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Context Recap / TheSimpsonsS20E9LisaTheDramaQueen

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1In this parody of ''Film/HeavenlyCreatures'' (minus the murder), Lisa and an imaginative fellow student invent their own fantasy world, Equalia, but Lisa begins to worry that her new friend may love fantasy more than reality.
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3!!Tropes featured:
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5* AbusiveParents: Juliet's, of the "so disconnected with what their daughter desires and obsessed with a routine that she hates that she does anything to escape" type.
6* AntiEscapismAesop: The more that Juliet and Lisa work on Equalia, the less connected to reality they are (and Juliet becomes [[SanitySlippage crazier]] [[LongingForFictionland as the episode goes on]]). Marge comes concerned about this and tries to prevent Lisa from being dragged down with Juliet.
7* BaitAndSwitch: Through Equalia, Lisa and Juliet watch Kearney beat up Jimbo and Dolph after entertaining Kearney with their world. In the real world, Kearney is actually getting beaten while he's still imagining Equalia.
8* BoundAndGagged: Just the former in this instance but this is what Jimbo, Dolph and Kearney do to Lisa and Juliet after discovering them using their hideout.
9* CantGetAwayWithNuthin: Lisa threatens to sneak out to see Juliet when Marge bars her; Marge bluntly points out that, being the mother of Bart, she has a particularly keen eye if she needs to watch out for troublemakers. Sure enough, when Lisa tries to slide down a tree near her window, Marge is ready with a laundry basket, pointing out Bart tried exactly that at 7 years old. In other words, she has the misfortune of being the kid to follow Bart, meaning anything he did, Marge and Homer would protect Lisa from doing... for better or worse.
10* CaptainOblivious: Homer thinks Principal Skinner is [[NotMeThisTime expressing concern about Bart]] even after Skinner and Marge repeatedly remind him they're talking about Lisa.
11* {{Cloudcuckoolander}}: Juliet likes roleplaying and has overactive imagination preferring live in her fantasy world than the real.
12* CutawayGag: Willie's {{Flashback}} to his emigration to America through Ellis Island, featuring a MonochromePast filter and a jaunty old-time piano score.
13* DidntThinkThisThrough:
14** When Lisa threatens to sneak out, Marge reminds her that thanks to Bart, she's perfectly aware of any escape routes in the house. Sure enough, Lisa immediately tries to slide down a tree near her window... and Marge is ready with a laundry basket to trap her, pointing out Bart did that at ''seven years old.''
15** When Lisa sends her manuscript in to a publisher, she receives a letter politely declining; however talented she is, she's still ''eight years old'' and outright admitted this was her first attempt, plus not much non-''children's'' publishers typically pick up novels written by a kid.
16* EndOfAnAge: This was the last episode to air in 4:3 standard definition and feature the classic opening sequence used since Season 2, before switching to high definition and introducing a brand new opening sequence. (Appropriately, this was a rare case of the full opening sequence being used.)
17* {{Fangirl}}: Juliet is this to the singer ''Music/JoshGroban'' as she is introduced while drawing him like a KnightInShiningArmor.
18* ForbiddenFriendship: After Lisa's academic performance falls by the wayside, Marge forbids her from playing with Juliet. Lisa unhesitatingly disobeys and even runs away with Juliet when she asks, but ultimately comes to realize Marge had a point.
19* FriendlessBackground: Both Lisa and Juliet have this, applying the usual NegativeContinuity to Lisa's prior friendships.
20* IncessantMusicMadness: Juliet's father (off-screen) has played the soundtrack of ''Literature/ThePelicanBrief'' so many times that Juliet [[RageBreakingPoint goes into a complete]] FreakOut and smashes the record when he tries to play it for Lisa.
21* LonelyRichKid: Juliet is wealthy and clearly quite troubled, which is why she gloms onto Lisa the way she does.
22* MeetTheInLaws: {{Parodied}} between [[SlobsVersusSnobs the Simpsons and Juliet's wealthy family]] when the latter have the former over to honor Juliet's budding friendship with Lisa. It's not as humiliating for Lisa as you'd think, as Juliet is far too frustrated by her own parents to care about Homer being Homer.
23* PseudoRomanticFriendship: Juliet and Lisa. In their fantasy world, they're the two queens who rule over the land of Equalia. And then they run away together when Marge, fearing that their friendship is having a bad effect on Lisa, attempts to separate them. Fittingly, the episode is based on the plot of ''Film/HeavenlyCreatures'' where the girls ''were'' budding baby lesbians.
24* SanitySlippage: Juliet. She eventually becomes so attached to Equalia that even Lisa starts to feel nervous around her. It ends with Juliet ditching Lisa because she wants to live in the real world and that's something Juliet criticizes as for people who "can't imagine any better" (though Lisa recognizes she's insane).
25* ShownTheirWork: Juliet's Creator/JohnGrisham-loving dad puts on the album of Music/JamesHorner's score for ''Literature/ThePelicanBrief'' - track 3 is indeed called "Researching The Brief."
26* StandardFantasySetting: Equalia.
27* WholePlotReference: To ''Film/HeavenlyCreatures''.
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