This has created the biggest divide between the two to date and inspired Hank to finally go out on his own. Here's hoping that they work things out in Season 8 and that Season 8 even exists. Rusty Venture has done a lot of terrible things. He has sacrificed Hank over Dean in a ton of adventures, killed interns in his self-centered Palaemon Project, and literally powered one of his machines with an orphan.
These are all terrible things, but it's been easy to pass them off across the story due to the inherently dark and campy nature of the show. However, if there was one scene of his that assuredly disgusted and horrified fans everywhere, it was learning that he was actually Dermott's father. Upon seducing the year-old president of his own fan club, Rusty held unto one of his darkest and most shameful secrets to date.
It was easy enough to just call Rusty a bad dad given how he's cloned the boys so much. Despite his begrudging efforts to be a good dad, the whole clone thing may have made him even more arrogant and negligent as a father. Did he really need to take the boys on all of those dangerous missions? As morally ambiguous as the cloning process was, it was surprising well, not too surprising given Rusty's intelligence to discover that he didn't actually invent the clones.
They were a project of his father's when Rusty himself got into a few too many adventures himself. Season 7's Morphic Trilogy was the ultimate culmination of some of the series' longest built stories and it was the epicenter of plenty more twists and surprises within the tail end of the story.
One of the biggest bombshells was discovering how important the monotoned Vendata really is. Venture's most trusted associates. After a tragic plane crash, Jonas resurrected Don as Venturion but quickly got rid of him after an incident with Rusty. Don would later get taken in by Dr.
Z who reprogrammed him for evil. While the true nature of Vendata was surprising on its own, his reveals don't compare to the sheer impact of discovering that the original Dr. Venture was still alive It was meant to extend someone's life in the event of their untimely death. He'd resurrect once again in Season 7 only to have one final exchange with the Blue Morpho.
For years, one of the biggest questions in the series was why exactly does The Monarch want to arch Dr. In either case, it seems that The Monarch isn't truly the son of The Blue Morpho as he thought and is only the latest in a long line of bastard children produced by the Venture family. It also means, ironically, that there is another pair of Venture Bros who have been a part of the show since its first episode.
It remains to be seen how this may change the dynamic between Doctor Venture and The Monarch, assuming it changes anything at all. More: Best Cartoon Series for Grownups. Prev 1 2 3. Share Share Tweet Email 0.
Related Topics SR Originals venture bros. Myra is a leather-clad, buxom, physically fit woman in her 40s or 50s, though years of longing after Doctor Venture and the stress of being forcibly separated from her alleged children have left her with a haggard look. Her face is similar to that of the younger Mia Farrow , who raised ten adopted children in addition to the four born of her, and at least at one point, deserved or not, had a reputation for being unhinged in attempting to keep them close and micro-manage their lives, likely cultivated at least in part by her ex-husband after he married one of those children immediately after she turned of age and was accused of molesting another as a preschooler.
Her first assignment straight out of the academy was to serve as Dr. Thaddeus "Rusty" Venture 's bodyguard, to protect him from his various enemies and those who would seek to steal his inventions. As time passed, Myra found herself falling in love with Rusty, culminating in a "night of passion" in Venture's car.
According to Myra's version of events, the sexual encounter left Myra pregnant and nine months later she gave birth to twin boys, Hank and Dean. Though Brock and Doc tell the boys that this story is a lie, several flashbacks early in season three corroborate large portions of her story, in particular, the fact that she was employed by O.
After giving birth, Rusty and Myra's relationship went downhill as Myra's obsession with her lover caused Rusty to leave his family compound to get away from Myra. The situation between the two would ultimately collapse, with Myra ultimately being tasered unconscious by an O. Myra would later claim that Rusty used his political contacts to terminate Myra's parental rights to the twins and had her institutionalized, as Rusty "wanted the boys all to himself". The shock of Rusty's ultimate rejection of her and the separation of Myra from her children caused her to have a complete and utter nervous breakdown and become clinically insane.
What followed next is unknown; in the version of Myra's backstory that Rusty and Brock Samson tell Hank and Dean, in order to try and discredit Myra's version of events, Myra is recast as a mentally unstable American Gladiator , known on the show as " PowerKat ". However, in an aside to his children when an Oni lured Rusty to the same motel where Hank and Dean were being held prisoner, Rusty sarcastically asked Myra if she told the boys about how she burnt down the Venture Compound several years earlier an event Brock refers to when he's telling the boys the fictionalized version of Myra's backstory.
Regardless of this, Myra was shown running a motel outside of town in I Know Why the Caged Bird Kills where she lived with many cats, which she refers to as her children—Hank and Dean's "brothers and sisters".
Myra acts like something of a cross between Annie Wilkes , the deranged middle-aged serial killer in the Stephen King novel, Misery and Catwoman from Batman Returns. Like Annie Wilkes, she is clinically insane, has a penchant for kidnapping people, and doesn't use normal curse words but instead often segues into childish babble-words like "ookey" instead of "disgusting".
Her costume resembles the s black vinyl costume worn by the Marvel Comics super-heroine Black Widow. After the closing credits run, a post-credits scene depicts Dr. Killinger offscreen whistling and calling the oni to him. The trunk of Dr. Venture's car opens, and the oni flies up into the air to rendezvous with a hovering Killinger. The oni seems to moan disconsolately. Killinger says that the oni failed to reunite Brandish and Venture, but that it did manage to save the boys.
Killinger concludes by saying: "Compromise, my friend, is the essence of diplomacy, and diplomacy is the cornerstone of love.
It was not confirmed in that episode if Myra is the genetic mother of Hank and Dean, or just an insane woman who convinced herself she is.
In the DVD commentary for her debut episode, I Know Why the Caged Bird Kills , the writers state that in early drafts of the episode the "boys' mother" subplot hadn't been developed yet and they "didn't know who Myra was", and that even after the episode was finished, they still weren't sure.
At the end of season 2, when the writers were recording the DVD commentary, they stated that they still weren't sure if Myra would turn out to indeed be the boys' real mother, or if they would develop a convoluted explanation for how she really isn't, and that at the moment there was an equal chance of each.
However, there are several hints and clues that indicate that she might be. Venture admitted that he once had sex with Myra, but did not confirm if this resulted in Hank and Dean's conception. Also, it is possible that Dr. Venture was just lying or volunteering a half-truth to get Hank and Dean to stop asking questions after Brock almost told them they are clones. It is possible that she could have been Dr.
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