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== Cultural References ==
== Cultural References ==
*When Arthur pulls the sword from the stone, it is a play on the King Arthurian Legends, because Arthur's name is Arthur.
*When Arthur pulls the sword from the stone, it is a play on the King Arthurian Legends, because Arthur's name is Arthur.
*The title for this episode is a reference to the third instalment of J.R.R. Tolkien's ''[[wikipedia:The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King|The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King]]''.
*The title for this episode is a reference to the third installment of J.R.R. Tolkien's ''[[wikipedia:The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King|The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King]]''.


== Episode Connections ==
== Episode Connections ==

Revision as of 03:59, 24 July 2017

"The Return of the King"
Sword 2.png
The Return of the King Title Card.png
Season/Series: 3
Number in season: 9b
Original Airdate: United States January 4, 1999[citation needed]
Credits
Written by: Peter K. Hirsch
Storyboard by: Mario Cabrera
Episodes
Previous
"Arthur's Treasure Hunt"
Next
"Attack of the Turbo Tibbles"
Read transcript

"The Return of the King" is the second half of the ninth episode in the third season of Arthur. It was later adapted into the book King Arthur.

Summary

On a field trip to the medieval fair, Arthur's class is being humiliated in competitions against a class led by Mr. Ratburn's old teacher. Can Arthur turn things around?

Plot

The episode opens with the kids going on a field trip to a medieval fair. When they make it to the fair, Mr. Ratburn's class sees that another school, Glenbrook Academy is there too.

The teacher with them is Mr. Pryce-Jones, who was Mr. Ratburn's teacher when he was in school. Arthur notices a sword put in a stone and anyone who can get it out will become "King of the Fair", but no matter how hard he pulls, it will not come out.

Throughout the day the Lakewood students compete with the Glenbrook students in several Middle Ages-themed competitions, losing every single one. Arthur loses at a medieval maze. Francine loses at archery. The Brain fails at a trivia competition.

Buster even loses at a pie eating contest! At lunch, it is revealed that Mr. Pryce-Jones was very strict, and when Arthur, Buster, Francine, and Brain overhear Mr. Haney talking with him, they think that if Lakewood loses all of the contests Mr. Pryce-Jones will replace Mr. Ratburn.

The final event is a castle building contest. The Lakewood students work hard and build a beautiful castle, but they lose to Glenbrook because their castle is not historically accurate. Arthur and the gang are dejected because they think that Mr. Pryce-Jones will replace Mr. Ratburn, but fortunately Mr. Ratburn will stay.

At the end of the day, the Glenbrook students and Mr. Pryce-Jones all try to remove the sword from the stone, but they all fail. Just when it is Arthur's turn, he hears the barker's reference to "a gentle hand" and suddenly realizes the secret of the sword. Just as his friends come over to get him to leave, Arthur pulls the sword out with ease. Arthur becomes the King of the Fair and everyone cheers. Mr. Pryce-Jones, who himself could not figure out the puzzle, congratulates Mr. Ratburn, declaring he taught Arthur well. Mr. Haney then explains to the children that Mr. Pryce-Jones will not be replacing Mr. Ratburn, but instead will be tutoring his nephew and niece (who are obviously worried about the prospect).

As they head home, Buster remarks that Mr. Pryce-Jones probably gave all his kids homework. Hearing this, Mr. Ratburn assigns the class a report on medieval times, much to their chagrin.

Characters

Major

Minor

Cameo

Trivia

  • The Lakewood kids all sat across from their counterparts at the lunch table, except for Fern sitting across from Maria's lookalike.

Cultural References

  • When Arthur pulls the sword from the stone, it is a play on the King Arthurian Legends, because Arthur's name is Arthur.
  • The title for this episode is a reference to the third installment of J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King.

Episode Connections

 

Errors

  • Arthur falls backwards when he sees his "shadow" move, but he rips through the wall facing forwards.

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References