The Big Knights

The Big Knights
Genre Animated series
Created by Neville Astley
Mark Baker
Written by Neville Astley
Mark Baker
Directed by Neville Astley
Mark Baker
Starring Brian Blessed
David Rintoul
Alexander Armstrong
Timothy West
Prunella Scales
Morwenna Banks
Brian Sewell
John Sparkes
Summer Strallen
Scarlett Strallen
Gordon Kennedy
Kate Robbins
Enn Reitel
Country of origin United Kingdom
Original language(s) English
No. of series 1
No. of episodes 13
Production
Producer(s) Claire Jennings
Running time 13 × 10 minutes
Production company(s) Astley Baker Davies
eOne Family
Release
Original network BBC One (UK)
Picture format 4:3 Standard Definition
Original release 19 December 1999 (1999-12-19)

The Big Knights was a British animated television series created, directed and produced by Astley Baker Davies and distributed by E1 Kids. it was first broadcast on BBC One over the Christmas Season of 1999-2000. It was the first TV series to be digitally animated using CelAction 2D, while the first release of the software was still under development.[1][2]

The stories tell the adventures of the two Big Knights, Sir Boris and Sir Morris, who are incredibly strong and brave, but are also incredibly stupid. They solve crises, usually of their own creation, but cause great destruction and mayhem in the process.

Setting

The eponymous Big Knights live in Castle Big, on the edge of Forest Big, in the land of Borovia. Borovia seems to be situated in either Central or Eastern Europe. The knights themselves are indeed big; according to the title sequence they are "the height of two men, the weight of four, the strength of sixteen".

Borovia is rife with dragons, witches, trolls, ogres and a race of tiny people. The only real civilisation aside from Castle Big and King Otto's run-down palace is Borodzo, a tiny country town in the middle of nowhere. In the town square was a large gold clock which the incompetent King Otto accidentally spent a huge amount of money upon, only for the Big Knights to destroy it before the King arrived to view it.

The population is negligible, the economy is poor and the army consists mainly of Sir Boris, Sir Morris and their pets, as well as a host of lesser knights who, not being big, tend to take a back seat. This is mainly due to their snobbish elitism and general martial incompetence; they are much happier practising genuflection and brushing up their courtly manners. There doesn't seem to be much going for Borovia. The land has a fledgling television system (in black and white, consisting mainly of weather reports), at least one car (owned by the King) and an ill-fated hydroelectric dam, along with a failed proton power plant, which runs on pig manure. From this it becomes apparent that Borovia, rather than being merely medieval, is in fact in the modern age, and whether through geographical isolation or sheer indolence, very backward.

The country borders on the land of Moridia, a richer and more prosperous nation. The people there are more intelligent, and are always one step ahead of their envious neighbours. Borovia also borders a land of vampires, which the Big Knights help to get rid of more by accident than design, in the process reviving the land's tourism industry. As lovable as they are, the Big Knights always seem to make life for all Borovians that little bit harder.

Main characters

Style of humour

The Big Knights appeared over the Christmas of 1999/2000, and was lauded for its wry humour and cleverness. Jack and the Beanstalk, for example, is retold from the point of view of a tiny race of people who inhabit Sir Morris' garden. In another episode, an asteroid narrowly misses a new hydroelectric dam, only for the knights' efforts to rescue the princesses result in the destruction of the dam by Sir Morris hurtling into it from a great height. The theme tune was provided by the Rostov Balalaika orchestra.

The cast

List of episodes

  1. Knights in Distress
  2. Ethel and the Imp
  3. Knight School
  4. Time Protonosphere
  5. The Land of the Vampires
  6. Sir Morris and the Beanstalk
  7. The Village Games
  8. Alchemy
  9. Lost Doris
  10. Clockwork Knights
  11. The Troll Bridge
  12. Proton Power
  13. The Royal Escort

+ - indicates episodes included on the VHS release.

International broadcasters

The series is airing or has aired in the following other countries.

Country Channel(s) Local title
 Australia ABC The Big Knights
 Brazil TV Cultura Os Grandes Cavaleiros
 Finland Yle TV1, Yle TV2 Remakat ritarit
 Netherlands Nederland 3 Heren in Blik

Home video releases

Awards

References

  1. .
  2. Directors' Commentary on the 2010 DVD release
  3. ASIN: B00004SX7I
  4. ASIN: B003XNB3OI

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, April 25, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.