While the masterful animated TV shows. From dystopian hellscapes to intelligent parodies of genres from times gone by, Disney has had some uniquely dark series.

Many of the dark yet compelling TV shows.

10 Tron: Uprising (2012 - 2013)

19 Episodes

The world seen in the Tron franchise already had dark undertones as it explored the terror of being trapped inside of a virtual reality, yet the animated series Tron: Uprising took things even further and felt more like a cyberpunk dystopian drama than a kids’ cartoon. Set in between the events of the films Tron and Tron: Legacy, the mature themes, intense atmosphere, and oppressive undertones brought to mind major adult-oriented franchises like The Matrix.

03115247_poster_w780.jpg

Your Rating

Tron: Uprising
TV-Y7
Animation
Drama
Sci-Fi & Fantasy
Family
Action
Release Date
2012 - 2013-00-00
Network
Disney Channel, Disney XD

WHERE TO WATCH

Streaming
BUY

As a series that expanded upon the franchise's lore, Tron: Uprising addressed themes of totalitarianism as the ruthless dictator Clu had taken over the Grid. With a premise based on rebelling against the forces of an authoritarian system, the young programmer Beck challenged the brutal military occupation of the city of Argon. With topics such as PTSD, survivor’s guilt, and self-doubt coming up regularly, Tron: Uprising was far darker than anyone expected it to be.

9 DuckTales (2017-2021)

3 Seasons

While the original DuckTales TV series from the 1980s featured mostly lighthearted adventures, the show was notably darker after it was rebooted in 2017. While DuckTales still focused on Scrooge McDuck looking after his grandnephews Huey, Dewey, and Louie, the thematic undertones of the series were notably darker than anything that came before. Even the set-up of this reboot started with Scrooge and Donald reconnecting after being estranged for ten years, a character backstory that threw kid viewers straight into the deep end regarding family trauma and unexpressed, festering emotional pain.

Your Rating

DuckTales
Release Date
2017 - 2021-00-00
Network
Disney Channel

WHERE TO WATCH

Streaming

Showrunner
Francisco Angones

Although there were still plenty of fun adventures in DuckTales, the show was not afraid to tap into trauma, loss, existential dread, and even psychological horror at times. A prime example of this was the episode “Whatever Happened to Della Duck?” which told the story of Donald’s sister, Della, being lost in space and left cold, isolated, scared, and hungry. Della’s disappearance also meant that Donald had to raise her children alone as he carried the trauma, stress, and worry about what happened to his sister.

8 Mighty Ducks: The Animated Series (1996 - 1997)

26 Episodes

The Mighty Ducks movie was a live-action Walt Disney production about a ragtag hockey team learning the values of teamwork as they were coached by a self-centered Minnesota lawyer learning his own life lessons. With this premise in mind, the fact that Mighty Ducks: The Animated Series shook up its premise to explore alien duck warriors fighting an oppressive reptilian empire in a sci-fi dystopia was incredibly bizarre.

0378266_poster_w780.jpg

Your Rating

Mighty Ducks: The Animated Series
Release Date
1996 - 1997-00-00
Network
ABC

WHERE TO WATCH

Streaming

Mighty Ducks: The Animated Series follows a group of hockey-loving ducks from the planet Puckworld who pursue the villainous Dragaunus to Earth. Stranded in Anaheim, California, they form a hockey team and continue their battle against Dragaunus while attempting to find a way back home.

Cast
Jeff Bennett, Brad Garrett, Val Bettin, Tim Curry, Tony Jay, Townsend Coleman, Rob Paulsen, S. Scott Bullock, Frank Welker
Creator(s)
David Wise, Marty Isenberg
Seasons
1

Within the superhero premise of Mighty Ducks: The Animated Series lay surprisingly dark undertones as the ducks' homeworld, Puckland, was brutally conquered by the reptilian Saurians, led by the evil overlord Dragaunus. With most of their species wiped out or enslaved, Mighty Ducks: The Animated Series addressed war and displacement all wrapped up in a kid-friendly package.

7 Recess (1997 - 2001)

6 Seasons

Recess was a beloved animated series produced by Walt Disney Television Animation that dealt with the politics of the schoolyard. While there were plenty of lighthearted episodes around the day-to-day trials and tribulations of elementary school, the truth was that Recess was never afraid to dig deep into serious topics. With some surprisingly dark and serious moments, many of the best episodes of Recess tackled themes of government control, psychological manipulation, and loneliness for its staff and students.

At times, the problems the kids faced in Recess felt more like something out of a war movie, as Principal Prickly’s totalitarian rule showcased military-like oppression and almost dystopian undertones for pupils trapped in school in against their will. From the dreaded solitary confinement of detention to the brainwashing that occurred when a new rating system was introduced, Recess satirized the bleakest aspects of the school experience. While Recess dealt with mature themes, this was part of its appeal and its legacy as one of the cleverest kids’ shows ever made.

6 Doug (1991 - 1999)

7 Seasons

While Doug was a seemingly innocent slice-of-life animated series that explored the zany hijinks of its title character, buried underneath the surface were some surprisingly dark moments. As a character, Doug was awkward and had difficulties navigating his transition from childhood into adolescence and all the trials and tribulations that this brought up. With episodes exploring social anxiety, alienation, and even class struggles, Doug didn’t sugarcoat the teenage experience and actually addressed issues that affect real young people.

One of the most darkly real things about Doug was that its main character was more than just simply shy, as he actually suffered from genuine anxiety and self-esteem issues. With a desperate desire to fit in and being surrounded by other troubled characters, Doug was almost uncomfortably introspective in the way it tackled serious themes. Although Doug originally aired on Nickelodeon before moving to ABC, the show was later acquired by Disney and branded in re-runs as Disney's Doug for seasons 5 to 7.

5 Clerks: The Animated Series (2000 - 2002)

6 Episodes

While the crude comedy of the filmmaker Kevin Smith and stoner icons like Jay and Silent Bob may not be the first thing people think of when it comes to Disney animated shows, the truth is Clerks: The Animated Series was co-produced by Walt Disney Television Animation. As Disney’s second adult animated television series after The PJs, the show aired on ABC but was sadly canceled after just two episodes with the remaining four being burnt off on Comedy Central.

Clerks The Animated Series

Your Rating

Clerks: The Animated Series
Release Date
May 31, 2000
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Brian O'Halloran
    Dante Hicks
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Jeff Anderson
    Randall Graves
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Jason Mewes
    Jay
  • Headshot Of Kevin Smith
    Silent Bob

This brief history was a real shame, as Clerks: The Animated Series featured sharp writing, Smith’s signature wit, and a great character design by Stephen Silver, known for his work on Kim Possible. With dark themes, meta-humor, and scathing satire of modern media, Clerks was too inappropriate for kids’ yet never got its due from adult viewers. As a forerunner to the humor of later shows like Archer or Rick and Morty, Clerks: The Animated Series was truly ahead of its time.

4 Fillmore! (2002 - 2004)

2 Seasons

As a parody of police dramas from the 1970s, the Disney series Filmore! addressed serious themes of justice, persecution, and moral dilemmas. With Cornelius Fillmore as a juvenile delinquent with a record, this young offender had a choice: either become a safety patrol officer or spend the rest of elementary school in detention. With noir-style narration and a hardboiled crime aesthetic, Filmore! pushed its kid viewers out of their comfort zone and had more in common with The Big Sleep than The Mickey Mouse Club.

Fillmore!

Your Rating

Fillmore!
Release Date
2002 - 2004-00-00
Network
ABC
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Orlando Brown
    Cornelius Fillmore
  • Headshot Of Tara Strong In The 'My Little Pony: The Movie' Premiere
    Ingrid Third
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Don LaFontaine
    Announcer
  • headshot Of Horatio Sanz In The premiere of 'The Other Guys'
    Jr. Commissioner Dutch Vallejo

While Filmore! was presented as a spoof of police procedurals, the writing was so mature and intense that it stands as a legitimately compelling crime series. As a former troublemaker-turned-hero, Cornelius Fillmore had a character backstory that added depth to his role, ensuring that law and order prevailed in the schoolyard. As one of the most mature animated series Disney ever made, Fillmore! was never afraid to deal with dark subject matters and thought-provoking topics.

3 Gravity Falls (2012 - 2016)

2 Seasons

Lynchian surrealism and Lovecraftian terror aren’t exactly associated with Disney animated series, although Gravity Falls somehow managed to present both of these things in a way that connected with young viewers. As the story of Dipper and Mabel Pines, twins visiting their Grunkle Stan at his tourist trap Mystery Shack in the fictional town of Gravity Pines, this series dealt with ideas of paranoia, existential dread, mind control, and the fight against an unstoppable cosmic entity ruling the universe.

Gravity Falls TV Poster

Your Rating

Gravity Falls
Release Date
2012 - 2016-00-00
Network
Disney Channel

WHERE TO WATCH

Streaming

Showrunner
Alex Hirsch

While the early episodes of Gravity Falls slowly introduced audiences to its world filled with paranormal and supernatural threats, as the series progressed over its two seasons, things got increasingly dark. This all came to a head with the final showdown against Bill Cipher, a truly terrifying antagonist bent on taking over reality and creating a chaotic, post-apocalyptic wasteland where time, physics, and sanity no longer exist. With an intensity rarely seen on children’s television, Gravity Falls was a boundary-pushing kids’ show.

2 The Owl House (2020 - 2023)

3 Seasons

While The Owl House may first appear like a lighthearted fantasy story, beneath its fun sense of adventure lay topics of horror, existential dread, and psychological trauma. What began with a 14-year-old girl named Luz Noceda accidentally stumbling upon a portal to another world soon grew into a series exploring rebellion, oppression, and dark consequences of unchecked power within the Demon Realm. With mature themes and compelling characters, The Owl House was a show that could be enjoyed by viewers of all ages.

The Owl House tv poster

Your Rating

The Owl House
Release Date
2020 - 2022
  • Cast Placeholder Image
    Sarah-Nicole Robles
  • Headshot Of Wendie Malick
    Wendie Malick

WHERE TO WATCH

Streaming

One notable example of The Owl House’s dark nature was the Boiling Isles, a fantasy setting created from the corpse of a giant, dead Titan. As a society built on the literal rotting flesh and bones of a supernatural figure, this told viewers all they needed to know about The Owl House’s willingness to go to dark places. Add to this the emotionally intense themes of oppression and genocide running through the show, and the result was a surprisingly dark Disney series.

1 Gargoyles (1994 - 1997)

3 Seasons

Disney truly surprised audiences with the expected darkness of their 1990s classic kids’ series Gargoyles. As the story of enchanted gargoyles awakens from their slumber after being petrified for a thousand years, Gargoyles saw these creatures reawakened in modern-day New York to become the city’s secret nighttime protectors. With complex and melodramatic narratives and story arcs, Gargoyles tapped into Shakespearean themes as it endeavored to address fairytales, religion, and mythology.

0345743_poster_w780.jpg

Your Rating

Gargoyles
Release Date
1994 - 1997-00-00
Network
ABC, Syndication

WHERE TO WATCH

Streaming

With such rich thematic depth, Gargoyles had earned its status as a cult classic in the years since it aired and stood as a modern Gothic fairytale with a unique sense of style. There was a sense of seriousness underpinning the narrative of Gargoyles that meant it stood apart from other, more lighthearted kids’ shows that were airing at the same time. While Disney has had plenty of shows that were surprisingly dark, Gargoyles stood out and has continued to fascinate viewers more than 30 years since it first premiered.