Clifford the Big Red Dog

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

IMPORTANT: The content of this page is outdated. If you have checked or updated this page and found the content to be suitable, please remove this notice.

Clifford the Big Red Dog. If you're North American, you've most probably heard of this series of picture books, although you probably didn't know that the first book was originally published in 1963. Since then, many, many more books have been published, as well as an animated adaptation.

The books, which were written by Norman Bridwell, star the adventures of the eponymous Clifford, a giant of a dog, and his owner, Emily Elizabeth Howard. Clifford originally started out as the runt of the litter, but Emily Elizabeth's love made him grow—and grow, and grow, and grow, ad infinitum. Well, not quite—he stopped growing once he was about twenty-five feet high, although his height isn't set in stone; it varies, depending on the story. He was way too big for the Howards to properly take care of Clifford in the city at this point, so they moved to Birdwell Island, where he could have more room to move around.

The series' Animated Adaptation has been around longer than you think. In the 80s, Nelvana picked up the rights to the series and spun off six half-hour direct to video specials with it. Starring Alyson Court opposite of Brent Titcomb, each specials featured a typical slice-of-life storyline peppered with two songs, and was animated with No Fourth Wall, allowing Emily and Clifford to "converse" directly with the viewers, but strangely Emily and Clifford could never converse among themselves in English, as to leverage on Scholastic's then-recent study that children learned better through participation rather than through repetition. After that, the franchise reverted to books (unless you count in the discontinuity that is the live-action mixed footage direct to video special by Warner Home Video that was released in the early 90s). This went on until the year 2000. Scholastic wanted to do another animated adaptation. Throwing away the old format and rebooting the continuity, it now featured Grey DeLisle as Emily Elizabeth opposite of John Ritter as Clifford. The new version was such a phenomenal success that it ran for two seasons, spun off a movie, and even resulted in a licensed kiddie ride. Things weren't so rosy after the movie, however. John Ritter passed on shortly after of a heart attack on the set of 8 Simple Rules. While Scholstic have been pondering upon the idea of a sequel for a then, the death of Mr. Ritter cements the decision of the spinoff, titled Clifford's Puppy Days. Two seasons were made before Scholastic decided to take a break from making a series out of the franchise again, while maintaining the series franchise. The books are still coming, as are merchandise. Repeats of both TV series, of course, are still running.

In May 2012, it was announced [dead link] that Illumination and Universal are working together to create a new Clifford movie, which will be based on the original book, but won't apparently have anything to do with the television series. The film, which is stated to be a blend of live-action and animation, will be penned by Matt Lopez (The Sorcerers Apprentice). Clifford celebrates his fiftieth anniversary in 2013.


Tropes used in Clifford the Big Red Dog include:
  • Aesop Amnesia: You'd think all the lessons Jetta learns about friendship would start to sink in at some point.
  • Amazing Technicolor Wildlife: Many of the animals have nonstandard fur color like bright red and purple.
  • Animated Adaptation
  • Art Evolution: The movie, titled Clifford's Really Big Movie, actually had a budget. So the animators decided to play around with cell shading. It worked ok for Clifford and the other animals. Unfortunately Emily-Elizabeth and the other regular human characters got dumped somewhere in the Uncanny Valley.
    • Also, there's a major art shift between the 80s specials (which were much more faithful to Norman Birdwell's illustrations) and the 2000s TV series.
  • Big Friendly Dog: Clifford of course - extra emphasis on big.
  • Black Bead Eyes: Except for the giant version of Clifford, who is the only character to have normal eyes.
  • Canis Major: Again, when they say "big", they aren't kidding.
  • Cannot Tell a Joke: T-Bone.
  • Cone of Shame: Cleo got to wear one in the episode "Cleo Gets A Cone".
  • Continuity Reboot: Between the Nelvana videos and the Scholastic self-produced TV series. The former made no mention of Bridwell Island and/or any of Clifford's or Emily's friends that the latter is much more commonly known for.
  • Crying Wolf: "The Dog Who Cried Woof" has Cleo repeatedly telling the others a ghost skunk named Wiffy, who she'd told ghost stories about, was after her as a prank. When she gets in trouble with a real skunk, they don't listen to her due to her pranking and she gets sprayed.
  • Cute Giant: Clifford himself, of course.
  • Exactly What It Says on the Tin: The books and cartoon are about a dog named Clifford who is big and red.
  • Expository Theme Tune
  • A Girl and Her X: A girl and her giant red dog.
  • Hair of Gold: Emily Elizabeth.
  • I Want You to Meet An Old Friend of Mine: One episode of the series has T-Bone's old friend Hamburger visiting Birdwell Island. Hamburger is voiced by Kenan Thompson.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Jetta, Cleo, and Mac.
  • The Kiddie Ride: The infamous Clifford ride made by Jolly Rogers of the UK. They're actually pretty common worldwide, you may have seen one at your local mall.
  • Licensed Games / Edutainment Games / IOS Games: About a dozen or so titles for PC/Macs. One for the iPhone (with a separate, HD version for the iPad, and an iPad-exclusive title). Also one title for the Leapfrog Leapster console. And that's not counting the platforms that are technically not gaming devices!
  • Limited Wardrobe
  • Lovable Alpha Bitch: Jetta might be a snotty Rich Bitch in training, but she's still part of the group (and Clifford likes her.) Machiavelli is a rare male example.
  • Lyrical Dissonance: The Really Big Tribute CD. Jody Gray loves this trope. They got Jody Gray to write the score and lyrics to the CD. Cue Emily singing about how great Clifford is- to a tune that sounded bitter. This also happens to some extent in the movie, who's music and lyrics are, unsurprisingly, scored and written by Jody Gray. Although the movie leans towards Mood Whiplash instead.
  • Merchandise-Driven: Of course!
  • The Movie: Both Clifford's Really Big Movie and an announced live-action/animated movie that doesn't have anything to do with the 2000 TV series.
  • No Antagonist: Unless you count the movie.
  • Rich Bitch: Jetta.
  • Smelly Skunk: "The Dog Who Cried Woof" had Cleo taunting the other dogs with ghost stories about a giant ghost skunk named Wiffy. She kept pranking them by saying he was after her, and they finally got fed up with it. Then a real skunk shows up and she scares it. The others don't come until they smell that she got sprayed.
  • Spinoff Babies: Clifford's Puppy Days.
  • Zettai Ryouiki: Emily Elizabeth wears a pair of stripey stockings.