Spy_Kids:_Mission_Critical

<i>Spy Kids: Mission Critical</i>

Spy Kids: Mission Critical

Computer-animated adventure-comedy TV series


Spy Kids: Mission Critical is a computer-animated adventure-comedy children's television series based on the Spy Kids franchise by Robert Rodriguez[lower-alpha 1] that was released in two seasonal swathes of 10 episodes each on 20 April[1] and on 30 November, both in 2018, on Netflix in the United States.[2]

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Plot

In Mission Critical, brother-and-sister team Juni and Carmen Cortez attend Spy Kids Academy, a top secret spy school for kid agents. When a new counter-spy agency threatens the safety of the world, it will be up to junior spies Juni and Carmen to train and lead a team of fellow Spy Kids cadets against the forces of S.W.A.M.P. (Sinister Wrongdoers Against Mankind's Preservation) and their diabolical leader, Golden Brain. The Mission Critical team may not be ready, but they are the only ones to call when grown-up spies can't do the job.

Voice cast and characters

  • Ashley Bornancin as Carmen Cortez / Tango, and Barracuda
  • Carter Hastings as Juni Cortez / Aztec
  • Caitlyn Bairstow as Glitch and Gablet
  • Nicholas Coombe as Ace
  • Nesta Cooper as Claudia Floop / Scorpion
  • Richard Ian Cox as Sir Awesome
  • Tom Kenny as Golden Brain, Spurious Visage, Professor Küpkakke, and Dave-Bot
  • Travis Turner as Peter St. Ignatius / PSI / Agent No-One
  • Christian Lanz as Gregorio Cortez, Fegan Floop, DJ Otto Tune / Death Meddle
  • Candi Milo as Vida Immortata, Malware, Mauly the Sparkle Scout, Kopi Vasquez and Glendora Chatting-Botham
  • Mira Sorvino as Ingrid Avellan-Cortez
  • Yuri Lowenthal as Desmond "Dez" and Zedmond "Zed" Vasquez / Rock n' Roll, Jaime Vasquez, Talon and Jason Pietranthony / Improv / Improvisario
  • Molly Shannon as Murna
  • Kate Micucci as Therese
  • Patton Oswalt as Bradley Feinstein / Mint Condition
  • Bobcat Goldthwait as JT / The Worm
  • Thomas Lennon as Dr. Chad Jericho
  • Terrence Stone as the deeply-distorted voice of Agent No-One (season 1)
  • Robert Englund as Agent No-One's disguised voice (season 2, episode 8)

Production

The production was announced as a production by The Weinstein Company and Netflix and was scheduled for release in 2018.[3] The two seasons each consist of 10 episodes[4] and were animated by Mainframe Studios as part of a deal between its parent company, Wow Unlimited Media, TWC and Netflix.[5][6][7]

Mike Fleming, Jr. of Deadline Hollywood announced the composition, look and style of the series whose creators were revealed as Michael Hefferon, president of Rainmaker Studios (which would be consolidated under Mainframe Studios itself in 2020) and Sean Jara, who created the Nickelodeon series Mysticons the year prior. The villains in the show were described to be as "colorful" as the protagonists. The series was said to contain "as much comedy as wish fulfillment".[8] FM DeMarco is the head writer of the series.[9][10] John Tellegen was one of the show's writers.[11] Robert Rodriguez and Bob Weinstein served executive producers due to the firing of the latter's brother Harvey, thus making it the first Weinstein Company title not to have Harvey's involvement.

Ashley Bornancin, Carter Hastings, Travis Turner, Mira Sorvino, Tom Kenny and Christian Lanz were announced as voice cast for Carmen, Juni, PSI, Ingrid, Golden Brain and Gregorio respectively.[12] FM De Marco said that he had "many inspirations for the series but it has its own very specific style and attitude". He also said that the show has a nice mix of all kinds of humor, and contains old and new characters. Travis Turner faced controversy for being cast as the voice of PSI, a black character, since Travis himself is white.[13][14][15] Just before the 18 April launch, the Weinstein Company was removed and replaced with Dimension Television, the television label of of Dimension Films, which handled production in-series, as the distributor. Bob Weinstein's name was also removed from the show's credits in all but 4 episodes.

Episodes

Season 1 (2018)

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Season 2 (2018)

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Notelist

  1. The writer, F.M. DeMarco, wrote in a deleted tweet that the show has no continuity with the previous films before it, having its own style and attitude. [ http://twitter.com/FMD1940/status/953469853872021505 Tweet link].

References

  1. Chavez, Danette (20 March 2018). "Here's what's coming to (and leaving from) Netflix in April". The A.V. Club. Retrieved March 20, 2018.
  2. "New to Netflix for November 2018". IGN. 24 October 2018. Retrieved 25 October 2018.
  3. Steinberg, Brian (16 June 2016). "Netflix Readies Animated 'Spy Kids', 'Llama Llama' Series (EXCLUSIVE)". Variety. Retrieved 1 July 2016.
  4. Pinto, Jordan (24 March 2017). "Wow! Unlimited inks deal with Weinstein Co, Netflix". Playback. Brunico Communications. Retrieved 17 April 2017.
  5. "Spy Kids: Mission Critical". Netflix. 16 June 2016. Retrieved 19 March 2018.
  6. Lanz, Christian [@ChristianLanz] (January 5, 2018). "Happy New Year! #SpyKidsMC18 #GregorioCortez #FeganFloop #SpyDad https://t.co/7tgStyIUBA" (Tweet). Archived from the original on 8 September 2020. Retrieved 14 June 2021 via Twitter.
  7. Montgomery, Sarah Jasmine (18 April 2018). "White 'Spy Kids' Actor Says He Can Voice Black Character Because He's 'Urban'". Complex Networks. Retrieved 1 May 2018.
  8. Turner, Travis [@travisturner87] (April 18, 2018). "https://t.co/B1HyxUIzVA" (Tweet). Archived from the original on 4 April 2023. Retrieved 14 June 2021 via Twitter.

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