

Issue #1 of the new Gargoyles comic from Dynamite is set a few months after the last SLG issue. In an interview with CBR, Weisman gave his answer:Ĭanon is the 65 episodes of Season 1 and 2 of Gargoyles (which originally aired from 1994-1996), plus the twelve issues of the SLG Gargoyles comic from earlier this century, and the six issues of the SLG Gargoyles: Bad Guys comic from that same time.

Now, Dynamite Comics is launching its own series coming in December which is set to continue the adventures of the gargoyle clan, but with so many conflicitng stories and comics, fans are wondering which ones are going to be treated as canonical. SLG then created two series that continued the show plot in the early 2000s. Marvel created a comic series based on the show, but it too was canceled. The more serious tone and nature of the show struck a chord with audiences, who kept the fandom alive despite the show only lasting two seasons. This was the plot of the Disney afternoon cartoon, Gargoyles. Related: OJ Simpson Helped Kill Gargoyles TV Show, Says Creator That prophecy was fulfilled in 1994, forcing Goliath and his remaining followers into the modern world of Manhattan where they swore to uphold their oaths as protectors of mankind.

The few that escaped were cursed to sleep until the castle rose above the clouds. However, they were betrayed and the majority of the clan was smashed. Leader of a large clan, Goliath and his kin were charged with protecting their home, a first century Scottish castle, and the humans who inhabited it. Goliath is a gargoyle, a powerful winged creature who turns to stone at the first light of dawn and reawakens with the setting sun. Now Disney and Dynamite Comics are set to revisit the world of Goliath and his clan, but that is leaving some fans wondering what stories are canon and which are not, and Greg Weisman has the answers. The show was followed with a few brief comics' series, but it has always been deserving of a reboot. The iconic '90s cartoon Gargoyles has a wide and passionate following, even after two and a half decades since its cancelation.
