BoJack Horseman (season 1)
The first season of the animated television series BoJack Horseman premiered exclusively via Netflix's web streaming service on August 22, 2014.[1] The season consists of 12 episodes.[2]
BoJack Horseman | |
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Season 1 | |
Starring | |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of episodes | 12 |
Release | |
Original network | Netflix |
Original release | August 22, 2014 |
Season chronology | |
While the first half of the season received mixed reviews, the second half of the season received much more positive reviews. Ben Travers of IndieWire believed one possible reason for mixed reviews of the show was critics reviewing only the first half of the season. Many critics cited the seventh episode "Say Anything" as being the turning point of the season, with it changing drastically in tone and developing a darker, deeper meaning.[3][4] This change was so drastic it resulted in IndieWire changing its policy to only review entire seasons of shows on Netflix, instead of just the first six episodes, which would have boosted BoJack Horseman's C+ grade.[5] This change in perception is starkly noticeable in the show's other seasons, which received critical acclaim on Rotten Tomatoes and Metacritic.
Cast and characters
Main
- Will Arnett as BoJack Horseman and Butterscotch Horseman
- Amy Sedaris as Princess Carolyn and Sharona
- Alison Brie as Diane Nguyen, Joelle Clarke, and Vincent Adultman
- Paul F. Tompkins as Mr. Peanutbutter and Andrew Garfield
- Aaron Paul as Todd Chavez
Recurring
- Patton Oswalt as Pinky Penguin, Neal McBeal, Gary Nguyen, and Bob Maggot
- Rachel Bloom as Laura
- Wendie Malick as Beatrice Horseman
- Kristen Schaal as Sarah Lynn
- Stanley Tucci as Herb Kazzaz
- Margo Martindale as Character Actress Margo Martindale
- Olivia Wilde as Charlotte Carson
- Chris Cox as Tina The Bear / various
- J. K. Simmons as Lenny Turteltaub
- Dave Segal as Paparazzi Robin
- Adam Conover as Paparazzi Blue Jay, A Ryan Seacrest Type, and Bradley Hitler-Smith
- Keith Olbermann as Tom Jumbo Grumbo
- Cedric Yarbrough as Officer Meow Meow Fuzzyface
- Raphael Bob-Waksberg as Charley Witherspoon and various characters
Guest
- Nicholas Gonzalez as Cartel Man
- Judy Greer as Pam
- Aisha Tyler as Sextina Aquafina and Carol Himmelfarb-Richardson
- Wyatt Cenac as Wayne
- Mike O'Malley as Artie Nguyen
- Melissa Leo as Ma Nguyen
- Kelen Coleman as Zoë and Zelda
- Yvette Nicole Brown as Beyoncé
- Chris Parnell as Klaus (Aryan Gang Leader) and News Reporter
- Horatio Sanz as Aldo (Latin Kings Gang Leader)
- Stephen Colbert as Mr. Witherspoon
- Kristin Chenoweth as Vanessa Gekko
- Kevin Bigley as Quentin Tarantulino and Dick Cavett
- Chris Cox as Marv Sbarbori / various
- Anjelica Huston as Angela Diaz
- Fielding Edlow as Roxy
- Naomi Watts as herself
- Wallace Shawn as himself
- Ken Jeong as Dr. Allen Hu
- John Krasinski as Secretariat
- Keegan-Michael Key as Sebastian St. Clair
- Maria Bamford as Kelsey Jannings
Episodes
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original release date | Prod. code |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 1 | "BoJack Horseman: The BoJack Horseman Story, Chapter One" | Joel Moser | Raphael Bob-Waksberg | August 22, 2014 | 101 |
Washed-up horse sitcom actor BoJack Horseman seeks to write an autobiography to reignite his fame, but is too lazy to do so, so his publisher assigns him a ghostwriter, Diane Nguyen. Initially unwilling to meet with her, he invites her to a quinceañera his slacker roommate Todd Chavez throws at his house to pay off a cartel, and is surprised to find that they connect. However, he learns that she is dating his longtime rival and fellow sitcom actor, dopey Labrador retriever Mr. Peanutbutter. | ||||||
2 | 2 | "BoJack Hates the Troops" | J.C. Gonzalez | Raphael Bob-Waksberg | August 22, 2014 | 102 |
BoJack ignites a media firestorm when he fights with a Navy SEAL over a box of muffins and calls the troops "jerks" on live TV. His Persian cat agent and ex-girlfriend Princess Carolyn plans to resolve the issue by making him go on Mr. Peanutbutter's reality TV show and apologize to the SEAL with replacement muffins, which almost goes poorly until Mr. Peanutbutter unintentionally distracts those present with his antics. BoJack finds Diane on the roof, and she asks him to start being honest about himself, which he promises to do. | ||||||
3 | 3 | "Prickly-Muffin" | Martin Cendreda | Raphael Bob-Waksberg | August 22, 2014 | 103 |
In flashbacks to BoJack's old show Horsin' Around, he neglects the emotions of his young costar Sarah Lynn and instills in her the toxic message to never stop performing. In the present day, Sarah Lynn is a floundering pop star that BoJack takes in after her boyfriend Andrew Garfield breaks up with her, and she begins to manipulate him through his guilt and desire for a family, allowing her to do whatever she wants. While living with him, she informs him that Horsin' Around creator Herb Kazzaz has terminal cancer. The two end up having sex, but BoJack ultimately realizes he is the one taking advantage of her; he tries to get her help, but she leaves. | ||||||
4 | 4 | "Zoës and Zeldas" | Amy Winfrey | Peter A. Knight | August 22, 2014 | 104 |
In 1985, BoJack meets and befriends Herb while failing at standup. In the present, after Diane questions the origin of his relationship with Todd, BoJack decides to help Todd work on the rock opera he has always been interested in making. When Todd finds actual success and posits moving out, BoJack panics and utilizes Margo Martindale to manipulate Todd into buying an addictive video game, causing him to underperform at an investor's showcase and ruin his potential. Diane's BuzzFeed columnist ex-boyfriend pretends to work on a positive article about Mr. Peanutbutter but really uses it as an excuse to try and get back together with her, warning her that she and Mr. Peanutbutter are incompatible. Guest starring: Margo Martindale as Character Actress Margo Martindale | ||||||
5 | 5 | "Live Fast, Diane Nguyen" | Joel Moser | Caroline Williams | August 22, 2014 | 105 |
While out east to visit BoJack's publisher, Diane learns that her cruel father has died. She takes him to Boston for the funeral, only for her lazy, immature family to make her pay for it herself and then not bother to show up, having their father's body turned into chum. Diane leaves enraged, but BoJack follows and comforts her, and the two return home. BoJack calls Herb before they leave, but is forced to leave a message. Todd turns BoJack's house into a cash grab by pretending it is the home of David Boreanaz, but is quickly caught and arrested. He calls BoJack in jail, but nobody answers. Guest starring: Ira Glass as Diane's ringtone | ||||||
6 | 6 | "Our A-Story is a 'D' Story" | J.C. Gonzalez | Scott Marder | August 22, 2014 | 106 |
BoJack develops feelings for Diane after returning from Boston, leading him to drunkenly steal the "D" from the Hollywood Sign as a grand romantic gesture. Knowing he needs to get rid of it, he enlists Mr. Peanutbutter for help, only for him to take all the credit for the theft himself. As BoJack leaves an honest, intimate voicemail for Diane, Mr. Peanutbutter privately proposes to her, only to make a big spectacle of it when she accepts. BoJack convinces Diane to delete the voicemail without listening to it when she calls him back. Todd is courted by the Aryan Brotherhood and Latin Kings in prison, only to get them to reconcile their differences and escape when a helicopter returning the "D" crashes into the prison wall. Guest starring: Yvette Nicole Brown as Beyoncé, Chris Parnell as Aryans Gang Member, Horatio Sanz as Latin Kings Leader. | ||||||
7 | 7 | "Say Anything" | Martin Cendreda | Joe Lawson | August 22, 2014 | 107 |
Princess Carolyn's agency merges with that of her rival Vanessa Gekko, who takes her office and her client. She tries to get BoJack to do a bourbon commercial, but he is more interested in romantically pursuing her, forcing her to get Todd to do it. After Gekko one-ups her multiple times, Princess Carolyn finally succumbs to BoJack's advances and goes on a date with him, only for him to get a foreboding call back from Herb and abandon the date, hurting her. She formulates a plot to lure her former client away from Gekko's project; the plot is successful, and Gekko is fired. Princess Carolyn gives a director the idea to make a movie about the Hollywood Sign and convinces him to hire BoJack, only to get a forlorn call from BoJack as he returns from Herb's house. As Princess Carolyn looks out her office window at the city below, her phone wishes her a happy fortieth birthday. | ||||||
8 | 8 | "The Telescope" | Amy Winfrey | Mehar Sethi | August 22, 2014 | 108 |
In flashbacks to the eighties and nineties, BoJack and Herb are bartenders and aspiring comedians when Herb gets Horsin' Around greenlit by ABC. Herb takes BoJack with him and gives him a telescope to signify their bond. As the two grow apart over the years, Herb is outed as gay and BoJack reluctantly lets the network fire him after being offered the chance to play Secretariat in a biopic, which never got made. In the present, BoJack takes Diane with him to prevent him from being alone with Herb, who is very passive-aggressive with BoJack despite clearly sharing kinship with him. Before leaving, Diane encourages BoJack to talk to Herb privately; BoJack apologizes to Herb for betraying him, but Herb refuses to forgive him. BoJack tries to take the telescope and the two fight, the telescope breaking in the process, and he receives the call from Princess Carolyn on the way home. As Diane assures BoJack that he did the right thing by apologizing, he kisses her and she pushes him off. | ||||||
9 | 9 | "Horse Majeure" | Joel Moser | Peter A. Knight | August 22, 2014 | 109 |
Princess Carolyn starts dating "Vincent Adultman", a man who only BoJack recognizes as three boys in a trench coat. Wanting to disrupt the upcoming wedding between Diane and Mr. Peanutbutter, he hires Margo Martindale to stage a bank robbery, but only ends up moving the wedding up and getting her arrested. Todd becomes Mr. Peanutbutter's driver at BoJack's urging, but turns on BoJack when he realizes he was the one who sabotaged his rock opera; he decides not to tell BoJack when Mr. Peanutbutter confesses his doubts about having a third wife. At the wedding, Diane assures BoJack that things are fine between them. BoJack confides in Vincent that he feels as though he many never have the chance to be good again. | ||||||
10 | 10 | "One Trick Pony" | J.C. Gonzalez | Laura Gutin Peterson | August 22, 2014 | 110 |
Two months later, BoJack has been cast as Mr. Peanutbutter in the movie about the Hollywood Sign and strikes up a relationship with Naomi Watts, who is playing Diane. Todd gains the director's favor and begins changing the movie's script to make BoJack out to be the villain of the story, eventually taking apart the movie entirely. When BoJack confronts him, Todd reveals he had no malicious intentions, but does not forgive BoJack, and Watts explains that she only slept with him to stay in character. Diane shows BoJack her current draft of his book, which he feels does not make him look good and insults it. Angry, Diane gets her ex-boyfriend to publish a teaser from it on BuzzFeed. The teaser receives positive feedback, but BoJack fires Diane anyway. Guest starring: Wallace Shawn as himself, Naomi Watts as herself | ||||||
11 | 11 | "Downer Ending" | Amy Winfrey | Kate Purdy | August 22, 2014 | 111 |
BoJack promises his publisher to write a better book than Diane, but finds himself struggling to start. He, Todd, and Sarah Lynn take drugs together and write a gibberish book, and Todd admits he does not care about the loss of his rock opera because he did not expect anything better from BoJack. BoJack begins to hallucinate visions of Diane and Horsin' Around while trying to reach a conclusion about his self-worth, and he has a flashback to his mother forcing on him the same advice he did Sarah Lynn. He imagines marrying Charlotte, a deer that was close friends with him and Herb, and having a daughter with her, only to finally wake up from his hallucinations. He goes to Diane at a ghostwriter convention and admits her book is excellent. He begs her to tell him that he is a good person; Diane does not respond. Guest starring: Ken Jeong as Dr Hu | ||||||
12 | 12 | "Later" | Martin Cendreda | Raphael Bob-Waksberg | August 22, 2014 | 112 |
In 1973, BoJack writes into The Dick Cavett Show while Secretariat is being interviewed, asking what he does when he feels sad. Secretariat tells BoJack to always keep running forward. One month later, Secretariat dies by suicide after being banned from racing. Three months after the release of the book, BoJack wins a Golden Globe and convinces producer Lenny Turtletaub to finally greenlight the Secretariat biopic, with a woman named Kelsey Jannings directing and Andrew Garfield playing the lead. Diane is invited by eccentric billionaire Sebastian St. Clair to document his providing of aid to impoverished countries, which would require her to leave Los Angeles for three months. Todd and Mr. Peanutbutter come up with a series of outlandish business ideas, one of which hospitalizes Garfield and gets BoJack the role of Secretariat. BoJack talks to Diane on her roof for the first time since he approached her at the convention, and she reveals she has been hired to work on the biopic. They discuss the true nature of happiness before BoJack admits he just wanted Diane to like him, and she says that she knew. BoJack visits the observatory where Herb revealed that Horsin' Around was being picked up, where he signs an autograph for a horse fan. Guest starring: John Krasinski as Secretariat |
Reception
The review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported a score of 71%, based on 28 reviews. The site's critical consensus states, "It's intermittently funny, but in most respects, BoJack Horseman pales in comparison to similar comedies."[6] On Metacritic, the season received a rating of 59 out of 100, based on 13 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[7]
Erik Adams' review of the first six episodes gave the series a C+ grade; in the review, Adams wrote that the show "spoofs the emptiness of celebrity, but does so without any novelty or true insight".[8] At Slate, Willa Paskin was more enthused. "[It] is perhaps a little more clever than it is uproariously funny, but it is often very clever, and, moreover, well-tuned to the ludicrousness of the sort of low-level fame that surrounds BoJack". She likened it to 30 Rock in its ability to "[present] big ideas without having to commit to them".[9]
Chris Mitchell from Popzara was equally optimistic about the show's future, saying that "Fans of FX's Archer or Fox's Bob's Burgers will definitely want to check this one out, as its rapid-fire delivery is always consciously spot-on".[10] The New York Times described the show as "hilarious and ribald".[11] Margaret Lyons of Vulture gave a positive review, describing it as "radically sad. I love it".[12]
However, the second half of the season received much more positive reviews. Ben Travers of Indiewire believed one possible reason for mixed reviews of the show was critics reviewing only the first half of the season, with the second half changing drastically in tone and developing a darker and deeper meaning. This change was so drastic it resulted in Indiewire changing its policy to only review entire seasons of shows on Netflix, instead of just the first six episodes, which would have boosted BoJack Horseman's C+ grade.[13]
References
- "Netflix teases 'BoJack Horseman' animated series". CNET. Retrieved July 25, 2016.
- "'BoJack Horseman' gallops onto Netflix". USA Today. Retrieved July 25, 2016.
- Martinelli, Marissa (December 10, 2019). "The BoJack Horseman Episode That Explains Why It's One of the Decade's Best TV Shows". Slate. Retrieved April 5, 2022.
- Lambe, Stacy (July 19, 2016). "My Favorite Scene: 'BoJack Horseman' Creator Raphael Bob-Waksberg on the Episode That Made Netflix Nervous". Entertainment Tonight. Retrieved April 5, 2022.
- Ben Travers (June 27, 2015). "7 New Netflix Shows to Binge Watch in July 2015 - Indiewire". Indiewire. Retrieved January 16, 2016.
- "BoJack Horseman: Season 1 (2014)". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved January 20, 2022.
- "BoJack Horseman – Season 1". Metacritic. Retrieved April 28, 2015.
- Adams, Erik (August 21, 2014). "Netflix's entry into the adult-animation race, BoJack Horseman, stumbles out of the gate". The A.V. Club. Retrieved August 22, 2014.
- Paskin, Willa (August 22, 2014). "The Longest Face". Slate. Retrieved August 23, 2014.
- Mitchell, Chris (August 29, 2014). "BoJack Horseman Popzara Review". Archived from the original on August 31, 2014.
- Neil, Genzlinger (August 24, 2014). "A Talking Horse of a Different Color: Blue". Retrieved August 31, 2014.
- "BoJack Horseman's Radically Funny Sadness -- Vulture". Vulture. September 11, 2014. Retrieved January 16, 2016.
- Ben Travers (June 27, 2015). "7 New Netflix Shows to Binge Watch in July 2015 - Indiewire". Indiewire. Retrieved January 16, 2016.