Family Guy the Untold Story of Stewie Griffin

Release Date: September 27, 2005.

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Prologue

The unabridged picture begins with a news report involving the premiere of the actual moving-picture show itself at the Quahog Performing Arts Center, where several characters have been invited. Eventually, the Griffin family arrives and each of them make a grand entrance, with the exceptions of 1000000 and Chris. Brian comes out of the limo and asks how everyone got in his sleeping accommodation. Chris comes out and makes a joke that he was sitting backwards in the limo so his underwear was going the right way. Stewie comes out and describes his political career, which resembles Saddam Hussein's. Lois falls out every bit she is extremely drunk because at that place was alcohol in the car and is followed by Peter, embarrassed beyond conventionalities. 1000000 comes out and reporter Tricia Takanawa asks her a question and before Million can even respond, David Bowie arrives and Tricia's attention is fatigued to him equally she dry out humps his leg and offers to make him fish brawl soup. Other guests included Drew Barrymore, the Kool-Aid Man and Cleveland. It ends inside the theater, where Quagmire is making a bootleg recording of the film (later on momentarily distracted by a woman's cleavage). On screen nosotros see fictional trailers for fictional movies (including a very clichéd Walt Disney moving-picture show). And then, on a dark-green background, nosotros see a sex activity warning, then information technology cuts to the 20th Century Fox logo.

Stewie B. Goode

The moving-picture show opens at the Quahog Community Swimming Pool. Encouraged past Peter and Lois to take swimming lessons, Stewie meets the star student of the class, Brad. Jealous, Stewie decides to try and outdo him in a swimming race. He well-nigh drowns in the procedure, while Brad finishes in first identify. Feeling humiliated and wanting to impale his nemesis, Stewie rigs a lifeguard chair with dynamite and lures Brad beneath information technology by putting a piece of marzipan under information technology. Withal, Stewie'due south detonator malfunctions, and he blows himself up and is crushed beneath the lifeguard chair. Stewie awakens in Hell. Stewie is abruptly brought dorsum to Earth, and he decides to change his ways.

Meanwhile, Peter gets a job at Quahog 5 News, hosting a ranting segment known as What Really Grinds My Gears, in which he rants about things that bother him, such every bit Lindsay Lohan and the 19th century. Peter becomes extremely popular, overshadowing Tom Tucker and making him feel jealous. His jealousy causes for himself to go fired. Stewie's attempts at being a practiced boy mainly revolve around smothering Brian with affection, much to the latter'south consternation. Brian finally goads Stewie into reverting to his old, violent means, resurrecting Stewie'due south fear of Hell. Deciding to follow Brian's example of controlling anger through drunkenness, Stewie becomes an alcoholic; Brian, seeking to cure Stewie, takes him out for a night of drinking at The Drunken Clam which culminates in Stewie ramming Brian's auto through the wall of the bar.

Knowing Stewie is Peter'southward son, Tom takes reward of the situation and presents footage of the accident at the news station. Peter loses his job and Tom regains his postal service.

The next morning, Stewie wakes up naked in his crib with a hangover, patently having blacked out and given Roger Moore his phone number the night before. Stewie laments to Brian his lonely existence in the globe, and wishes that there were someone else to whom he could relate.

Bango Was His Name Oh

Later, while watching television, Brian and Stewie come across an interview with a San Francisco human who looks and sounds exactly like Stewie. Stewie is convinced that this human being is his real father (he's really non proud of having Peter as a male parent) and resolves to travel to San Francisco to encounter with him.

Learning that Quagmire is going on a Cross "Cuntry" (his spelling; Quagmire is apparently and so perverted that he doesn't believe "country" is spelled with an "o" betwixt the "c" and the "u") trip through all 50 states with the intent of having sex activity with a adult female in every state, Brian and Stewie hitch a ride in his "Wanna-bang-o". At a cabin in New Jersey, Quagmire is handcuffed to a bed and mugged by a cleaning woman; Stewie finds Quagmire, and rather than gratis him, steals the "Wanna-bang-o". Having obtained "pep pills" from a trucker, Stewie goes off-road and crashes the vehicle. When they are stranded in the desert there is a clear homage with In the Army Now. Stewie almost gives up, but Brian gives a pep talk.

Meanwhile, in the B plot, Peter and Lois decide to encourage their older children to date others so that they could spend some time alone together without interruption. They succeed in the finish, only to question whether their motives were good and if the kids were actually ready to see other people.

Arriving in San Francisco, Stewie and Brian runway down the human being from the television. Stewie confronts the homo on a trolley, and is shocked to discover that the man is actually Stewie from 30 years in the futurity.

Intermission

The motion picture then cuts to a brief intermission (with a running commentary from the theater patrons, since they are nevertheless watching the picture).

Stu & Stewie's Excellent Adventure

Stu Griffin, as Stewie's future cocky is called, is taking a time-travel vacation, which is how people in the future take time off. Stewie tricks his way back to the future with Stu. In the hereafter, Stu refers to the younger Stewie equally a kid named "Pablo" from Nicaragua. Amazingly, no one seems to notice the similarities betwixt the two.

In the year 2035 at a family unit dinner, Stewie discovers how the lives of his family will pan out: Chris will become a traffic cop and marry a hateful, foul-mouthed hustler named Vanessa who belittles him and insists on putting Peter and Lois in a retirement home; 1000000 will go to college and become a sex change, becoming a man named Ron; and Brian volition die of theobromine poisoning by eating chocolate he establish in the garbage, get to Sky, and spend a rather promising eternity drinking with Ernest Hemingway, Vincent van Gogh and Kurt Cobain (who, in common, have committed suicide, only Hemingway, van Gogh, and Cobain intentionally committed suicide past shooting themselves and for deeper reasons: Hemingway was weighed downwardly by his own genius, van Gogh couldn't reconcile his feelings with gild's feelings [plus, he was mentally ill], and Cobain didn't want to live to see his music be dumbed down and usurped by greedy, soulless corporations).

Stewie over fourth dimension learns of his own horrible fate: at age 35, he will exist a virgin working for the Quahog Circuit Shack (a spoof of Excursion City, Best Purchase and Radio Shack) and living in a low-hire apartment (where he withal keeps and talks to his teddy bear, Rupert) and his only friend will be a female person co-worker named Fran. Furthermore, he is a doting mama'due south male child, having long ago abandoned his matricidal tendencies.

Disgusted with the style his futurity life will turn out, Stewie screams "I will have the crappy place and the expressionless end task just I will not accept beingness a 35 year old Parade magazine reading VIRGIN!!!!!!!!!!" and and then remodels Stu'southward apartment and coaches him through The Joy of Sex activity with the intent of getting Stu to lose his virginity to Fran. Stu and Fran practise finish upward having sex—for nearly 8 seconds, followed past 40 minutes of Stu crying, and then offering to pay for the sex. Fran goes back to Circuit Shack and tells everyone well-nigh it, costing Stu his job. Returning dwelling house, he finds that his apartment is in flames, ironically caused by "stress-release" candles Stewie placed while redecorating.

His life at present ruined, Stu laments the twenty-four hours of his near-death experience at the Community Pool. Noting that it may exist a clue to the reason of his future life, Stewie asks him to elaborate, and Stu reveals that memories of the experience will re-surface when young Stewie is 20, causing him to backslide and preventing him from taking whatsoever risks (hence why he grew up to become such a wimp with a dead end chore). Armed with this cognition, Stu and Stewie proceed to the retirement home where Lois now resides to ask for money to buy a new fourth dimension-travel lookout man; Lois, who reveals she knew all forth that "Pablo" was Stewie, obliges (but requests that Chris must never marry Vanessa). They buy the watch, but before Stewie leaves Stu realizes that his history will alter if Stewie succeeds, and that they volition never see each other the same way again. They say their terminal goodbyes and Stewie begins his mission.

Stewie travels back in time to the day of the accident (with a brief stop, at Lois' request, to kill Vanessa with an Rocket-propelled grenade on her wedding mean solar day with Chris) and runs to the puddle similar Ferris Bueller from Ferris Bueller's Day Off. He manages to prevent himself from getting crushed by the chair. By Stewie wonders what happened and asks Future Stewie who he is - Future Stewie responds, and after a brief talk By Stewie vaporizes Time to come Stewie with his raygun. By obliterating Future Stewie, the trajectory of his future is inverse, without him knowing. The family packs up and heads home, with 1000000 bidding farewell to a boy to whom she's been talking to, considering how much she likes his name: Ron.

Epilogue

Later on the film ends, we cut to the after party, where each fellow member of the Griffin family is interviewed by Tricia Takanawa, sharing thoughts involved with Family Guy's cancellation and improvement. In the end, during his final speech communication, Peter rips out a fart as a joke, and anybody laughs. The picture show ends with the screen pulls back, revealing information technology to be on another TV screen with Peter next to information technology. He explains that farting is no laughing matter, then rips out another fart, revealing it to be another joke.


"Stewie Griffin The Untold Story" contains examples of...

  • Abusive Parents: Peter & Lois go to some pretty horrific lengths to teach Meg and Chris how to handle dating. Peter is incredibly misogynistic to Meg and locks her in the car and forces her to smell his farts challenge that it's the sexiest thing a woman can do for a man. Lois on the other hand has Chris chained upwards in a tub and when he fails to get the names of all of the women on Sex activity and the Metropolis, she has him punished via electroshock therapy.
  • Allurement-and-Switch:
    • A cutaway shows Peter launching himself from a catapult and then cuts to a man placing line-up dominoes and expensive, delicate glass next to his newborn, hemophiliac baby. Peter lands...right outside the house and no impairment is done.
    • When Lois is teaching Chris how to date, she says, "Now that we've practiced kissing and cuddling, it's time to practise eating out. [camera cuts dorsum to reveal a dining table]... at a fancy eatery."
    • What initially seems similar a Take That! at Sheryl Crow ends upward being one about Lance Armstrong: "Did you lot know Lance Armstrong is dating Sheryl Crow? You know, it really speaks to her character that she tin get past the whole "he had cancer" matter and even so observe him sexually bonny. Really speaks to her grapheme. I respect that."
  • Bland-Proper name Product: Lackluster Video in part 1.
  • Bowdlerization and Edited for Syndication:
    • When aired on television, the movie plays out more like a three-function episode. The movie premiere framing devices are all cut (including the ending that shows the Griffins every bit Animated Actors who all did different projects during the bear witness's cancellation, like Peter directing some unaired Family unit Guy episodes [including one where Cleveland and Lois perform a jungle cede and a Very Special Episode centered on incest], Chris stars in a West Fly-style political drama, Meg singing for Navy sailors, and Lois getting in trouble for drunken and disorderly conduct and takes to entertaining as a available party stripper), and most of the jokes are either cut or altered for time and/or content reasons. Some examples include:
    • The offensive language (mostly Peter's "fuck y'all, America" and 95% of what Vanessa [Chris' hereafter wife] says) is bleeped out or replaced with alternate, less offensive lines.
    • The special opening (which consists of the same premiere scenes, the 1994 20th Century Flim-flam logo, and a credits sequence modeled after the ones used for the Brian and Stewie "Road to..." episodes, in that verbal order) is replaced with the regular Family Guy title sequence. Two "Previously on…" teasers were added to parts 2 and three.
    • The first pool scenes, where Lois reveals that she became pro-choice later on her pregnancy with Meg cost her the take chances at being an Olympic diver, Meg and Peter injuring themselves subsequently trying to push Brian in the puddle, and Quagmire having sex with a woman in the pump motel.
    • The cutaway of Peter'due south jazz-singing ancestor (who looks similar Ella Fitzgerald) blinding a young Ray Charles by singing then high that she breaks a wine glass almost his eyes (even though in Existent Life, Ray Charles went blind when he was a child).
    • Stewie waking up hungover: On the DVD version, Stewie wakes up and finds that he's naked and has a tattoo on his chest that reads, "Property of Roger Moore." On the Boob tube version, Stewie is fully-clothed and, instead, finds a handkerchief with Roger Moore's initials embroidered on information technology. The dialogue was changed accordingly.
    • The Shield cutaway (with Detective Scrotes) is missing from the TV versions.
    • Very minor ones: When baby Stewie is instructing developed Stewie how to accept sexual practice, in the DVD version he says "Put it in, take it out" repeatedly, whereas in the TV version he says "And in, and out" repeatedly. Too, in the DVD version, baby Stewie whispers to adult Stewie, "You march in there right now and insert your... (looks in book) "phallus" into her "vagina". In the Television receiver version, "phallus" was replaced with "penis" (mispronounced "pennis") (the gratis tv syndication version bleeped both "penis" and "vagina"). And in the DVD version, Fran tells adult Stewie, "I'm putting in my diaphragm...", but in the Television version, she says the more than vague, "I'm getting my diaphragm..."
    • The scene of Brian and Stewie drunkenly playing Pac-Man was cut for time in the TV version.
  • Chewing the Scenery: When Peter grabs Stewie and attempts to throw him in the pool, Stewie holds on tight and tries to let Peter know he doesn't want to die.

    Stewie: No! Let me go! I don't desire to drown! I desire to alive! LIIIIVVVVEEEE!

  • Children Are a Waste material: Lois reveals in part one that she was supposed to go to the Olympics for pond, just got meaning with Meg and couldn't become.

    Lois: Now I'm pro-choice.

  • Comically Missing the Point: Stewie and Stu discussing Meg's gender-transition as Ron.

    Stu: That'southward Meg. She'southward Ron at present. She had a sex change operation later on finishing college.
    Stewie: Wow! She went to college?

  • Compilation Movie: Inverted. It was idea up before the testify was Un-Cancelled, but it was made and then information technology could be easily split into iii parts for television.
  • Country Matters: When Quagmire shows off his Winnebago (which he calls "Winnebango"), he has a sign that says "Cross Country". Brian asks him, "Isn't there an "O" in state?" Quagmire replies, "Nope!"
  • Didn't Remember This Through: Later in the pic, Future Stewie is goaded by Stewie to have sexual practice with Fran, Future Stewie's coworker at All-time Buy. After their awkward attempt to take sexual practice, Future Stewie'south boss finds out most his endeavor of having an intimate relationship with Fran. Due to Hereafter Stewie and Fran beingness co-workers and the strict rules of coworkers having relationships, Future Stewie's boss promptly fires him.
  • Diegetic Soundtrack Usage: Played straight in the DVD wraparounds when a drunk Lois exits a limo and slurs, "La-la-la-la, Family unit Guy!"
  • Distracted by the Sexy: As in the film it parodies, Stewie runs by two bikini-clad women on backyard chairs... only to walk back into frame and milkshake their hands.
  • Failed Futurity Forecast: When Stewie first travels to the hereafter, he's surprised that very little has inverse, building-wise. Stu tells him, "Well of course, it's only been thirty years." This is addressed in the commentary besides: In movies, they tend to treat 20 Minutes into the Time to come as radically different than the present, but in reality things don't progress nigh that fast.
  • Framing Device: The film opens with the Griffins attending the premiere of the picture and ends with a scene at the later-party.
  • Fruit Cart: While chasing down his futurity cocky in a car, Stewie hits a fruit stand. After Stewie lampshades why they always appear in auto chases, a cutaway gag shows a garage where fruit carts are existence dispatched like taxicabs to the scene of a reported police force hunt.
  • Future Loser: Stewie is not happy about who he becomes in the futurity.

    Stewie: I could handle the crappy flat and the pedestrian task, merely now you're telling me I'm a 35-year sometime Parade magazine reading virgin?! Well, yous, sir, are pathetic!

  • Future Self Reveal: Stewie and Brian sees a human on Television who looks and talks exactly similar Stewie. Convinced this person is his real father, Stewie travels all the fashion to San Francisco to try and meet him. Nonetheless when he finally does, Stewie is shocked to detect out that the human being is non his male parent, but himself from 35 years in the future.
  • Genre Deconstruction: There is a deconstruction of Looney Tunes, where Elmer Fudd approaches Bugs Bunny. It starts off with the basic "What's upwards, doc?" simply so Elmer shoots Bugs repeatedly with his gun and Bugs dies a ho-hum and painful decease before Elmer casually snaps his cervix and carries away the corpse.
  • Have a Gay Old Time: Inverted in part 3: Baby Stewie uses the word "douchebag" and is criticized past adult Stewie, because the term "douchebag" took on a different meaning later on President Douchebag was elected.
  • Hell: Stewie has a virtually-decease feel, and finds himself in Hell. However, rather than the typical Burn and Brimstone Hell, he's sitting in an ordinary hotel room. Then Steve Allen enters, and takes off his shirt, saying "All right, let's exercise this." After Stewie comes back to life, Steve ponders, "Wonder what's on TV in Hell?" He turns on the TV and every single channel is playing Who'southward the Boss?.
  • Here We Go Once again!: Later Stewie prevents his terrible hereafter from happening, Meg finishes having a conversation with a man which would lead to her consider having a sex change in the future. Thus a possible Sequel Hook.

    Million: You know, I just e'er liked that proper name. Ron...

  • Hint Dropping:
    • After adult Stewie and Fran come back to Stewie's apartment after the movie, Fran bluntly declares, "And I'm non tired at all."
    • Before in the picture, Lois tries to goad Peter into saying "grinds my gears" at the breakfast table. He finally gives in when he says, "Stewie, don't interrupt. It grinds my gears when y'all do that." Lois ecstatically replies, "OHHHHH!! He said it!"
  • Instrumental Theme Tune: I plays over the opening credits.
  • Intermission: There'due south one in the DVD version right after Stu reveals himself to be Stewie from the future. Amongst the things said by the characters over the break screen: Herbert wants a shirtless scene for Chris and 1000000 is dismayed that her "tastefully-done" sexual activity scene was cut.
  • Irony: One of the firefighters points out the irony of the stress-reliever candles that burned down Stu'southward apartment.
  • Jerkass: Chris' wife Vanessa, she's foul mouthed & verbally calumniating to everyone, especially Chris. She ends upward forcing Ron and Stu to help her strength Peter & Lois out of their firm so Chris tin take it.
  • Jerkass Has a Betoken: Fifty-fifty though Stu's life gets ruined, Stewie brought up a good point that how his futurity self'southward life was pathetic.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Jerk: Later on spending most of the 2nd human activity bonding with Brian as they search for Stewie's male parent, 1 of the first things Stewie does upon entering the future is defile the now dead Brian'south grave and retort to a disturbed future Stewie that he always loathed him (fifty-fifty futurity Stewie wasn't really unnerved well-nigh this callousness as much equally the fact the insult he vandalised Brian's grave with was at present outdated).
  • The Final Straw: Present Stewie doesn't accept to kindly to much of Future Loser Stewie's life. Once he learns that he is still a virgin, he finally takes over to improve his futurity self's life.
  • Luke, You Are My Father: "Bango Was His Name Oh" has Stewie chase an older lookalike who may exist his real male parent. Still, the lookalike reveals himself in the end as Stewie from the future.
  • The Motion-picture show: Considered to be this by many fans for its dramatic storyline, even though it'south not theatrical and is more-or-less simply three continuity-driven episodes put together and doesn't accept much variety that breaks the usual Family Guy formula.
  • Noodle Incident: When Peter tries out TiVO in existent life, he skips by the salesman sales pitch correct to checkout, where he's just ended a story. (Although, Peter was probably making a Telephone call-Back to the episode "A Very Special Family unit Guy Freakin' Christmas".)

    Peter: ...Some kind of palsy. Anyhow, that's how I saved Christmas!

  • Obvious Stunt Double: At that place'southward a scene of Stewie leaping out of a hotel window. It cuts to what appears to exist Dennis Franz in red overalls making the swoop.
  • Off-Model: A brief scene in part 2 features Quagmire with the incorrect haircut. This is due to the animators accidentally pulling the model sheet from the episode "Decease Lives", which featured a flashback to Quagmire'southward Navy days.
  • Potty Failure: During the visit to the nursing dwelling house in part 3:

    Lois: Hey Glen, how's the arthritis?
    Quagmire: Oh information technology's okay. Of course, since you walked in, I'1000 feelin' a trivial stiff! Giggity gig- oh, I just pooped a little.
    Cleveland: Ooooohhhhhhhhhhhhh thaaaaaaaaaaaaaaat'due south naaaaaaaaaaaaasty.

  • Previously on…: The TV version of part 3 ("Stu and Stewie's Excellent Run a risk") opens with a 24 parody, recapping the events and then far... plus an unrelated clip from The Chevy Chase Show where Chevy Hunt drops a birthday cake in forepart of Oliver Hudson.
  • Raging Stiffie: How Quagmire is able to dial 911 while tied to the bed in part 2, subsequently viewing some porn.
  • Road Trip Plot: To San Francisco in part two.
  • "Shaggy Dog" Story: Cleverly zig-zagged: The Stewie that traveled through fourth dimension warns the regular Stewie that he can't blow up a chair he planted bombs in (while trying to actually blow up a child who crush him) or he'll grow up to be lame adult Stewie. Regular Stewie asks time travel Stewie if, in his fourth dimension traveling, they ever found a suitable vehicle for Ellen Cleghorne. Time travel Stewie doesn't know, and regular Stewie replies, "Then you're just as worthless as she is!", and blasts time travel Stewie with a disintegrator. Makes it seem similar the whole story was pointless, until you realize that Stewie never blew up the chair and almost died from the accident, and then there'due south the possibility that he won't turn out similar adult Stewie after all.
  • Shout-Out:
    • The climax recreates the "running home" scene in Ferris Bueller'due south Twenty-four hours Off, complete with the same music choice.
    • Adult Stewie tells infant Stewie that he fourth dimension-traveled to see Jesus when He was alive. Stewie thought His abilities were greatly exaggerated: Jesus merely did Art Metrano's "magic" tricks. annotation This reference got the Family Guy staff in trouble, as Metrano sued the show for copyright infringement.
  • Sick and Wrong: Peter admitted he pushed things likewise far when he made the incest episode of Family Guy. The prune shown from it had Chris and Lois awkwardly proverb hi to each other, then boom-cutting to Brian pounding his fist on the breakfast tabular array, lamenting, "WRONG! It's WRONG!"
  • Sir Swears-a-Lot: Vanessa in the uncut version.
  • Speed Sex: During office 3:

    (Adult) Stewie: I'chiliad lamentable, that'due south never happened to me before.
    Fran: Which part? The eight seconds of sexual activity, or the forty-5 minutes of crying?
    (Adult) Stewie: I guess both.

  • Straw Loser: Stewie's future self.
  • Swapped Roles: In the DVD wraparounds, Lois is the one who'south drunkard and Peter is the sober ane embarrassed by her behavior. Not that Lois has never been hammered, but the role is unremarkably given to Peter.
  • Accept That!:
    • To Ellen Cleghorne note a former Saturday Night Live bandage member — the first black female cast member who lasted longer than a season — who, like some SNL cast members, hasn't really institute much success after leaving the prove, who was allegedly and so upset that she called the Family unit Guy offices and chewed out a staff member.
    • When Brian and Stewie are wandering the desert, the two see a Dr. Pepper machine in the distance; when they get closer, they realize it was just a delusion, and Stewie says in disgust, "Ugh, an RC Cola machine."
    • The merely television show that airs in Hell is Who'due south the Boss?.
    • One cutaway has this in regards to the allegations of Walt Disney's antisemitism.

      Scientist: Welcome dorsum, Mr. Disney.
      Disney: Are the Jews gone yet?
      Scientist: Uh, no.
      Disney: Put me dorsum in! (closes the cryogenic chamber)

  • Toilet Humour: Alluded to when Brian eats Rupert'south leg.

    Stewie: Give me back his leg!
    Brian: Oh, you'll go information technology dorsum.

  • Urban Legend: Stewie brings upward the Three Men and a Infant urban fable that there'south a ghost of a expressionless boy in the groundwork of one scene. Brian flatly refutes it, saying it's just a slice of paper-thin.

    Stewie: No, information technology's a ghost, I heard.
    Brian: You heard from who?
    Stewie: From... Lois.
    Brian: Yeah, right.
    Stewie: Cleveland?
    Brian: No.
    Stewie: Death?
    Brian: No.
    Stewie: Greased-upwardly Deaf Guy?
    Brian: He said that?

  • Vomit Indiscretion Shot:
    • In the wraparounds on the DVD, Lois comes to the premiere political party wasted, and vomits a petty scrap.
    • Stewie vomits on Brian in office 1.

      Stewie: I've never felt better. (vomits) Okay, now I've never felt better.

  • Wham Line "I'm not your begetter...I'm you."

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Source: https://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Recap/StewieGriffinTheUntoldStory

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