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Rick & Morty Season 8’s Variants: How They Impact The Pair Explained By Stars

Warning: SPOILERS lie ahead for the first five episodes of Rick and Morty season 8!

The Sanchez family are back for another series of zany, yet surprisingly emotional, adventures in Rick and Morty season 8. With Scott Marder still at the showrunner helm, the new season picks up an unclear amount of time after the events of the prior season, in which the titular duo found themselves confronted by everything from Evil Morty’s return to Rick having to confront his trauma over Diane’s death with the mind-bending finale, “Fear No Mort”.

Rick and Morty season 8, which premiered on May 25, has similarly seen the return of key figures from prior seasons’ storylines, including Space Beth and the Galactic Federation in “Valkyrick”, while also offering a wild, fantastical twist on the Easter Bunny in “The Last Temptation of Jerry”. However, one of the more notable episodes thus far was that of episode 3, “The Rick, The Mort & The Ugly”, which revealed where numerous Rick and Morty clones are in the wake of The Citadel’s destruction, including one of the former with a very dark past.

In honor of the show’s mid-season point, ScreenRant interviewed Harry Belden and Ian Cardoni to discuss Rick and Morty season 8. The duo opened up about some of the new variants of the titular characters introduced this season, including how that allowed them to explore different layers of the mad scientist and grandson, as well as the emotional reveal of a new part of Rick’s backstory. Belden and Cardoni also offered an exciting update on season 9’s production, and their thoughts on The Citadel’s future in the franchise.

Two Of Rick And Morty Season 8’s Variants Are Belden & Cardoni’s Favorites

There May Also Be A Future For The Pair

As with previous seasons of the show, Rick and Morty season 8 has showcased a number of wild new variants of the titular characters, particularly in episode 3, “The Rick, The Mort & The Ugly”, in which Rick C-137 and Morty Prime stumble upon a Wild West-like settlement on a planet near where The Citadel floated in space. After an emergency landing to repair their ship, the duo subsequently learn the settlement is inhabited by clones of Ricks and Mortys, all of whom are stranded after Evil Morty’s destructive escape from the Central Finite Curve in the season 5 finale.

One of the more notable introductions in the episode is that of Homesteader Rick, who lives on the outskirts of the settlement and focuses on tending to some bizarre-looking creatures. However, as the episode proceeds, it’s revealed that this variant was actually the one behind the cloning process on The Citadel, having taken to his newly quiet life in an effort to try and leave his dark past behind. As Cardoni explained, this also gave way to getting to explore a new sound for Rick, which now has “the darker, more brooding nature a little more front and center“.

There’s a gruffness, there’s a texture in the voice,” Cardoni detailed. “I tried to put in a little bit of Harrison Ford in there, maybe a little bit of Clint Eastwood, given the episode title and all that. It’s just trying to highlight a couple aspects of the character that are always there somewhat. But in this particular version, it’s sort of his driving force. He’s, in some ways, a magnified version of Rick that, deep down, still cares, but is maybe even more reluctant to share that or show that.

 

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