

- #SOMETIMES A GREAT NOTION MOTORCYCLE MOVIE#
- #SOMETIMES A GREAT NOTION MOTORCYCLE LICENSE#
- #SOMETIMES A GREAT NOTION MOTORCYCLE SERIES#
#SOMETIMES A GREAT NOTION MOTORCYCLE LICENSE#
The license then went back into a slumber until February 2015, when all 2010-2011 comics but the de-canonized crossover were reprinted as a trade by Joe Books Inc., rewritten by original editor Aaron Sparrow to better fit the show's tone and featuring a new epilogue. The comic ended in November 2011, with a Bat Family Crisis Crossover with the DuckTales comic where Scrooge McDuck and Darkwing join forces against the combined might of their rogues gallery as well as search for the long-missing Gizmoduck.

This all came to an end in 1996 and the license sat dormant until 2010, when Disney revived the franchise with the announcement of a brand-new ongoing monthly comic series, starting with an arc entitled " The Duck Knight Returns", which began in June 2010. Some of these were written by the show's scriptwriters and many feature villains not in the show. While the show was on TV, several complementary comic stories and illustrated books were released. The show was animated by eight different studios: Sunwoo Entertainment, South Korea (forty-one episodes), Hanho Heung-Up, South-Korea (fifteen episodes), Walt Disney Japan (thirteen episodes), Walt Disney Australia (nine episodes), Kennedy Cartoons, Canada (six episodes), Wang Film Productions, Taiwan (four episodes), Walt Disney France (two episodes) and Freelance, New-Zealand (one episode). Also, some evil mind-controlling aliens that looked like hats.
#SOMETIMES A GREAT NOTION MOTORCYCLE MOVIE#
These include Gizmoduck from DuckTales (1987), the duck-turned-dinosaur Stegmutt, the fish-turned-person Neptunia, and Morgana MacCawber, a sorceress and former crook who reformed and began dating Darkwing.ĭarkwing faced a variety of villains, including the nefarious dimensional traveller NegaDuck, the comical but deadly electropath Megavolt, the plant/duck hybrid Bushroot, the scorned artist Splatter Phoenix, the insane clown Quackerjack, the movie maniac Tuskerninni, and the ruthless F.O.W.L. He also ran into a number of other heroes, usually not starting off on the best foot due to his own ego issues. I am Darkwing Duck!"ĭW was assisted by his sidekick Launchpad McQuack, fresh from DuckTales (1987), his adopted daughter Gosalyn, and the youngest son of his next door neighbors, Honker Muddlefoot. "I am the terror that flaps in the night, I am the batteries that are not included.

DW always tried to make it fit his current situation, but it didn't always work. His other catch phrase "I am the terror." changed pretty much every time it was used. He always came through in the end, usually after being brought to his senses, and uttering the phrase, "Let's get dangerous," after which he'd really show his true skills. Canard - all while providing his own narration.ĭarkwing was comedically inept, hampered by his vainglory, short-sightedness, bad temper, and general klutziness.
#SOMETIMES A GREAT NOTION MOTORCYCLE SERIES#
Nevertheless, it was one of Disney's Darker and Edgier series (not as much as Gargoyles, but it did go places that most of Disney's works wouldn't dream of going), fondly remembered for things like total aversion of Never Say "Die" and an episode featuring Satan (albeit a comical version) as the Monster of the Week (though that episode ended up getting banned from syndication).Īrmed with only a gas gun and a massive ego, Darkwing battled a Rogues Gallery of villains and defended the city of St. It followed the adventures of a masked duck, who was somewhere between Batman, Sandman, The Green Hornet and The Shadow, parodying many superheroic tropes and characters along the way. Darkwing Duck was a superhero cartoon produced by Disney that ran from 1991 to 1992.
