In one standout scene, KITT locks the doors of the Mustang to prevent Mike from doing something stupid. Sarah overrides it. KITT sighs (digitally). “That’s the third time this week, Sarah. My threat assessment protocols are not optional.”
Val Kilmer’s dry, almost bored delivery as KITT works surprisingly well here—less William Daniels’s KITT (affectionate uncle) and more Spinal Tap ’s Derek Smalls (exhausted genius). Let’s be honest: Knight Rider 2008 was never grounded, but “A Hard Day’s Knight” strains credibility even by its own rules. The episode’s centerpiece involves KITT remotely controlling a luggage cart to take out a bad guy on the tarmac. Later, Mike hangs off the landing gear of a Boeing 747 while KITT drives himself underneath to catch him. El auto fantastico -2008- 1x5
KITT using his satellite feed to project a holographic “ghost car” to confuse pursuing SUVs. Worst Moment: Mike’s motivational speech to the photographer, which includes the line, “Fear is just excitement without the airbags.” Should you watch it? Yes—if you love talking cars, 2000s cheese, or want to see Val Kilmer pretend to be a Ford for 42 minutes. Knight Rider (2008) Season 1, Episode 5: “A Hard Day’s Knight” is available on Peacock, Amazon Prime (purchase), and occasionally YouTube in 480p with Russian subtitles—which, frankly, adds to the experience. In one standout scene, KITT locks the doors
The answer, at least in Episode 1x5, is a thrilling maybe . The episode, which aired on October 22, 2008 , throws our heroes into a high-octane pressure cooker. Mike Traceur (Justin Bruening) and KITT (voiced by Val Kilmer) are tasked with protecting a celebrity photographer who has inadvertently captured evidence of a clandestine weapons deal. The twist? The photographer is about to board a 24-hour non-stop flight from Los Angeles to Sydney, Australia. “That’s the third time this week, Sarah
Can a Sentient Car Survive a 24-Hour Shift? When NBC resurrected the iconic 1980s franchise Knight Rider in 2008, the goal was clear: update the concept for a post- Transformers , post- Fast & Furious world. At the center of the hype was the new KITT (Knight Industries Three Thousand)—a Ford Shelby GT500KR Mustang with liquid-metal skin, AI-driven holograms, and enough gadgets to make James Bond jealous. But by the fifth episode, titled “A Hard Day’s Knight” , the series had to answer a harder question: Can a show survive on car porn and nostalgia alone?