
Also, Supercomputer Friend is voiced by Brian Doyle-Murray, the Flying Dutchman from SpongeBob SquarePants.

This will enable them to travel faster than the speed of light and make it all the way to Mars and back before the night is through. The Brave Little Toaster Goes to Mars was in production at the same time as The Brave Little Toaster to the Rescue, which is the second film chronologically but came out a year after this film because Hyperion was a Very Competent Studio, and so The Brave Little Toaster is capable of travelling to Mars because his Rat Friend who was introduced in To the Rescue hits on the bright idea of asking their Supercomputer Friend who was introduced in To the Rescue to calculate a method whereby they can harness the power of Carol Channing Fan's propulsion by feeding Wayne Knight Microwave bags of popcorn. The hearing aid is also heavily coded as a Germanic Jew, and implied to have ties to the Nazi Party due to his calculator friend doing the whole, "Ve have vays of making you talk, frauleine," schtick. In The Brave Little Toaster Goes to Mars, the Brave Little Toaster and friends are sent into action by Albert Einstein's old hearing aid, who has been in contact with a mysterious entity on planet Mars, and whose scheming machinations result in their Master's newborn son getting abducted instead, because the appliances are constantly jerks to one another for no good reason and spend so much time being paranoid about the hearing aid doing something that they don't keep an eye on the fleshy infant they've sworn themselves to protect.

The following things are all true statements about the 1998 direct-to-video children's animated film The Brave Little Toaster Goes to Mars:
