Comics and periodicals • "Herbert West, Reanimated", written as a round-robin serial by
Robert Price and others, for
Crypt of Cthulhu #64 (1989), is a sort of sequel in which Sir Eric Moreland Chapman-Lee resurrects and reassembles Dr. West, who then escapes, kills and resurrects his assistant, and resumes his increasingly wild experiments with life & death, leading to mind-transfers & cloning. •
Adventure Publications, an imprint of
Malibu Comics, published two series related to the films starting in 1991. First was a three-issue comic-book adaptation of the first film, scripted by Steven Philip Jones and drawn by
Christopher Jones. It was followed by an original four-issue prequel titled
Re-Animator: Dawn of the Re-Animator, written by Bill Spangler. In 2017
Arrow Video included reprints of these comics in their
Blu-ray DVD collections of the two films. • In issue #14 of the magazine
From the Tomb (released in June 2004), edited by Peter Normanton, various other 1950s horror comics' homages to Herbert West are discussed, including "Atlas' Adventures" in
Weird Worlds #24, where Dr. Karl Veblen created a "life generator" serum. He had a co-conspirator arranged to revive himself after death with it, but the co-conspirator returned
Cleopatra instead. •
Dynamite Entertainment has produced a comic,
Army of Darkness vs. Re-Animator, a crossover with Herbert West from Lovecraft's short story, "Herbert West–Reanimator", and well known from the film
Re-Animator and its sequels. However,
Army of Darkness vs. Re-Animator is inspired by neither the film
Re-Animator nor the original short story; instead it portrays West as an immortal supervillain in league with
Yog-Sothoth, battling
Ash Williams from the
Evil Dead film series. • In 2016
Caliber Comics published all six Herbert West stories in "H. P. Lovecraft's Reanimator Tales." The book was edited by
Steven Philip Jones. An original sequel, "The Empty House on Harley Street", and a radio script for
From the Dark written by Jones also appear alongside Lovecraft's seminal essay
Supernatural Horror in Literature. • Herbert West is the doctor that Mayor
Harvey Dent sees in the
Batman Elseworlds comic book miniseries,
The Doom That Came To Gotham. • Herbert West makes a guest appearance in the
Devil's Due Publishing series
Hack/Slash (#15–17) in a crossover called "Hack/Slash vs. Re-Animator" where the father of the main heroine,
Cassie Hack, is an assistant to Herbert. During one of his experiments, he reanimates her mother, the Lunch Lady, who almost starts a killing spree. However, with Cassie's help, he destroys the Lunch Lady and eventually disappears from Cassie and Vlad's sight. It is hinted that the government is now interested in his work. • West is a main character in the
Zenescope Entertainment comic
Chronicles of Doctor Herbert West, essentially a modern retelling of the Lovecraftian novel in which the
hidden narrator is now Megan, who is his lover and girlfriend while in his college years, and his obsession with death is now explained as the byproduct of a childhood trauma: while going to church with his devout family, he saw his mother and sister run over by a bus. He renounces the idea of an immortal soul reaching a heavenly afterlife, swearing that he will find a way to bring back his loved ones. It appears to currently be on hiatus. • Randy MilHolland's webcomic
Something Positive contains a musical adaptation of Herbert West in the "Out of Tune" storyline.
Films as Herbert West in
Bride of Re-Animator •
Stuart Gordon's film
Re-Animator (1985) is the most famous adaptation. Updated to a contemporary setting,
Re-Animator takes its plot and characters from the first two episodes of the serial, depicting West as a medical student at Miskatonic University. The film is set over a fairly short period of time where West and Cain are still medical students, whereas the short story played out over the span of decades. The
Bride of Re-Animator (1990) uses material from the last two episodes. In the first two films the equivalent of West's nameless companion is Dr. Daniel Cain, played by
Bruce Abbott, who finds himself embroiled in West's experiments.
Bride was followed by
Beyond Re-Animator (2003), which moved Herbert West to a prison and had very little to do with Lovecraft's story. • Director Dylan Mars Greenberg has produced and directed a film titled
Dr. West: A Reanimator Parody. • In 2017, Italian filmmaker Ivan Zuccon made an adaptation filmed in Italian titled
Herbert West: Re-Animator. It stars Emanuele Cerman as Herbert West and Alessio Cherubini as Herbert West, Junior. • West is also a character in the
Swedish Lovecraftian horror film Kammaren. The scriptwriters did a Swedish take on the name and it became Herbert Vest. He was played by the Swedish actor Kaj Stenberg. • Herbert West appears in a post-credits scene in the 2020 film
Castle Freak.
Games • The story's narrative forms part of the plot of a video game based on Lovecraft's work,
Call of Cthulhu: The Wasted Land (2012). • The online flash game
Deanimator is based on H. P. Lovecraft's original character. • West is a main character in the Japanese video game
Operation Darkness, a WWII-era tactical-RPG/third-person shooter about an Allied special forces unit that possesses supernatural abilities. West is the team medic. (In the English version of the game, West is renamed "Herbert East.") • In the video game
Obscure 2, the player picks up a keycard in the hospital belonging to a man named Herbert West. • In the endless runner game
Zombie Tsunami, the player at one point unlocks a potion called "Herbert West's Finest Reanimation Serum". • In the video game ''
Sherlock Holmes: The Devil's Daughter, a pamphlet promoting Bedlam Asylum'' states to "Contact Dr. Herbert West for questions"
Literature and audiobooks • An
audiobook version of the short story, published in 1999, is performed by
Jeffrey Combs, who played Herbert West in the three film versions. • Audrey Driscoll's novel
The Friendship of Mortals (2010) expands on Lovecraft's story. Driscoll's primary focus is the relationship between West and the narrator, who is neither nameless nor a physician, but a Miskatonic University librarian named Charles Milburn. The plot roughly follows the original but adheres to the premise that West is undone by his experiments. He also the main character in Driscoll's
Islands of the Gulf (2012) and
Hunting the Phoenix (2012). • A radio-drama adaption of the short story was published in 2017 by the
Secret Cabal Gaming Podcast, with Herbert West being played by Patrick Kelly and the narrator being played by Jamie Keagy. • In 2015, writer Joshua Chaplinsky remodeled the cover of the film
Re-Animator, starring
Kanye West, and created a spin story where West tried to revive a dead
hip hop scene. • Herbert West and elements form
The Plague-Daemon feature prominently in
Lovecraftian: The Shipwright Circle by
Steven Philip Jones. The
Lovecraftian series reimagines the weird tales of
H. P. Lovecraft into one single universe modern epic. • The character of Herbert West has had brief cameo appearances in
Kim Newman's
Anno Dracula series novels
The Bloody Red Baron and
Dracula Cha Cha Cha, serving as a colleague of
Dr. Moreau,
Jakob Ten Brincken, and
Doctor Septimus Pretorius. • West is an important, but peripheral character in Pete Rawlik's novel
Reanimators (2013), in which his previously unnamed colleague is identified as Daniel Cain, using the name assigned him in the Stuart Gordon movie. The novel tells the story of a previously unknown rival of West's, as well as the secret history of Lovecraft's Arkham country.
Anime • The Lovecraft-based
anime series
Demonbane reimagines Herbert West as a guitar-playing lunatic mad scientist.
Music • "Herbert West" is the title of a 2007 song by UK band Heartwear Process. • "Herbert West" is also the title of a 2008 song by US band Pipe Supply, named by Jiggly J. Slickwood as a tribute to the Re-Animator movies. • "Herbert West Starter Kit" is the title of a 2016 song by US rapper Extra Kool. • "Herbert West" was also the name of a rock band based in Barrow-in-Furness in the 1980s. • Herbert West is referenced by name in the song "Re-Animator" by Brazilian metal band "Blasfemador", the song pays homage to the short story. ==Other appearances==