King Arthur and the Knights of Justice

This article is about the cartoon series. For the video game, see King Arthur & the Knights of Justice (video game).
King Arthur
and the Knights of Justice

Cover of the Image Entertainment DVD release
Also known as King Arthur & the Knights of Justice
Genre Action/Adventure
Fantasy
Created by Jean Chalopin
Written by Jean Chalopin
Directed by Stephan Martinière
Charlie Sansonetti
Xavier Picard
Shigeru Koshi (production)
Kazasuke Doshihara (art)
Michael Donovan (voice)
Creative director(s) Stephan Martinière
Charlie Sansonetti
Voices of Andrew Kavadas
Scott McNeil
Michael Donovan
Kathleen Barr
Garry Chalk
Jim Byrnes
Composer(s) Shuki Levy
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 2
No. of episodes 26
Production
Executive producer(s) Diane Eskenazi
Allen Bohbot
Jean Chalopin
Avi Arad
Producer(s) Allen Bohbot
Diane Eskenazi
Mark Taylor
Shigeru Akagawa (animation)
Hiroshi Saotome (animation)
Suzanne Remiot
Running time 22 minutes
Production company(s) C&D (Créativité et Développement)
Golden Films
Distributor Bohbot Entertainment
Golden Films
Release
Original network first-run syndiaction (1992-1993)
SyncTV Kids (2009-present)
Original release September 13, 1992 – December 12, 1993

King Arthur and the Knights of Justice is an American cartoon series produced by Golden Films, C&D (Créativité et Développement) and Bohbot Entertainment. The series was created by Diane Eskenazi (Golden Films) and Avi Arad (Toy Biz chairman, CEO and the founder of Marvel Studios) who were also executive producers of the series, which lasted for two seasons of 13 episodes each. Its first episode aired on September 13, 1992, and the last episode was on December 12, 1993.

Plot

The show's premise had King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table trapped in the Cave of Glass by the evil enchantress Queen Morgana. The wizard Merlin, unable to free King Arthur and the Knights himself, searches the timeline for replacement Knights. Merlin finds the quarterback of the New York Knights football team, Arthur King, as a suitable replacement. Merlin transports Arthur King and his teammates to Camelot after one of their football games and appoints Arthur King as their leader, with his teammates as the new Knights of the Round Table, and assigns them the task of freeing the true King and Knights. To do so, they must find the 12 Keys of Truth, one for each knight that only the knight in question can initially touch. Once all the keys are found, the real knights will be free and the team will return home. In the meantime, they pledge "....fairness to all, to protect the weak and vanquish the evil". The Knights are armed with special armor and are able to summon their respective creatures at any time when in battle armor. These animals, such as King Arthur's dragon, are emblazoned on their shields.

The series had a progressive story with both sides making progress towards their goals. Continuity was also established in the episodes which would be brought up in later episodes, along with some repeat minor characters, character relationships, and previously overcome weaknesses of the Knights. Despite the continual movement towards a resolution, the series is incomplete and ended abruptly during the second season.

Characters

The Knights of the Round Table

Knights' weapons, items and vehicles

Each knight has at least one weapon through which Merlin can communicate. Some knight weapons appear out of the chest plates of their armor, others have weapons separate from the armor and have either items or more (rarely used) weapons that appear from their armor. Each knight also has a shield with an animal pictured on them; these animals can materialize out of the shields and aid the knights. Some of the knights also ride in horse-drawn carts with giant weapons, as opposed to just riding a horse.

Knight Weapon/item External weapon Shield animal Cart
Arthur Excalibur None Dragon Dahlia Cart
Lancelot Lance Sword Lion Lance Cart
Trunk Battering Ram Battle Axe Ram Ramhead Cart
Tone Blacksmith's hammer and stake Sword Serpent Large wagon
Breeze Pike Sword Sphinx None
Wally Daggers Two shortswords Falcon None
Gallop Pole mace Sword Cerberus None
Darren Crossbow Sword Eagle Giant crossbow cart
Phil Spiked Club Mace; Sword Panther None
Brick Brick wall Sword Bat Brick tower cart
Zeke Spear Sword; Club Hydra None
Lug Football Sword Kraken Large wagon

Camelot characters

Enemies of the Knights

Warlords

Purple Horde

Episode list

Season 1

  1. "Opening Kick-Off"
  2. "A Knight's Quest (The Search for Guinevere)"
  3. "The Unbeliever"
  4. "Even Knights Have to Eat"
  5. "Assault on Castle Morgana"
  6. "Quest for Courage"
  7. "The Warlord Knight"
  8. "The Challenge"
  9. "To Save a Squire"
  10. "The Surrender"
  11. "Darren's Key"
  12. "Viper's Phantom"
  13. "The Way Back"

Season 2

  1. "A Matter of Honor"
  2. "What the Key Unlocked"
  3. "Tyronne and Everett Alone"
  4. "The Dark Side"
  5. "The Quitter"
  6. "Camelot Park"
  7. "The High Ground"
  8. "The Island"
  9. "Quest for the Book"
  10. "Enter Morgana"
  11. "The Cure"
  12. "Winter Campaign"
  13. "Tone's Triumph"

Video game

A video game based on the series was created by Enix for the Super Nintendo platform in 1995. The game featured a final confrontation between King Arthur and Morgana, in the form of a giant dragon, and provided an ending to the series where the Knights football team were able to return to their own time.

Other merchandise

Mattel released a handful of 5½" action figures and vehicles/accessories based on the show.[1] Marvel Comics released a three-part comic book miniseries was created by Michael Golden in 1993.[2]

Releases

In March 2010, after several various partial VHS and DVD releases, Image Entertainment released the complete series as a boxed set in the U.S. with all 26 episodes in a three-DVD set King Arthur and the Knights of Justice: The Complete Animated Series. The whole series was available for free watching through Internet streaming at the Lycos' SyncTV service. As of 2011, it now available on Kidlet. Between 2012 and 2014, it was available for instant streaming on Netflix.

Reception

The website Topless Robot ranked the show as first on the lists of The 10 Most Ridiculous Adaptations of Arthurian Legend (2009) and the 8 Mostly Forgotten '90s Cartoons (2011).[3][4]

See also

References

External links

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