their right minds would give a mainstream animated series to John Kricfalusi, the erratic and enigmatic Canadian animator known for causing chaos throughout the '80s with his attempts in putting out a grotesque, almost obscene art style which played up every body hair, pimple, bulging vein, oozing sore, lump of unsightly fat, and pock-marked butt cheek, whilst proudly flaunting around showing off the most disgusting and disturbing parts of internal anatomy?

Well, Nickelodeon did, and the result was The Ren & Stimpy Show, which detailed the adventures of an inverted version of the cat and dog duo, consisting of a smart, yet mentally unbalanced and psychopathic chihuahua named Ren Höek (voiced by Kricfalusi in the first two seasons, with Billy West taking his place for the remaining episodes) and his feline sidekick, a cheery but Buffoonish Tom Cat named Stimpson J. Cat (West), who often makes Ren angry with his eediocy.

The show was over-the-top in every way imaginable. It was a show that rejected all of the conventions every other animated cartoon had in its day. Instead of cohesive storytelling with familiar morals, Ren and Stimpy had no educational value and went for all kinds of absurdist concepts. It was also innovative in its production values, using more off-model animation which allowed the crew to be more exaggerated, expressive, and experimental with the medium. its visuals, even traditional Animation Tropes were taken up a notch; characters frequently Temporarily Atomise things the size of a nuclear submarine, and Non-Fatal Explosions generally take out at least one state. Even its dialogue was pulled up to eleven — Ren didn't so much talk as scream threats and insults in other people's faces. And that's not even counting its macabre tone — in The Ren & Stimpy Show, even a standard Sitcom plot such as "Ren is jealous that Stimpy has a fan club" could become a psychodrama laden with operatic angst and rage. And just when you thought you've seen everything, it gives us an almighty Frank Capra-esque Tear Jerker tale about a sentient fart cloud!

One of the first three Nicktoons, which premiered alongside Doug and Rugrats on August 11, 1991, it's safe to say Ren & Stimpy broke the mould in many ways. Kricfalusi and his crew wanted to get away from the boring, cheaply-animated and moral-heavy programming they despised working on for years by setting out to make cartoons funny again. Plots for episodes were devised using loose outlines and storyboards rather than written scripts (modelled after how Kricfalusi's beloved Golden Age cartoons had been made), and the layout stage was prioritised, allowing focus on visual humour and expressive character acting.

The show was an overnight sensation, and its approach inspired many other successful shows in its wake — such as Rocko's Modern Life, Dexter's Laboratory, The Powerpuff Girls, SpongeBob SquarePants, The Fairly OddParents!, Beavis and Butt-Headto follow its example, whilst its... ahem, infamous imagery pretty much invented the Gross-Out Show genre. The show was so famous back then that even long after its premiere, it was being referenced by the top shows of the 90s, including The Simpsons, Tiny Toon Adventures, and Sabrina, the Teenage Witch.

Aside from its innovations in the industry, the show is just as notorious for its haphazard production history; friction between Nickelodeon execs and Kricfalusi — mostly over Kricfalusi's attitude and penchant for late work — eventually led to his removal from the show in 1992, midway through production of the show's second season. Production was then absorbed by Nickelodeon itself via its inhouse studio Games Animations as a number of the original staff (such as major directors Jim Smith and Vincent Waller) left in disgust over Kricfalusi's firing, although several notable crew members (such as Jim Gomez, Chris Reccardi, Mike Kim and co-creator Bob Camp, who was subsequently promoted to showrunner) remained on the series long-term. The show was cancelled in 1995 after 52 half-hour episodes.

The series lived on through a Marvel Comic Book series published from 1992 to 1996, alongside a brief early-2000s reboot (with Kricfalusi and several alumni from the original show, such as Smith, Waller and story artist Richard Pursel, on board) for adult audiences called Ren & Stimpy "Adult Party Cartoon", which was... well, polarising, to say the least.

In 2020, work commenced on a reboot of the show, produced by MTV Studios and with Billy West once again voicing the titular characters; with plans to air on Comedy Central. However, this iteration only managed to air in France, and after it was leaked in 2024 and met with derision, it appears that MTV quietly pulled the plug on it.

An unauthorized tell-all by Thad Komorowski, entitled Sick Little Monkeys: The Unauthorized Ren & Stimpy Story, was published in 2013. A documentary, Happy Happy Joy Joy: The Ren and Stimpy Story, which features new art and animation by many of the original artists who worked on the show, was released in 2020.

Ren and Stimpy appear in Nickelodeon All-Star Brawl as a duo of simultaneously controlled playable characters, alongside Powdered Toast Man as a separate fighter.

General trope examples: Tie-in Media with their own trope pages: Happy Happy, Tropes Tropes:

    open/close all folders 

    Tropes A-H 

    Tropes I-Q 

    Tropes R-Z 

"Our country reeks of trees!

Our yaks are really large.

And they smell like rotting beef carcasses.

And we have to clean up after them

And our saddle sores are the best

We proudly wear womens' clothing

And searing sand blows up our skirts

And the buzzards, they soar overhead

And poisonous snakes will devour us whole

Our bones will bleach in the sun

And we will probably go to "BURP!" [hell]

And that is our great reward

For being the-uh roy-oy-al Canadian Kilted Yaksmen"

Oh joy Ren, another page about tropes!

The Big Sleep

Whilst in the dog pound, Ren freaks out when he realizes what Jasper meant about Bill being put to sleep.

Example of:
Deadly Euphemism

Alternative Title(s): Ren And Stimpy


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