City Sushi
"City Sushi" is the sixth episode of the fifteenth season of the American animated sitcom South Park, and the 215th episode of the series overall. It premiered on Comedy Central in the United States on June 1, 2011. In the episode, Butters is misdiagnosed with multiple personality disorder. Meanwhile, Tuong Lu Kim takes on South Park's new Japanese resident, who has put a sushi restaurant right next to his City Wok.[1]
"City Sushi" | |
---|---|
South Park episode | |
Episode no. | Season 15 Episode 6 |
Directed by | Trey Parker |
Written by | Trey Parker |
Featured music | "Party Rock Anthem" by LMFAO |
Production code | 1506 |
Original air date | June 1, 2011 |
The episode was written by series co-creator Trey Parker and is rated TV-MA L in the United States. It parodies several horror films, such as Psycho, Paranormal Activity and Identity.
Plot
Butters, distributing flyers for a newly opened Japanese restaurant named City Sushi, gives one to Tuong Lu Kim, the owner of the Chinese restaurant City Wok. Bewildered at the prospect of a Japanese restaurant next to his, an angered Lu Kim enters the establishment and gets in a fight with the owner, a Japanese man named Junichi Takayama. Butters is then sent home by the police for indirectly starting an "Asian turf war". Linda wonders what is the problem, and, according to Stephen, "it's clear it isn't our parenting, we're awesome!". Stephen decides that Butters must have mental problems and he and Linda take Butters to therapy, where he ends up being misdiagnosed with multiple personality disorder by psychiatrist Dr. Janus, even though Butters is just a child playing and using his imagination to pretend to be a firefighter, a supervillain, and a detective. Ironically, however, it turns out that Janus actually has multiple personality disorder himself and unknowingly puts Butters in situations that make the boy appear more mentally unfit.
While this occurs, Lu Kim is further infuriated that everyone in South Park is lumping Chinese and Japanese together, such as the town naming its Chinatown "Little Tokyo". He proceeds to enact a plan to get rid of Takayama by first faking a truce and then publicly humiliating him at the school by depicting old stock photos of the atrocities Japan committed against the Chinese during the Second Sino-Japanese War. (Such as the Nanjing Massacre) Lu Kim later makes an apology to Takayama while building a tower called "the Tower of Peace" between the two restaurants for an "Asian Diversity Festival", intending to murder Takayama and make it look like a suicide which would not arouse suspicion, due to the stereotype behind it.
At that time, Butters is investigating Dr. Janus' house at the insistence of "Billy," one of Janus' personas, and makes a shocking discovery: "Tuong Lu Kim" is, and always was, yet another split-personality of the therapist. Even though Dr. Janus is white, his most dominant alternate persona is the owner of the local Chinese restaurant, and for years, Janus has effectively convinced the people of South Park that he is indeed the Chinese "Tuong Lu Kim" by squinting his eyes and speaking in a stereotypical Chinese accent. Butters contacts the police and as they arrive Lu Kim is attempting to push Takayama off the tower and visibly changes his personality in plain sight before the town. Upon finding out that Lu Kim was white all along, Takayama comes to the realization that he has brought shame upon himself and commits suicide by jumping over the edge of the tower to his death yelling: "No! This is racial stereotyping!" and falling on the City Sushi building, destroying it on impact.
Butters is praised as a hero by the police for exposing the split identities of Janus, and his parents, upon learning the truth of the events, are proud of him. Despite Takayama's harassment and death and the disorganized state of Janus' mental health, the police decide to keep Lu Kim around since he owns the only Chinese restaurant in South Park. The episode ends with a scene parodying the ending of Psycho; Lu Kim sits in a prison cell, covered in a blanket, and when a fly lands on him, and he says he will show them he is fine as he would not even harm a fly, before a shot of Dr. Janus covers his face, followed by a final shot of City Wok.
Cultural references
Dr. Janus is named after Roman god Janus, god of transitions. This god is generally depicted with two faces: one on the front of his head and one on the back.[2]
The scene in which Butters watches a video he recorded of his night sleeping is a reference to the film Paranormal Activity (Butters acknowledges that he got the idea from the film) and the final scene with Lu Kim parodies that of the film Psycho.[2]
In the scene where Butters is playing as a trucker, he is quoting parts of the song "Convoy" by C. W. McCall.
In the scene where Dr. Janus first reveals his multiple personalities, one of the personalities says, "The horned toad says we should go to Mexico". The line is a quote from the movie The Outlaw Josey Wales, spoken by the character Lone Watie, portrayed by veteran actor Chief Dan George.
Critical reception
The episode cleverly handles a formerly funny but now terribly racist presentation of a Chinese character by eliminating the possibility of the character being Chinese, rather a crazy white man who thinks he is Chinese.
Assignment X rated the episode B+, stating that South Park had "emerged from its slump", stating "the spoof of horror movies is where the episode really excels".[3] The A.V. Club gave it the same rating, praising the creators on their "mindfulness" of not diluting Butters' character by repeatedly putting him in the spotlight.[2] Meanwhile, IGN gave the episode a mixed review stating "so far this season has displayed a drastic drop in quality, and it's sad when even Butters can't put it right".[4]
References
- "City Sushi", South Park Studios, accessed June 9, 2011.
- "City Sushi". The A.V. Club.
- Cortez, Carl. "TV Review: SOUTH PARK - Season 15 - "City Sushi"". Assignment X.
- Isler, Ramsey. "South Park: "City Sushi" Review" Archived 2011-06-07 at the Wayback Machine, IGN, June 2, 2011
External links
- "City Sushi" Episode guide at South Park Studios
- "City Sushi" Full episode at South Park Studios
- "City Sushi" on IMDb
- "City Sushi" at TV.com