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Context Recap / TheSimpsonsS1E11TheCrepesOfWrath

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1[[quoteright:175:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/the_crepes_of_wrath_promo_pictures.jpg]]
2
3'''Original air date:''' 4/15/1990
4
5'''Production code:''' 7G13
6
7Marge makes Bart clean up his room after he paralyzes Homer by leaving his skateboard out near the stairs (causing Homer to fall down the stairs and hurt his back). While doing so, Bart discovers a cherry bomb, which he flushes down a toilet in the boys' bathroom at school—creating an explosion in the girls' room that drenches Principal Skinner's visiting mother, Agnes. Skinner visits the Simpsons and tells them that a troublemaker like Bart can benefit from the school's foreign exchange program, so Bart goes off to France, where a pair of low-rent winemakers keep Bart as a slave. Meanwhile, the Simpsons host an Albanian boy named Adil, and Homer begins taking a shine to him, but does Adil like Homer, or is he using him to get information on the nuclear plant for his country?
8----
9
10!!This episode contains examples of:
11* AffablyEvil: Adil is very polite to everyone and seems to genuinely like his foster family, even though he's a spy stealing nuclear secrets for Albania.
12* ArsonMurderAndJaywalking: Bart's description of everything César and Ugolin put him through; it's the contamination of wine that gets the police involved.
13* ArtImitatesArt: Bart, Cesar and Ugolin drive through landscapes that are all references to famous French impressionist and realist paintings.
14* BadBoss: César and Ugolin treat Bart like a slave by forcing him to do most of the work while they sit around and yell at him.
15* BilingualBonus: The French used is [[ShownTheirWork fairly accurate]]. Even the Albanian is.
16* BlandNameProduct: Bart becomes a national hero in France when he exposes César and Ugolin's spiking their wine with antifreeze. He even appears on the cover of "Newsweeque" magazine.
17* BrokenRecord: While Homer lies on the floor with an injured back and no one there to help him, he's forced to listen to Bart's Krusty doll say, "I like to play with you!" over and over until the doll's batteries die.
18* ComicallyMissingThePoint:
19** When Bart returns to Springfield and watches Homer struggle to get a wine bottle open, he quips "My father--what a buffoon" in French... and Homer delightedly brags about how proud he is of his son's linguistic ability. To add to the joke, the French word for "buffoon" is "bouffon", a cognate that even sounds like its English counterpart--but Homer still can't pick up on the insult.
20** Also, as the Simpsons say good-bye to Adil, Homer promises to send him the plans he wanted due to them being so close. Despite the fact that Adil's been using him and that doing so would be aiding a spy.
21* CouchGag: The family sits on the couch and Homer gets squashed off, landing on the ground.
22* CulturalTranslation: The Italian dub gives Adil a marked Apulian accent as a reference to the Arbëreshë communities in southern Italy.
23* DeepCoverAgent: Adil is an Albanian spy.
24* DepartmentOfRedundancyDepartment: The vineyard Bart stays at is called the Chateau Maison.
25* TheDogBitesBack:
26** After all the abuse he receives from César and Ugolin, Bart eventually gets them arrested.
27** At first, it seems Skinner has done this by sending Bart to France, where he suffers at the hands of the winemakers and finally faces genuine repercussions for his pranks. But as the abuse continues to a point where it is no longer funny, DisproportionateRetribution definitely comes into effect.
28* EarlyInstallmentWeirdness:
29** Here, Agnes Skinner is a kind old woman who embarrasses her son by calling him "Spanky", a far cry from the [[AbusiveParents emotional and psychological abuse]] and ''Film/{{Psycho}}''-esque jokes about Seymour and Agnes years later. The DVD commentary justifies this change by stating that [[UnwittingInstigatorOfDoom Bart's cherry-bomb prank]] [[NiceJobBreakingItHero is what turned Agnes cruel and bitter]].
30** Also, Lisa argues with Adil about the worthiness of America, and her behavior is incredibly odd by the standards of her later characterization. Here, she takes a rather conservative pro-American stance, insisting that it is a land of opportunity with promises of equality. Later episodes would emphasize her liberal political values, and one can't help but suspect that nowadays she would likely side with Adil's critiques of capitalism and claims that the concept of the American dream is unrealistic.
31** This is the first foreign voyage episode, yet Bart travels alone, rather than with his entire family (since Bart going to France is part of a student exchange program/punishment for what he did to Mrs. Skinner, rather than a family vacation) and there is not as many jokes referencing things the foreign country is known for as there would be in later such episodes.
32* EarnYourHappyEnding: While he's treated like dirt for most of the episode, Bart manages to pick up French and get his captors arrested. Afterwards, he's able to enjoy his time in France before going home.
33* ExplainExplainOhCrap: A rare inversion occurs when Bart is unable to get a police officer to help him. He walks away cursing his ignorance and inability to learn French...only to start speaking the language fluently as he continues to criticize himself. It takes him a few seconds to realize that he's actually picked up French through immersion; once he does, he runs back to the officer and tells him what's happening.
34* FamousNamedForeigner: Adil Hoxha is named after former Albanian dictator Enver Hoxha along with [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adil_%C3%87ar%C3%A7ani Adil Carcani]], Albania's last communist prime minister.
35* ForeignExchangeStudent: Bart and Adil.
36* FrenchJerk: César and Ugolin. Oh, so very much. The rest of the French though completely avert it, treating Bart very well after the first two's arrest.
37* FriendlyEnemy: Adil is one with the American child spy he gets a PrisonerExchange with at the end.
38* FunnyForeigner: Frenchmen and Albanians.
39* GlobalIgnorance:
40** Homer confuses Albanians with albinos.
41** Skinner's speech:
42---> '''Skinner:''' You might find his accent peculiar. Certain aspects of his culture may seem absurd, perhaps even offensive. But I urge you all to give little Adil the benefit of the doubt. [[HypocriticalHumor This way, and only in this way, do we hope to better understand our backward neighbors throughout the world.]]
43* GodzillaThreshold: Skinner proposes to Homer and Marge that Bart has ''"transcended incorrigible"'', and neither suspension or expulsion from Springfield Elementary will make a dent in his behavior. Homer is very receptive to the idea of Bart living in another country for an extended period.
44* HateSink: César and Ugolin. Their use of Bart as slave labor while making his life a living hell for no reason other than because they can, as well as making him drink wine with anti-freeze in it, something that could kill him. At a certain point, their abuse isn't even played humorously.
45* HoistByHisOwnPetard: The two winemakers are brought down by the exchange student they abused.
46* {{Jerkass}}: César and Ugolin. Treating Bart like a slave, stealing his stuff, force-feeding him anti-freeze laced wine.
47* JustAStupidAccent: While the trope was averted in the original English, it was played ''awfully'' straight in the Latin American dub, with all the French substituted with French-accented Spanish. The gendarme couldn't understand Bart because of his accent rather than his speaking a different language. The Quebec French dub, obviously, kept the French and also had the gendarme unable to understand Bart's accent, but there it made more sense, with the gendarme's trouble with Bart's Quebec accent being more realistic.
48* KarmaHoudini: Adil gets off scot-free for his crimes of espionage because the CIA and Albanian intelligence do prisoner exchanges. Although, to be fair, he IS a child and more of an AntiVillain than anything else, so possibly [[JustifiedTrope Justified]].
49* KnightOfCerebus: César and Ugolin, who treat Bart like a slave and could have killed him by giving him antifreeze-laced wine. Their abuse starts off comedic but over time it's played completely straight.
50* LiteraryAllusionTitle: The title is a parody of ''Literature/TheGrapesOfWrath''.
51* MauriceChevalierAccent: All Frenchmen speak in this manner, though the police officer who helps Bart when Bart can finally speak enough French to ask him for help doesn't have that.
52* TheMole: Adil is discovered to be a Communist spy.
53* MoralMyopia: Cesar and Ugolin treat Bart like a slave, then berate him as an ''"ungrateful swine"'' who they've fed and housed when he tries to eat a single grape from one of the vines.
54* MyCountryTisOfTheeThatISting:
55--> '''Homer:''' Please, please, kids, stop fighting. [[BothSidesHaveAPoint Maybe Lisa's right about America being the land of opportunity, and maybe Adil's got a point about the machinery of capitalism being oiled with the blood of the workers.]]
56* NamedAfterSomebodyFamous: Adil Hoxha was named after then-Prime Minister Adil Carcani and former dictator Enver Hoxha.
57* NationalStereotypes:
58** We only see two Frenchmen for most of the episode and they are both filthy, arrogant wine merchants. One of them wears a beret, has a moustache and smokes a cigarette. That being said, the police officer who helps Bart is actually a fairly nice man who couldn't help Bart at first because he doesn't speak or understand English (then helped him when Bart learned just enough French to tell the officer about the abuse and the wine tampering operation), even though French police officers in real life can be just as snooty and condescending as the wine merchants who abused Bart, especially when it comes to dealing with foreigners.
59** The Albanian is actually a Communist mastermind spy. His last name, Hoxha, references the former Albanian dictator Enver Hoxha.
60* NeverMyFault: César and Ugolin's interactions make clear they sincerely think they treated Bart fairly and he is just ungrateful. They curse their downfall solely on signing up to the student exchange program in the first place when Bart gets them arrested for their awful treatment.
61** Bart himself thinks that it's Homer's fault for slipping on his skateboard and falling down the stairs. When he goes to his room after Marge reproaches him, Bart mutters that Homer should've watched where he was going.
62* OldFashionedFruitStomping: Bart is forced to stomp grapes by his abusive caretakers while he's an exchange student in France.
63* ParrotExposition:
64--> '''Skinner:''' Mr. and Mrs. Simpson, we have transcended incorrigible. I don't think suspension or expulsion will do the trick. I think it behooves us all to consider... deportation.\
65'''Marge:''' Deportation!? You mean, kick Bart out of the country?
66* PetTheDog: Despite being a pair of crooked child-abusing slavers, Ugolin and César actually treat Maurice the donkey with great affection and care - César is introduced petting the mule while telling him he won't have to do 'back-breaking labor' anymore as Bart arrives, they give him Bart's cap possibly even instead of selling it like his other possessions, and true to form, with Bart around Maurice is only ever shown following them around and getting a comfortable bed instead of being used for work. This is a rare case of this used to cast the characters doing the petting in a ''negative'' light, as the way they treat Maurice highlights just how badly they do Bart (even yelling at him not to disturb Maurice in bed and sleep on the floor), but it is nonetheless a surprisingly genuine kind habit both men share.
67* PoliceAreUseless: Averted. The first police officer Bart finds in France can't understand him and seems somewhat oblivious to his situation and visibly poor condition, but does wish to give him a hand (and gave him a piece of candy). When Bart realizes he's learned French, he tells the cop about how the wine merchants had been abusing him and the man instantly helps Bart, providing him shelter and proper clothes and getting the men arrested.
68* PrisonerExchange: After Adil gets captured, the American government exchanges him for an American spy captured by the Albanians.
69* PunBasedTitle: The title is a pun on ''Literature/TheGrapesOfWrath'' and the French word for pancakes ("crêpes"), which is odd, considering that the plot is more about grapes and wine.
70* RippedFromTheHeadlines: A somewhat belated example in the bit regarding tainting wine with antifreeze. The plot point is based on [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1985_diethylene_glycol_wine_scandal a real scandal]] from 1985 in which numerous Austrian wine brands were discovered to have been diluting their products with diethylene glycol (found in wallpaper remover and some brands of antifreeze) as far back as 1976, resulting in numerous Austrian and West German consumers suffering liver, kidney, and neuron damage as a result of either long-term exposure from constant drinking or short-term exposure from drinking wine that had been additionally laced with sugar (which prevents the ethanol in wine from counteracting the toxicity of diethylene glycol). The show's staff discuss the incident's effects on the episode in the DVDCommentary.
71* SecretPolice: Adil is actually an Albanian spy.
72* SeriousBusiness: The French take winemaking ''very'' seriously. César and Ugolin spiking their wine is rightly treated as a serious crime, but the French go so far as to make Bart a national hero for exposing them. He appears on the cover of "Newsweeque" and is showered with gifts he brings back to the U.S. for his family.
73* ShoutOut:
74** While driving to the French farm Bart and his chauffeur pass through landscapes which are all references to famous paintings made in France, including works by Creator/ClaudeMonet, Creator/VincentVanGogh, Henri Rousseau, and [[Art/LeDejeunerSurLHerbe Édouard Manet]].
75** The French winemakers César and Ugolin are based on the protagonists of the films ''Film/JeanDeFlorette'' and ''Film/ManonDesSources''.
76** Bart brought a red balloon for Maggie from France, a reference to the critically acclaimed French children's short ''[[Film/TheRedBalloon La Ballon Rouge]]''.
77* SkewedPriorities: Downplayed. The police officer treats wine laced with anti-freeze as serious (or even more so) an offense as Bart's abuse. However he also fulfills his promise to Bart that he'll no longer be mistreated by César and Ugolin.
78* SmoochOfVictory: After getting César and Ugolin arrested, Bart attends a ceremony during which he is honored by France. During this ceremony, the young boy receives a kiss from a pretty woman.
79* TeenSuperspy: Adil and his spying activities. It's revealed at the end that the CIA had a pre-teen spy of its own operating on Eastern Europe (that is exchanged for Adil... and the two kids ''know each other'').
80* TimeMarchesOn: Since 1992, two years after initial premiere, Albania is a democratic non-Communist nation. The Albanian spy subplot had more relevance during the Cold War, which was already almost over when the episode aired.
81* TookALevelInKindness: Bart's near-death experience at the hands of César and Ugolin makes him genuinely miss his family. He buys them all thoughtful presents on the trip home and excitedly runs to hug them once his flight arrives at the airport. Bart even remarks that he's happy to see Homer (although he ''does'' call him a buffoon in French upon seeing Homer struggle to open a bottle of wine).
82* TreatedWorseThanThePet: César and Ugolin are shown to treat their donkey Maurice far more kindly than they treat Bart, even [[KickTheDog taking away Bart's hat and giving it to Maurice]].
83* UnexpectedlyDarkEpisode: Bart's abuse by César and Ugolin puts the episode in this territory.
84* VacationEpisode: The first of many; the Simpsons enjoyed having such traveling adventures about OnceASeason. Here, Bart travels to France.
85* WhamLine: Adil's sinister "Excellent" after convincing Homer to take him to the power plant, the first indication that he's more than just a simple foreign exchange student.
86* WouldHurtAChild: César and Ugolin treat Bart like a horse and risk his well-being by testing anti-freeze laced wine on him during their duration in the foreign exchange program. In a follow-up appearance in the comics, they return from prison to try and ''kill'' him.

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