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Moonbeam City

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Genre
  
Comedy Adult animation

Directed by
  
Mark Brooks Juno Lee

First episode date
  
16 September 2015

Network
  
Comedy Central

6.8/10
IMDb

6.6/10
TV

Created by
  
Scott Gairdner

Theme music composer
  
Night Club

Final episode date
  
9 December 2015

Program creator
  
Scott Gairdner

Moonbeam City wwwgstaticcomtvthumbtvbanners10478909p10478

Voices of
  
Rob Lowe Elizabeth Banks Kate Mara Will Forte

Opening theme
  
"Another One" (Instrumental)

Voices
  
Rob Lowe, Elizabeth Banks, Kate Mara, Will Forte

Similar
  
TripTank, Idiotsitter, Another Period, Brickleberry, Archer

Rob lowe moonbeam city exclusive interview comic con 2015 hd


Moonbeam City is an American adult animated television series that was created by Scott Gairdner, and starred the voices of Elizabeth Banks, Rob Lowe, Kate Mara and Will Forte. It premiered on Comedy Central on September 16, 2015.

Contents

Moonbeam City Moonbeam City Season 1 TV Review Moonbeam City has Archer vibes

A parody of 1980s cop shows such as Miami Vice, it was animated in distinctively bright, neon colors similar to the style of the 1980s artist Patrick Nagel and the anime City Hunter, and featured a soundtrack of 1980s-style synthesizer music, performed by Night Club.

Moonbeam City Moonbeam City Western Animation TV Tropes

On March 30, 2016, the series was cancelled after one season, due to low ratings.

Characters

Moonbeam City Meet Scott Gairdner The Man Behind Moonbeam City Meet Scott

  • Dazzle Novak (Rob Lowe): Protagonist and Moonbeam City PD detective, despite being unqualified for the job due to poor impulse control, horrendous reasoning skills, ridiculous libido and ego, and (often) even worse aim. He gets sidetracked from assignments to tend to anything he finds far superior. Any success is normally due to luck or the assistance of others (usually his junior partner, Chrysalis). Has an odd talent for invention and design, and is the son of stuntman Razzle Novak. Dazzle's mother died when he was a child.
  • Pizzaz Miller (Elizabeth Banks): Police chief, and Dazzle's irascible supervisor. Though she is sometimes at odds with Dazzle due to his shoddy police work and defiance of authority, she fails to harshly discipline him for even the most severe infractions due to an intense mutual attraction and affection between the two. It is later learned that Pizzaz is an heiress (and eventual sole inheritor) to Moonbeam City's founder, laser prospecting mega-millionaire, Vector Azimuth Miller. Pizzaz also has four abusive and conniving sisters: Charisma, Panache, Sophistica, and Accoutrement. She speaks with a slightly noticeable Southern accent. When either passionate or angry, Pizzaz narrows her eyes and a slanted window blind-like shadow appears over her face and body, regardless of the location and ambient lighting.
  • Chrysalis Zirconia Tate (Kate Mara): Dazzle's rookie colleague. A former lab tech, Chrysalis is the polar opposite of Dazzle (competent, level-headed, responsible), and often the unintentional victim of his irresponsibility and poor impulse control. Chrysalis' job usually entails the detective work and technical aspects of the job, and she is often blamed by Pizzaz for Dazzle and Rad's inept behavior. Chrysalis is the daughter of eccentric Naval Commander Blade H. Tate.
  • Radward "Rad" Cunningham/Manning (born: Gregory Manning) (Will Forte): Dazzle's equally incompetent, yet even stupider childish rival/teammate from Canada in the Moonbeam PD. He fears authority more than Dazzle, and is prone to even greater lapses of judgment, usually when trying to outdo or outsmart Dazzle. While initially seeming fierce and threatening in the Pilot episode, Rad is eventually shown to be incredibly cowardly and immature, though not without moments of unexpected (and ill-timed) bravery. The season finale reveals (through Chrysalis' detective work) that Rad is the biological son of the billionaire computer founders of Canadian computer company Flamingo Computers, but was kidnapped as a toddler by the con-artist couple who raised him (he later changes his name to "Radward Manning" to distance himself from them). Rad himself reveals an intense (but mostly hidden) attraction to Chrysalis, though the feelings are not completely reciprocated by his teammate. He has a unique condition called " " which causes his right foot to just have one giant toe which takes up the end of his entire foot.
  • Genesis Jones (Scott Gairdner): News anchor who appears in every episode. He often acts as more of a shameless announcer or sensationalist rather than a real journalist.
  • Mayor Eo Jaxxon (Powers Boothe): Mayor of the Moonbeam City who acts a lecherous tyrant. He speaks in a slow raspy register. He has an especially dark infatuation to Chief Pizzaz Miller. He uses his authority to continuously threaten to shutting down the Police Department, and moving the employees into the far more competent and successful Fire Department, in order to sexually extort Pizzaz into having sex with him multiple times. He has at least one son, who becomes addicted to the designer drug "Glitzotrene" that the police invented during the fifth episode to keep the station in business, but it is unknown if he has other family members.
  • Broadcast

    Internationally, the series premiered in Australia on 15 November 2015 on The Comedy Channel.

    Reception

    Moonbeam City Moonbeam City Wikipedia

    On December 1, 2015, Moonbeam City was nominated for an Annie Award for Best General Audience Animated TV/Broadcast Production, but lost to The Simpsons.

    Moonbeam City Moonbeam City TV Series 2015 IMDb

    The show however, received mostly mixed-to-negative reviews from critics, and positive reviews from audiences. Many compared it unfavorably to Archer, some even criticizing that Dazzle Novak himself was too similar to Sterling Archer. The first season holds a 31% on Rotten Tomatoes based on 13 reviews. Its consensus states: "Moonbeam City wildly overestimates the effectiveness of its attempts at over-the-top humor, leaving viewers with little more than a derivative disappointment". On Metacritic is holds a 52% indicating mixed or average reviews.

    Moonbeam City Moonbeam City39 Canceled By Comedy Central After One Season Rob Lowe

    Mike Hale of The New York Times stated that "the look of Moonbeam City may catch your eye, but after a while, you may be tempted to say, I will bury you so deep the world's smartest worms couldn't find you". He also stated that the pop-culture references and satire were forced and the dialogue "tries so hard you can see it sweat". Daniel Fienberg of The Hollywood Reporter claimed that the show would be able to stand "in a world without Archer" and called it thin and with limited potential. Bob Sassone of The A.V. Club gave it a C+, calling it "more clever than funny with Archer vibes". Brian Lowry of Variety claims that the show settles more for being puerile than clever, making it "less than dazzling". Katy Waldman of Slate's review was scathing, stating that the series "is so willfully dumb that it might make you wonder if it is meta-dumb".

    References

    Moonbeam City Wikipedia