Difference between revisions of "The Death of Harvey"

From Hanna-Barbera Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
Line 408: Line 408:


{{DEFAULTSORT:Death of Harvey, The}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Death of Harvey, The}}
[[Category:Attorney at Law episodes]]
[[Category:Birdman episodes]]
[[Category:Birdman episodes]]
[[Category:Episodes]]
[[Category:Episodes]]
[[Category:Harvey Birdman episodes]]
[[Category:Williams Street]]
[[Category:Williams Street]]

Revision as of 21:51, 1 December 2021

The Death of Harvey
Harvey's wake.png
Premiere date July 22, 2007
Music composed by Michael Kohler
Writer(s) Michael Ouweleen and Erik Richter
Director(s) Richard Ferguson-Hull
Episode navigation
Previous Next

"The Death of Harvey" is the seventh episode of Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law season four, and the thirty-nine and final overall. It aired on July 22, 2007 on Cartoon Network's Adult Swim block. It was written by series creators, Michael Ouweleen and Erik Richter, produced by Evan W Adler, and directed by Richard Ferguson-Hull. In 2018, the series was given a "reunion special" with Harvey Birdman: Attorney General.

The questionable jury of Harvey's past cases requires him to do them all over, which leads to the original: Nitron. But taking Nitron down is not the job of an attorney, but the job of a superhero: Biiiirdman!!!!!

Detailed summary

Memorable quotes

Birdgirl: See that guy? There? Remember you sent him that thing?
Potamus: That guy? I didn't send him nothin'. I keep a very detailed list of things sent and/or received, and I specifically remember sending him no thing.
Birdgirl: Well, you did, and he got it. But he didn't tell you.
Potamus: What? Nobody could be that cruel.
Birdgirl: Oh, yeah, he got it, and he was laughing about it. "Hey, everybody, I got that thing, but I'm not gonna in any way acknowledge receiving it."


Harvey: As an attorney, I swore to uphold the truth. As a superhero, the truth is mine to uphold.
Richter: Wait? What?

Characters

Legend
Character debut Speaking debut Ep. debut No lines Mentioned

In order of appearance:

Character Actor
Birdgirl/Judy Ken Sebben Paget Brewster
Peanut Thomas Allen
Avenger Unavailable
The Bear Unavailable
Scrappy-Doo N/A
Peter Potamus Chris Edgerly
Doctor Benton Quest Neil Ross
Harvey Birdman Gary Cole
Melvin Van Peebles N/A
Jonny Quest N/A
Hadji N/A
O.J. Simpson N/A
President George W. Bush N/A
Squiddly Diddly N/A
Old woman Thomas Allen
Magilla Gorilla
Huckleberry Hound N/A
Gloop or Gleep
Phil Ken Sebben Stephen Colbert
Doggie Daddy N/A
Augie Doggie N/A
Nun N/A
Paw Rugg N/A
Hokey Wolf N/A
Bus driver Frank Welker
X the Eliminator Peter MacNicol
Zardo John Michael Higgins
Judge Mentok John Michael Higgins
Janitor N/A
Inch High Maurice LaMarche
Bailiff N/A
Apache Chief Maurice LaMarche
Jabberjaw Frank Welker
Video clerk Thomas Allen
Ding-a-Ling Neil Ross
Phyllis Ken Sebben (poster) N/A
Jerry Bruckheimer
Race Bannon N/A
Scooby-Doo N/A
Shaggy Rogers N/A
Boo Boo Bear N/A
Kenji Morimoto N/A
Miko Morimoto N/A
Seiko Morimoto N/A
Fred Flintstone N/A
Thundarr N/A
Secret Squirrel Unavailable
Ernie Devlin N/A
Tangy Devlin N/A
Speed Buggy N/A
Tinker N/A
Quick Draw McGraw N/A
Harry Twiddles N/A
George Jetson N/A
Jane Jetson N/A
Judy Jetson N/A
Elroy Jetson N/A
Beegli Beegli N/A
Grape Ape N/A
Yakky Doodle N/A
Droopy N/A
Wally Gator N/A
Ricochet Rabbit N/A
Morocco Mole N/A
Captain Caveman N/A
Cavey Jr. N/A
Grok N/A
Tana N/A
Top Cat Unavailable
Nitron Unavailable
Abraham Lincoln cosplayer N/A
Elliot, the Deadly Duplicator Lewis Black
Mary Unavailable
Bronson
Brody
Noam Chomsky
Tony
Stan Freezoid
Judge Mightor
Myron Reducto
Debbie
Caramel
Black Vulcan Phil LaMarr
Shazzan Unavailable
Frida Kahlo N/A
Hair Bear Unavailable
Atom Ant N/A
Cubby McQuilken Unavailable
Pixie N/A
Dixie N/A
Perfectionist Unavailable
Gigi Unavailable
Mary Volcanus Unavailable


Organizations

Locations

Objects

Vehicles

Production

Development

Filming

Phil being hit by a blimp is reused from the previous episode, "Juror in Court".

Music

The music was composed by Michael Kohler.

Release

Dates are in order of release:

  • United States: July 22, 2007 on Adult Swim (Cartoon Network)

Behind the scenes

  • The episode title is a reference to "The Death of Superman" arc by DC Comics. Nitron is a parody of Doomsday, who was able to kill Superman. In the former, their confrontation leads to both of their deaths, while in the latter, Nitron and Harvey die for different reasons.
  • This episode is double the length of a regular episode.
  • It begins with a recap of the aforementioned previous episode.
  • Phil was believed to have been killed in "Babysitter."
  • The blimp advertises a bald eagle logo associated with The Colbert Report, hosted by Stephen Colbert.
  • Port St. Charles seems to be a parody of Cape St. Charles.
  • When Birdgirl tears off Harvey's suit to get to his superhero costume, she also finds he's wearing his ballgown from "Evolutionary War," a Starfleet-like top from Star Trek: The Original Series, and Charlie Brown's t-shirt.
  • Potamus can still turn into "the creature" after his consumption of Atom Ant's radioactive droppings in "Incredible Hippo." The creature is a parody of the Incredible Hulk from Marvel Comics. Potamus also says to Nitron he wouldn't like him when he's parched, which is a paraphrase of Bruce Banner's line, "You wouldn't like me when I'm angry," before he would transform into the Hulk in the 1970s/1980s The Incredible Hulk TV series.
  • Harvey refers to the Bronzoluxe Tanning Crème he used in "SPF."
  • Richter and Ouweleen have cameos just after Birdman makes his final nonsensical speech, which the former questions.
  • The way the Bear leaves Harvey's wake is a parody of the ending of the sitcom Cheers.

Errors

  • Harvey's 38 cases don't include Hair Bear presumably because that ended in a mistrial.
  • The billboard says "Old Dirty Carny" when it's supposed to be Ol' Dirty Carny.
  • Peanut is wearing his sweater vest when operating the crane.

Everlasting influence

  • Harvey's death and resurrection is the plot of Harvey Birdman, Attorney General.
  • Birdgirl quickly repeating "Oh, my God" is used in the theme song to the spin-off Birdgirl.

Critical reception

Home availability

References