You may not have heard, but the obnoxiously overbearing lemur king from Madagascar, Julien (Danny Jacobs), has his own Netflix original television show! The second batch of five episodes release on Friday, and I caught a sneak peek of several of the episodes. If Penguins of Madgascar and the original trilogy of Madagascar were your thing, then you should make haste to the lemur kingdom forthwith!
A spin-off of the Madagascar franchise on Netflix. This computer-animated cartoon features King Julien XIII, chronicling his life on Madagascar prior to the events of the films. Also returning are Maurice and Mort, as well as a new female lemur character named Clover.
The show debuted in December 2014 with five episodes. It is the second spinoff to circulate from Madagascar, after The Penguins of Madagascar which premiered on Nickelodeon. It is also the second film by DreamWorks Animation, after Turbo, to be given a spinoff by Netflix.
Following the events of the 4th season finale, a Sequel Series, All Hail King Julien: Exiled, premiered on May 12, 2017 taking a dramatic shift from episodic comedy to highly serialized dramatic comedy in the form of a 13 part story.
As of November 2023, the show is no longer available on Netflix as per the contract between Dreamworks and Netflix to run their exclusives for only 6 years after the end of a show's run. It is currently airing on Universal Kids.
All Hail King Julien (The Original TV Series) is an American computer-animated television series. It stars characters from the DreamWorks Animation animated film Madagascar. It stars the main three lemurs; King Julien, Mort and Maurice from the Madagascar franchise and takes place in Madagascar and before the events of the first film making it a prequel.[1] It is the second DreamWorks Animation show to be based on the Madagascar franchise.
The series debuted on December 19, 2014, on Netflix when the first five 22-minute episodes were released.[2] Season 2 was released on October 16, 2015.[3] Season 3 was released on June 17, 2016,[4] and season 4 was released on November 11, 2016.[5] During the course of the series, 65 episodes of All Hail King Julien, excluding the spin-off Exiled, released on May 12, 2017, were released over five seasons. The fifth and final season was released on December 1, 2017. It is currently showing reruns on Universal Kids
When King Julien XII (also known as Uncle King Julien), a very strict and cowardly ring-tailed lemur is foretold to be eaten by fossa (spelled and pronounced as "foosa"), he abdicates his throne in favor of his nephew, who becomes King Julien XIII, a fun, notorious party animal, who now has an entire kingdom of lemurs to lead on his own. While Uncle King Julien is gone, the new King Julien gets into various troubles in the company of his adviser Maurice, his head of security Clover, and his biggest fan Mort. All the while, his devious uncle returns and tries to get rid of his nephew to reclaim the throne. Aside from Uncle King Julien and the foosa, Julien deals with other threats like the mad fanaloka Karl, and Clover's twin sister Crimson.
At the end of the fourth season, King Julien is dethroned and forced into exile by King Koto and his army but successfully defeats Koto and regains his kingdom in spin-off, subtitled Exiled. The fifth and final season takes place after Koto's demise; villains such as Karl and Uncle King Julien decide to give up their evil ways and start a new life. This all leads up to the arrival of Alex on Madagascar (setting the stage of the first film) just as Clover leaves with her husband, Sage Moondancer, on their honeymoon.
The series was announced in March 2014 as part of an agreement between Netflix and DreamWorks Animation, under which the studio will develop more than 300 hours of exclusive programming for the service.[8] The series is based on the characters from Madagascar, but is a prequel, set prior to the events of the film series.[9] Danny Jacobs, Andy Richter, Kevin Michael Richardson reprised their roles from the previous Madagascar TV series, while Henry Winkler, India de Beaufort, and Betsy Sodaro joined the cast.[10]
The series has been received favorable reviews. After the initial release of the first five episodes, Robert Lloyd of Los Angeles Times wrote in his review that the series "succeeds on matters of style, script, timing and performance, not the number of individual hairs rendered in a patch of fur. And Julien delivers on all the important accounts."[11]
If youve seen any of The Madagascar films, you know all about the zany King Julien. He is a leader who only thinks about himself. To make matters worse, he makes really bad decisions and often causes huge catastrophies for everyone else on Madagascar.
We loved watching the new episodes. Our very favorite was He Blinded Me With Science. It is hilarious! You can only imagine the resulting chaos when King Julien learns how to use appliances. They even use a crock pot as a hot tub! We laughed a lot during all of the episodes.
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N2 - Repetitive brief episodes of soft-tissue collapse within the upper airway during sleep characterize obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), an extremely common and disabling disorder. Failure to maintain the patency of the upper airway is caused by the combination of sleep-related loss of compensatory dilator muscle activity and aerodynamic forces promoting closure. The prediction of soft-tissue movement in patient-specific airway 3D mechanical models is emerging as a useful contribution to clinical understanding and decision-making. Such modeling requires reliable estimations of the wall pressure forces. While nasal obstruction has been recognized as a risk factor of OSA, the need to include the nasal cavity in upper-airway models for OSA applications requires consideration, as it is most often omitted because of its complex shape. The hypothesis underpinning this work is that adequate boundary conditions and simple artificial geometric extensions can reproduce the essential effects of the nasal cavity on the pharyngeal flow field and thereby reduce the overall complexity and computational cost of accurate simulations of upper-airway dynamics.
AB - Repetitive brief episodes of soft-tissue collapse within the upper airway during sleep characterize obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), an extremely common and disabling disorder. Failure to maintain the patency of the upper airway is caused by the combination of sleep-related loss of compensatory dilator muscle activity and aerodynamic forces promoting closure. The prediction of soft-tissue movement in patient-specific airway 3D mechanical models is emerging as a useful contribution to clinical understanding and decision-making. Such modeling requires reliable estimations of the wall pressure forces. While nasal obstruction has been recognized as a risk factor of OSA, the need to include the nasal cavity in upper-airway models for OSA applications requires consideration, as it is most often omitted because of its complex shape. The hypothesis underpinning this work is that adequate boundary conditions and simple artificial geometric extensions can reproduce the essential effects of the nasal cavity on the pharyngeal flow field and thereby reduce the overall complexity and computational cost of accurate simulations of upper-airway dynamics.
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