This is a list of television series and films based on Harvey Comics publications. It includes live-action and animated films, theatrical releases, direct-to-video releases, and television film releases.
Title | Aired | Seasons | Network | Notes | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Richie Rich | 2015 | 2 seasons | Netflix | 21 episodes | |||
In development | |||||||
Untitled Casper the Friendly Ghost series [1] | TBA | TBA | Peacock | TBA |
Year | Title | Production studio | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1957 | The Sad Sack | Paramount Pictures | |
1994 | Richie Rich | Warner Bros. Family Entertainment | |
1995 | Casper | Universal Pictures/Amblin Entertainment | First film directed by Brad Silberling. |
Year | Title | Production studio | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
1997 | Casper: A Spirited Beginning | 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment/Saban Entertainment | A prequel to Casper. |
1998 | Casper Meets Wendy | A sequel to Casper: A Spirited Beginning. | |
Richie Rich's Christmas Wish | Warner Bros. Family Entertainment/Saban Entertainment | A sequel to Richie Rich. | |
1999 | Baby Huey's Great Easter Adventure | Sony Pictures Home Entertainment | |
2000 | Casper's Haunted Christmas | Universal Pictures Home Entertainment/Rainmaker Entertainment | |
2006 | Casper's Scare School | Philips Filmstudio Inc. | |
Film | Distributor(s) | Release date | Budget | Box office revenue [2] [3] [4] | Box office ranking | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Domestic | Foreign | Worldwide | All time domestic | All time worldwide | ||||
The Sad Sack | Paramount Pictures | November 27, 1957 | N/A | $3,500,000 | $1,878,519 | $5,378,519 | N/A | N/A |
Richie Rich | Warner Bros. Family Entertainment | December 21, 1994 | $40 million | $38,087,756 | — | — | #2,027 | N/A |
Casper | Universal Pictures/Amblin Entertainment | May 26, 1995 | $55 million | $100,328,194 | $187,600,000 | $287,928,194 | #617 | #380 |
Total | $95 million | $141,915,950 | $189,478,519 | $293,306,713 | #2,644 | #380 |
Film | Rotten Tomatoes | Metacritic | CinemaScore |
---|---|---|---|
The Sad Sack | — | — | — |
Richie Rich | 24% (21 reviews) [5] | — | A− [6] |
Casper | 50% (40 reviews) [7] | — | A [6] |
Casper: A Spirited Beginning | 0% (5 reviews) [8] | — | — |
Casper Meets Wendy | 17% (6 reviews) [9] | — | — |
Richie Rich's Christmas Wish | 33% (3 reviews) [10] | — | — |
Baby Huey's Great Easter Adventure | N/A [11] | — | — |
Casper's Haunted Christmas | 39% (2 reviews) [12] | — | — |
Casper's Scare School | 60% (1 reviews) [13] | — | — |
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A superhero film is a genre centered on superheroes and their adventures, with characters often possessing superhuman abilities or exceptional skills. Superhero films typically blend elements of action, adventure, fantasy, or science fiction. The first film about a particular superhero character, often focuses on the hero's origin story and typically introduces the hero's nemesis.
Harvey Comics was an American comic book publisher, founded in New York City by Alfred Harvey in 1941, after buying out the small publisher Brookwood Publications. His brothers, Robert B. and Leon Harvey, joined shortly after. The company soon got into licensed characters, which, by the 1950s, became the bulk of their output. The artist Warren Kremer was closely associated with the publisher.
Wendy the Good Little Witch is a fictional comic book character from Harvey Comics. Like Casper the Friendly Ghost and Hot Stuff the Little Devil, Wendy is an opposite-type character, a girl witch who does good deeds.
Ernesto Colón Sierra was a stateside Puerto Rican comics artist, known for his wide-ranging career illustrating children's, superhero, and horror comics, as well as mainstream nonfiction.
Blade is a superhero film and television franchise based on the Marvel Comics character of the same name, starring Wesley Snipes as Blade in the original trilogy, and Sticky Fingaz in the television series. The original trilogy was directed by Stephen Norrington, Guillermo del Toro and David S. Goyer, the latter of whom also wrote the films and served as a co-writer for the first and last two episodes of the television series. The original films and television series were distributed by New Line Cinema from 1998 to 2006.
William W. White, Jr. was an American animator, and a comic book writer, penciller, and inker.
The Harvey Entertainment Company was the production arm of comic book publisher Harvey Comics. It was founded in 1957.
Casper the Friendly Ghost is a fictional character who serves as the protagonist of the Famous Studios theatrical animated cartoon series of the same name. He is a translucent ghost who is pleasant and personable, but often criticized by his three wicked uncles, the Ghostly Trio.
Casper is a 1995 American supernatural fantasy comedy film directed by Brad Silberling, in his feature film directorial debut, based on the Harvey Comics cartoon character Casper the Friendly Ghost created by Seymour Reit and Joe Oriolo. The film stars Christina Ricci, Bill Pullman, Cathy Moriarty, and Eric Idle, with voice talents of Joe Nipote, Joe Alaskey, Brad Garrett, and the film introduction of Malachi Pearson in the title role. The film follows the title character who peacefully haunts a mansion called Whipstaff Manor in Friendship, Maine, meets and befriends a teenage girl named Kat Harvey (Ricci), the daughter of Dr. James Harvey (Pullman), a paranormal therapist who is hired to move into Whipstaff in order to rid the mansion of its spectral inhabitants.
The cartoon character, Casper the Friendly Ghost who appears in numerous cartoon shorts as well as Harvey Comics publication, has appeared in five films since his inception, most of which were either released in television or straight-to-video while only one was released theatrically. Many for the most part are unrelated to each other. Like in the comics and animated shorts, the films feature Casper, a ghost of a deceased child, who refused to frighten others and would like nothing more than to be friendly around the world, due to the nature of what he appears to be, it would often get him shunned by whoever he encounters, but along the way, he would find and befriend a certain someone he could identify himself with, and would often help that someone in need.