Genre: | Comedy Fantasy |
Creator: | Peter A. Knight |
Developer: | Peter A. Knight and Brad Johnson |
Director: | Alex Hardcastle |
Starring: | Sean Maguire India de Beaufort Kevin Hart Steve Speirs Marques Ray Alex MacQueen Matt Lucas |
Narrated: | Michael Gambon (UK) Chris Parnell (US) |
Country: | United States United Kingdom |
Num Series: | 1 |
Num Episodes: | 6 |
Executive Producer: | Scott Landsman (Comedy Central) Rob Bullock (Hat Trick) Simon Wilson (BBC) Peter A. Knight Brad Johnson Jimmy Mulville Flody Suarez Courtney B. Conte |
Producer: | Mario Stylianides |
Runtime: | 28 minutes |
Company: | Hat Trick Productions Media Rights Capital Watson Pond Productions |
Channel: | Comedy Central (U.S.) BBC Two / BBC HD (UK) |
Last Aired: | [1] |
Kröd Mändoon and the Flaming Sword of Fire is a British-American comedic sword and sorcery series created by Peter A. Knight, co-produced by Hat Trick Productions and Media Rights Capital for Comedy Central and BBC Two, which premiered on April 9, 2009 in the US and on June 11 in the UK.[2]
The series, set in an ancient fantasy realm, follows reluctant hero Kröd Mändoon (Sean Maguire), a "thin-skinned and underconfident freedom fighter" in his struggle against the evil ruler, Chancellor Dongalor (Matt Lucas).[3]
The creator, Peter A. Knight, has said that the show's humor was inspired by The Simpsons, Get Smart, and Monty Python and the Holy Grail, the last of which he claims to have seen more than any other movie.[4] The name Kröd, which is the word dork spelled backwards, was inspired by someone Knight knew growing up in school, who was often picked on; the boy was nicknamed Krod, although he failed to realise that it was an insult.[5] The series was filmed in Budapest, Hungary, and show developers Knight and Brad Johnson were on the set at all times for the filming of each episode.[6] Chancellor Dongalor's castle's exterior is Orava Castle in neighboring Slovakia. The flaming sword used by Kröd is not a computer-generated special effect, but an actual sword prop with a gas canister and a hose that runs up actor Sean Maguire's arm to light the blade.[7]
The brief opening title sequence was designed to reflect a visual style of movie posters from fantasy films of the 1980s, as well as more modern fantasy movies like The Lord of the Rings film trilogy.[8]
Sean Maguire originally passed on the part because he wanted to do a more serious project following his role in the poorly received 2008 comedy film Meet the Spartans, and did not think the show was right for him; he also said he thought the title sounded stupid. Maguire said, "I thought, 'Who’s going to watch this piece of shit?' ... I'm too quick to judge." His manager encouraged him to read the script and give it another chance and, upon reading the script, Maguire changed his mind and decided he wanted the role. Maguire worked out two hours a day for three months prior to filming the series in order to build up his physique for the role. The dynamic between Mändoon and Aneka was in part inspired by an idea Knight and Johnson had for a comedy set at a workplace, where a man and woman break up but have to see each other every day at their work setting; Maguire said he felt that aspect of the relationship gave Mändoon a very "human element" and was easy for male audiences to relate to.[10]
India de Beaufort became familiar with Kröd Mändoon at an acting studio where she was receiving training. The teacher, who had read and loved a Mändoon script, brought it to the studio and told the students about it. Many of them tried to audition for the show, including Beaufort, so the role of Aneka proved to be a competitive one, but Beaufort eventually got an audition which led to her casting. When she agreed to take the role, she had only read the script for the first episode, "Wench Trouble", and did not know about some of the character's more promiscuous scenes in future episodes, such as her striptease dance in "Golden Powers". Upon learning more about the character, Beaufort became concerned that the role was too sexual and that she would not be taken seriously as an actress after playing the part. However, she said she quickly grew to love the character, who she believes to be a strong female character with feminist convictions: "She's saying, 'I'm equal to every other man in the world. Men enjoy sex. I enjoy sex.' You know, she's out there putting out this strong statement."
Matt Lucas said he sees the Dongalor character as a combination of Cambodian leader Pol Pot and James Bond antagonist Ernst Blofeld.
Chris Parnell, a comedian formerly of Saturday Night Live, provides the voice of the narrator in the North American version.[11] Michael Gambon narrates the UK version.[12]
Kröd Mändoon and the Flaming Sword of Fire received mixed reviews and mediocre Nielsen ratings in the United States.[13] Critical reception in Britain was mixed, with some critics singling out the game performances by the cast.[14]
The character Bruce, a flamboyant homosexual played by Marques Ray, has received criticism among the gay community, who have described the character as an offensive stereotype. Sean Maguire said the show producers expected some backlash: "you know, one way or another, you can't win. If you're too gay you get criticism. If you're not gay enough, you get criticism. ... Whenever you're playing a stereotypical character, you’re damned if you do and damned if you don't. You can't really win."
On 21 August 2009, it was reported in British media newspaper Broadcast that the series had been cancelled, "after its funding partner pulled out".[15] However, three days later it reported that the BBC had retracted the claim,[16] stating that a second series could be produced if they were able to gain a new funding partner. According to Jimmy Mulville of Hat Trick Productions, "There is a bit of misinformation going on. As far as the writers and the controller of BBC comedy and the controller of BBC2 and Matt Lucas are concerned, we are developing a second series." However, no further series has been produced.
The first showing of each episode was broadcast simultaneously on BBC Two and BBC HD. The first two episodes were run together to create one hour-long episode; other episodes aired singly.
Episode Number | Episode | Air Date | Viewers (millions) | |
---|---|---|---|---|
1/2 | "Wench Trouble" / "Golden Powers" | June 11, 2009 | 2.047 [17] | |
3 | "Our Bounties Ourselves" | June 18, 2009 | 1.33[18] | |
4 | "O Biclops, Where Art Thou?" | June 25, 2009 | 1.34 | |
5 | "Succubi: The Dawn's Early Light" | July 2, 2009 | 1.30 | |
6 | "Thrilla in the Villa" | July 6, 2009 | N/A |
On April 16, 2009, Comedy Central released a trailer for a new flash game based on the Kröd Mändoon television series. Titled Kröd Mändoon: The Rise of Dongalor, the game is a simple top-down adventure/shooter in which the player must defeat "Myrmidons" to compete for the highest score. The player may collect power-ups that grant them health, extra speed, a double shot and a triple shot.[20]