Comic books Starting in 1985,
Star Comics, an
imprint of Marvel Comics, began producing
comic books titled
Heathcliff. The series ran for 56 issues, changing to the
Marvel Comics brand with issue #23. Star Comics added an additional
spin-off title in 1987 called ''Heathcliff's Funhouse
(which also switched over to Marvel with issue #6). It was a combination of new material and reprinted stories that first appeared in the original Heathcliff'' title. In the comics, Heathcliff had a far better relationship with Mr. Nutmeg, and much of his adventures were done with Mr. Nutmeg's grandson. Heathcliff's reputation for adventurism was even noted by the local police, who recruited him for a sting operation against a gang of cats stealing purses, in exchange for them forgiving the fact Heathcliff
swiped shellfish. Within the
Marvel Comics multiverse, Heathcliff's reality is designated as Earth-85481. •
Heathcliff: The Trickiest Cat in Town (1 issue, Marvel Books) •
Heathcliff the Fish Bandit (1 issue, Marvel Books) •
Heathcliff Goes to Hollywood (1 issue, Marvel Books) •
Heathcliff in Outer Space (1 issue, Marvel Books) •
Heathcliff (56 issues, Star/Marvel) •
Heathcliff Annual (1 issue, Star) • ''Heathcliff's Funhouse'' (10 issues, Star/Marvel) •
Heathcliff Spring Special (1 issue, Marvel UK) •
Star Comics Presents: Heathcliff (1 issue,
ashcan) •
Star Comics Magazine (AKA
Star Comics Digest) (13 issues, Star)
Animated series Two
animated TV series based on the strip, both simply named
Heathcliff, were created. Although Heathcliff does not speak in the comic strip, both animated versions of the character were voiced by
Mel Blanc. Heathcliff was one of the last original characters Blanc voiced before his death in 1989. The first
Heathcliff was produced by
Ruby-Spears Productions and debuted in 1980. The first season featured segments with Dingbat and the Creeps (Dingbat is the
vampire dog, who was voiced by
Frank Welker, accompanied by Spare Rib the
skeleton and Nobody the
jack-o-lantern who were both voiced by
Don Messick), which were created by Ruby-Spears for the show, and the second season featured fellow comic strip character
Marmaduke (voiced by
Paul Winchell). This version is sometimes seen on
Boomerang. In 1984, the second
Heathcliff debuted, which was produced by
DIC Entertainment. This series featured segments with
the Catillac Cats (AKA Cats and Co. by the end credits of the show), which is why this version is sometimes referred to as
Heathcliff and the Catillac Cats. In 2005,
Shout! Factory released a Volume 1 DVD for the show, featuring the first 24 episodes of the series. Since then, Mill Creek Entertainment has gained the license and released the show on DVD, with a ten-episode best-of compilation entitled
King of the Beasts and two volumes that cover Season 1; volume 1 contains 32 episodes, while volume 2 has the remaining 33. In 2021, the film and TV rights of Heathcliff were acquired by
Legendary.
Film In 1986,
Heathcliff: The Movie debuted in theaters. It was an
anthology film which consisted of seven episodes from the 1984 series. The film was released on VHS by
Paramount Home Video in 1988. A CGI-animated Heathcliff film was in development for several years. In 2010, a trailer for
Heathcliff in Bad Kitty was released, but the movie itself never materialized. As of 2021,
Legendary Entertainment has plans to simultaneously develop a TV series and film based on the
Heathcliff comics. Gallagher will produce the film alongside
Steve Waterman.
Video games •
Heathcliff: Fun with Spelling, published by
Datasoft for
Atari 8-bit computers and
Commodore 64 (1984) •
Heathcliff: Frantic Foto, published by Storm City Games,
Nintendo DS (2010) •
Heathcliff: The Fast and the Furriest, published by Storm City Games,
Wii (2010) •
Heathcliff: Spot On, published by Enjoy Gaming, Nintendo DS (
DSiWare; 2013) ==References==