El Viaje Misterioso de Nuestro Jomer (The Mysterious Voyage of Homer)
| Season | 8 |
| Episode | 9 |
| Director | Jim Reardon |
| Writer | Ken Keeler |
| Production | 3F24 |
| Airdate | 1997-01-05 |
| Guests | * Johnny Cash as the Space Coyote |
| Couch Gag | The family parachutes to the couch; Homer's parachute fails, sending him plummeting. |
| Commentary | Matt Groening Josh Weinstein Jim Reardon George Meyer |
| Prev | Hurricane Neddy |
| Next | The Springfield Files |
"El Viaje Misterioso de Nuestro Jomer (The Mysterious Voyage of Homer)", (el ˈβjaxe misteˈɾjoso ðe ˈnwestɾo xoˈmeɾ) also known simply as "The Mysterious Voyage of Our Homer", is the ninth episode of the eighth season of the American animated television series The Simpsons. It originally aired on Fox in the United States on January 5, 1997. In the episode, Homer eats several hot chili peppers and hallucinates, causing him to go on a mysterious voyage. Following this, he questions his relationship with Marge and goes on a journey to find his soulmate.
This episode was written by Ken Keeler and directed by Jim Reardon. The episode explores themes of marriage, community, and alcohol use. Homer's voyage features surreal animation to depict the elaborate hallucination. The episode guest stars Johnny Cash as the "Space Coyote".
Plot
Marge becomes suspiciously cautious by attempting to distract Homer from an unspecified event. She tries to mask an odor by smoking cigarettes in the house, but after stepping outside Homer smells the scent of Springfield's annual chili cook-off. Marge finally admits trying to dissuade Homer from going due to his drunken antics at the previous year's cook-off. She agrees to let him attend after he promises to not drink.
At the cook-off, Homer shows an extraordinary ability to withstand hot foods, but is burned by Chief Wiggum's fiery chili made with Guatemalan insanity peppers and is caught by Marge while attempting to cool his tongue with some beer; she believes he was intentionally getting drunk. While quenching the heat with water, Homer nearly drinks melted candle wax by mistake before Ralph Wiggum warns him not to. Homer realizes he can use the wax to coat and protect his mouth, enabling him to swallow several insanity peppers whole.
After winning the chili-eating contest, Homer hallucinates wildly from the peppers. During his trip, he meets his spirit guide in the form of a coyote, who advises him to find his soulmate and questions Homer's assumption that Marge is his. Helen Lovejoy tells Marge about Homer's antics; under the impression that they are alcohol-induced, an upset Marge drives home without him.
The next day, Homer awakens at a golf course. He returns home to find Marge angry with him for his embarrassing behavior at the cook-off. Homer makes note of their fundamental personality differences and questions if they truly are soulmates.
Roaming the streets at night, he thinks a lonely lighthouse keeper is his soulmate, only to discover that the lighthouse is operated by a machine upon arrival. Seeing a ship approaching, Homer sabotages the lighthouse's light, hoping its passengers will befriend him once their ship crashes ashore. An apologetic Marge arrives, having known exactly where Homer would go. They reconcile after realizing they really are soulmates despite their differences. After fixing the light, the ship runs aground nearby and spills its cargo of hotpants. Springfield's citizens happily retrieve them as Marge and Homer embrace.
Production

The episode was pitched as early as the series' third season by George Meyer, who was interested in an episode based on the works of Carlos Castaneda. Meyer had wanted to have an episode featuring a mystical voyage that was not induced by drugs and so he decided to use "really hot" chili peppers instead. The staff, except for Matt Groening, felt it was too odd for the series at that point. Bill Oakley and Josh Weinstein eventually recovered the story and decided to use it for the eighth season.
Most of the hallucination sequence was animated completely by David Silverman, who did not want the risk of sending it to South Korea and wanted it to look exactly as he had imagined it, including rendered backgrounds to give a soft mystical feel to the scene. The coyote was intentionally drawn in a boxier way so that it looked "other-worldly" and unlike the other characters. During Homer's voyage, the clouds in one shot are live-action footage and 3D computer graphics was used for the giant butterfly. During the same hallucination, Ned Flanders' line was treated on a Mac computer so that it increased and decreased pitch.
The Fox censors sent a note to the writers, questioning Homer coating his mouth with hot wax. The note read: "To discourage imitation by young and foolish viewers, when Homer begins to pour hot wax into his mouth, please have him scream in pain so kids will understand that doing this would actually burn their mouths." The scream was not added; however, they did add dialog from Ralph Wiggum, questioning Homer on his action. Reardon also created a "wax-chart" of Homer for the animators to follow during the sequence when Homer's mouth is coated with candle-wax.
Homer finding himself at a golf course is a reference to something that actually happened: a friend of the producers blacked out and found himself at a golf course. He had to buy a map from a 7-Eleven to find out where he was and discovered that not only was he in a different town, he was also in a different state. He walked several miles to return to a friend's house, which was the last place he remembered being the night before.
Johnny Cash and Bob Dylan were the writers' top two choices to play the coyote; the writers had wanted to use one of The Highwaymen as the voice of the spirit guide. Dylan had turned the show down many times, having previously been offered a role in the season seven episode "Homerpalooza". Cash was offered the role, which he accepted. Groening described Cash's appearance as "one of the greatest coups the show has ever had".
Cultural references
The main plot of the episode is based on the works of Carlos Castaneda, with some of the Native American imagery being similar to that used in Dances with Wolves. The main theme from The Good, the Bad and the Ugly is used during the scenes when Homer walks into the chili cook-off, and the song "At Seventeen" by Janis Ian plays in the background as Homer walks through Springfield looking for his soul-mate. The scene at the end of Homer's hallucination, when a ghostly train is heading towards him, is a reference to the opening titles of Soul Train. The lighthouse keeper actually being a machine is a reference to the The Twilight Zone episode "The Old Man in the Cave", in which a man in a cave turns out to be a computer. Homer's record collection features albums by Jim Nabors, Glen Campbell and The Doodletown Pipers. "Short Shorts" by The Royal Teens plays over the end credits.
Reception

In its original broadcast, "El Viaje Misterioso de Nuestro Jomer (The Mysterious Voyage of Homer)" finished 34th in ratings for the week of December 30, 1996 – January 5, 1997, with a Nielsen rating of 9.0, equivalent to approximately 8.7 million viewing households. It was the highest-rated show on the Fox network that week.
The authors of the book I Can't Believe It's a Bigger and Better Updated Unofficial Simpsons Guide, Gary Russell and Gareth Roberts, said: "Homer's chili-induced trip is brilliant, complete with the surreal tortoise and Indian spirit guide." The episode was placed eighth on AskMen.com's "Top 10: Simpsons Episodes" list, and in his book Planet Simpson, Chris Turner named the episode as being one of his five favorites, although he found the ending too sentimental. In 2019, Time ranked the episode seventh in its list of 10 best Simpsons episodes picked by Simpsons experts.
In 2011, Keith Plocek of LA Weeklys Squid Ink blog listed "El Viaje Misterioso de Nuestro Jomer (The Mysterious Voyage of Homer)" as the best episode of the show with a food theme.
IGN ranked Johnny Cash's performance as the 14th-best guest appearance in the show's history. Cash also appeared on AOL's list of their 25 favorite The Simpsons guest stars, and on The Times Simon Crerar's list of the 33 funniest cameos in the history of the show. Andrew Martin of Prefix Mag named Cash his third-favorite musical guest on The Simpsons out of a list of ten.
Fred Topel of Crave Online named it the best episode of the entire series.
The episode was later adapted for the Simpsons Level Pack in Traveller's Tales' 2015 video game Lego Dimensions as the exclusive level for Homer Simpson, reusing audio from the episode for Cash as the Space Coyote and series lead Dan Castellaneta as Homer.
In The A.V. Club, Oliver Sava writes that "The spirit quest sequence is one of animator David Silverman's finest moments on the show." He also praises Cash's performance: "He's the perfect casting choice for Homer's spirit guide, with a deep, commanding voice that fully captures the immense gravity of the character's words. When you have Johnny Cash saying something, it sounds important, and that natural authority makes his humorous lines even funnier." Of the story, Sava writes: "Because this kind of thing has happened so many times in the past, the viewer can sympathize with Marge's feelings, but we've also seen the love between the spouses in their best moments, so we want them to find their way back to each other. And they do, because this is a love that is truly written in the stars."
References
- El Viaje Misterioso del Nuestro Jomer (The, March 26, 2007, Martyn, Warren, Gary Russell, Wood, Adrian, Gareth Roberts (writer), 2000, BBC, February 20, 2007, dead
- Weinstein, Josh, 2006, The Simpsons The Complete Eighth Season DVD commentary for the episode "El Viaje Misterioso de Nuestro Jomer (The Mysterious Voyage of Homer)", DVD, 20th Century Fox
- Karma Waltonen, Denise Du Vernay, The Simpsons in the Classroom: Embiggening the Learning Experience With the Wisdom of Springfield, 3 February 2013, 4 May 2010, McFarland
- Meyer, George, 2006, The Simpsons The Complete Eighth Season DVD commentary for the episode "El Viaje Misterioso de Nuestro Jomer (The Mysterious Voyage of Homer)", DVD, 20th Century Fox
- Groening, Matt, 2006, The Simpsons The Complete Eighth Season DVD commentary for the episode "El Viaje Misterioso de Nuestro Jomer (The Mysterious Voyage of Homer)", DVD, 20th Century Fox
- Reardon, Jim, 2006, The Simpsons The Complete Eighth Season DVD commentary for the episode "El Viaje Misterioso de Nuestro Jomer (The Mysterious Voyage of Homer)", DVD, 20th Century Fox
- Weinstein, Josh; Meyer, George; Groening, Matt; Reardon, Jim, 2006, The Simpsons The Complete Eighth Season DVD commentary for the episode "El Viaje Misterioso de Nuestro Jomer (The Mysterious Voyage of Homer)", DVD, 20th Century Fox
- Snierson, Dan, The Simpsons, rock and roll, Entertainment Weekly, January 21, 2022, May 10, 1996, January 22, 2022, dead
- Sugar bowl was sweet for ABC, too, Sun-Sentinel, Associated Press, January 9, 1997
- Gary Russell: From Peladon to Placebos, Preddle, Jon, June 1997, Time Space Visualiser, 51, 20 August 2020, The New Zealand Doctor Who Fan Club, I've just done my first non-fiction book, Oh No It's A Completely Unofficial Simpsons Guide for Virgin, co-authored with Gareth Roberts which has, to be frank, been more of a nightmare than it needed to be , book was published as I Can't Believe It's An Unofficial Simpsons Guide, with Gary and Gareth writing under the pseudonyms Warren Martyn & Adrian Wood, .
- Top 10: Simpsons Episodes, March 25, 2007, Weir, Rich, AskMen, December 22, 2007, live
- Raisa Bruner, We Asked Experts for 10 of Their Most Memorable Simpsons Episodes of All Time, Time, 2019-12-10, 2019-12-11
- Plocek, Keith, Top 10 Simpsons Food Episodes: Tomacco Ribwich with a Side of Guatemalan Insanity Peppers + Skittlebrau, January 22, 2022, November 11, 2011, LA Weekly, November 13, 2011
- Top 25 Simpsons Guest Appearances, January 22, 2022, Goldman, Eric, Iverson, Dan, Zoromski, Brian, IGN, 4 January 2010, 22 June 2007, live
- Potts, Kimberly, Favorite 'Simpsons' Guest Stars, dead, September 24, 2010, November 24, 2008, AOL
- Crerar, Simon, The 33 funniest Simpsons cameos ever, January 22, 2022, The Times, July 5, 2007, November 16, 2020, live
- Martin, Andrew, Top 10 Best Musical Guests On 'The Simpsons', Prefix Mag, October 8, 2011, October 7, 2011, October 15, 2011, live
- Topel, Fred, Best Episode Ever #1: 'The Simpsons', Crave Online, June 14, 2013, June 12, 2013, June 14, 2013, dead
- Metro, Lego Dimensions Doctor Who Level Pack review – plus Portal 2, The Simpsons, and Back to the Future, Jenkins, David, November 20, 2015, July 7, 2020, July 31, 2020, live
- Sava, Oliver, December 7, 2014, The Simpsons: "El Viaje Misterioso de Nuestro Jomer", August 4, 2023, June 6, 2023, live
- Groening, Matt, Matt Groening, Ray, Richmond, Ray Richmond, Antonia, Coffman, The Simpsons: A Complete Guide to Our Favorite Family, 1st, 1997, New York, HarperPerennial, 98141857, 433519M, 37796735
- Turner, Chris, Chris Turner (author), Planet Simpson: How a Cartoon Masterpiece Documented an Era and Defined a Generation, Foreword by , Douglas Coupland, ., 1st, 2004, Toronto, Random House Canada, 55682258
External links
Category:1997 American television episodes
Category:The Simpsons season 8 episodes
Category:Television episodes directed by Jim Reardon
Category:Television episodes written by Ken Keeler
Category:Adaptations of works by Carlos Castaneda