Solar Opposites | |
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Genre | |
Created by | Justin Roiland and Mike McMahan |
Voices of |
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Composer | Chris Westlake |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language | English |
No. of seasons | 2 |
No. of episodes | 16 |
Production | |
Executive producers |
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Producers | Sydney Ryan J. Michael Mendel |
Editor | Lee Harting |
Running time | 21–25 minutes |
Production companies |
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Original release | |
Network | Hulu |
Release | May 8, 2020 present | –
Solar Opposites is an American adult animated sitcom created by Rick and Morty co-creator Justin Roiland and Mike McMahan for Hulu.[2] Originally created for the Fox Broadcasting Company, the project was shelved, then bought by Hulu. The series debuted on May 8, 2020.[3] The series was originally ordered as 2 seasons consisting of 8 episodes each. In June 2020, the series was renewed for a third season consisting of 12 episodes.[4] The second season was released on March 26, 2021.
Premise[]
Solar Opposites "centers around a family of aliens from a better world who must take refuge in middle America. They disagree on whether this is awful or awesome." A parallel storyline follows a society of humans shrunk by the replicant Yumyulack and imprisoned in a terrarium known as "The Wall".[5]
Cast[]
Main[]
- Justin Roiland as Korvo: an intelligent alien scientist who hates Earth and wants to leave as soon as possible. He is the designated leader of their mission to find a new world.
- Thomas Middleditch as Terry: Korvo's optimistic and naive partner who enjoys being on Earth and is fascinated with human culture.
- Sean Giambrone as Yumyulack: Korvo's replicant, a self-proclaimed scientist who shrinks random people to add to his terrarium, "The Wall".
- Mary Mack as Jesse: Terry's replicant who is generally kind and wants to fit into human society.
- Sagan McMahan[n 2] as The Pupa: an infant alien linked with the titular Solar Opposites who will one day evolve into its true form and terraform the Earth into a copy of the Shlorp homeworld for the Shlorp ruling class, using the data stored in its DNA.
The Wall[]
- Andy Daly as Lindsey Tim: One of Yumulak's captives, shrunk down for wearing a red shirt. He becomes a scavenger and resistance leader against the Duke's regime, before taking his place.
- Christina Hendricks as Cherie: A Benihana chef placed in the Wall by Yumyulak for serving him shrimp he didn't want. She becomes one of Tim's companions in his fight against the Duke.
- Alfred Molina as The Duke / Ringo (seasons 1–2): the corrupt ruler of Yumyulak's Wall, he maintains order and control by hoarding the supplies given to the Wall's inhabitants by Jesse.
- Sterling K. Brown as Halk (season 2): A haunted war hero of the Resistance and former Bones executive producer trying to solve a string of grisly murders in peacetime.
Recurring[]
- Tiffany Haddish as Aisha: The alien ship's artificial intelligence.
- Kari Wahlgren as Mrs. Frankie: A teacher at James Earl Jones High School who is openly prejudiced against Yumyulak and Jesse and is engaging in a secret affair with Principal Cooke.
- Rob Schrab as Principal Cooke: The principal at James Earl Jones High School who is openly prejudiced against Yumyulak and Jesse and is engaging in a secret affair with Mrs. Frankie.
- Jason Mantzoukas as Vanbo (season 1): An obnoxious alien from another timeline.
Additional Voices[]
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Episodes[]
Season | Episodes | Originally released | |||
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1 | 8 | May 8, 2020 | |||
2 | 8 | March 26, 2021 |
Season 1 (2020)[]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original release date | Prod. code |
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1 | 1 | "The Matter Transfer Array" | Kim Arndt | Mike McMahan Justin Roiland | May 8, 2020 | 1LBF01 |
One year after escaping the destruction of their planet Shlorp and crashing on Earth, aliens Korvo, Terry, and their child-replicants Yumyulack and Jesse adjust to their new lives. Korvo is determined to repair their spaceship, but Terry introduces him to the television show Funbucket. Realizing that the titular alien is fictional, they create a real Funbucket, who tires of them and befriends humans Travis and Avery. Forced to attend high school, Yumyulack and Jesse are menaced by their classmates and faculty. They shrink a bully named Lydia, hoping to use her to study human behavior. When she threatens to go to the authorities, they attempt to lobotomize her, and Terry pours soda on her exposed brain, erasing her memory. Korvo and Terry create another mutated Funbucket who accidentally fuses with the first, becoming a monster that terrorizes the city. They shrink Funbucket and prepare to kill him, but Travis and Avery take him instead. As the Shlorpian family has dinner together, it is revealed that their pet, the Pupa, will one day evolve and destroy Earth to terraform a new Shlorp. | ||||||
2 | 2 | "The Unstable Grey Hole" | Bob Suarez | Mike McMahan | May 8, 2020 | 1LBF02 |
Korvo and Terry place nanobots in the city's water supply to spy on their neighbors. Learning they are not well-liked, Korvo and Terry use the nanobots' information to win over the community and run for president of their homeowner association. The nanobots form a sentient person that runs for president as well, and all three expose embarrassing secrets about their neighbors, who break out in violence. The incumbent president Ruth restores order and turns the crowd against Korvo, Terry, and the nanobot person, who escapes from Korvo. Jesse, concerned that Yumyulack is shrinking and capturing too many humans, uses technology to manipulate people who were mean to Yumyulack, hoping to teach him that humans are generally kind. Unconvinced, Yumyulack takes her to a neo-Nazi bar where they are attacked, forcing his automated suit to kill everyone. Inside the vivarium of shrunken humans in Yumyulack and Jesse's bedroom, a new arrival named Tim is introduced to the horrors of the tiny, savage civilization. | ||||||
3 | 3 | "The Quantum Ring" | Lucas Gray | Matt McKenna | May 8, 2020 | 1LBF04 |
Korvo tries to get the family involved in repairing the spaceship, but they attend a birthday party instead, where he is inspired to become a magician. Using his computer system Aisha, Korvo creates a technologically advanced magic act; he goes viral and prepares for a Las Vegas show, which will culminate in him leaping through a black hole. Korvo ignores his family's warning that jealous magicians plan to kill him; the family saves him from being shot, but he dies when the black hole trick goes awry. The grieving family agrees to repair the ship in Korvo's memory, and he reappears, having faked his death to bring them closer together. Yumyulack adds a woman named Cherie to his shrunken collection. Inside, she is rescued by Tim, who explains the society the captives have built: kept in a system of connected terrariums—the "Wall"—they survive mostly on candy given by Jesse, controlled by the tyrannical Duke. Tim, Cherie, and Pedro try to barter with the Duke for insulin for Pedro's diabetic father Enrique, but the Duke has Pedro killed. Tim and Cherie resolve to bring change to the Wall. | ||||||
4 | 4 | "The Booster Manifold" | Andy Thom | Josh Bycel | May 8, 2020 | 1LBF03 |
Korvo, increasingly frustrated by Terry, vomits a "red Goobler"–a stress-induced creature intent on killing Korvo. They buy a Jet Ski from Trent, who is killed by the Goobler. Hunting the creature inside a Halloween store, they shrink and capture it. At school, Jesse discovers a flower growing on her head, which releases pollen similar to MDMA, making the popular girls enamored with her. Yumyulack accompanies Jesse to a party and discovers his flower, with pollen similar to cocaine, and bonds with the popular boys. The mix of Yumyulack and Jesse's pollen creates an effect similar to PCP or bath salts, turning the party-goers bloodthirsty and deranged. Jesse and Yumyulack inform Terry and Korvo, who explain the flowers are a temporary fungus. Armed with "emergency medical weapons," the family heals the party. Rejected by the popular cliques, Jesse and Yumyulack find themselves heroes to the uncool kids. Terry discovers the red Goobler has escaped but tells Korvo it is dead, filling Terry with his stress; elsewhere, the Goobler plots to kill Korvo. The Pupa winds up in an exotic animal auction, frees the animals, and returns home, only to be accidentally shipped to Africa. | ||||||
5 | 5 | "The Lavatic Reactor" | Bob Suarez | Sean O'Connor | May 8, 2020 | 1LBF06 |
Threatened with expulsion, Yumyulack and Jesse continue to attend their empty high school after the school year ends. Unaware of the summer break, they believe they are being tested and attempt to teach each other. They realize their mistake and wreak havoc on the school, and are bribed with straight As after discovering Principal Cooke and Mrs. Frankie having sex in the cafeteria. Korvo and Terry enroll in a junior college, but Terry shoots Korvo with a raygun that makes him dumber. Korvo joins Terry's hard-partying college experience but accidentally causes the "ice lava" that powers their spaceship to flood the city, freezing everyone in its path. Terry teaches himself to repair the leak, returning the ice lava to the ship; everyone who was frozen disintegrates, and Terry reconstitutes their ashes as infants. The family locks Korvo in the bathroom until his intelligence returns. Inside the Wall, Tim and Cherie lead a rebellion to liberate the Duke's food supply, but Tim refuses to use deadly force. They are betrayed by Enrique, who blames Tim for his son's death. The Duke throws Cherie into the "Boo Hoo Hole" and imprisons Tim. | ||||||
6 | 6 | "The P.A.T.R.I.C.I.A. Device" | Kim Arndt | Danielle Uhlarik | May 8, 2020 | 1LBF05 |
Trying to emulate human males, Korvo and Terry create their own man cave and "P.A.T.R.I.C.I.A.," a robot based on female sitcom characters, programmed to hate the man cave. Korvo and Terry realize the robot fulfills their respective desires for a nagging wife and a nurturing mother and invite her inside the man cave. Torn between her conflicting directives, P.A.T.R.I.C.I.A. transforms into a heavily-armed killing machine and destroys every man cave in the neighborhood. Ms. Perez, Jesse's gender studies teacher, assigns the class to challenge a glass ceiling. Jesse confronts several school extracurriculars but is disappointed to learn they already welcome women. Korvo and Terry lure P.A.T.R.I.C.I.A. to a Dave & Buster's, where Ms. Perez also works but are unable to stop her rampage. Jesse arrives to ask Ms. Perez about the assignment and confronts P.A.T.R.I.C.I.A., allowing Terry to return the robot to her original state. Unable to bring himself to deactivate her, Korvo buries P.A.T.R.I.C.I.A. in a shipping container in the backyard with an emasculated male robot. Yumyulack has his own Australia-themed adventure. | ||||||
7 | 7 | "Terry and Korvo Steal a Bear" | Andy Thom | Dominic Dierkes | May 8, 2020 | 1LBF07 |
Inside the Wall, Tim—imprisoned and tortured on the Duke's orders—is convinced by his cellmate Jean-Pierre to write letters calling for revolution. They are rescued by Cherie and her fellow rebels and prepare to overthrow the Duke. Tim and Cherie spend a passionate night together, and copies of Tim's letters spread throughout the Wall, drawing people to their cause; Cherie urges Tim to lead them. As the Duke addresses a congregation, his sheriff spots Tim in the crowd and attacks, killing Jean-Pierre. Tim unites the oppressed inhabitants of the Wall in an open rebellion. The Duke floods the lower levels, drowning countless people; a farmer named Steven cannot save his beloved mouse, Molly. The rebels rise through the levels of the Wall, confronting the Duke's enforcers. The sheriff fights off Cherie and prepares to kill Tim but is killed by Steven. Tim reaches the Duke's chamber alone and watches the Duke escape through a hidden hole to the outside. Choosing to take control of the Wall himself, Tim kills Cherie to keep the hole secret. Meanwhile, Terry and Korvo steal a bear from a zoo. Note: Composer Chris Westlake conducted a full orchestral score for this episode, recorded at the Fox Studio sound stage. | ||||||
8 | 8 | "Retrace-Your-Step-Alizer" | Lucas Gray | Joe Saunders Ariel Ladensohn | May 8, 2020 | 1LBF08 |
When the Pupa turns orange, Korvo realizes he left important Pupa information in his wallet on Shlorp. He and Terry travel back in time to the day they evacuated Shlorp and knock Korvo's wallet into their spaceship. Returning to the present, they realize the Pupa merely ate something orange, but the time stream has been altered, and they now live with Vanbo, an obnoxious Shlorpian. Returning to the past to set things right, Korvo and Terry learn they did not want each other as evacuation partners but reconcile and beat up Vanbo. Yumyulack discovers Jesse has simulated a nicer version of himself in the "Pretend-O-Deck." His simulated self teaches him to be a better brother to Jesse, but one Yumyulack kills the other. Believing he is the rogue simulation, Jesse kills the real Yumyulack. Terry and Korvo return to the dramatically altered present, and Yumyulack enters, revealing the family has been in the Pretend-O-Deck all along. The Pupa telepathically links with a neighbor, Lorraine, and lets her relive memories of her late mother in exchange for retrieving his confiscated Harry Potter whistle. Jesse and Yumyulack ignore the ominous fact that the Pupa has turned purple. |
Season 2 (2021)[]
No. overall | No. in season | Title | Directed by | Written by | Original release date | Prod. code |
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9 | 1 | "The Sacred Non-repeating Number" | Lucas Gray | Mike McMahan | March 26, 2021 | 2JBF01 |
The family (now dubbed the Solar Opposites by Terry) finally repair their ship, but only Korvo is glad to leave, so when it breaks down, stranding them again because Terry had brought along too many useless things, they are happy. Later, they discover other Schlorpians in London, but when Jesse and Terry are disheartened by the aliens who live underground and hide from humans, Korvo decides to join them, but he begins to feel under them when he forgets the holy number. Meanwhile, Jesse and Terry ruin the house in Korvo's absence. Korvo decides to steal Terry's pupa so it can live with them because they think they will be a better family. Then, he forgets the Shlorpian's holy number and, when Jesse and Terry realize their mistakes and ask Korvo to come home, he agrees, prompting the others to trap him. He escapes and uses a Ferris wheel to return to America and convinces them that a dog is the Pupa and sends them away. Meanwhile, Yumyulack's friends reject him. He is about to kill the bullies when a new kid named Daryl shows up and they become friends. | ||||||
10 | 2 | "The Earth Eraser" | Kim Arndt | Danielle Uhlarik | March 26, 2021 | 2LBF02 |
Yumyulack shrinks another person down, and is surprised that Jesse is not concerned. Terry and Jesse are invited to a dinner party, but Korvo convinces them to let the whole family come. The man Yumyulack shrunk down discovers that since the apparent "death" of the Duke and the rise of Tim, the Wall has become a perfect Utopia. At the dinner party, Korvo leaves embarrassed after everything begins to think he is weird, and makes dinner parties against the law. He and Yumyulack begin arresting people, however Terry hides from them and continues to have dinner parties. In the Wall, a war hero named Halk investigates a murder, but he is conflicted. Korvo creates deadly hounds that turn people at dinner parties into bottles of wine, but when they set their sights on Terry, he realizes must save them. They survive by pretending to be at a birthday party and overturn the law in DC. Yumyulack transforms all the wine back into people. The man who recently entered the Wall has not checked into work, but unbeknownst to all it is because he was gorily killed in his own house. | ||||||
11 | 3 | "The Lake House Device" | Bob Suarez | Josh Bycel | March 26, 2021 | 2LBF03 |
After realizing his warranty complaint box can sent other letters into the past, Korvo uses it to send letters to Terry in order to change his behavior. | ||||||
12 | 4 | "The Emergency Urbanizer" | Annisa Adjani | Daniel Libman Matt Libman | March 26, 2021 | 2LBF04 |
After facing a future of 3 whole months with the replicants, Terry and Korvo send them to "camp". However, they all end up lost in the woods, and decide to use the emergency urbanizer to turn the forest into a city. There, the family split off into different groups to earn enough money to find where Terry parked the car. Inside the wall, they get closer to finding who the killer is. | ||||||
13 | 5 | "The Rad Awesome Terrific Ray" | Lucas Gray | Garrick Bernard | March 26, 2021 | 2LBF05 |
The red goobler returns, but has found love. Jesse and Yumyulak cheat during a fitness test so they don't get picked on by the other kids. | ||||||
14 | 6 | "The Apple Pencil Pro" | Kim Arndt | Ariel Ladensohn | March 26, 2021 | 2LBF06 |
Inside an Apple store, the family meet a pig monstrosity that accuses them of torturing it and sends the family to jail. | ||||||
15 | 7 | "The Unlikely Demise of Terry's Favorite Shot Glass" | Bob Suarez | Joe Saunders | March 26, 2021 | 2LBF07 |
After being stabbed by Tim and thrown out of the Wall, Cherie wakes up with a broken leg in the Solar Opposites' backyard. She is able to survive long enough to find food, but when she begins devouring a giant chicken leg, she finds the Duke, also alive, feeding there as well. Despite their original mistrust of each other, when they share their pieces of the story and realize that Tim has been the villain all along, they begin working together to survive in a toy spaceship and growing close, all while living in fear of Jeff, a possum and the mother of a baby that the Duke killed in self-protection. After suspicions that Cherie is pregnant, the Duke tests it with candy and reveals the truth, that Cherie and Tim will have a baby. He points Cherie in the direction of a Wallgreens, but sacrifices himself stopping Jeff in the process. Resulting in the unlikely demise of Terry’s favorite shot glass. He also reveals his actual name to be Ringo. After a monthly journey through the yard Cherie spontaneously gives birth while in a Pez dispenser that Jesse picked up and is rapidly eating. Cherie continues and reaches past the fence to Walgreens but it turns out to be fake, so she resolves to return to the Wall with her baby. She narrowly escapes a pigeon attack with the help of the Pupa while climbing up the side of the Wall, but returns to the shrunken-down civilization on her memorial day. She meets with Halk and they plot to take down Tim. | ||||||
16 | 8 | "The Solar Opposites Almost Get An Xbox" | Annisa Adjani | Josh Bycel Jen McCartney | March 26, 2021 | 2LBF08 |
After a party, the Solar Opposites discover that the Pupa has changed color again, and that his light blue finish now means they will all die at midnight, the Pupa will eat them, and finally terraform the planet. The are excited, but while getting his shovel back from a neighbor to dig his own grave, he learns that death is final and there are no do-overs. They think they are fulfilled, but Aisha warns them otherwise. They come up with a lot of ideas of things that will make them happy, but choose only one: travel to Brazil to help a rag-tag water-polo team win a championship. They coach a team and win, but do not feel fulfilled and go fulfilling on their own, but each fail. The Pupa prepares to eat them. They regroup, but only Terry is truly fulfilled, until a fight breaks out and he dies. The others try to kill each other to get fulfilled. After Yumyulack's death, Jesse and Korvo realize that spending time with the people they love is fulfilling just as Korvo dies. Jesse is regretful as she waits to die, however the family is reborn as trees. They hate on their neighbor and all get fulfilled. Hulu reveals a holiday special coming next season. |
Production[]
Development[]
On August 28, 2018, it was announced that Hulu had given the production a series order for two seasons consisting of sixteen episodes. The series was created by Rick and Morty co-creator Justin Roiland and Mike McMahan who were also expected to serve as executive producers. Production companies involved with the series are slated to consist of 20th Television.[5][6][7] On June 18, 2020, Hulu renewed the series for a third season consisting of 12 episodes.[4] Originally, the series was being developed by Roiland and McMahan for Fox Broadcasting Company. McMahan has said[when?] that Fox passed on the series because it didn't "fit in with what they were doing" at the time.[citation needed]
Writing[]
The Wall in Yumyulak's room in which he keeps shrunken-down people as prisoners was, as Roiland has noted, one of the duo's initial ideas for the series, as they were interested in a "B-story" that lasted the entire first season.[8][9]
Casting[]
Alongside the series order announcement, it was confirmed that Justin Roiland, Thomas Middleditch, Sean Giambrone, and Mary Mack would voice the lead characters in the series.[5][6][7]
Release[]
The first teaser for the series was released on March 25, 2020.[10] The official trailer was released on April 15, 2020.[11] On May 8, 2020, the first season was released. In January 2021, along with a second trailer, it was revealed that the second season would premiere on March 26, 2021, on Hulu.[12] Internationally, the series premiered on Disney+ under the dedicated streaming hub Star as an original series, on February 23, 2021.[13] In June 2020, ahead of the season two premiere, Hulu renewed the series for a third season consisting of 12 episodes.[4]
Reception[]
Critical response[]
On Rotten Tomatoes the season 1 has an approval rating of 92% based on reviews from 36 critics, with an average rating of 7.56/10. The website's critical consensus states, "Charming, hilarious, and surprisingly sincere, Solar Opposites revels in the ridiculousness of life while finding a few fresh things to say about humanity along the way."[14] On Metacritic it has a weighted average score of 72 out of 100, based on reviews from 10 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[15] On Rotten Tomatoes season 2 has an approval rating of 100% based on reviews from 7 critics.[16]
Alex McLevy of The A.V. Club gave the show a B grade and calls it "a mischievous cousin of 3rd Rock from the Sun" while saying it doesn't stray too far from the template Roiland set with Rick and Morty. McLevy feels the show is still finding its feet, but "Luckily, the humor is so reliably strong, the pacing so breakneck as it races from one plot to the next, that it's hard not to be won over by Solar Opposites' avalanche of charm."[17] Dan Fienberg of The Hollywood Reporter wrote; "The early episodes have certain limited windows of continuity or running gags... but the show becomes increasingly serialized; things that seem like they might be throw-away become unexpectedly important."[18]
Daniel Kurland of Bubbleblabber gave the show's first season a 9/10, stating, "Solar Opposites doesn't hit the same sweeping places of nuance and reflection that Rick and Morty does, but it still respects its characters and takes their problems seriously. It's just easy to get lost in all of the free-floating chaos that never really gets a chance to slow down. Solar Opposites delivers an exceptional first season that's as good, if not even better than Rick and Morty in some ways. It's definitely a crazier series, which is a very good thing for the nature of animated comedies on television. If this is the baseline for Solar Opposites then future seasons can only get more ambitious and insane."[19]
Audience viewership[]
According to Hulu, the series was the number 1 most watched show since its debut on May 8, 2020 to May 12, 2020.[20]
Notes[]
References[]
- ↑ https://deadline.com/2021/03/disney-launches-20th-television-animation-promotes-marci-proietto-the-simpsons-family-guy-1234723503/
- ↑ Evershed, John (2020). Adult Animation Finally Breaking Free of its Comedy Shackles (Report). High Concentrate, LLC in Squarespace. pp. 29. https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5daf57aecd04c82eed72aa1a/t/5e8643ba226c066acaa235b2/1585857472073/Adult+Animation+White+Paper.pdf. Retrieved November 2, 2020.
- ↑ Hipes, Patrick (January 17, 2020). "Hulu Sets Premiere Dates For 'The Great', 'Ramy' And 'Solar Opposites' – TCA". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved January 17, 2020.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 "Solar Opposites/Crossing Swords renewed at Hulu". Retrieved 18 June 2020.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 Andreeva, Nellie (August 28, 2018). "Alien Animated Comedy From 'Rick and Morty' Duo & 20th TV Gets Hulu Series Order". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved August 28, 2018.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ 6.0 6.1 Porter, Rick (August 28, 2018). "'Rick and Morty' Duo Lands 2-Season Order for 'Solar Opposites' at Hulu". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved August 28, 2018.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ 7.0 7.1 Otterson, Joe (August 28, 2018). "Justin Roiland Animated Comedy 'Solar Opposites' Scores Two Season Order at Hulu". Variety. Retrieved August 28, 2018.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ Grobar, Matt (2020-06-23). "'Solar Opposites' Co-Creator Mike McMahan On Following His Bliss With Subversive Alien-Centric Sitcom & What's To Come In Season 2". Deadline. Retrieved 2021-02-15.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ Boone, Brian (2020-05-28). "The Untold Truth Of Solar Opposites". Looper.com. Retrieved 2021-02-15.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ Petski, Denise (March 25, 2020). "'Solar Opposites' Trailer: First Look At Alien Animated Comedy From 'Rick & Morty' Duo". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved April 26, 2020.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ Prudom, Laura (April 15, 2020). "Solar Opposites Trailer: Exclusive Look at Hulu's Deranged Sci-fi Comedy". IGN. Retrieved April 26, 2020.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ Ridgely, Charlie (January 6, 2021). "Solar Opposites Season 2 Premiere Date Announced by Hulu". comicbook.com. Retrieved January 6, 2021.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ Palmer, Roger (January 28, 2021). "DISNEY+ "STAR" UK AND IRELAND LAUNCH LINEUP ANNOUNCED". What's on Disney Plus. Retrieved January 28, 2021.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ "Solar Opposites: Season 1". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved April 1, 2021.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ "Solar Opposites". Metacritic. Retrieved June 9, 2020.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ "Solar Opposites: Season 2". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved April 1, 2021.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ McLevy, Alex. "Solar Opposites is a looser, lighter Rick And Morty". The A.V. Club.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ Fienberg, Dan (May 7, 2020). "'Solar Opposites': TV Review". The Hollywood Reporter.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ Kurland, Daniel. "Solar Opposites Season 1 Review". Retrieved 8 May 2020.
{{cite web}}
: - ↑ Variety Staff (May 12, 2020). "Solar Opposites' Ranks as Hulu's Most Watched Title Since Debut, Streaming Service Says". Variety. Retrieved May 13, 2020.
{{cite web}}
:
External links[]

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