The following contains spoilers for The Simpsons season 36 episode 5, “Treehouse of Horror XXXV,” now streaming on HuluThe thirty-fifth iteration ofThe SimpsonsHalloween tradition creates a new version of Springfield with one key difference from the regular show. Beginning in season 2, “Treehouse of Horror” anthology episodes have become a yearly tradition forThe Simpsons. Each episode contains at least three segments that throw the cast of Springfield into a horror-filled version of their world. While many of these shorts take place in a reality similar to the core reality ofThe Simpsons' family, others take larger tonal swings.

This is true in “Treehouse of Horror XXXV,” which shifts time-period and style with each short. The third segment, “Denim,” features a major shift for the status quo of the show. Thanks to the non-canon nature of the segment,“Denim” is able to examine one of the show’s most fundamental relationships from a new perspective. It’s an interesting trend that the episode continues, as it’s not uncommon to seeThe Simpsons' “Treehouse of Horror” episodesundo one of the show’s most important relationships.

The Simpsons Treehouse Of Horror XXXV Denim 2

The Simpsons Season 36 Creates Another World Where Homer & Marge Never Got Together

“Denim” Introduces A Marge And Homer Who Didn’t Date Until Long After High School

Season 36’s “Treehouse of Horror XXXV” segment “Denim” is the latest example ofThe Simpsons' Halloween specials imagining worlds where Homer and Marge never got together. “Denim” is largely a parody ofVenom, with an alien life-form forming a bond with Homer by becoming his jeans.This timeline is quickly established as a unique world compared to the primary version of Springfield, with an adult Homer pining after Marge from afar. It seems that in this timeline, Homer and Marge never bonded in high school, negating their marriage (and subsequently the birth of Bart, Lisa, and Maggie).

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“Denim” focuses on the burgeoning relationship between the pair, which is complicated by Homer’s bond to the Denim symbiote. Ultimately, Denim tries to kill Marge, forcing Homer to choose between them. Choosing Denim leads the alien to spare Marge, but shatters her romance with Marge. It’s a surprisingly blunt and quietly somber turn of events, with a lonely Homer playing videogames with Denim and admitting that he still follows Marge’s Facebook from afar.It’s an interesting exploration of a timeline where Homer and Marge never got together, and is far from the first time the Halloween specials have done this.

Agnes Skinner stares angrily in a spooky house from The Simpsons Treehouse of Horror XXXV Fall of the House of Monty

Treehouse Of Horror Loves To Imagine Worlds Where Homer Never Married Marge

Earlier Treehouse Of Horror Segments Broke Up Homer And Marge

Due in part to their non-canon nature,The Simpsonshas always been able to experiment with the “Treehouse of Horror” episodes. The annual Halloween specials have only become more ambitious and engaging with time, including in their willingness to bend canon. In most segments, Homer and Marge are together as normal. However, some have revealed Marge’s affair with an alien like season 10’s short “Starship Poopers” or undid their entire marriage through the use of time-travel as in season 24’s segment “Bart and Homer’s Excellent Adventure.”

The most extensive of these changes came withseason 34’s “Not It.“An episode-length parody of Stephen King’sIt, the story diverged from the typicalThe Simpsonsstory when a young Comic Book Guy tricked Marge into believing Homer’s profession of love was his own. This set up a world where Marge married him instead, giving birth to variants of Lisa and Bart while Homer remained in Springfield and opened a tavern.The “Treehouse of Horror” specials have found plenty of storytelling potential in exploring worlds where Homer and Marge were never together, with season 36’s “Denim” segment following suit.

Homer and Marge at a diner in The Simpsons Treehouse Of Horror XXXV Denim 1

Why Treehouse Of Horror Can Split Up Homer And Marge So Easily

How Non-Canon Stories Can Reflect One OfThe Simpsons' Most Fundamental Plotlines

“Treehouse of Horror” episodes are non-canon, making their decision to kill off characters liberally for the sake of scary stories effective without ruining the core series. However, the frequent decision to break up Homer and Marge or to set up realities where they never got together speaks to one ofThe Simpsons' core stories. Homer and Marge’s romance and enduring love in the face of their bittersweet and bizarre lives are key elements of the show. By putting that relationship in jeopardy,The Simpsonsis able to bring thematic stakes to a non-canon short with no impact on the series.

By exploring realities where Homer and Marge never got together,The Simpsonsis able to showcase how the pair would work if they were alone, and highlights how incomplete their lives feel without one another in them.Almost all those shorts (save for “Denim”) end with the pair reunited, finding one another even if the circumstances of their romance are radically changed. By imagining worlds where the show’s primary romance never came to be,The Simpsonsis able to bring an additional layer of emotional stakes to otherwise throaway scary shorts.

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The Simpsons is an animated series set in the fictional town of Springfield, following the daily lives of the Simpson family—Homer, Marge, Bart, Lisa, and Maggie. Premiering in 1989, the show is renowned for its satirical commentary on politics, media, and American culture, featuring numerous celebrity guest appearances.