Poster Categories

Special Sale
Artist Galleries
Abstract
American History
Animals
Architecture
Canvas Transfer
Comic Books
Cuisine
Fine Art
Humor
Inspirational
Kid Stuff
Maps
Movies/TV
Music
Personalities
Places
Scenic
Space
Sci-fi
Sports
Still Life
Tapestries
Transportation
Vintage
What's Hot
World Culture

Post your pictures


Holiday Posters From our Featured Poster Gallery

[an error occurred while processing this directive]


Halloween Products

Halloween Books
Halloween DVDs
Halloween Toys
Halloween Video Games

Casper the Friendly Ghost Posters for sale

More Halloween Posters

Happy Halloween to all you ghosts and ghouls! Don't be scared! It's Casper the Friendly Ghost posters and pictures you can buy and hang on your wall. Enjoy browsing this great collection of cartoon and movie Casper posters including pictures  For purchase information for any of these ghostly posters, just click on the link below the image.


Happy Halloween!

Casper Books Casper Music Casper Movie Search Casper Clothes Casper Toys
Scary Casper Wallpaper


Superman and Casper

Casper and the Ghostbusters

Casper and Ghostbusters

Casper CGI Cartoon

Casper movie wallpaper

Casper cartoon

Casper the Friendly Ghost is a ghost, but doesn't want to scare anyone. He just wants to be friends.. According to the 1995 feature film Casper, his family name is McFadden, making his "full" name Casper McFadden.

Casper was created in the early-1940s by Seymour Reit and Joe Oriolo, the former devising the idea for the character and the latter providing illustrations. Intended initially for a children's storybook, there was at first little interest in their idea and when Reit was away on military service during the Second World War, Oriolo sold the rights to the character to Paramount Pictures' Famous Studios animation division, for which he had occasionally worked.

The Friendly Ghost, the first Noveltoon to feature Casper, was released by Paramount in 1945. In the cartoon, Casper is a cute, pudgy ghost-child, who prefers making friends with people instead of scaring them. He leaves his home at the local haunted house and goes out to make friends. However, every person or animal he meets takes one horrified look at him and runs off in the other direction. Distraught, Casper unsuccessfully attempts to commit suicide by laying himself down on a railway track before an oncoming train (apparently forgetting that he's already dead) before he meets two little children who become his friends. The children's mother at first rejects Casper, but later welcomes him into the family after he wards off a greedy landlord.

Casper appeared in two subsequent Noveltoons before Paramount started a Casper the Friendly Ghost series in 1950, and ran the theatrical releases until the summer of 1959. Nearly every entry in the series was the same: Casper leaves the (after)life of a regular ghost, tries to find friends but scares nearly everyone, and finally finds a (cute little) friend, whom he saves from some sort of fate. The cartoon series also boasted a catchy title song which was written by Jerry Livingston and Mack David.

Casper went on to become one of the most famous properties from the Famous Studio. Alfred Harvey, founder and publisher of Harvey Comics began producing Casper comic books in 1952, and in 1957, purchased the rights to the character outright.
After Harvey bought the rights to Casper and many other Famous properties in 1959 (including Herman and Katnip, Little Audrey, and Baby Huey), they began broadcasting the post-1950 theatrical Famous shorts on a television show sponsored by Mattel Toys titled Matty's Funday Funnies on ABC in 1959 which introduced the Barbie doll to the public. The other Famous produced Casper cartoons had already been acquired by television distributor U.M.&M. T.V. Corp. in 1956. U.M.&M. retitled just "A Haunting We Will Go", but miscredited "Featuring Casper The Friendly Ghost" as "Featuring Caspers Friendly Ghost".

New cartoons were created for the New Casper Cartoon Show in 1963, also on ABC. The original Casper cartoons were syndicated under the title Harveytoons in 1962 and ran continually until the mid-90s. Casper has remained popular in reruns and merchandising, and Hanna-Barbera produced two holiday specials, Casper's First Christmas (which also starred Yogi Bear, Huckleberry Hound, Snagglepuss, Quick Draw McGraw, Augie Doggie and Doggie Daddy) and Casper's Halloween Special, and also the Saturday morning cartoon series Casper and the Angels in the autumn of 1979, all on NBC. Also featured on the NBC version was a big ghost named Hairy Scary (voiced by John Stephenson). None of Casper's original co-stars appeared in the show.

In 1995, the friendly ghost was adapted into a live-action feature film entitled Casper, where he and his wicked uncles, the Ghostly Trio, were created with computer animation. The film constructed a backstory for Casper and is the only time in the series that the question of his death has been addressed. According to the film, Casper was a twelve-year-old boy living in Whipstaff Manor with his inventor father J. T. McFadden until he died from pneumonia after playing out in the cold until it was past nightfall. Much of the backstory he is given in the film is contradicted by other Casper media.

In 1995, Fox created a new Casper series, based on the 1995 feature, that lasted two years. Two live-action direct-to-video follow-ups, Casper: A Spirited Beginning and Casper Meets Wendy, which introduced Hilary Duff, to the film were later made. They were followed by Casper's Haunted Christmas (starring Spooky and Poil from the animated spinoff of the first movie), and Casper's Scare School, which were done entirely in CGI with no live-action elements. These films are often referred to as being "sequels" to the 1995 feature despite the fact that they heartily contradict the feature and do not appear to even take place in the same universe.

In Casper's Scare School, Casper's personality remains unchanged, but he had new friends, enemies, etc. Casper was not really the only friendly ghost however. Kibosh (this time without Snivel) also was friendly back when he was a child like Casper. Unlike the previous Casper films, Casper's uncles appear to care for him and when he goes to scare school, they are not really happy about him leaving. Whipstaff Manor (or a house that resembles it) was in the movie but Dr. Harvey and his daughter Kat were not in it. His voice is noticeably deeper than previous versions.

 

 

Holiday Posters
Kids Posters

Related Posters
Abbott and Costello
Addams Family
Alfred Hitchcock
Army of Darkness
Bela Lugosi
Bewitched
Boris Karloff
Creature from the Black Lagoon
Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde
Dracula
Evil Dead
Frankenstein
Ghostbusters
Godzilla
Haunted Mansion
Haunting
King Kong
Lon Chaney
Lost Boys
Mummy
Munsters
Scooby Doo
Sleepy Hollow
Van Helsing
Vincent Price
Wolf Man

80's cartoons
Barnyard
Batman
Because of Winn Dixie
Captain America
Cars
Charlie and the Chocolate Factory
Charlotte's Web
Charlie Brown
Chicken Little
comic book posters
Curious George
Disney
Dragonball Z
Garfield
Flushed Away
Happy Feet
Herbie
Hoodwinked
Hulk
Ice Age, Ice Age 2
Incredibles
Justice League
Lizzie McGuire
Looney Tunes
Madagascar
Monster House
Open Season
Over the Hedge
Pokemon
The Polar Express
Popeye
Robots
Scooby Doo
Shark Tale
Shrek
Spiderman

Star Wars
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
The Wild
Transformers
Wallace & Gromit
Walt Disney
Wonder Woman
X-men
Yu-Gi-Oh