Skip to main content

Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt is back with an interactive special on Netflix

Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt: Kimmy vs. The Reverend | Interactive Special Official Trailer | Netflix

Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt is going interactive.

Recommended Videos

Almost a year a half after Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt and its quirky characters ended their run on Netflix, the cast is back with an interactive special debuting Tuesday, May 12.

Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt: Kimmy vs. The Reverend will include on-screen prompts so viewers can choose how the plot plays out, similar to Netflix’s popular Bandersnatch episode of Black Mirror.

The special is centered around lovable but dim Kimmy played again by Ellie Kemper, now a young adult novelist, and her fiance Frederick Windsor, an equally dim and charming English prince who’s 12th in line for the throne, portrayed by Daniel Radcliffe.

The interactive special also includes the shenanigans of the original cast like 30 Rock‘s Jane Krakowski who stars as former socialite Jacqueline White, John Hamm as the Reverend Richard Wayne Gary Wayne, and her kooky landlord Lillian, portrayed by comedy veteran Carol Kane.

Co-creator Tina Fey, of 30 Rock and Saturday Night Live fame, said: “I hope Kimmy’s optimism, combined with this fun new format, can provide a joyful distraction to everyone’s stressful home life right now.”

Multiple takes of the same scene were shot to accommodate viewers’ possible choices. Actor Tituss Burgess, who plays Kimmy’s over-the-top best friend Titus Andromedon, said it was “a maze…I’ve never done anything like this before, so that’s been pretty exciting in the way that it is quite challenging.”

The special is formatted to run for approximately an hour, giving viewers a few minutes to make each of the decisions on the story, but it’s format also allows people to spend hours clicking through each of the options in the on-screen prompts and watch multiple versions of the special, too.

The special was made using Branch Manager, the same tech used on the Bandersnatch episode. Branch Manager allowed writers and directors to see film cuts within the software program itself, allowing them to map out various plotlines and incorporate jokes into the choose-your-adventure format.

Netflix also used the interactive technology for Bear Grylls’ You vs. Wild in the past, but filming a comedy with it in mind is a different feat. Fey and the writing staff had to plot out not only each of the prompts available to viewers, but story arcs based on those prompts and which combinations would make the most sense.

Netflix did not immediately respond to comment about whether there could be more of its original shows done in this format but given the popularity of both Black Mirror and Kimmy, we might see more of this viewer-controlled content.

Mythili Sampathkumar
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Mythili is a freelance journalist based in New York. When not reporting about politics, foreign policy, entertainment, and…
Eric Andre’s first stand-up special will launch on Netflix in June
The Eric Andre Show

Comedian Eric André announced his first stand-up special on Instagram on Wednesday. The special, Legalize Everything, will be coming to Netflix on June 23.

It’s the latest in a year of wins for the comedian, whose surreal Adult Swim program The Eric André Show was renewed for a fifth season coming in 2020; he’s also one of the stars of Netflix animated comedy Disenchantment, which will release its third season in 2020.

Read more
The best Black Mirror episodes
Three men crowd around a computer in Bandersnatch.

Black Mirror: Season 5 | Official Trailer | Netflix

Charlie Brooker's award-winning sci-fi series Black Mirror is like a new generation’s version of The Twilight Zone (which recently returned to television), but with a modern, technology-driven twist. The series' dark, ominous stories examine what might happen if technological development, and our seemingly innocuous digital habits, were taken too far. Surprise endings or terrifying awakenings are at the core of every episode, so it’s no surprise that each of the short but compelling seasons has mesmerized viewers and, with everything going on in the world right now, occasionally hit close to home in unexpected ways.

Read more
25 years later, this enjoyably bad James Bond movie is still not enough
James Bond leans up against a car.

Barbara Broccoli, the longtime producer of the Bond franchise, recently revealed that the search for the next 007 is underway. Bond is one of those IPs that will never die, no matter how much time passes in between projects or how good or bad they might be. Indeed, the franchise is full of undeniably high peaks, like Goldfinger and Casino Royale, and embarrassingly low valleys, like Moonraker and Die Another Day. Most of Pierce Brosnan's tenure as 007 is somewhere in between, with his four-film stint as the spy with a license to kill offering an uneven blend of well-executed action and unadulterated and quite unintentional camp.

Of his four movies, the third, Michael Apted's The World Is Not Enough, is the hardest to pin down. On the one hand, it's absolutely awful, with a ridiculous story that embraces the worst aspects of the franchise and clumsy action sequences that have aged like milk. And yet, the film is so shamelessly entertaining and deliriously silly that it's hard not to fall under its spell. On its 25th anniversary, let's look back at the complicated legacy of The World Is Not Enough and discuss how this deliciously awful movie is still one of the most purely enjoyable James Bond outings.
Nowhere near enough

Read more