Gargoyles (TV series)
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Gargoyles | |
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![]() Gargoyles title card. |
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Genre | Animated series |
Creator(s) | Frank Paur Greg Weisman |
Starring | Keith David Salli Richardson Jeff Bennett Bill Fagerbakke Thom Adcox-Hernandez Brigitte Bako Ed Asner Frank Welker Marina Sirtis Jonathan Frakes |
Country of origin | ![]() |
No. of episodes | 78 (List of episodes) |
Production | |
Running time | 22 minutes |
Broadcast | |
Original channel | ABC, Syndication |
Original run | October 24, 1994 – February 15, 1997 |
Links | |
IMDb profile | |
TV.com summary |
- This article is about the animated series. For the stone statues, see Gargoyle.
Gargoyles is an acclaimed American animated series created by Greg Weisman, produced by Greg Weisman and Frank Paur and aired from October 24, 1994 to February 15, 1997. It was at the time hailed as one of the more ambitious Disney animated series in history, targeting an older demographic and taking a darker edge.
The series was known for its complex story arcs and drama, a prime example being the controversial first-season episode "Deadly Force," which addressed the consequences of gun violence, including a graphic depiction of the wounds of a gunshot victim. The show was also notable for its complex characters, and character arcs were heavily employed throughout the series. As the series progressed, it became deeply meshed with medieval history, particularly kings and princes from medieval Scottish history, and worldwide mythologies such as the King Arthur mythos and Norse Mythology among others, as well as the works of William Shakespeare, most notably A Midsummer Night's Dream and Macbeth.
During the second season, a voice-over by series star Keith David was heard over the opening sequence:
- One thousand years ago, superstition and the sword ruled. It was a time of darkness. It was a world of fear. It was the age of gargoyles. Stone by day, warriors by night, we were betrayed by the humans we had sworn to protect, frozen in stone by a magic spell for a thousand years. Now, here in Manhattan, the spell is broken, and we live again! We are defenders of the night. We are Gargoyles!
A loyal fanbase kept the property alive following its cancellation, prompting Disney to reinvest in the franchise. The entire first season and part of season two are available on DVD. The Gargoyles storyline currently continues in a comic book also titled Gargoyles written by Weisman and produced by Slave Labor Graphics. The show continues to air in the form of reruns on the Toon Disney network in the United States as part of the JETIX lineup.
Contents |
[edit] Plot
The series features a clan of warrior creatures known as Gargoyles that turn to stone during the day. Led by their leader Goliath in the year 994 A.D., they protect Castle Wyvern and its resident humans on the coast of Scotland until betrayal causes a massacre of the clan and a magic spell forces the six survivors into stone sleep, until the castle rises over the clouds. In 1994, a billionaire named David Xanatos purchases the castle and moves it to the top of his New York City skyscraper, breaking the spell. Awakening in modern day Manhattan, the gargoyles must adapt to this new world as they vow to protect the citizens of New York.
[edit] Cast
A myriad of gargoyles, humans and creatures from mythology and superstition feature prominently throughout the series. Although series creators considered the series an ensemble piece, storylines revolve primarily around Goliath and his clan.
[edit] Episodes
A total of 78 half-hour episodes were produced. The first two seasons aired in the Disney Afternoon programming block. The controversial third and final season aired on Disney's One Saturday Morning format on ABC as Gargoyles: The Goliath Chronicles. Except for the first episode of the season, "The Journey," these episodes were produced without the involvement of series creator Greg Weisman, and are largely not considered canonical by fans and the later comic series.
In 1995, Disney released a direct-to-video feature film entitled Gargoyles the Movie: The Heroes Awaken, which was in fact the series's five pilot episodes edited together into one feature. It should also be noted that, originally, the 'City Of Stone' 4-parter, as well as the 'Hunter's Moon' 3-parter were in talks to be Direct To Video before they were ultimately aired on Television instead.
[edit] Comics
[edit] Marvel
In 1995 Marvel released a Gargoyles comic book series. The books did not directly follow the continuity of the series, but they did reference specific events that took place within it. Greg Weisman, television series co-creator, did not have any direct involvement in the story development of the comic series, but was consulted on some plot points to be sure it stayed within certain boundaries. The series ran for 11 issues. Weisman was hired to write the script for issue 12, but Marvel cut ties with Disney before the issue could be produced. Weisman still has his unpublished script for issue 12.[citation needed] The Marvel series was tonally darker than the television series, dealing largely with Xanatos' experiments to create creatures and machines to defeat the Gargoyles.
[edit] Slave Labor Graphics
On 21 June 2006, Slave Labor Graphics, in association with CreatureComics.com, began producing a new Gargoyles comic written by series creator Greg Weisman. The comic continues the storyline of the animated series, picking up after the second season finale, "Hunter's Moon, Part III", with the first two issues adapting the first episode of The Goliath Chronicles. The comic will diverge in its own direction with #3. The series had a promising debut with the first issue selling out.
[edit] VHS/DVD releases
[edit] VHS
The first five episodes of the pilot were edited into movie format for Gargoyles the Movie: The Heroes Awaken in February, 1995. The following videos were later released containing the remaining first-season episodes:
- The Hunted (October 1995), containing episodes "The Thrill Of The Hunt" and "Temptation"
- The Force Of Macbeth (October 1995), containing episodes "Deadly Force" and "Enter Macbeth"
- Deeds Of Deception (April 1996), containing episodes "The Edge" and "Long Way To Morning"
- Brothers Betrayed (April 1996), containing episodes "Her Brother's Keeper" and "Reawakening"
Episodes 6-13 were left unaltered, except for the removals of the "Previously on Gargoyles..." segment from "Enter Macbeth."
[edit] DVD
In 2004, the tenth anniversary of its premiere, the first season of the series was released on DVD. The first half of the second season was released in December 2005.
As of June 30, 2006, Weisman announced at the Gargoyles Gathering Convention in Los Angeles, the release of Season 2, Volume 2 is in jeopardy. Weisman has stated simply, "Volume 1 did not sell enough copies." Disney currently has no plans to release the second volume. [5]
The episodes themselves are uncensored, restoring scenes which were removed on Toon Disney and the VHS releases.
[edit] Influences
Series creator Weisman, a former English teacher, has often cited his goal of ideally incorporating every myth and legend into the series eventually, similar to that of the Wold Newton family. Another possible source of influence is Shakespeare's similar use of existing source material. Many Shakespearean characters and stories found their way into the show's storylines.
The biggest influence was perhaps Bruce Timm and Paul Dini's Emmy award winning Batman: The Animated Series, which was also noted for its dark and serious subject matter.
Weisman has also noted, among many other influences, the impact that Gummi Bears and Hill Street Blues had on the series. The latter in particular inspired the ensemble format of the series and the 30-second "Previously, on Gargoyles..." recap found at the beginning of later episodes. The former was an influence on the original comedy development of the show, which was subsequently changed and made darker and more serious before being released.
Some aspects of the series Bonkers, which Weisman helped develop, also influenced the show to some degree. Most noticably, the relationship of toon cop Bonkers and his human partner Miranda Wright was used as a template for the relationship of gargoyle Goliath and Elisa Maza, as was the then-recent movie Beauty and the Beast. (Which is actually directly referenced in the 2nd season episode, "Eye Of The Beholder", where Elisa dresses as Belle for Halloween and walks down the street, arm in arm with Goliath)
[edit] Video game
In 1995, a video game based on the series was released for the Sega Genesis. The plot involved the Eye of Odin attempting to destroy the world and Goliath (the player) must stop them. The game was a side scrolling action game and had a poor reception.
[edit] Planned canonical spinoffs
Weisman and his development team, before the cancellation of Gargoyles, planned several spinoffs featuring tangential characters from the series, as well as continuing the story of the Manhattan Clan. Only one of the projects ever entered active development: the series Bad Guys, for which a leica reel was produced.
- Timedancer -- A story about Brooklyn being caught by the wayward Phoenix Gate thrown into the time stream by Goliath. This spinoff details Brooklyn's 40-year (20 years biologically for a gargoyle) journey through time while trying to catch the gate and return home to Manhattan. During his travels, he ends up in Xanadu, China where he picks up the gargoyle beast Fu-Dog, the future where he and Fu-Dog contribute to the fight against the Space-Spawn, and also to feudal Japan where he meets his future mate Katana. They eventually return to Manhattan just five minutes after his departure along with their children Nashville and Tachi. The spinoff would have also featured the enhanced Archmage and Caliban of Shakespeare's The Tempest as antagonists and shown how Brooklyn, Puck, Mary and Finella helped Xanatos and Demona form their eventual alliance that would free the gargoyles from their stone sleep.
- Pendragon -- A spinoff series about King Arthur and the English gargoyle Griff as they search for Arthur's mentor Merlin, the biological son of Oberon by a mortal woman. Along the way they clash with the Illuminati and journey to such places as Tintagel, Stonehenge, and Antarctica in their search for Merlin. Eventually they find the wizard and a fourth character, Blanchefleur, the estranged wife of the Fisher King. Eventually, Arthur would have also pursued the Holy Grail in the hands of Illuminati leadership and at the end of his travels would have founded the kingdom of New Camelot in Antarctica, which would also become the site of a gargoyle clan.
- Dark Ages -- A prequel that would have dealt with the original Wyvern Clan. It would have covered the time period before the creation of Castle Wyvern and ended with the massacre. This spinoff concerned the development of Goliath, Demona, Hudson, Coldstone/Othello, Coldfire/Desdemona, Coldsteel/Iago, the Archmage, Prince Malcolm, the Captain of the Guard and also Hudson's mate and their daughter Hippolyta, both of whom would have been killed by the end of the series. Major events would have included the construction of Castle Wyvern, Malcolm and the gargoyles' part in the Scottish Civil War that would lead to Malcolm's brother Kenneth becoming High King of Scotland, and how the alliance between Malcolm and the Archmage was formed.
- Bad Guys -- A series featuring former enemies of the Gargoyles joined together by the Director, an American public servant. The team would have been led by Robyn Canmore, one of the Hunters, and would have included Dingo (formerly of the Pack), Matrix, Yama of the Ishimura Clan (exiled for what he did in Bushido) and Fang (one of the mutates). All of the team members would have been blackmailed into joining with Robyn and Dingo been wanted by law enforcement in America and Yama through the secret of his clan dwelling in Ishimura. The primary purpose of the team would have been to combat the Illuminati and would have also dealt with the various members redeeming themselves. There would have also been a romance between Dingo and Robyn whose descendants (the Monmouths) would be in conflict with the Castaways and the Quarrymen in the future. Of the spin-offs, this was the only one that was almost made before being cancelled and a leica reel that was made is shown each year during the Gathering.
- Gargoyles 2198 -- A future spinoff to the gargoyles series, 2198 would have dealt with the Earth being invaded and occupied by the Space-Spawn, who have kidnapped the newly formed gargoyle clan of Queen Florence Island along with the human and gargoyle leaders there and stolen the Master Matrix (the computer processor for much of the world and the weather control center of New Camelot) located in Antarctica. The primary characters were to be Samson, the descendant of Goliath through Angela and de facto leader of the Manhattan clan; Delilah, presumably a clone of the gargoyle created by Sevarius; and Zafiro, a descendant of the Mayan Clan of Guatemala. They would have also been joined by Owen, incapable of transforming into Puck due to the fact that Alexander (now the leader of the UN) has been kidnapped by the Space-Spawn; Demona who is apparently still unredeemed; Nick Maza, a descendant of the adopted child of Goliath and Elisa and of the Natsilane family; a timedancing Brooklyn from the past accompanied by Fu-Dog; Nokkar of the N'Kai, who has failed in his task of stopping the Space-Spawn from taking Earth; and two robots resembling Lexington, which are without guidance after the Master Matrix was stolen. The team would have mainly dealt with the Space-Spawn and their proxies the Illuminati (who have decided to turn collaborator) and the Quarrymen (who blame the gargoyles for the invasion). The cast would have eventually be split with Nokkar, Demona, Nick Maza, Zafiro and one of the Lexington robots going into space to fight the Space-Spawn.
- The New Olympians -- Would have dealt with the New Olympians introduced in the Gargoyles episode of the same name (a half-fae, half-mortal race) and their relations with humans after they make contact with the United Nations. The main characters would have been Taurus (the minotaur security chief of New Olympus and the new ambassador to the human world), Talos (a New Olympian robot who advises the New Olympians due to the fact that he was built thousands of years ago in ancient Greece by Daedalus), Sphinx (a young New Olympian student) and Terry Chung (a human who stumbles upon New Olympus and precipitates the New Olympians into making contact with humanity). The New Olympians themselves would have been split into three factions made up of those who still fear humanity (Ekidna, Kiron, and one of Boreas' sons), those who want humanity to worship them again (Helios, Jove) and those who just want to co-exist (Taurus, Talos, Boreas). Like Gargoyles, New Olympians would also have had an inter-species romance between Sphinx and Terry along the vein of a Romeo and Juliet relationship.
- The New Olympians were inspired from Marvel Comics Inhumans, The Eternals and DC Comics New Gods.[1]
There was initially intense speculation concerning the intentions of the producers had the series continued, but many have been since debunked by Weisman in the "Ask Greg" forum. Weisman has, however, also revealed some of his own plans for the show, had it continued.
While no other series have entered production since the cancellation of Gargoyles, there have been organized fan fiction efforts to explore Pendragon, Timedancer, Bad Guys and Dark Ages.
Weisman has stated that he intends to incorporate some elements of these spinoffs into the current comic book, but has not gone into details yet.[citation needed]
[edit] Fandom
Perhaps more than any other Disney production, the series has inspired an intense fan following. Disney acknowledged this with their selection of Gargoyles as their first animated series released for DVD retail in a season collection format.
[edit] Fan Fiction
Out of displeasure with the third season deviation from Weisman's plan, fans created a virtual season fan fiction series, The Gargoyles Saga, to continue the franchise expanding its stories and creating a series of spinoffs. Fan fiction has also attempted to realize the Timedancer, Pendragon, and Dark Ages series.
[edit] Convention
The Gathering of the Gargoyles is an annual convention begun in 1997. The Gathering features several special guests including series co-creator Greg Weisman, Keith David (the voice of Goliath) and Thom Adcox (the voice of Lexington). The gathering has featured several recurring special events such as a radio play where gathering attendees audition and take part, a masquerade ball where attendees dress up as their favorite character, an art show where the many talented artists within the fandom can display and auction off or sell their artwork, and several mug-a-guest panels where special guests sit around with fans and just talk about whatever comes to mind (sometimes going late into the night). Weisman is known to show the leica reel of Bad Guys at Gatherings.
[edit] Parody/Reference
[edit] JLA Showcase #1
In 1999 Greg Weisman wrote a story for DC Comics JLA Showcase #1 80-Page, cover dated February 2000. The one shot consists of various Justice League stories; Weisman's was set during the time of the Justice League Europe and titled "Flashback Of Notre Dame". Roster included: Captain Atom, Flash, Kilowog, Metamorpho and Blue Jay. The story has Captain Atom, The JLE and Bette Sans Souci/Plastique meeting a group of Gargoyles at Notre Dame Cathedral. After the usual misunderstanding/battle, the JLE help The Gargoyles return to their home island Brigadoon.
The story, while being a parody is a homage to Gargoyles. This version of the clan are more batlike then the characters they parodied and have names based from Paris, France. The story's full of injokes (such as The Gargoyles home island Brigadoon, being a reference to Avalon). The names of the clan (and Gargoyle they're based off of) are:
- Behemoth/Goliath (Clan Leader)
- Diabloique/Demona (Behemoth's Ex-Wife)
- Seine/Hudson (Behemoth's Mentor)
- Angelique/Angela (Daughter of Behemoth and Diabloique)
- Montparnasse/Broadway (Boyfriend to Angelique)
- Montmarte/Brooklyn (Behemoth's Lieutenant)
- Champs-Élysées/Lexington (Monmartes' Brother)
- Left Bank/Bronx (Clan's Dog)
- Thomeheb/Thailog (Behemoth's Brother)
- Cyrano/Othello (one of Behemoth's rookery siblings)
- Christian/Iago (another of Behemoth's rookery siblings)
- Roxanne/Desdemona (yet another of Behemoth's rookery siblings)
- Live Journal - Gargoyles/JLE/Captain Atom Parody
[edit] Buzz Lightyear of Star Command
The episode "Clone Rangers" was produced by Greg Weisman. Zurg steals DNA from Members of Team Lightyear to clone them. In a rush to proceed with the plan, he frees the clones before they develop fully. Hence, ends up with child versions of Buzz, Mira Nova and Booster. References are as follow:
- Buzz's Clone is named Zzub, similar to Thailog being a reverse of Goliath.
- Zurg obtains DNA of Team Lightyear (except for XR, because of him being machine) through use of robotic bugs. Similar to methods used in The "Reckoning".[6]
[edit] Freakazoid
The Lawn Gnomes mini segement was a rather obvious parody of Gargoyles.
The episode "Freakazoid is History" featured Freakazoid listening to a Gargoyle who bears a slight resemblance to Goliath.
[edit] 3×3
According to Greg Weisman, who did one of the English dubs of 3×3, there is a scene with a homeless man humming the Gargoyles theme song.[2]
[edit] The Big O
In episode 14 (the first episode of the second season) of the anime Big O, stone gargoyles that bear a striking resemblance to Brooklyn and Broadway can be seen on a rooftop as Roger Smith wanders through a memory of New York City.
[edit] X-Men: Evolution
In episode 45 "No Good Deed" during the staged "heroics" montage, Avalanche knocks a stone Gargoyle statue, which bears a resemblance to Broadway, off a building in order for Blob to catch, preventing it from smashing into a crowd of people below.
[edit] W.I.T.C.H.
Episode 21 of Season 2, U Is For Undivided has parts of the city transformed into a medieval type setting. A couple shown in the middle of it are Brenda and Marco. Respectively based off the Gargoyles yuppie couple Margot and Brendan. Pat Fraley voiced both Brenda and Marco.
[edit] The Batman
Ellen Yin, a Gotham detective in the first two seasons of the series, is designed with a color scheme and outfit very similar to that of Gargoyles detective Elisa Maza. It is unclear whether this is a coincidence. [3]
[edit] Footnotes
[edit] External links
- Gargoyles Wiki - A wiki with descriptions on all persons, places and things within the Gargoyles universe.
- Gargoyles FiendSite Ask Greg Q&A with series creator Greg Weisman
- The 2006 Annual Gathering of the Gargoyles - June 23-26, 2006 in Los Angeles, California
- The Gargoyles Fans Website Complete episode guide with reviews, fan fiction, essays, and more.
TV series (Episodes) • Comic book • Characters • Gargoyle clans • Locations • Items • Quotes
Characters & Groups
Goliath • Elisa Maza • David Xanatos • Demona
Archmage • Owen Burnett • Coldstone • Hakon • The Hunters • Macbeth • Mutates • Oberon's Children • The Pack • Anton Sevarius • Steel Clan • Thailog
Cast & Crew
Greg Weisman • Frank Paur • Michael Reaves • Cary Bates • Voice actors
Categories: Articles with unsourced statements since February 2007 | All articles with unsourced statements | The Disney Afternoon | Gargoyles | Television series by Disney | 1994 television program debuts | 1997 television program series endings | Animated television series | 1990s American television series | Family Channel shows | Disney Channel shows | Fictional gargoyles | Television shows set in New York | Fantasy television series | Shapeshifting in fiction | First-run syndicated television programs | Science fiction television series