Follow TV Tropes

Following

Recap / Rick And The Loud House Chapter 43 One Crew Over The Crewcoos Lynn

Go To

Rick takes Lincoln and reluctantly allows Lynn to tag along as they pull the biggest and most Rick-diculous heists the multiverse can witness... of course, Rick has other ideas, leaning towards his granddaughter.

Rick and Morty episode: "One Crew Over The Crewcoo's Morty"

The Loud House episode: N/A


  • Adaptational Context Change: Downplayed. The plot remains mostly the same, except for a few additions, like that of Rick's motivation for discouraging Lynn was not because of a Netflix screenplay, but because she's been a major pain in his ass looking for her for three tiresome months last chapters ago and for being such a massive egotistical little shit towards him.
  • Adaptation Expansion: This episode introduces the potent infinity ball, an original creation for this story, which will serve a purpose in the next few chapters ahead.
  • Adapted Out: Elon Tusk (Elon Musk with tusks) does not appear, and so is every scene involving him.
  • Adaptational Sympathy: Rick's entire motivation for discouraging Lynn from adventuring with him was not out of a desire for ruining someone's creativity by messing up a Netflix script so he can have said person for himself. Rather, it was because Lynn had been so much of a gigantic menace towards Rick, followed by her self-imposed three-month exile, that this was pretty much the only way to remove her from the equation.
  • Break the Cutie / Break the Haughty: Lynn suffers through a mentally tired state of mind through Rick's latest adventure. She returns home, a sobbing, broken mess. It didn't help that it was a massive plan by Rick to get her off his adventures, with a possible modus operandi of getting back at Lynn for screwing with Rick.
  • Calling the Old Man Out: After realizing that Rick set up the heist adventure simply to "heist" the enthusiasm off of Lynn, Lincoln berates Grandpa Rick for letting his sister suffer. However...
  • Desperately Craves Affection: Rick fires back at Lincoln, revealing that he only helps his sisters, even if he has to commit morally unspeakable acts such as murdering someone, just to prove himself that he's a valuable figure to both his sisters and himself. As a result, it just shakes Lincoln's self-esteem to his core, and he decides not to do what he usually does.
  • Disproportionate Retribution: Somewhat Played With. While Rick's motivation for discouraging Lynn was completely different from how he does Morty in canon, there are hints indicating he wanted to get back at Lynn ten-fold for for her abrasive attitude towards him, and a way to assert dominance over her by setting up this heist adventure. First, he has Lynn climb a dangerous cliff with holes, then he teleports her in a laser-based booby trap that zaps her skin, prevents her from enjoying a monster truck race, and pulls a ridiculously massive Gambit Pileup with Heistotron just to mentally disorient her.
  • Gambit Pileup: Rick pulls one with Heistotron just as in canon. However, this was out of a desire to discourage Lynn from adventuring with him, and an apparent desire to pay Lynn back tenfold for her trying to lord over Rick.
  • Suddenly Shouting: Lynn shouts at Lucy to leave her alone in their room after becoming traumatized with Rick's adventure.
  • Hypocrite: Lynn expresses disgust when Rick baits Knightly with his dung instead of the crystal skull. Rick then points to Lynn that she still finds dutch ovens funny. It doubles down as Rick himself is also hypocritical as Lynn happened to have inherited his penchant for fart jokes.
  • Humiliation Conga: Lynn suffers a lot of it both physically and mentally. First, she almost falls from an alien cliff she's climbing on, then she gets zapped inside a booby-trapped room, and is mentally exhausted by the Gambit Pileup involving Heistotron. Then it was revealed that Rick had subjected her to such misfortunes as part of a massive plan just to get her off his back.
  • Jerkass Has a Point: While Rick had gone so hard on Lynn on the heist-adventure and wanted to make her pay ten-fold for her abrasive nature, he absolutely right he doesn't want her on his adventure for how when she lost her shit on the Death Arena, escapes from Rick and her family, where the former had to comb the entire universe to find Lynn whict it's took three months before Lynn came back home. Long story short, his reasoning about putting out Lynn from her adventure was more understandable and slightly justified.
    • While he's blunt about it with Lincoln's need to validation, he makes a point that Lincoln definitely has no room to speak for Rick's amorally acts such as murdering people for petty reasons or whims to prove why he's always right when Lincoln himself has proved to commit unspeakable acts just for being useful to his sisters, such as murdering a purgist cat-person (although this one was more self defence for him and her sister Lucy) or kill Krombopulous Michael (this one was more an accident but still he did "kill him") where he makes clear that he just killed a killer to save a sentient cloud for then to kill the same cloud for his plans of Carbon-life species extermination, all pf this for his own validation. Even Lincoln lampshades that Rick has a point.
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: Unlike in canon, Rick set up the entire heist adventure to get Lynn to swear off adventures with him. Although there are hints that it was also out of retribution.
  • What the Hell, Hero?: Although he can barely be called one, ​Lincoln calls out Rick for setting up the adventure just to both spite and discourage Lynn from adventuring with Rick. Rick fires back with rather understandable reasons of why he did it.

Top