


Written by creator Greg Weisman, art by Karine Charlebois. It may be hard to believe, but these Bad Guys are the best hope we’ve got! Gargoyles series creator Greg Weisman is the writer, with art by fan favorite Karine Charlebois and tones by fan favorite Stephanie Lostimolo.

Take this quintet of felons and force them to work on the side of the angels. GARGOYLES: BAD GUYS & GARGOYLES: CLAN-BUILDING 2 TRADES are out!įor regular 'Gargoyles' news check out Landon Thomas' Gargoyles Twitter FeedĪlso see S8 Gargoyles for discussion, chat, a blog, media and the "Ask Greg" feature where you can talk to creator Greg Weisman!įive of the toughest villains in the Gargoyles Universe: Hunter – member of a Scottish family of gargoyle-slayers Dingo – Australian mercenary and charter member of the deadly Pack Matrix – a nanotech hive-mind artificial intelligence that came very close to destroying the Earth Yama – a Japanese gargoyle who betrayed his own clan, and Fang – the mutate who would be king. New to the GARGOYLES universe? * Need a refresher on the characters? * Original canon stories from CREATOR Greg Weisman! * The hit 90s animated series is back - in COMIC form! Highly recommended.GargoylesComic גרגוילס קומיקס Home * Introduction * Order * Resources * Letters * Media * FAQ * Links * Contact In a time when comedies are saturating both the primetime and daytime cartoon markets, it's nice to find a gripping animated drama without needing to set your sights to the other side of the Pacific. If you at all appreciate the art form, you'll wonder where this show has been all your life.

Overall, I think this is the best animated television series to ever come out of this country. The writing is taut, the acting fantastic, and the animation beautiful, but they are all mere servants to the story, which stays interesting and moderately serialized throughout the entire series (just the first season has been released on DVD, 13 of 65 episodes). The backbone of this saga is what all timeless fiction must contain: plot and character development. It's definitely not for young children (the Y7 rating is a good guideline), but don't think it's just another brainless afternoon shoot-'em-up designed to sell action figures. It stunned people at the time with its tragic plots, realistic weapons, and clear consequences to characters' actions. What makes it so unique is that it's still the only dramatic animated series Disney TV has ever produced. "Gargoyles" was a series released during the "Disney Afternoon" block of the mid-nineties.
