Decker (TV series)


Decker is an American comedy web series and series created by Tim Heidecker and Gregg Turkington. The show is a web spinoff/tie-in to the series On Cinema at the Cinema and began on July 17, 2014. Many recurring jokes and the personas and mutual antipathies expressed by Decker and Turkington carry over from the relationship of the "real" actors, Heidecker and Turkington, in On Cinema.
The series is a spoof of action films, with intentionally bad production for comedic effect. It focuses on Special Agent Jack Decker, who attempts to stop terror attacks before they occur. At his side is Special Agent Kington, with recurring appearances from many guests of the On Cinema series, such as Joe Estevez as President Davidson, and Mark Proksch as Abdul.
The series is part of the "On Cinema universe" which has a cult following, especially through social media. In response, Heidecker and Turkington started Decker-Con, where new episodes of Decker are screened and the cast appears as their "On Cinema" characters, meeting and talking to fans.
Initially an Adultswim.com series, it was announced to be moving to TV on December 17, 2015, and its fourth season premiered on June 17, 2016, on Adult Swim. The series was renewed for a fifth and sixth season, both of which aired in 2017.

Premise

Decker follows the adventures of Jack Decker, a Jack Bauer-esque conservative CIA agent, in his attempts to defeat enemies including the Taliban, ISIS, Count Dracula, environmental science, and the inept, cowardly liberal President Jason Davidson. In his quest to save America, Decker is aided by the CIA's "master of codes", the movie-obsessed Jonathan Kington, whose name is frequently mispronounced as either Kingston or Klington.
The series is a tie-in to On Cinema, acting as the passion project of the fictional version of Tim Heidecker. In the series, the production is extremely low quality, with CGI errors, notably overt political grandstanding, very low quality animations, misquotes and bad editing, all for comedic effect. The series is also party to overdrawn scenes, such as in season 2, where the main character sings "Our Values Are Under Attack," a partisan political song created by Heidecker. As the series progressed, more CGI was used, but used ineffectively, where sometimes effects would seem unfinished.

Characters

Main characters

Recurring characters

  • James Mane Jr. as Lanoi Arnold, Decker's former CIA partner from Hawaii turned restaurateur and the main antagonist of the second season. He betrays Decker and works with the terrorists in exchange for money to pay off his debts and renovate his bar.
  • John Aprea as General Jeffrey Cotter, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who is written as a flat character with very few lines.
  • Mark Proksch as Abdul Sharif, a Saudi Arabian terrorist who is the show's main antagonist and Decker's nemesis. Proksch also plays various other roles in the series such as characters from the Universal Monsters roster. A recurring joke carried over from On Cinema is that Proksch's many different roles require impersonation skills far beyond his in-universe persona's talent.
  • Ralph Lucas as Dracula. Dracula seeks to destroy the world with his diabolical creation: the Destructicon.
  • Jimmy McNichol as the Son of Dracula and the main antagonist of Season 5. Intent on avenging his father's death at Decker's hands during the previous season.
  • Charlie Schiefer as Vice President Roger Robertson. A background character during the first seasons who later reveals himself to be a double agent working for Dracula.
  • Vaughn Armstrong as Dr. Peterson, a doctor that regularly treat Decker amnesia in the fifth season.
  • Alessandro Serradimigni as Axiom, the guitarist of Decker's band, Dekkar. His character is no different from the on-universe Axiom.
  • Manuel Giusti as Manuel, the second guitarist of Dekkar. Giusti also play another version of Jonathan Kington in another episode.
  • Michael Matthews as Roy Saint Charlemagne Laroux, the owner of a leather shop in New Orleans. Matthews would later become a recurring guest in On Cinema proper and also voice Jeremy Coleman, another codebreaker character in the animated series spin-off.

Production

Heidecker has said of production that there is, to an extent, purposefully little preparation in the process to make the show appear as low-quality as possible, as well as stating: "We'll also go off-script and rant a bit to get everyone confused."