Frasier is getting a D.I.Y. animated remake all his own

Frasier Crane doesn’t know what to do with this tossed salad and scrambled eggs, but the animators over at Our Frasier Remake sure do.

TV Features Frasier
Frasier is getting a D.I.Y. animated remake all his own
Niles, Frasier, Martin, and Daphne in Our Frasier Remake Illustration: Lori Schkufza

A new, fan-driven animated Frasier reboot is beating Paramount to the non-fat latte.

Following in the tradition of Our Robocop Remake, Our Footloose Remake, Shrek Retold, and Star Wars Uncut, Seattle’s most infamous radio psychologist is getting an animated remake to call its own. This fan-driven collaboration is made up of a collection of animated shorts based on six-to-12-second chunks from Frasier’s season one finale, “My Coffee With Niles.” Creator Jacob Reed (Jimmy Kimmel Live!) brought together more than 100 different artists who remade their segments in whatever style they prefer, cutting together various animated shorts into a singular and bizarre episode.

Like previous stitched-together remakes, Our Frasier Reboot brings together artists from disparate mediums with a shared love of all things Frasier. It consists of 185 different “chopped up” clips from different artists to create a unique and entirely D.I.Y. take on television’s greatest snob. A trailer for the Remake includes art by BAFTA-winning animator Steven Kraan, Jimmy Kimmel Live director Jacob Reed, Robot Chicken director Harry Chaskin, and KC Green, best known for creating the “This is fine” cartoon.

Our Frasier Remake (2023) | Teaser Trailer

“My Coffee With Niles” is also a particularly interesting focus for the remake. Set entirely in Cafe Nervosa, “Coffee” sees Niles (David Hyde Pierce) and Frasier (Kelsey Grammar) bounce from table to table. The season one finale is a true bottle episode that plays out in real-time, with the Crane boys going back and forth over what it means to be happy. However, according to Jacob Reed, the episode also serves as an open debate over the necessity of Frasier as a whole.

“[It’s] a thinly veiled question about whether or not a spin-off of Cheers called Frasier was worth it,” Reed said. “Three decades later, we’re asking the same question about the reboot. Our Frasier Remake is a celebration of Frasier, yet also critiques the current culture of endless remakes.”

Our Frasier Remake premieres on October 11, one day before the official revival of the series. Frasier fans can find the installment at OurFrasierRemake.com.

7 Comments

  • frasier-crane-av says:

    Excellent efforts shall indubitably be well-met. I await with bated breath, champing at the bit!

  • thefilthywhore-av says:

    I’m looking forward to this. These fan-animated collaborations are so much fun to watch.

    • medacris-av says:

      Same. I think they’re sometimes referred to as a MAP (Multi-Animator Project) or an “Exquisite Corpse”.

      Here’s one I like of a fairly well-known YouTube Poop, with the original creator filling in on a couple of segments themselves:

  • docnemenn-av says:

    Looks fun!Though I do have to chuckle a little at the mentions of Frasier getting a “corporate reboot”, as if the original was some kind of gem of anti-capitalist outlaw art that is being sullied somehow now that the suits have taken over it.

  • milligna000-av says:

    It’s a shame all of these projects just get really boring really fast

  • cura-te-ipsum-av says:

    Our Robocop Remake is still the gold standard for this sort of thing. Especially Fatal Farm’s Scene 27.

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