Robot Chicken Born Again Virgin Christmas Specil
Robot Craven | |
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Also known every bit | Sweet J Presents (2001) |
Genre |
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Created by |
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Based on | ToyFare |
Directed by |
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Voices of | (Complete list) |
Opening theme | "Robot Chicken" by Les Claypool |
Ending theme | "The Gonk" by Herbert Chappell |
Composers |
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Country of origin | United states |
No. of seasons | 11 |
No. of episodes | 220 (and 11 specials) (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Executive producers |
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Producers |
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Running time | 11 minutes |
Production companies |
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Distributor | Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution |
Release | |
Original network | Adult Swim |
Motion-picture show format | NTSC (2005–09) HDTV 1080i (2010–nowadays) |
Kickoff shown in | 2001 (as Sweetness J Presents) |
Original release | February 20, 2005 (2005-02-20) – present |
Robot Chicken is an American adult animated terminate motion sketch comedy goggle box series, created and executive produced for Developed Swim by Seth Green and Matthew Senreich forth with co-head writers Douglas Goldstein and Tom Root. The writers, nearly prominently Greenish, also provide many of the voices. Senreich, Goldstein, and Root were formerly writers for the popular action figure hobbyist magazine ToyFare.[two] Robot Chicken has won two Annie Awards and half dozen Emmy Awards.[three] [4]
Production history [edit]
Robot Chicken was conceptually preceded by "Twisted ToyFare Theatre", a humorous photo comic-strip actualization in ToyFare: The Toy Magazine.[5] The show's name was inspired past a dish on the carte du jour at a West Hollywood Chinese restaurant, Kung Pao Bistro, where Green and Senreich had dined; other ideas for the series' proper noun included Junk in the Trunk, The Deep Finish, and Toyz in the Attic (many of these rejected names would be reworked into episode titles for the beginning season).[vi]
The testify was created, written, and produced by Seth Dark-green and Matthew Senreich, and produced by ShadowMachine Films (Seasons ane–five) and Stoopid Buddy Stoodios in association with Stoop!d Monkey, Williams Street, Sony Pictures Digital (Seasons ane–v) and Sony Pictures Television receiver (Seasons 6–ten). The series first appeared as Sweet J Presents on the Sony website Screenblast.com in 2001.[7] In the first episode ("Conan's Big Fun"), Conan O'Brien was a featured character, voiced by Family Guy creator Seth MacFarlane (2005–present).[7] [8] Sweetness J Presents ended afterwards 12 episodes and moved to Drawing Network'southward Developed Swim in 2005 as Robot Chicken, premiering on Sunday, February 20, 2005.
Some television networks and sketch shows rejected Robot Chicken, including Comedy Central, MADtv, Saturday Night Live, and even Drawing Network. Yet, someone at Cartoon Network passed the pitch along to Adult Swim, around the aforementioned time that Seth MacFarlane told Seth Green and Matthew Senreich to pitch the show to Adult Swim.
Light-green and Senreich cited the likes of Monty Python's Flying Circus, Pee-wee's Playhouse and The Kentucky Fried Movie equally major influences for Robot Chicken.
The evidence mocks popular culture, referencing toys, movies, television, games, popular fads, and more obscure references like anime cartoons and older television programs, much in the same vein every bit comedy sketch shows like Saturday Night Live.[9] Information technology employs cease motion animation of toys, action figures, claymation, and various other objects, such as tongue depressors, The Game of Life pegs, and popsicle sticks.[6]
1 item motif involves the idea of fantastical characters existence placed in a more than realistic world or situation (such as Stretch Armstrong requiring a corn syrup transplant afterwards losing his abilities because of aging, Optimus Prime performing a prostate cancer PSA for the humans, and Godzilla having issues in the bedchamber).[9] The program aired a 30-minute episode dedicated to Star Wars which premiered June 17, 2007, in the U.s., featuring the voices of Star Wars notables George Lucas, Mark Hamill (from a previous episode), Baton Dee Williams, and Ahmed Best.[ten] The Star Wars episode was nominated for a 2008 Emmy Honor as Outstanding Animated Program (for Programming Less Than 1 60 minutes).
The serial was renewed for a 20-episode tertiary season, which ran from August 12, 2007, to Oct 5, 2008.[vii] Afterward an viii-calendar month hiatus during the third season, the evidence returned on September seven, 2008, to air the remaining 5 episodes.[vii] The series was renewed for a fourth season which premiered on Dec seven, 2008, and concluded September twenty, 2009.[vii] In early 2010, the show was renewed for a fifth and sixth flavour (twoscore more episodes total).[11] Season v premiered on December 12, 2010.[7] The 2nd group of episodes began broadcasting on October 23, 2011. The 100th episode aired on January 15, 2012.[7] In May 2012, Adult Swim announced they were picking up a sixth season of Robot Chicken, which began ambulation in September 2012.[12] The seventh flavour premiered on Apr 13, 2014. Season eight premiered on Oct 25, 2015.[thirteen] Flavor nine premiered on December 10, 2017.[fourteen] Flavour 10 premiered on September 29, 2019, containing the 200th episode.[fifteen] Season 11 premiered on September 6, 2021.[16] [17]
Following the 2020 cancellation of The Venture Bros., it is Developed Swim'southward longest running series, both in terms of years and episodes.
Opening sequence [edit]
On a night and stormy dark, a mad scientist finds a road-killed chicken, which he takes dorsum to his laboratory to refashion into a cyborg. Midway through the opening sequence, the titular chicken turns his light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation centre towards the camera, and the title appears amid the "light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation furnishings" as Les Claypool of Primus tin be heard screaming "Information technology's alive!" quoting Frankenstein (Claypool as well composed and performed the show's theme song). The mad scientist then straps the re-animated Robot Chicken into a chair, uses calipers to hold his eyes open, and forces him to watch a banking concern of television set monitors (with allusion to A Clockwork Orange); this scene segues into the body of the show, which resembles someone frequently changing TV channels.[ citation needed ]
In the episode "1987", Michael Ian Black claims in the "Best Robot Chicken Always" sketch that this sequence tells the viewers that they are the chicken, being forced to watch the skits. Because of all this, the frame story of the Robot Chicken and the Mad Scientist would not continue across the opening sequence until the 100th episode entitled "Fight Club Paradise", when the chicken finally makes his escape and later on kills the Mad Scientist when he takes his hen wife in response, fighting and killing several characters from previous skits (virtually of them beingness implied to exist the Mad Scientist's henchmen) in the process.
Beginning in the sixth season, a new opening sequence has been featured with a role reversal afterwards the events of the show's 100th episode. The Robot Chicken comes upon the torso of the Mad Scientist, which has been decapitated. He decides to do the aforementioned that he did to him: add together robotic parts to him, turn him into a cyborg, and give him a laser heart (although he gives the scientist a bluish center instead of a red i, which necessitates a modify in the championship background colour). He then straps him to the same chair he was strapped to and forces him to sentry the same Telly monitors while the chicken and his wife share a kiss.[18]
Beginning in the eighth season, a new opening sequence has been featured with the Robot Chicken existence uncovered in snow, frozen in a cake of ice, past robots. Taken to a futuristic laboratory, the Robot Chicken is taken out of suspended animation by a masked scientist, revealed to be a descendant of the Mad Scientist who first reanimated the Robot Chicken. The descendant mad scientist then proceeds to strength the Robot Chicken to watch a wall of projected images with dissimilar shows, as his ancestor did before him. This new opening was necessary following the plot of last season's episode "Chipotle Miserables" in which the Mad Scientist's son rips out his father's remaining heart to open a door controlled by an optical biometric reader, and so creates a posse of reanimated cyborg animals, likewise as a cyborg homeless person. The posse and then proceeds to kidnap all (at the time) five living US presidents Jimmy Carter, George H.W. Bush-league, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, and Barack Obama. The Robot Chicken and the at present-reformed Mad Scientist then team up to rescue the presidents, subsequently which, the Mad Scientist punishes his son past forcing him to lookout the Tv set monitors and the Robot Craven flies away, free. Nonetheless, it doesn't explain how the Robot Chicken got frozen and the extended version (seen in the Season 8 episode "Garbage Sushi" and the Flavour 9 episode "3 2 one 2 333, 222, iii...66?") exists where it begins with a destroyed Statue of Freedom buried in snow (referring to the catastrophe scene of Planet of the Apes) when ii drones are flight together. Then, a drone scans the frozen Robot Chicken while the current of air blows to himself.
Beginning in the 10th season, a new opening sequence has been featured with the Nerd beingness turned into a cyborg by both the Robot Chicken and the Mad Scientist and beingness forced to sentry the skits while they high five. This is a result of the previous season finale where the Nerd dies from a cliff spring stunt in an endeavour to get the show renewed. The letters "10" in the title have been likewise highlighted to mark the bear witness reaching ten seasons. In the 200th episode, as the title is showing, David Lynch shouts "Robot Chicken!" in an off-screen voice.
In the eleventh flavour, a new opening sequence has been featured with the Mad Scientist launching the Robot Chicken off a space station in a capsule. The capsule so crashes on the basis where the Robot Craven meets some other cyborg chicken, just in an elderly land (with innuendo to 2001: A Space Odyssey). The monolith-shaped TVs in the firm evidence a babe Robot Craven floating through space. Starting with the episode "May Cause a Whole Lotta Scabs", an extended version (which set in a two.39:1 aspect ratio) exists where information technology begins with a tribe of hominids watching the skits on the TVs while a hominid version of the Nerd bites a remote command to turn on the TV monitors. All of a sudden, a hominid tries to accept the remote, but the hominid Nerd kills it and gets the remote back, segueing into the opening sequence.
Characters [edit]
While Robot Chicken uses a diversity of famous real people and fictional characters, it as well has original characters created exclusively for the testify.
- Robot Craven (voiced by Seth Greenish) – The evidence's titular grapheme (although his name is only simply as the "Chicken" according to a maid in the 100th episode). He is a cyborg craven with a red light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation middle. Commencement seen as a roadkill chicken on Highway 9W while he originally lived on Quondam Human McLauchlin'south farm, the Mad Scientist revived him as a cyborg and experiments on him by forcing him to spotter sketches on numerous Telly monitors. In the 100th episode, he gets freed by a maid and after kills his creator after he kidnaps his wife. He afterward revived the Mad Scientist every bit a cyborg and reverses the roles, forcing him to watch sketches.
- Cluckerella (voiced by Seth Greenish) – The Robot Craven's wife. She wears a apparel and has blonde hair and red lipstick. She gets kidnapped past the Mad Scientist during the 100th episode, causing the Robot Chicken to go to the lab and kill him to rescue her. In the Season 7 finale, it is revealed that Cluckerella has left.
- The Mad Scientist (voiced by Les Claypool for the laughter and line in the opening and David Lynch for the speaking vocalization from Season 10 onwards) – A scientist who revived the Robot Craven. He has wild white pilus and a diabolical grin. Starting with Flavour 3, his real name is revealed to be Fritz Huhnmörder (German for "chicken murderer"), which is seen at the gravestone in the season premiere. He was killed past the Robot Chicken later the events of the 100th episode only for him to be revived as a cyborg in the sixth season's opening sequence, and and so gets his revenge by forcing the Mad Scientist to picket the same sketches that he had previously forced the Robot Chicken to watch. In the Season 10 episode "Fila Ogden in: Maggie'south Got a Total Load" with the Sabbatum Night Alive-styled opening, the Mad Scientist'due south nickname is Rick Sanchez, named after another Adult Swim mad scientist character due to his resemblance to the same grapheme. He really has five kids, in which they include his crazed son, a teenage daughter, an viii-year-old daughter, and infant twins that are a boy and a daughter.
- Mad Scientist's Son (voiced by Zachary Levi) – The Mad Scientist's 32-year-erstwhile twisted son, who steals his cyborg-making tools equally office of a plot to kidnap all living US presidents for bribe. Notwithstanding, he ends up being defeated past the Robot Chicken and the Mad Scientist, who then forces him to watch the sketches as punishment. According to the script of the Season 7 finale, it revealed his real proper name is Tony Huhnmörder-Anderson.
- The Nerd (voiced by Seth Green) – A 26-year-sometime nerdy homo (although that'south debatable since he however goes to high school and lives with his parents) with foursquare-framed glasses who lisps. He appears in many episodes and often ends up in wild situations in famous media. Although his name was mentioned as "Gary" in the Flavor ane episode "Joint Signal", recent Adult Swim commercials for some later on episodes requite his name as "Arthur Kensington, Jr.". He dies in the Flavour nine finale only for him to get revived as a cyborg in the tenth season's opening sequence.
- Bitch Pudding (voiced by Katee Sackhoff) – A fictitious improver to the Strawberry Shortcake universe. Bitch Pudding is a foul-mouthed, crass and fierce 18-yr-old adult female and a former resident of Pastryville who has a penchant for insulting, tormenting, and sometimes fifty-fifty killing others. In her debut appearance in the Flavor 4 episode "P.South. Aye, in That Way", she seems to be 8 years quondam for early episodes, only in later episodes to prove her as a young developed when she gets a growth spurt. In Flavor 7, Bitch Pudding became the showtime of the series' recurring characters to have their ain special, titled the "Bitch Pudding Special".
- Unicorn (voiced by George Lowe) – A white homosexual unicorn who is a complete pervert. In his debut appearance in the Season 2 episode "Suck Information technology", he appears earlier the Nerd, who had just daydreamed about unicorns being real. When his magic horn is polished, it gives "magical unicorn mayonnaise".
- Mo-Larr: Eternian Dentist (voiced by Michael Ian Black) – A fictional addition to the bandage for the prove's Masters of the Universe parodies. Mo-Larr is the resident dentist of Eternia. He is willing to resort to drastic measures in order to perform his dental work on unwilling patients such as Skeletor, fifty-fifty going so far equally to ensnare Beast Man in dental floss and stick a dental drill into Grizzlor's heart. In the Season 5 episode "Terms of Endaredevil", his total name is revealed to be Moe Larrstein.
- Composite Santa Claus (voiced by Christian Slater) – A genocidal monster who is half Santa Claus, half snowman, and is based on Composite Superman. In the Season iv episode "In a DVD Factory", his backstory is revealed: he has been created by a diabolical scientist from the combined Dna of Santa and Frosty the Snowman. Afterwards he awakens, he shoots the scientist and his ii assistants with an automatic rifle, killing the latter two, and goes on a rampage, waging war on all not-Gentile religions.
- Little Drummer Male child (voiced by Seth Green) – An anime-style drummer whose drums tin summon demons when beaten.
- Humping Robot – A mute robot looking for love, who is first seen humping a washing machine in the Flavour one episode "Atta Toy". He has also been seen humping church bells, jukeboxes, and slot machines, among other metallic objects. In the Season iii episode "Werewolf vs. Unicorn", he is revealed to be a father of his unknown robotic family unit, according to the gravestone.
- MC Broccoli (voiced by Breckin Meyer) - An anthropomorphic broccoli who is a rapper.
- Daniel a.thousand.a. "Gyro-Robo" (voiced by Seth Dark-green) – A negative-minded teenage nerd who hosts a web serial (entitled the "Gyro-Robo News 60 minutes") where he complains about inaccuracies in media – and not fifty-fifty Robot Chicken is immune from his criticism. He masturbates frequently and is often targeted by the local bully, Munson.
- Munson (voiced by Breckin Meyer) – A jerkish teenager who bullies nerds, especially Daniel.
- Gary the Stormtrooper (voiced by Donald Faison) – A fictional addition to the bandage for the bear witness's Star Wars parodies. Gary is a clumsy, scrap incompetent and well-meaning 29-year-old stormtrooper who usually messes things up due to his clumsiness. Despite that, he is able to brand his work correct. In the special Robot Craven: Star Wars Episode II, he is revealed to be a married family man who lives with his wife Beverly (voiced by Rachael Leigh Melt) and his young girl Jessica (voiced past Adrianne Palicki), who according to his wife, hardly ever sees him due to his work; simply is making efforts to be involved more in her life. In the special Robot Chicken: Star Wars Episode III, he as well revealed that his family live on Alderaan.
- Aliens (voiced by Seth Green, Breckin Meyer, Adam Talbott, Marking Hamill, Patrick Pinney, and Patrick Stewart) – A race of wacky gray aliens who have a tendency to boggle their plans and efforts, unremarkably resulting in them letting out a frustrated scream of "Dammit, dammit, dammit!".
- Bloopers Host (voiced by Jamie Kaler) – The host of the "Bloopers!" sketches, which parodies the early years of America'southward Funniest Domicile Videos, substituting habitation videos for humorous tv set and flick outtakes (although home videos have been shown on 2 occasions, the latter of which are from his own life). At the terminate of almost every sketch he appears in, he commits suicide in various means, including hanging himself, swallowing whiskey and pills, putting a toaster in a bathtub, and suffocating himself with a plastic bag.
- Viscid Bear (voiced by Michelle Trachtenberg) – An anthropomorphic gluey bear who is doomed to scream in pain from stepping on a behave trap. In her debut advent in the Flavor 3 episode "Tapping a Hero", she doesn't mind the taste of her own leg afterwards she bites it off to free herself only to step on another bear trap again.
Episodes [edit]
Voice cast [edit]
Besides all the celebrities and many famous voice actors who have voiced characters on the show, chief and major recurring actors/writers are:
- Jordan Allen-Dutton
- Candace Bailey
- Carlee Baker
- Abraham Benrubi
- Rachel Bloom
- Alex Borstein
- Leah Cevoli
- Rachael Leigh Cook
- Macaulay Culkin
- Hugh Davidson
- Mikey Solar day
- Deirdre Devlin
- Madison Dylan
- Eden Espinosa
- Donald Faison
- Mike Fasolo
- Lynn Favin
- Keith Ferguson
- Shelby Fero
- Nathan Fillion
- Tamara Garfield
- Sarah Michelle Gellar
- Doug Goldstein
- Ginnifer Goodwin
- Melissa Goodwin Shepherd
- Clare Grant
- Seth Greenish
- Jim Hanks
- Jamie Kaler
- Mila Kunis
- Jordan Ladd
- Jamie Loftus
- Whitney Loveall
- George Lowe
- Seth MacFarlane
- Rachael MacFarlane
- Harmony McElligott
- Breckin Meyer
- Dan Milano
- Republic of chad Morgan
- Adrianne Palicki
- Patrick Pinney
- Tom Root
- Katee Sackhoff
- Matthew Senreich
- Mehar Sethi
- Tom Sheppard
- Kevin Shinick
- Amy Smart
- Adam Talbott
- Fred Tatasciore
- Erik Weiner
- Zeb Wells
- Victor Yerrid
Syndication [edit]
All Robot Chicken episodes from seasons ane through 11 are bachelor on HBO Max.
Home media [edit]
DVD title | Release date | Ep # | Discs | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Region one | Region 2 | Region 4 | |||
The Complete First Season | March 28, 2006 | September 29, 2008 | April 4, 2007 | 1–20 | 2 |
This two-disc boxset includes all twenty episodes from Flavor one in production order. While it contains many sketches that were edited from the Goggle box airings, several of the original Sony Screenblast webtoons, and the words "Jesus" and "Christ" equally an oath unbleeped (though "fuck" and "shit" are even so censored out), the episodes are not all uncut. I particular segment that featured the Teen Titans meeting Beavis and Butt-Head was omitted from the DVD considering of legal issues. The Voltron/Yous Got Served sketch shown on the DVD has a replacement song because of legal issues over the song that was used on the Television version. At a performance of Family unit Guy Live in Chicago, during the Q&A session that ends each performance, Seth Green was asked how they came up with the proper noun Robot Chicken. He explained that the championship of each episode was a proper noun Adult Swim rejected for the name of the show. A Region 2 version of the set was released in the UK on September 29, 2008.[xix] Three edited shorts from Sweet J Presents were included on the Robot Chicken Season one DVD boxset.[eight] | |||||
The Consummate Second Flavour | September iv, 2007 | September 28, 2009 | November 11, 2007 | 21–40 | ii |
This ii-disc boxset includes all 20 episodes from Flavour 2 in production lodge and uncensored, with the words "fuck" and "shit" uncensored (except for one case in the episode "Easter Basket" in the Lego sketch). It is currently bachelor for download on iTunes (though the episode "Veggies for Sloth" is absent because of copyright issues involving the "Archie's Final Destination" segment).[20] Seth Light-green stated at Comic-Con 2006 that the second DVD ready will incorporate the "Beavis and Butt-Head Bring together Teen Titans" sketch, which had been removed from the starting time DVD set because of copyright problems. However, the sketch is absent from the DVD (although information technology is available on iTunes). Bonus features include the Christmas special. A secret Nerf gun fight can be constitute on the disc one extras menu and pushing "up" over the extras and set up-upwards items on the menu reveals more special features. | |||||
Star Wars Special | July 22, 2008 | August 11, 2008 | August 6, 2008 | one | 1 |
This single DVD features the Star Wars special in its Television receiver-edited version (i.e. with bleeps in place of profane words) and several extras near the crew and their work on the special, including a photo gallery, alternate sound, and an easter egg demonstrating the crew'due south difficulty in composing a proper musical score for the sketch "Empire on Ice". It also features various audio commentaries, featuring members of the cast and crew. | |||||
The Complete Tertiary Season | October seven, 2008 | January 25, 2010 | December 3, 2008 | 41–threescore | 2 |
This 2-disc boxset includes all twenty episodes from Season iii in production lodge. This DVD is uncensored, except for the "Cat in the Lid" sketch from episode 7 on Disc 1. It also intentionally censored in episode v in the "Constabulary and Gild: KFC" sketch. This DVD has special features such equally deleted scenes and animatics. It besides includes commentary for all of the episodes and has "Chicken Nuggets" commentary for episodes i and 3–5. The bonus features also include a gag reel and audio takes. | |||||
Star Wars Episode II | July 21, 2009 | July 27, 2009 | August 5, 2009 | one | i |
This single DVD features the main Star Wars special extras, including normal Robot Craven episodes and common DVD extras; "The Making Of"; and deleted scenes. | |||||
The Consummate Fourth Flavour | December 15, 2009 | August 30, 2010 | December ii, 2009 | 61–eighty | two |
This two-disc boxset includes all 20 episodes from Season 4 in production order. The special features include "Chicken Nuggets", a San Diego Comic-Con '08 console, "Day in the Life", a New York Comic-Con '09 panel, video blogs, "Australia Visit", alternating sound, deleted scenes, deleted animations, and commentary on all 20 episodes. | |||||
Star Wars Episode Three | July 12, 2011 | July 4, 2011 | August 3, 2011 | 1 | 1 |
Interview with George Lucas, "Craven Nuggets" (sketch by sketch video commentary), Backside the Scenes, Vocalism Recording Featurette, Star Wars Celebration V Robot Chicken Console, Skywalker Ranch Premiere Trip, Writer'due south Room Featurette, Deleted Animatics w/video intros, Sound Commentaries. | |||||
The Complete 5th Season | October 25, 2011 | TBA | Nov 30, 2011 | 81–100 | 2 |
This two-disc boxset includes all 20 episodes from Flavour 5 in product order. 9 of the episodes were previously unaired before the DVD release. The set includes commentary on all episodes, "Chicken Nuggets" on a few episodes and a featurette on episode 100. Deleted scenes and deleted animations are too included. Among the deleted scenes are the sketches "Beavis and Butt-Head Join Teen Titans" (deleted from Season 1 due to copyright issues) and the "Archie'due south Final Destination" sketch (deleted from Season 2 sets). | |||||
DC Comics Special | July ix, 2013 | TBA | September 18, 2013 | 1 | 1 |
The Making of the RCDC Special, RCDC'south Aquaman Origin Story, Craven Nuggets, Writers' Commentary, Actors' Commentary, DC Amusement Tour, Stoopid Alter Egos, Outtakes, Cut Sketches, five.2 Questions. | |||||
DC Comics Special 2: Villains in Paradise | October xiv, 2014 | TBA | February 18, 2015 | one | ane |
The second set of specials parodying DC Superheroes. Special features include the making of RCDC2VIP, "Bad Hair, Musical Numbers and Sequels", "The Ones That Got Away", "twenty Questions", "Chicken Nuggets", cutting animatics, cut sketches, actors' commentary and writers' commentary. | |||||
The Complete Sixth Season | October 8, 2013 | TBA | November twenty, 2013 | 101–120 | 2 |
This ii-disc boxset includes all 20 episodes from Season vi in production order. Special features include commentary on every episode, deleted animatics, featurettes, deleted scenes, aqueduct flips and "Craven Nuggets". | |||||
Christmas Specials | November 18, 2014 | TBA | TBA | 6 | 1 |
This DVD contains 6 Christmas-themed episodes: "Robot Chicken's Christmas Special", "Robot Chicken's Half-Assed Christmas Special", "Love Consumer (Robot Chicken's Total-Assed Christmas Special)", "Robot Chicken's DP Christmas Special", "Robot Craven's ATM Christmas Special" and "Built-in Again Virgin Christmas Special". Special features include commentaries, deleted scenes, deleted animatics and "long-forgotten" promos. | |||||
Star Wars Trilogy | TBA | December 4, 2015 | Feb iv, 2015 | iii | iii |
The Complete 7th Season | July 21, 2015 | December eleven, 2020 | September xvi, 2015 | 121–140 | 2 |
This two-disc boxset includes all 20 episodes from Season seven in production lodge. Special features include commentary on every episode, featurettes and cutting sketches. | |||||
Robot Chicken DC Comics Special (collection) | March 2018 | December two, 2016 | June 20, 2018 | three | 3 |
The Robot Chicken Walking Dead Special: Look Who's Walking | March 27, 2018 | TBA | Baronial fifteen, 2018 | 1 | i |
Inside the Robot Chicken Walking Dead Special: Expect Who's Walking, Cut Sketches, Commentary, Sketches to Dice For, Bawkward, Behind the Screams. | |||||
The Complete Eighth Season | TBA | March 26, 2021 | April 17, 2019 | 141–160 | 2 |
The Complete 9th Flavour | TBA | March fifteen, 2019 | May 22, 2019 | 161–180 | 2 |
Revolver Amusement have released the first four seasons and all iii Star Wars specials on DVD in the United kingdom.[21] A box set including the first 3 seasons and a box set including all 3 Star Wars specials accept also been released.[22]
Madman Entertainment has released the outset 9 seasons of Robot Craven and specials on DVD in Commonwealth of australia and New Zealand.
International circulate [edit]
The series airs in the United Kingdom and Ireland as office of E4's Adult Swim block, in Canada on Adult Swim (previously Teletoon's Teletoon at Night block from 2006 to 2019) and also in Quebec on Télétoon'southward Télétoon la nuit block, in Australia on The Comedy Channel's Developed Swim block, in Russia on 2x2'due south Adult Swim block, in Germany on WarnerTV Comedy'southward Adult Swim block (previously TNT Serie'southward Adult Swim block from 2009 to 2017), and in Latin America on the I.Sat Adult Swim block (after the Adult Swim block was canceled from Cartoon Network Latin America in 2008). Many of the testify'southward sketches from Sweetness J Presents were redone for Robot Chicken.[7]
References [edit]
- ^ Goldberg, Lesley (Dec 2, 2011). "'Robot Chicken' Duo Launch Blitheness Studio: Seth Light-green and Matthew Senreich pact with Buddy Systems to create Stoopid Buddy Stoodios and volition produce tribute episode to DC Comics universe". Hollywood Reporter . Retrieved March vii, 2012.
- ^ "R.I.P. ToyFare Magazine 1997–2011". Actionfigures.about.com. Retrieved 2013-07-26 .
- ^ "Emmys – Robot Chicken". Emmys – Official website. Retrieved 2013-05-02 .
- ^ "Annie Awards: 'Wreck-It-Ralph' Wins 5 Including Feature, Robot Chicken 'DC Comics Special' TV, 'Paperman' All-time Short Awards Winners 2013". Deadline. 3 February 2013. Retrieved 2013-05-02 .
- ^ "Before Robot Craven: Twisted ToyFare Theatre Takes on DC Comics". Comicbook.com. 2012-09-09. Retrieved 2013-07-26 .
- ^ a b "Video Games, Game Reviews & News". G4tv.com. 2005-02-16. Retrieved 2013-07-26 .
- ^ a b c d e f thou h The New York Times
- ^ a b Robot Chicken: Sweet J Presents (Summary)
- ^ a b "Seth Green Interview". askmen.com. Retrieved 2013-05-02 .
- ^ Mike Snider (June 13, 2007). "'Robot Chicken' digs its satirical talons into 'Star Wars'". USA Today . Retrieved 2008-11-02 .
- ^ "Robot Craven Gets Unprecedented Two-Flavor, twoscore Episode Option-Up – Boob tube Ratings, Nielsen Ratings, Tv set Testify Ratings". TVbytheNumbers.com. 2010-01-21. Archived from the original on 2010-01-25. Retrieved 2010-04-27 .
- ^ "Breaking News – "Robot Chicken" Flavor 6 Kicks Off on Sept 9th at Midnight!". TheFutonCritic.com. 2012-08-16. Retrieved 2013-07-26 .
- ^ "Robot Chicken Season 8 begins writing". League of Buddies. Stoopid Buddy Productions. 2015. Retrieved 20 May 2015.
- ^ Deckelmeier, Joe (September 26, 2017). "What Fans Can Wait From Robot Chicken Season 9". screenrant.com . Retrieved 2017-11-04 .
- ^ "Seth Greenish on Season 10 of 'Robot Chicken', Their 200th Episode, and Upcoming Special". Collider. 20 September 2019.
- ^ @swimpedia (24 May 2021). "Robot Chicken season eleven premieres this September!" (Tweet). Retrieved 2021-06-27 – via Twitter.
- ^ "ROBOT CHICKEN Returns Sept. 6 to Adult Swim". BroadwayWorld TV & Film. 2021-08-10. Retrieved 2021-08-10 .
- ^ "Robot Chicken Opening – Robot Chicken – Developed Swim Video". Video.adultswim.com. Archived from the original on 2013-09-28. Retrieved 2013-07-26 .
- ^ "Robot Chicken – Season 1 Box Set (Region two) (Pal): DVD". Amazon.co.uk. Retrieved 2010-07-13 .
- ^ "Robot Chicken – Season 2 Review". TVShowsOnDVD.com. 2007-08-31. Archived from the original on 2009-12-08. Retrieved 2010-07-thirteen .
- ^ "sitcomsondvd.co.uk". sitcomsondvd.co.united kingdom. Retrieved 2010-04-27 . [ permanent dead link ]
- ^ "sitcomsondvd.co.united kingdom". sitcomsondvd.co.uk. Archived from the original on 2009-09-14. Retrieved 2010-04-27 .
External links [edit]
- Official website
- Robot Chicken at IMDb
- Robot Craven at the Big Drawing DataBase
- Robot Craven – Star Wars Review at Diverseness.com
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robot_Chicken
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