The novel has been adapted to films and other media on multiple occasions. In addition, the novel has influenced many fictional works. The following are some of the works which are related to the character of Dr. Moreau and his story:
In literature •
Maurice Renard's 1908 French novel
Le Docteur Lerne, sous-dieu was inspired by
The Island of Doctor Moreau, and dedicated to H. G. Wells by its author. •
The Invention of Morel (1940) by
Adolfo Bioy Casares is a reinterpretation of the novel's themes by an Argentinian novelist. • In chapter 1 of
Daniel Pinkwater's novel
Lizard Music (1976), Victor watches a late-night film on TV which is identified in chapter 2 as
The Island of Dr. Morbo. • ''Moreau's Other Island'' (1980) by
Brian Aldiss is an updating of the original to a near-future setting. US Under-Secretary of State Calvert Madle Roberts is cast ashore on the eponymous island where he discovers the cyborgised
Thalidomide victim Mortimer Dart carrying on Moreau's work. It transpires that Dart's work is intended to produce a 'replacement' race that can survive a post-nuclear environment, and that Roberts approved Dart's funding. •
JLA: Island of Dr. Moreau (2002) is an
Elseworlds one-shot tale from
DC Comics where Dr. H.I. Moreau and his assistant
Professor Ivo create a counterpart of the
Justice League called the Justifiers of Law to the Anointed out of uplifted animals. The group consists of Dianna (a white gorilla and counterpart of
Wonder Woman), Komodo (a komodo dragon), Jubatus (a cheetah and counterpart of
Flash), Delphinius (a dolphin and counterpart of
Aquaman), Bernardus (a St. Bernard with several electric eels fused to his right arm), Black Arrow (a bear/porcupine hybrid and counterpart of
Green Arrow), and Dirus Falconus (an uplifted hawk/wolf and counterpart of
Black Canary). Moreau sends the Justifiers after
Jack the Ripper, who is revealed to be an uplifted orangutan and was thought dead by Moreau. As in the novel, the animals start returning to their animal behaviour, leading to them and Dr. Moreau killing each other in a scuffle, with Ivo also being killed during the conflict. • In
The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Volume II (2002–2003), Moreau is relocated to the
South Downs by the British Government, where he continues his experiments, creating a number of children's characters, such as
Rupert Bear,
Mr. Toad and
Peter Rabbit. He is also stated to be the uncle of the painter
Gustave Moreau. •
Sherlock Holmes: The Army of Dr. Moreau (2012) by
Guy Adams puts
Sherlock Holmes and
Doctor Watson on the trail of several of the hybrids on the loose in London which leads him to Dr. Moreau. • ''The Madman's Daughter'' trilogy (2013) by Megan Shepherd tells the story of Dr. Moreau's daughter Juliet. Each book is based on a different classic novel: the first book is based on this novel by Wells, the second one on
Robert Louis Stevenson's
Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1886), and the final book is based on
Mary Shelley's
Frankenstein (1818). •
The Isles of Dr Moreau (2015) in
Heather O'Neill's short story collection
Daydreams of Angels tells of a grandfather who, when he was young, meets an eccentric, albeit humane scientist named Dr Moreau on "the Isle of Noble and Important and Respectable Betterment of
Homo sapiens and Their Consorts". Moreau's experiments involve combining animal DNA with human DNA and the story unfolds as the grandfather meets (and dates) several of these humanoid creatures. • ''
The Strange Case of the Alchemist's Daughter (2017) by Theodora Goss features the half-finished puma woman from The Island of Dr Moreau'' as one of its main characters, Catherine. •
The Daughter of Doctor Moreau (2022) by
Silvia Moreno-Garcia is a novel billed as "a dreamy reimagining of
The Island of Doctor Moreau set against the backdrop of nineteenth-century Mexico."
In music • The "Manimals" referenced in the lyrics to "
Jason and the Argonauts" by
XTC were based on the book's creatures. • The song "Toes" by the
alternative rock band
Glass Animals is based on the book's story. • The music video for the song "
Eaten Alive" by
Diana Ross, with Ross playing the role of the Panther Woman. • The debut
studio album by the American
new wave band
Devo was titled
Q. Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo! (1978) from a line in the litany of the Law, spoken by the Speaker of the Law to the Beast Folk. • Hip-hop group
House of Pain took their name from the novel. • The
studio album by the
nu metal band
Tallah titled
The Generation of Danger (2022) is, as stated by vocalist
Justin Bonitz, inspired by the book's story. • The lyrics to "
Supernature" by
Cerrone were "built around" the novel.
In radio • David Calcutt adapted the story for a
BBC Radio 4 Saturday Night Theatre dramatization in 1990, with
Kenneth Colley as Montgomery,
Garard Green as Moreau,
Terry Molloy as M'Ling,
Kim Wall as Prentice and Neal Foster as Prentice's Nephew. •
Jonathan Pryce read a five-part abridgement for
Book at Bedtime on
BBC Radio 4 in 2008. • In 2017,
Big Finish Productions adapted the story into a two-hour audio drama starring
Ronald Pickup as Doctor Moreau with
John Heffernan as Edward Prendick and
Enzo Cilenti as Montgomery.
In television • A codified copy of
The Island of Doctor Moreau is featured throughout the science-fiction series
Orphan Black (2013-2017). Additionally, elements of the show's fifth season resemble the story: much of it is set in the isolated island village of Revival, where the human experiments carried out by the enigmatic P.T. Westmorland (
Stephen McHattie) recall those of Moreau.
In cinema • ''Ile d'Epouvante
(1913, The Island of Terror
), a French silent film (also spelled L'Ile d'Epouvante
and Isle d'epouvante
). The 23-minute, two-reel film, directed by Joe Hamman in 1911 was then released in 1913. By late 1913, the film had been picked up by US distributor George Kleine and renamed The Island of Terror'' for its release in Chicago. •
Die Insel der Verschollenen (1921), a German silent adaption directed by
Urban Gad. •
Island of Lost Souls (1932), with
Charles Laughton as Doctor Moreau, and
Bela Lugosi as the Sayer of the Law. In the film, Dr. Moreau creates his Beast Folk through "
plastic surgery,
blood transfusions,
gland extracts, and
ray baths". In addition, the Sayer of the Law is depicted as a humanoid
wolf. Another addition is Lota (
Kathleen Burke), a woman Moreau derived from a
panther, set upon to mate with Edward (
Richard Arlen), so Moreau can find out whether or not she can bear human-children. Lota was not a character from the original novel (the closest is a half-finished puma woman), but filmmakers of future adaptations apparently loved her so much, they included a feline love interest in their adaptations, which include
Barbara Carrera as Maria in the
1977 version, and
Fairuza Balk as Aissa in the
1996 version. • At the age of 13,
Tim Burton made an amateur adaptation on
Super-8 of Wells' novel as
The Island of Doctor Agor (1971). •
The Twilight People (1972), starring
John Ashley and with an early role for African-American actress
Pam Grier, is
Eddie Romero's version of the original story. •
The Island of Dr. Moreau, a 1977 film with
Burt Lancaster and
Michael York. In this film, Dr. Moreau injects the animals with a serum containing human genetic material. The Sayer of the Law is depicted as an
Wolf-Man. The Leopard-Man is replaced by a Bull-Man which resembles an
American bison. There are also humanoid versions of lions, tigers, bears, and
wild pigs. •
The Island of Dr. Moreau (1996), a New Line-produced film with
Marlon Brando,
Val Kilmer,
David Thewlis,
Fairuza Balk, and
Ron Perlman. In this film, Dr. Moreau introduces human
DNA into the animals in his possession to make them more human. The film's version of the Sayer of the Law is depicted as a blind
goat-themed hybrid. Unlike the books and earlier films, the Sayer of the Law survives the ordeal and sees off the main protagonist. • The film ''
Dr. Moreau's House of Pain'' (2004), made by cult horror studio
Full Moon Pictures, is billed as a sequel to the novel. • The 2013 film
Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs 2 shares similarities with the novel. •
Christopher Lambert plays Dr. Moreau in the 2018 Italian horror film
La Voce del Lupo.
In video games • The action-platformer game
Sly 3: Honor Among Thieves features a Boss & Character named Doctor M. He is a mandrill with personality traits and backstory similar to the titular Doctor moreau. • The horror game
Resident Evil Village (2021) features a
boss called Salvatore Moreau, the result of a failed experiment that gave him a fish-like appearance, who in turn conducts his own experiments on humans to prove his worth to his master. • The story mode of the first-person shooter game,
Far Cry (2004), developed by Crytek and published by Ubisoft, is a retelling of the novel's story. The protagonist Jack Carver is shipwrecked on a remote jungle island where he is hunted by mercenaries and later encounters half-human abominations created by a Dr. Krieger. • The role playing video game,
Fallout (1997) developed and published by Interplay
, features main antagonist “The Master”, whose real name is Richard Moreau. His name is a direct nod from Doctor Moreau, both of whom experiment on creating beast-man hybrids that worship Doctor Moreau like a god. ==Scientific plausibility==