Team Knight Rider | |
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The Team Knight Rider opening title sequence.
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Genre |
Action Crime |
Created by |
Rick Copp David A. Goodman Glen A. Larson |
Starring |
Brixton Karnes Christine Steel Duane Davis Kathy Trageser Nick Wechsler |
Voices of |
Tom Kane Nia Vardalos Kerrigan Mahan Andrea Beutner John Kassir |
Composer(s) | Gary Stockdale |
Country of origin | United States |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of seasons | 1 |
No. of episodes | 22 (list of episodes) |
Production | |
Producer(s) | Scott McAboy Gilbert A. Wadsworth III |
Running time | apx. 45 minutes |
Production company(s) | McAboy-Wadsworth Productions Sterling Pacific Films Copp & Goodman Television Universal Television |
Distributor | NBCUniversal Television Distribution |
Release | |
Original network | NBC |
Original release | October 6, 1997 | – May 18, 1998
Chronology | |
Related shows | Knight Rider |
Team Knight Rider (TKR) is a syndicated television series that was adapted from the Knight Rider franchise and ran between 1997 and 1998. TKR was created by writer/producers Rick Copp and David A. Goodman, based on the original series created by Glen A. Larson, who was an executive producer. TKR was produced by Gil Wadsworth and Scott McAboy and was distributed by Universal Domestic Television and ran only a single season of 22 one-hour episodes before it was canceled due to poor ratings.
The story is about a new team of high-tech crime fighters assembled by the Foundation for Law and Government (FLAG, formed by Wilton Knight) who follow in the tracks of the legendary Michael Knight and his supercar KITT. Instead of "one man making a difference", there are now five team members who each has a computerized talking vehicle counterpart. Like the original duo, TKR goes after notorious criminals who operate "above the law" – from spies and assassins, to terrorists and drug dealers. The final episode of the season, and series, featured the reappearance of Michael Knight, seen only from behind, at the very end.
Team Knight Rider use five different vehicles for their missions, each with its own computer AI system like the original Knight Industries 2000 vehicle. Unlike KITT, these are specialized units with specific roles in the team. In addition, after the K.R.O. incident, Garland has had each vehicle installed with intentional weaknesses to act as a fail-safe in case any of them go rogue.
Although armored to protect their occupants, the vehicles do not share the original KITT's nearly indestructible "molecular bonded shell". Bullets can shatter windows or blown open with a small explosive, for example, while body panels can be damaged in collisions and roll-overs. The vehicles deploy their own self-repair system enabling the cars to fix their own minor damage – shattered windows and crushed body panels have been shown "fixed" soon after taking damage. More severe impacts however, require body shop maintenance to repair the vehicles.