The Simpsons (1989–…): Season 24, Episode 8 - To Cur with Love - full transcript

When Homer shows no remorse over almost losing Santa's Little Helper, Grandpa tells everyone the story of Homer's childhood dog.

♪ The Simpsons 24x08 ♪
To Cur With Love
Original Air Date on December 16, 2012

== sync, corrected by elderman ==
Resync for WEB-DL by Norther

Ho, ho, ho!
== sync, corrected by elderman ==
Resync for WEB-DL by Norther

Welcome to the Montgomery
Burns Prize,

rewarding excellence,
in the field of alternative energy.

Local inventors are vying for a
million dollar stipend donated

by C. Montgomery Burns, as part
of a court settlement

for causing one billion dollars
of environmental damage.

Shoo. Go have one
of your enormous litters.

(growls, screeches)

First inventor,
you, bus driver.



Give us the gist
of your terrible idea.

Well, I've harnessed the
ancient power of slavery

to run the school bus
of tomorrow.

(groans, sighs)

Whose boy is this?

I'll take him home.

You'll take his place.

(groans)

I would like to present

my Kwik-E-Smart perpetual
energy machine.

Three years ago,
I tripped over the cord,

but the hotdogs,
they kept rolling.

Some say they're powered
by decaying nitrates,

others by tiny insects
beneath the hot dog skins.



(wry laugh)

Hard to believe I once turned
down a job in Tampa, Florida,

because I believed in this city.

That was 15 years ago.

They wouldn't take you now.

Is anyone here
an actual scientist?

Uh, yes, I have, on occasion,
dabbled in the scientific arts.

Frink Labs,
a division of Allied Frink,

the Good-Glavin people,

are proud to present
the Frinkasonic MHV.

And what, pray tell, is MHV?

Oh, yes,
it's the Moyvin-Hoyvin Vehicle.

This non-magnetic babe magnet

is powered entirely by,
you guessed it,

(quietly):
sound waves.

(crowd murmuring)

(engine starts)

Ah, yes, you see?

Your quite appropriate
oohs and ahs

are propelling me forward.
It's wonderful.

(gasping, murmuring excitedly)

That's slightly more enthusiasm
than I had anticipated.

For the love of God,

step on the brakes!

The brakes are powered
by silence.

(people yelling)

(Willie yelling)

Look out because of the zooming.

Why is it ejecting?

It's just a normal seat...!

(gasping, shouting)

(all screaming)
No! No!

I'm okay.

I'll just go live with my son.

(screaming)
No! No!

Hurry up.

I want to get Grampa
back here by 3:00,

so we can get him and Maggie
on the same nap schedule.

I've labeled all his boxes.

(laughs)

Well, I can't pick up
something this heavy

without my lifting belt.

(sudden shout)
Ow!

You know you can't
lift your lifting belt

without wearing your
belt-lifting-belt.

Oh, no.

I won't be able
to help you pack up Grampa.

Fine.

Just stay here and
hold down the fort.

Hold down the fort?

With my bad back?

(groans)

(chuckles)

Man, that keyboard-playing cat
is so cute.

(playing jazzy tune
over tablet speaker)

"Villageville"?!

"Build your own authentic
medieval village."

I must have
something better to do.

And ca-lick.

(fanfare plays)

Finally, a woodcutter that will
do what I tell him.

(humming happily)

Holy moley!

He's already made a clearing.

Let's go for a glade.

(chopping and bell dinging
repeatedly)

(chuckles)

Just call me DeForest Kelley.

I gotta write that down
and send it to Conan.

Oh, move this here-- tap.

Mill, mill.

Barn, silo.

Tavern, tavern, tavern, tavern,
tavern, tavern...

Brothel.

Parsonage.

A Theater in the Round.

And...

hay pile.

(panting)

"And the Lord saw what
He had made, and it was good."

(groans)

VILLAGERS (over speaker):
Ew.

Yeah, that's right,

your Lord sticks his hand
in his pants.

And yes, it is the same hand
I tapped you with.

(bell dings)

Well, if I've learned anything,

it's that you can't have
too much iron ore.

Maybe one of your tavern wenches
can do the laundry.

(shrieks)
You're back.

Did you spend this whole time

doing fake chores
in a fake village?

It's real to them.
(groans)

Um, where's
Santa's Little Helper?

I don't know.
The backyard?

The backyard?
But what if he got out

through your half-completed
tunnel to Flanders's fridge?

I don't see him anywhere.

You jackass.
You lost our dog!

Oh, my God.

I forgot to feed my jackass.

(bellowing):
Hank-hew.

(bellowing):
You're welcome.

Santa's Little Helper.

Santa's Little Helper!

I love that dog,

but that is one long,
stupid name.

(both groaning)

(meows)

- What the hell?
- Oh, right.

The animal shelter hasn't had
any greyhounds turned in.

Just a dachshund, a chow,
and a pregnant raccoon.

A lot of good backups.
How pregnant is the raccoon?

We don't want a raccoon.

Good, Marge.

Get their price down.

Dad, I just noticed something.

You're not upset enough
about this.

Hey, Lisa's right.

You're the only one who
hasn't cried about the dog.

Not a crier.

What? You cry all the time.

You cried when they canceled
that show you hated.

Goofing on it made me feel wise.

(whimpering)

- Where is that coming from?
- From the kitchen.

He's alive!

And he didn't pee on the floor.

For me, that's a perfect day.

(everyone talking at once)

Dad, why'd you shut our dog
in a cabinet?

I'll answer that.

Your father's an idiot.

I believe the word is idiote.

How did Santa's Little Helper
get in there?

(gasps)
I know what must have happened.

I'm going to get a snack,

but first, should I introduce
the black plague?

Mm... what could be the harm?

(man screaming over speaker)

Whoa, now I've got to buy
a corpse wagon.

Well, that's how they get you.

Hmm... ooh, it's amazing

how many things they can
make taste like cheese.

Oh, yeah, baby, I'm drinking
you down to your knees.

(sniffing)

♪ Gonna drink ammonia

♪ 'Cause it tastes like cheese

♪ I wonder what will happen...

A minstrel has composed
a roundelay mocking me?

Torture, torture, torture.

(people screaming over speaker)

Well, it's time we showed
this dog some love.

- Oh.
- Oh.

(all speak soothingly)

Attaboy.

Hey Homer, how come
you're not hugging the dog?

He knows I love him,
and he loves me.

(growling)

That's short for
"Rrright you are."

I don't think you even like
Santa's Little Helper.

You never take him for walks
or sleep with him in your arms.

And I suspect you've been
chewing on his treats.

How are they his treats
if I paid for them?

Okay, okay.

I'll be nicer to the dude.

I've just never really
been a dog person.

Really? What about Bongo?

Bongo?!

I told you never
to ever talk about Bongo.

(sobbing)

Ever!

What just happened?
Who's Bongo?

Bongo was Homer's dog
when he was a boy.

HOMER:
He's still my dog!

We got him years ago.

HOMER: I don't know what you
just said, but it's wrong!

Wrong, wrong, wrong.

(sighs)

I was working long hours

at the Springfield
Smokestack Factory.

Oh, I was so tired
when I got home.

Then little Homer
would start crying and crying,

but Bongo knew just what to do.

(howling, crying stops)

(snoring)

Now, my dear, we can
watch Mannix as a couple.

Unfortunately,
like all true stories,

this one has a crappy ending.

You have a story with an ending?

Uh-huh. All my stories
have endings now.

They're putting something
in my Jell-O down at the home.

Anyway, Homer and that dog

went together like Christmas
and suicidal thoughts.

♪ Me and my Arrow

♪ Straighter than narrow

♪ Wherever we go

♪ Everyone knows

♪ It's me and my Arrow...

(tires screech)

♪ Me and my Arrow

♪ Taking the high road...

(alarm sounding)

♪ Wherever we go

♪ Everyone knows

♪ It's me and my Arrow...

Aww.

(stammers, gasps)

I had no clue.

Then came the fateful day

when Mr. Burns was lobbying

for the go-ahead
on his nuclear plant,

and he was giving away

stuffed Isotoads
to all the children.

Have a toy.

Don't thwart my ambition.

Look, they even talk.

ELECTRONIC VOICE: Cancer
clusters are random occurrences.

Creepy.

You can have mine, Bongo.

Those toys are people bribes,
you good-hearted little brat.

(growling)

Ugh! He bit me!

(growling)
Get him out of here, son.

Now.

Mr. Burns,
I'm awfully sorry.

Oh, I'll be all right.

Once I hold your
dying pet in my arms

and feel his wagging
tail go stiff.

Uh, sir, you are aware you're
at a PR event for children.

(chuckles)

Bring in the clown.

Hey-hey!

(laughs)

So, Lady Godiva gets a haircut,
right, and...

Kids?

Uh, no problem.

I'll just cut
to my clean material.

(muttering)

Farmer's daughter, no.

A man from Nantucket, no.

Bring out the monkey!

(laughing)

Next time I'm getting
a smaller monkey.

Ow! Gow! Ooh!

Oh! Gah! All right!

So Mr. Burns wanted
to kill Homer's dog.

Homer had no idea.

He was so innocent and chubby.

Course now,
he's just stupid and fat.

- Focus.
- Huh? Oh, right.

Little Homer didn't know it,

but Burns had unleashed
the local dogcatcher

to bring Bongo in.

(sirens wailing)

♪ Little Homer had a dog

♪ And Bongo was his name-o

♪ B-O-On-On-Go

♪ B-O-On-On-Go...

(tires screech)
Get in quick.

This was before the day
of safety seats

and coming to a complete stop
to let your child get in.

When God closes a door,
he opens a gun shop.

Wait.

How could you know
what Herman said?

You were driving away.

- He wrote a memoir.
- Oh.

Uh-oh.

Huh.

Oh.

Anyway...

(siren blaring)

Son, I've got an idea.

A hole next to the seat
to hold my cup?

That's a stupid idea.

Holding cups
are what thighs are for.

Now hang on tight.

(sniffing, panting, barking)

(inhales)
Mmm!

Smell them sausages, Lou.

Are you sure
the Big Brother Program

couldn't find me anybody else?

Yeah, well, you were
my last pick, too, okay?

Tipping, aah!

(barking)

Oh, I'm a washout
as a dogcatcher.

What do I do now?

Well, my dream
is to be police chief.

Oh, no, you can't 'cause,
um, that's my dream.

I'm gonna be chief of police.

Well, then I'll be
a spokesman for my people,

like Ralph Abernathy.

Ralph, I like that name.

Man, this story
is filling in a lot of gaps.

But I want to know about Dad
and his broken heart.

Your father lost a lot
in his life--

his hair, his mother,

more games of Monopoly
than any man ought.

He'd go to jail and stay there
'cause he loves the easy life,

but I think losing that dog

was the toughest blow of all.

HOMER:
Where are we going, Daddy?

Remember our old
neighbor, Miss Viola?

Well, she moved to the country,
where there was no limit

on how many pets one
single lady could own.

Miss Viola?

Isn't she cuckoo?

Now, son,
a lot of people are cuckoo

till you need something
from them.

I knew that Bongo would have
a good home there

and Burns would never find him.

Gosh, Miss Viola,

I want you
and your husband to know

how much I appreciate this.

(both groan, then goat bleats)

Well, let's get this dog in.

(whimpers)
Come on.

Son, uh, why don't you
give him your sweatshirt

so he'll remember you.

Okay.

How long till we come back
and get him?

I had to tell my boy

we were giving
away his dog for good.

I wasn't sure if a six-year-old

could even understand
the concept.

What? No.

No! No!

Bongo!

(wailing)

Turns out,
he caught on pretty quick.

Your father was devastated.

(crying)

(scoffs)
Women and their crying.

(sobbing):
Finish the damn story.

I've got a hockey game tonight.

When I finally got back
to the house...

Simpson, release your hound.

He's already gone
where you'll never get him.

I'm a powerful man, Simpson.

I can walk into McDonalds,
order soup,

and they'll make it.

Go on. Get.

I got a bug zapper,
and I ain't afraid to use it.

Is that sugar water I smell?

(electrical zapping)
(groans)

Well, I'm afraid I
already told my dogs

they could tear yours apart.

Don't make me look into those
pitiless black eyes and say,

"Daddy didn't bring you
a friend-friend to rip-rip!"

Where's Bongo?

Is he still
at the crazy lady's...

Back to sleep, son.

(chuckles)

(groans, snores)

Oh, listen,

I can think of something
you'd enjoy

more than killing a dog.

Dropping a horse on a church?

No! Breaking a man's spirit.

Mine.

Well, I guess I could always

drop a horse on a
church afterward.

Fine.

I had to take care of
his hounds for a year.

I tried to wear a bite-proof suit,

but those satanic Snoopys
always found their way in.

(growling, groaning)

I'm not done with you.

I insist you never wear shoes
or a proper necktie again.

Just house slippers

and the most humiliating tie
there is;

bolo.

(gasps)

But the hardest part

was that my son
was so angry with me.

How was school today?

Ketchup, please.

You're probably wondering
how I got rabies.

Well...
I'm not hungry anymore.

Our relationship
never recovered,

and no amount of ignoring
the problem could ever fix it.

(sobbing)

Grampa, why is the
saddest story you ever told

the only one that's
ever made sense?

(scoffs)
Doesn't make sense to me.

I happen to remember it
just a little differently.

Well, tell us your version.

Now granted, I was just a kid,
but I say...

Grampa always hated Bongo

and loved money
so he sold Bongo

to a wicked farm witch
just so he could hang out

with a bunch of rich dogs
and kidnapped Santa

so I'd never get the toy
I actually wanted.

And then... then wha...

and then what happened... was...

(stammers)

Gee, my story
doesn't make much sense

except the Santa part.

Yeah, but at least it was short.

Wait. Wait.

There's one part of the story
even Grampa didn't know about.

A few months later,
I went to rescue Bongo.

(coughing)

Hendrix, come here, boy.

(barking)

But there was one thing
I wasn't prepared for.

Bongo was...

happy without me.

He had become her dog.

Oh, Homie.

I'm so sorry.

Well, that's just
the way dogs are.

The most disloyal, unfaithful
creatures God ever made.

Homer, maybe you should take
a look at this.

A Christmas card I got
from Miss Viola years later.

HOMER: He still had
my sweatshirt.

Bongo didn't forget you.

Unlike those gerbils
of yours we gave away.

Oh, they were fickle as hell.

Oh, my God, Dad.

I owe you an apology.

You saved Bongo.

I never understood that
till now.

(sobbing):
All these years I thought

you loved that dog more than me.

(sobbing):

Why would you think that?

Just because I put you in a home
where they feed you dog food?

Aw, give me a hug, son.

Okay, but I'm a little
out of practice.

Hold your arms like you're
carrying a wedding cake.

What flavor?

It doesn't matter.

If it doesn't matter,
then I call Snickers.

That's not a flavor.

Everything's a flavor
in the kitchens of today.

Just hug already.

Homie? Huh?

(snoring)

Come on, boy,
time to go to bed.

My dog.

All right, Homer,
it's your moment.

But he's mine tomorrow.

(both snoring)

♪ Me and my Arrow

♪ Straighter than narrow

♪ Wherever we go...

== sync, corrected by elderman ==
Resync for WEB-DL by Norther

More cheese, sir?

No. Any word
from Karl Rove?

Sir, despite what he's been
telling you, it's over.

- Romney lost.
- Damn it.

I guess it's time I explain
to these good people

the upcoming fiscal cliff.

Think of the economy as a car
and the rich man as the driver.

If you don't give the
driver all the money,

he'll drive you over a cliff.

It's just common sense.

Furthermore,
rich people feel things

more deeply than the common man.

(screaming, sobbing)

And we've got to change our
approach to immigration.

I have a progressive proposal
to let into this country

200 grimy Irishmen a year.

I've got lots of potatoes
that need peeling

and stables to be mucked out.

Sir, the insta-polls are in.

You're just digging
yourself deeper.

Well, then let me
just say this.

Marco Rubio...
(speaking Spanish)

I'm afraid you
just made things even worse.

How? Why?

You just said Marco Rubio
is a pink handkerchief.

This public service announcement
is over.

BURNS:
Execute the cameraman.

Shh!