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  1. Howard the Duck was a 1940's era detective. (Earth-80097) Strange-Duck. Howard the Duck was Earth's Sorcerer Supreme. (Earth-80118) Howard the Duck became a TV star. (Earth-81039) Howard the Human. New Quack City.

  2. Howard the Duck was hatched on Duckworld, a planet in another universe, where intelligent life evolved from waterfowl. Duckworld resembles mankind's Earth in an astounding number of ways, including the fact that ducks speak English.

  3. Howard the Duck | Marvel 101. Born on Duckworld, Howard the semi-humanoid duck grows up a mediocre loner. Then, he’s forcibly pulled to Earth-616 by mystical means! Cynical and argumentative, this furious fowl tries to fit in, eventually finding work as a peevish private eye.

    • Overview
    • Appearances
    • Cast
    • Notes
    • Reception
    • Soundtrack
    • Trivia
    • See Also

    More adventure than humanly possible.

    Featured Characters:

    •Howard the Duck ⏵ (First appearance)

    Supporting Characters:

    •Beverly Switzler ⏵ (First appearance)

    •Phil Blumburtt ⏵ (First appearance)

    Antagonists:

    •Lea Thompson as Beverly Switzler

    •Jeffrey Jones as Dr. Walter Jenning / Dark Overlord

    •Tim Robbins as Phil Blumburtt

    •Ed Gale as Howard the Duck (actor in suit)

    •Chip Zien as Howard the Duck (voice)

    •Paul Guilfoyle as Lt. Welker

    •Howard the Duck is a 1986 live-action film produced by Lucasfilm and Universal Pictures, directed by Willard Huyck from a script by Huyck and his wife Gloria Katz. It starred Lea Thompson, Jeffrey Jones, Tim Robbins and Chip Zien as the voice of Howard. It was inspired by the Marvel Comics characters Howard the Duck and Beverly Switzler created by Steve Gerber, although their appearance and portrayals almost completely ignored their source material.

    Trailer

    The film was widely panned and was a U.S. box office bomb. In his Movie Guide, Leonard Maltin calls the film a "hopeless mess of a movie". The film was also among Siskel and Ebert's picks for the "Worst Films of 1986".

    Steve Gerber told Starlog that he liked it better than any other Howard the Duck script that he had read. He has retracted this statement numerous times.

    "As for my comments at the time about the film script, well -- to put it bluntly, I lied. I was hoping against hope that the script and the movie itself weren't as bad as I thought they were. Or at least, that they wouldn't be received as badly as I thought they would. I hated most of the movies coming out of Hollywood at the time, and the ones I hated most turned into box office blockbusters. I didn't think my own tastes were a reliable indicator of what the public might want, so I tried to say nothing that would discourage people from seeing the film. Sadly, the HTD movie was one of the few instances in which my taste and the public's coincided."

    Even though it was a commercial failure in the U.S., the movie managed to gross outside the U.S. $21,000,000 -- beating its domestic gross by over 55%, and therefore exceeding its costs. It was also quite successful at the Finnish box office.

    The film did renew enough attention on the character for Marvel Comics to keep using the character on occasion. It also still gets television showings on RTL 2 and VOX in Germany, TVE2 in Spain, Space and CTV in Canada and the occasional screening in the UK on satellite broadcasts. Most recently it was shown on the U.S. pay-TV network Encore on July 21, 2007.

    It scored 15% at Rotten Tomatoes and 28% at Metacritic, both reviewing movie sites.

    Like the film itself, the soundtrack album has its own appreciative 'cult' despite its commercial failure. The album's rarity alone makes it a much sought after collectible; few copies were produced or sold (being the soundtrack to a movie that not many people saw in theatres), the album has been out of print for decades, and the tracks have never appeared on any other releases. The 'star-power' of the soundtrack also has also added to its collectability - the original score was composed by John Barry, with additional music composed by synth wizard Thomas Dolby; George Clinton, Joe Walsh and Stevie Wonder also appear on the album.

    On some B-sides of some of the album singles, an alternate version of "Don't Turn Away" was released with vocals entirely by Lea Thompson and this version is the same as the one featured in the movie.

    One notable song is the "Howard the Duck Megamix", a remix of the album track, and which was released as a B-side.

    The tracklisting for the original release was as follows:

    •Hunger City (04:12) Performed by Dolby's Cube Feat. Cherry Bomb (lead vocals: Lea Thompson)

    •Howard the Duck (03:55) Performed by Dolby's Cube Feat. Cherry Bomb (lead vocals: Lea Thompson, background vocals: George Clinton, guitar: Joe Walsh)

    •This is the first film based on Marvel Comics to be released theatrically in American theaters since the 1944 Captain America film serial.

    •The movie was the only Marvel Comics film adaptation to be rated PG until the 2007 release of Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer.

    •This movie was intended to be start of a franchise, with Howard's voice actor Chip Zien having signed for three movies. The movie was expected to be a hit, with executive producer George Lucas throwing a massive post-production party with festivities that included a full circus. The afterparty for the film's Hollywood premiere was also expensive. The movie ended up being critically panned, and made only $5 million in its opening weeked. The movie's total box office take was $16.2 million domestic and $37.9 million worldwide, and it had been reported at the time that the movie had cost Universal Pictures $45 million, including prints and advertising. The critical and commercial bombing of the film also led to Universal Pictures' president Frank Price being fired.

    •Many lines of dialog in the film are derived directly from Bill Mantlo's magazine scripts, in particular, the "Duckworld" story that Gerber has often spoken out against.

    •The character of Beverly was originally offered to the then-unknown Tori Amos, but the offer was retracted when Thompson expressed interest.

    •Besides Howard (who was portrayed by an assortment of stunt actors in duck suits), the only character borrowed from the comic book was Beverly.

    •10 image(s) from Howard the Duck (film)

    • 3 min
  4. Howard the Duck is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character was created by writer Steve Gerber, based very loosely on his college friend Howard Tockman, [1] and artist Val Mayerik.

  5. Howard Duckson is an extra-terrestrial anthropomorphic duck and a former resident specimen in Taneleer Tivan 's museum dubbed Howard the Duck. Following the Blip, Howard was transported to Earth to fight in the battle against Thanos ' army. He currently resides on Knowhere after the Guardians of the Galaxy rebuilt it.

  6. Howard Duckson is an extra-terrestrial anthropomorphic duck who runs a criminal enterprise on Xandar as Howard the Duck. An associate of Nebula, he aligned with her to help defeat the corrupt Nova Corps in order to preserve his business. Howard was on Xandar when Ronan the Accuser attacked...