Ren & Stimpy Wiki
Tag: Visual edit
Tag: Visual edit
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The episode starts off with Ren and Stimpy praying on their bed. Stimpy asks for God to bless people, especially Ren who is "not strong". Ren, meanwhile, wishes for a load of cash, a fridge with a padlock and large pectoral muscles. Just as Ren is about to go to sleep, Stimpy asks Ren to read a bedtime story. Basically, it's more or less the same opening as Robin Hoek.
 
The episode starts off with Ren and Stimpy praying on their bed. Stimpy asks for God to bless people, especially Ren who is "not strong". Ren, meanwhile, wishes for a load of cash, a fridge with a padlock and large pectoral muscles. Just as Ren is about to go to sleep, Stimpy asks Ren to read a bedtime story. Basically, it's more or less the same opening as Robin Hoek.
   
This time, the story is called "The Littlest Giant". In Ren's dream, the giant is Stimpy, who is bullied by bigger, mean cat giants for being shorter than the rest, and is the victim of Three Stooges-style abuse. Giant Stimpy has had enough with the abuse that he's put up with, but his brothers in Huegevania are the only giant cats he's ever known. As he sits on a rock in the middle of the forest, the giant Stimpy decides to run away, and so he writes a goodbye letter that reads, "My dearest friends, the bigger mean giants... I am running away, forever. Your punching bag: The Littlest Giant". After a good two minutes of understandable but incessant sobbing, the giant leaves his country by walking through the ocean and his wandering takes him to the town of Thumbsville, a small town in the middle of a huge drought, where the farmer Wee Ren lives. Ren laments that his water-starved cow cannot produce milk, his sow fries in the sun, and his chickens "only lay silt".
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This time, the story is called "The Littlest Giant". In Ren's dream, the giant is Stimpy, who is bullied by bigger, mean cat giants for being shorter than the rest, and is the victim of Three Stooges-style abuse. Giant Stimpy has had enough with the abuse that he's put up with, but his brothers in Huegevania are the only giant cats he's ever known. As he sits on a rock in the middle of the forest, the giant Stimpy decides to run away, and so he writes a goodbye letter that reads, "My dearest friends, the bigger mean giants... I am running away, forever. Your punching bag: The Littlest Giant". After a good two minutes of understandable but incessant sobbing, the giant leaves his country by walking through the ocean and his wandering takes him to the town of Thumbsville, a small town in the middle of a huge drought, where the farmer Wee Ren lives. Ren laments that his water-starved cow cannot produce milk, his pig fries in the sun, and his chickens "only lay silt".
   
 
One day, just by coincidence, Ren wakes up to find Giant Stimpy, in tears, right by his well; the tears he produces fill up the well and rejuvenate his crops, allowing the cow to drink from it and produce milk again. A grateful Ren thanks Stimpy for this convenient contrivance and declares that he will do anything for him; an equally grateful Stimpy gets him to do a number of gross and bizarre tasks like shaving his tongue. 
 
One day, just by coincidence, Ren wakes up to find Giant Stimpy, in tears, right by his well; the tears he produces fill up the well and rejuvenate his crops, allowing the cow to drink from it and produce milk again. A grateful Ren thanks Stimpy for this convenient contrivance and declares that he will do anything for him; an equally grateful Stimpy gets him to do a number of gross and bizarre tasks like shaving his tongue. 

Revision as of 01:25, 2 November 2017

"Stimpy's Storybook Land: The Littlest Giant" is an episode of The Ren & Stimpy Show that aired on September 19, 1991.

Characters

  • Ren Höek
  • Stimpy as The Littlest Giant
  • Giant look-alike Curly Howard
  • Giant look-alike Larry Fine
  • Cow
  • Pig
  • Chicken

Summary

Stimpy Giant Crying

The episode starts off with Ren and Stimpy praying on their bed. Stimpy asks for God to bless people, especially Ren who is "not strong". Ren, meanwhile, wishes for a load of cash, a fridge with a padlock and large pectoral muscles. Just as Ren is about to go to sleep, Stimpy asks Ren to read a bedtime story. Basically, it's more or less the same opening as Robin Hoek.

This time, the story is called "The Littlest Giant". In Ren's dream, the giant is Stimpy, who is bullied by bigger, mean cat giants for being shorter than the rest, and is the victim of Three Stooges-style abuse. Giant Stimpy has had enough with the abuse that he's put up with, but his brothers in Huegevania are the only giant cats he's ever known. As he sits on a rock in the middle of the forest, the giant Stimpy decides to run away, and so he writes a goodbye letter that reads, "My dearest friends, the bigger mean giants... I am running away, forever. Your punching bag: The Littlest Giant". After a good two minutes of understandable but incessant sobbing, the giant leaves his country by walking through the ocean and his wandering takes him to the town of Thumbsville, a small town in the middle of a huge drought, where the farmer Wee Ren lives. Ren laments that his water-starved cow cannot produce milk, his pig fries in the sun, and his chickens "only lay silt".

One day, just by coincidence, Ren wakes up to find Giant Stimpy, in tears, right by his well; the tears he produces fill up the well and rejuvenate his crops, allowing the cow to drink from it and produce milk again. A grateful Ren thanks Stimpy for this convenient contrivance and declares that he will do anything for him; an equally grateful Stimpy gets him to do a number of gross and bizarre tasks like shaving his tongue. 

That evening, Ren wakes up to find giant Stimpy asleep by his house, and Stimpy concludes his story as them living "happily ever after".

Production Music

  • Promenade – Tony Lowry
  • Symphony No. 9-The New World (2nd Movement) – Antonín Dvořák
  • Sylvia-Pizzicati – Leo Delibes
  • Brahm’s Lullaby – Johannes Brahms
  • Pizzicato Playtime – Sam Fonteyn
  • Radetzy March – Johann Strauss
  • L’Esprit de Paris – John Leach
  • Clair De Lune – Claude Debussy
  • The Nutcracker - Arabian Dance
  • Reverie – Robert Schumann
  • Clair De Lune – Claude Debussy
  • Ridin’ High and Handsome – Glen Sutton, Norris Wilson
  • Romantic Legend – Eric Swan
  • Folli the Foal – Andrew Fenner

Watch Episode

Trivia/Goofs

  • Ren and Stimpy's lines "Goodnight, Stimpy. Goodnight, Ren." were added after the animation, so their mouths don't match when they speak those lines.
  • John K considers this episode to be among his least favorites as he disliked the episode's pacing and jokes, which led him to nickname the episode "The Littlest Jokes."
  • The episode's beginning is exactly the same as another Stimpy Storybook Episode, Robin Hoek.