Genre: | Fantasy-adventure |
Based On: | Characters by Jim Henson |
Director: | Louis Leterrier |
Narrated: | Sigourney Weaver |
Country: | United States |
Language: | English |
Num Seasons: | 1 |
Num Episodes: | 10 |
Budget: | $97.7 million[1] |
Producer: | Ritamarie Peruggi |
Runtime: | 46–61 minutes |
Company: | The Jim Henson Company |
Channel: | Netflix |
The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance is an American fantasy television series produced, made and owned by The Jim Henson Company. It is a prequel to the 1982 Jim Henson film The Dark Crystal that explores the world of Thra created for the original film. It follows the story of three Gelflings: Rian, Deet, and Brea, as they journey together on a quest to unite the Gelfling clans to rise against the tyrannical Skeksis and save their planet Thra from a destructive blight known as the Darkening. The series premiered on August 30, 2019, to critical acclaim.[2] In September 2020, it was announced that the series had been cancelled after one season.
On the planet Thra, three Gelflings – Rian, Brea, and Deet – inspire a rebellion after discovering a horrifying secret behind their customarily worshipped rulers, the Skeksis, that threatens their entire planet.[3]
Character | Puppeteer | Voice | |
---|---|---|---|
Rian | Neil Sterenberg | Taron Egerton | |
Brea | Alice Dinnean | Anya Taylor-Joy | |
Deet | Beccy Henderson | Nathalie Emmanuel | |
Aughra | Kevin Clash | Donna Kimball | |
Gurjin | Dave Chapman | Harris Dickinson | |
Seladon | Helena Smee | Gugu Mbatha-Raw | |
Tavra | Neil Sterenberg | Caitriona Balfe | |
Hup | Victor Yerrid | ||
Kylan | Victor Yerrid | Shazad Latif | |
Naia | Beccy Henderson | Hannah John-Kamen | |
All-Maudra Mayrin | Louise Gold | Helena Bonham Carter |
See main article: Skeksis.
Character | Puppeteer | Voice | |
---|---|---|---|
The Emperor (skekSo) | Dave Chapman | Jason Isaacs | |
The Chamberlain (skekSil) | Warrick Brownlow-Pike Katherine Smee | Simon Pegg | |
The General (skekVar) | Kevin Clash Katherine Smee | Benedict Wong | |
The Scientist (skekTek) | Olly Taylor | Mark Hamill | |
The Ritual-Master (skekZok) | Victor Yerrid | Keegan-Michael Key | |
The Collector (skekLach) | Helena Smee | Awkwafina | |
The Gourmand (skekAyuk) | Louise Gold | Harvey Fierstein | |
The Ornamentalist (skekEkt) | Alice Dinnean | ||
The Scroll Keeper (skekOk) | Neil Sterenberg |
Character | Puppeteer | Voice | |
---|---|---|---|
Cadia | Olly Taylor | Eddie Izzard | |
The Librarian | Kevin Clash | Toby Jones | |
Daudran | Olly Taylor | Dustin Demri-Burns | |
Maudra Fara/The Rock Singer | Alice Dinnean | Lena Headey | |
Mira | Helena Smee | Alicia Vikander | |
Onica | Louise Gold | Natalie Dormer | |
Ordon | Dave Chapman | Mark Strong | |
Rek’yr | Olly Taylor | Theo James | |
Lath’N | Warrick Brownlow-Pike | James Dreyfus | |
Mitjan | Victor Yerrid | Charlie Condou | |
Maudra Argot/The Shadow Bender | Louise Gold | ||
Maudra Seethi/The Skin Painter | Beccy Henderson | Kemi-Bo Jacobs | |
Maudra Mera | Neil Sterenberg | Nina Sosanya | |
Maudra Laesid/The Blue Stone Healer | Warrick Brownlow-Pike | Nimmy March | |
Maudra Ethri | Louise Gold | Beccy Henderson | |
Bobb’N | Alice Dinnean | Beccy Henderson | |
Juni | Beccy Henderson | April Hughes | |
Red Haired Paladin | Warrick Brownlow-Pike |
Character | Puppeteer | Voice |
---|---|---|
The Hunter (skekMal) | Kevin Clash Nick Kellington | Ralph Ineson |
The Heretic (skekGra) | Damian Farrell Barnaby Dixon | Andy Samberg |
urVa/The Archer | Olly Taylor | Ólafur Darri Ólafsson |
urGoh/The Wanderer | Bill Hader |
Character | Puppeteer | Voice | |
---|---|---|---|
Baffi | Dave Goelz | ||
Lore | Damian Farrell | ||
Vliste-Staba (the Sanctuary Tree) | Theo Ogundipe | ||
The Myth Speaker/Narrator | Sigourney Weaver | ||
Gruenaks | Kevin Clash Neil Sterenberg | ||
Podling Servants | Warrick Brownlow-Pike Louise Gold | ||
Core | Katherine Smee | ||
Garthim | Daniel Dewhirst |
Additional voices by Warrick Brownlow-Pike, Dave Chapman, Stewart Clarke, Kevin Clash, Alice Dinnean, Barbara Drennan, Damian Farrell, Louise Gold, Beccy Henderson, Isabella Laughland, Omar Malik, Sarah Beck Mather, Jack Myers, Mark Restuccia, Irfan Samji, Helena Smee, Katherine Smee, Neil Sterenberg, Olly Taylor, and Victor Yerrid.
Additional puppeteers included; Don Austen, Sue Beattie, Mikey Brett, Sarah Burgess, Carl Chadd, Sheila Clark, Marcus Clarke, Richard Coombs, Ronnie Le Drew, Phil Eason, Phil Fletcher, Lesa Gillespie, Andy Heath, Sarah-Jane Honeywell, Steven Kynman, Steve Nallon, Angie Passmore, Colin Purves, Andrew Spooner, Victoria Willing, and Michael Winsor, amongst others.
All episode titles are quotes from the original 1982 film.
A feature-length documentary, , was released on Netflix on August 30, 2019. It was directed by Randall Lobb and features interviews with the cast, including Egerton, Dormer and Pegg.[4] [5]
Initially conceived as a feature-length sequel to The Dark Crystal titled The Power of the Dark Crystal, the project was for years in a state of development hell. In 2012, director Louis Leterrier expressed an interest in joining Jim Henson Productions in their project shortly after the release of Clash of the Titans, hoping to interest large studios, but was repeatedly turned down as, according to him, they were only interested in Transformers, and many executives had never heard of The Dark Crystal. It was during this impasse that Leterrier decided to shoot a prequel series rather than a film sequel because of the richness of material available in Jim Henson and Frank Oz's notes on the events leading up to the original film.[6] Lisa Henson identified the "Wall of Destiny" from the original film as a "jumping point": "What was that culture? What was lost? What was that beautiful Gelfling civilization?"[7] Jeff Addiss, Will Matthews and Javier Grillo Marxuach, all fans of The Dark Crystal, were subsequently hired as writers. The project was eventually sold to Netflix after Leterrier found a studio executive who shared the team's enthusiasm for the original film.[6]
The production was pitched to Netflix as an animated prequel series. Upon hearing the idea, Vice President of Original Content Cindy Holland rewatched the film and asked about the possibility of doing the series in live-action, much to the Henson Company's surprise. A short test film, featuring a puppet Skeksis and a CGI Gelfling, was produced in 2016 to test potential improvements the series could have over the film. Ultimately, the test convinced the Henson Company and Netflix that the series needed puppet characters.[8]
In May 2017, it was announced that The Jim Henson Company, in association with Netflix, would produce a prequel to the film The Dark Crystal.[9] The series, written by Jeffrey Addiss, Will Matthews, and Javier Grillo-Marxuach, began filming in the United Kingdom in November 2017 with Louis Leterrier serving as director.[10] [11] Addiss and Matthews serve as showrunners for the series.[12]
At New York Comic Con in 2018, Leterrier insisted that the series would depend on puppetry and not CGI, except for the use of green screens to remove puppeteers.[13] On December 17, 2018, the 36th anniversary of the original film's release, the voice cast was revealed, as well as some images of the main Gelfling characters.[14] [15] [16] On May 30, 2019, Netflix released a teaser trailer and poster for the series, announcing its official release date on August 30, 2019.[2] Additional voice actors were announced on June 26, including Awkwafina, Lena Headey, Hannah John-Kamen, Sigourney Weaver and Benedict Wong.[17] Similar to the original film, voiceovers for the series were recorded after the bulk of filming was done, with the voice actors having to match their performances to both the lip movements and scratch track voices of the puppeteers.[8]
The puppets were fabricated in early 2017 in Jim Henson's Creature Shop in Los Angeles, then exported to Langley Studios just outside London,[18] with The Muppets veteran Dave Goelz and The Dark Crystals concept artist Brian Froud participating in performing and designing the characters. Aside from Froud's new sketches, the original film's tie-in book, The World of the Dark Crystal, was used as a reference point.[6] Other sources of inspiration in building the world of Thra included Game of Thrones and .[7]
According to design supervisor Toby Froud (who played the baby Toby in Labyrinth), the show makes use of 20 principal puppets, with an additional 90 for secondary roles. Unlike the original film, the Gelfling puppets require only two puppeteers, as opposed to four in The Dark Crystal, thus permitting greater freedom of movement. Also, while the animatronic components of the original film's Gelfling puppets were controlled via cables, the mechanical parts of the new Gelflings were remotely operated via a modified Wii controller.[18]
On May 30, 2019, the first teaser trailer for the series was released and received a generally favorable response with Tasha Robinson, writing for The Verge, writing, "what's most compelling about this trailer, though, is the stunning fidelity to the original film".[19]
On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, the series has an 89% rating with an average score of 8.6/10, based on 79 reviews.[20] The website's critical consensus reads, "An epic fantasy adventure that will please old and new fans alike, Age of Resistance expertly builds on the lore of The Dark Crystal, crafting compelling new mythos without losing sight of the humanity at the story's heart."[21] On Metacritic, the series has a weighted average score of 82 out of 100, based on 20 critics.[22]
In a positive review for RogerEbert.com, critic Matt Fagerholm referred to the series as "quite simply, one of the all-time great fantasy epics, as well as the masterwork of puppetry most closely aligned with Jim Henson’s humanistic philosophy since his son Brian helmed 1992’s holiday perennial, The Muppet Christmas Carol".[23] Matt Zoller Seitz of Vulture similarly praised the series, saying: "Age of Resistance is like an immense, ten-hour magic show, engrossing down to the very last wondrous detail. This is an altogether staggering artistic achievement, and a joyful continuation of the Henson tradition."[24]
In a mostly positive review, Keith Phipps of TV Guide stated that "Age of Resistance is, in many respects, an extraordinary accomplishment. Which isn't to say it doesn't run into some problems along the way."[25] In a more mixed review for The Daily Telegraph, Ed Power wrote, "There are real pleasures to be had watching beautiful puppets running, kissing and poking each others' eyes out. But the Dark Crystal is in such a hurry to create a splash it plunges off the deep end too soon."[26]
Critics' Choice Television Awards | January 12, 2020 | Best Animated Series | The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance | [27] | ||
Golden Reel Awards | January 19, 2020 | Outstanding Achievement in Sound Editing: Episodic Long Form-Sound Effects and Foley | Tim Nielsen (supervising sound editor, sound designer), David Farmer (sound designer), Andre Zweers, Jonathan Borland, Addison Teague, Lee Gilmore (sound effects editors), Shelley Roden, John Roesch (Foley artists) and Anthony De Francesco (Foley editor)for the episode "What Was Sundered And Undone" | [28] | ||
Primetime Emmy Awards | September 19, 2020 | Outstanding Children's Program | Lisa Henson, Halle Stanford, Louis Leterrier, (executive producers) Jeffrey Addiss, Will Matthews, Javier Grillo-Marxuach, Blanca Lista (co-executive producers) and Ritamarie Peruggi (produced by) | [29] | ||
Visual Effects Society Awards | January 29, 2020 | Outstanding Special (Practical) Effects in a Photoreal or Animated Project | Sean Mathiesen, Jon Savage, Toby Froud and Phil Harvey | [30] | ||
Outstanding Created Environment in an Episode, Commercial, or Real-Time Project | Sulé Bryan, Charles Chorein, Christian Waite and Martyn Hawkins | |||||
Writers Guild of America Awards | February 1, 2020 | Children's Script – Episodic, Long form and Specials | Javier Grillo-Marxuach (writer)for the episode "Time to Make...My Move" | [31] | ||
Saturn Awards | Best Fantasy Television Series | The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance | [32] |
During a Nintendo Direct at E3 2019, it was announced that a video game based on the Netflix series, called The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance Tactics, was in development by BonusXP and En Masse Entertainment. The game was released on February 4, 2020, for Nintendo Switch, Xbox One, PlayStation 4, Microsoft Windows, and macOS.[33] [34] It was released in Japan on May 7, 2020.[35]
On September 2, 2019, IndieWire reported that Addiss and Matthews were interested in and prepared for a possible second season: in an interview, Matthews said, "If we are lucky enough to get more seasons then the story will go on and we know where it's going and it's maybe more hopeful than you might think", with Addiss noting, "We also have a concrete document for season two. So we are ready to go."[36]
However, on September 20, 2020, it was announced that the series would not be renewed for a second season. Lisa Henson stated, "We know fans are eager to learn how this chapter of The Dark Crystal saga concludes and we'll look for ways to tell that story in the future."[37]
On February 10, 2022, TV Head of The Jim Henson Company Halle Stanford stated "We are nimble, we are resilient. We are ready to jump. The minute anyone would like to jump back into Thra [“The Dark Crystal” planet setting], it is a world that we will continue to build on and think about."[38]
Varèse Sarabande (Music.Film) issued 2 Soundtracks sets for the series in September 2019: "The Dark Crystal: Age of Resistance, Vol. 1 Music from the Netflix Original Series," and Vol. 2 of the same name. Volume 1 is a 2-disc set, and Volume 2 is 1-disc.