With a copyright of 2001, Alan Lau, in conjunction with Wildbrain.com, produced a flash animation webshow cartoon that was prominently featured on CartoonNetwork.com, and could still be found there as of the middle of June 2015. While Penry appears identical to the original incarnation, Hong Kong Phooey is a much larger, cut, and highly competent and skilled fighter—even without Spot the cat. Hong Kong Phooey faces off against and easily defeats evil anthropomorphic animals: a trio of rabbits, what appears to be a crane, and a reptilianoid (that appears to be a
Komodo dragon). At the end he morphs back to Penry with a smile and sparkle in his eye.
Film • On July 12, 2009, it was announced that
David A. Goodman had been hired to write the screenplay for a
Hong Kong Phooey film to be released by
Warner Bros. Pictures.
Alex Zamm was slated to direct, and
Broderick Johnson,
Andrew Kosove,
Brett Ratner, and
Jay Stern were identified as producers. According to the announcement,
Alcon Entertainment would back the film. On December 28, 2012, test footage of the film was leaked, showing a computer-generated character in live-action scenery. no further information has been revealed since, and the film has likely been canceled. • Hong Kong Phooey briefly appears on the side of an arcade machine in the film
Scoob! (2020).
TV series • Hong Kong Phooey/Penrod "Penry" Pooch appears in the TV series
Laff-A-Lympics, with
Scatman Crothers reprising his role. He is a member of the "Scooby Doobies", which consists of characters from Hanna-Barbera's shows from the 1970s. Hong Kong Phooey was selected as a replacement for the title character from
Jeannie, as legal issues with
Columbia Pictures (who owned the rights to the
I Dream of Jeannie characters through their
television division) prevented the
Jeannie characters from appearing in the show. • Hong Kong Phooey made a cameo in the "Agent Penny" episode of the
Super Secret Secret Squirrel segment of
2 Stupid Dogs. • To date, Hong Kong Phooey has appeared in two segments on
Robot Chicken: • "Enter the Fat One (Part 2)", in the episode "
S&M Present", where he fights
Joey Fatone in a karate tournament. • "Laff-A-Munich", in the episode "
Ban on the Fun", in a segment that spoofs
Laff-A-Lympics in the style of the
1972 Munich massacre and the
film based on the massacre. • Hong Kong Phooey made a cameo in the
Duck Dodgers episode "K-9 Quarry". He was amongst the poached Hanna-Barbera characters on the
Alien Hunter's ship. • Hong Kong Phooey/Penrod "Penry" Pooch appears in the new
Wacky Races episode "Hong Kong Screwy", voiced by
Phil LaMarr. The racers encounter him in China and help him fight the forces of the evil organization K.I.T.T.Y. led by Golden Paw. This appearance reveals Hong Kong Phooey's origin, and he is presented as an actual martial-arts master and competent crime-fighter. • In the 2003 episode of
Malcolm in the Middle, "Future Malcolm", Malcolm helps a misanthropic man he played chess with in the park get an interview at the drug store where his mother works. In response to the question, "Why here?", Malcolm responds, "Because this is the only guy I know that would trade a job interview for a Hong Kong Phooey lunchbox." • Hong Kong Phooey (voiced by
Ron Funches), Sergeant Flint, Rosemary (voiced by Georgie Kidder) and Spot (voiced by Bernardo de Paula) appear in the
Jellystone! season 3 episode "Collection Protection". In it, they are characters in an anime series. Hong Kong Phooey also appears in a later episode "Mummy Knows Best" which reveals he was a real-life movie star who starred in martial arts films in the 1980s.
Music • The
Bloodhound Gang song "
Why's Everybody Always Pickin' on Me?" describes a person as looking "like
Chewie,
Baba Booey and Hong Kong Phooey all in one." •
The Moldy Peaches song "Nothing Came Out" mentions
Hong Kong Phooey among other cartoons: "I want you to watch cartoons with me.
He-Man,
Voltron, and
Hong Kong Phooey." • The song "Sugarcane" by the
Space Monkeys mentions the side-effect of drugs as being "Quicker than the human eye or Hong Kong Phooey." • The song "Old School" by
Danger Doom, features a few classic cartoon mentions. One of these is a mention of Phooey by rapper
MF Doom in the line "Ooh Wee, like a Hong Kong Phooey Kick", reminiscing about his childhood. • Rosemary appears as the Kong Studios receptionist when the
Kong Studios game was revived by the English
virtual band Gorillaz's website in September 2025.
Literature The children's
novella Hong Kong Phooey and the Fortune Cookie Caper by Jean Lewis, illustrated by Phil Ostapczuk, was published in 1975 by
Rand McNally and Company, as well as
Hong Kong Phooey and the Bird Nest Snatchers (1976) and
Hong Kong Phooey and the Fire Engine Mystery (1977). ''Hong Kong Phooey's Hidden Pictures'' book by
Tony Tallarico was published by
Tempo Books in 1976.
Art In January 2015, a
street art ceramic mosaic of Hong Kong Phooey sold at a
Sotheby's auction for
HK$2 million. The copy sold was a re-creation by the artist
Invader after the original was removed from a city wall by Hong Kong authorities.
Comics Charlton Comics published seven issues of a
Hong Kong Phooey comic book during the show's run. Much of the art was produced by
Paul Fung Jr. The character appeared in 2017 in
Scooby-Doo Team-Up #51-52 digital comic (released in print as #26). In 2018, a re-imagined version of Hong Kong Phooey appeared alongside
Black Lightning in the
DC comic book
Black Lightning/Hong Kong Phooey Special #1.
Video games A hireable NPC named "H K Phooey" can be found in the game
Might and Magic II: Gates to Another World. ==See also==