Tuesday, October 27, 2020

Scooby-Doo Review














Scooby-Doo


Release Date: 20th June 2002 - Australia


Production Companies
Warner Bros. Pictures (presents)
Mosaic Media Group
Atlas Entertainment (Uncredited)

Distribution
Roadshow Films


Genre: Family/Comedy

Rating: G

Runtime: 86 minutes


Budget: $84,000,000 

Box Office Gross: $275,678,613 (Worldwide)


Plot Summary
After two years of splitting up, Scooby and Shaggy reunite with Fred, Velma and Daphne as the Mystery Inc. gang is brought back together in an invitation to an amusement park/resort, Spooky Island. However, strange things are happening at Spooky Island, seemingly affecting young visitors in unusual ways.

Scooby and the gang will have to work together and resolve their differences to solve this mystery and discover if this is indeed a haunted island. Or it could be the work of a sinister individual behind all these occurrences.


Cast
Matthew Lillard - Shaggy
Neil Fanning - Scooby (Voice)
Freddie Prinze Jr. - Fred
Sarah Michelle Gellar - Daphne
Linda Cardellini - Velma
Rowan Atkinson - Mondavarious
Isla Fisher - Mary Jane
Miguel A. Nunez Jr. - Voodoo Maestro
Steven Grives - N' Goo Tuana
Scott Innes - Scrappy (Voice)
J. P. Manoux - Scrappy Rex
Sam Greco - Zarkos
Charlie Cousins - Velma's Friend
Kristian Schmid - Brad
Nicholas Hope - Old Man Smithers
Jess Harnell - Creatures (Voice)
Frank Welker - Creatures (Voice)
Pamela Anderson - Herself (Cameo)
Sugar Ray - Themselves (Cameos)

Crew
Director - Raja Gosnell
Story - Craig Titley
Story/Screenplay - James Gunn
Based on Characters - Joe Ruby and Ken Spears (Uncredited)
Based on Characters/
Executive Producers - William Hanna and Joseph Barbera
Associate Producer - Sheryl Benko
Associate Producer/Unit Production Manager - Stephen Jones
Associate Producer/First Assistant Director -
Philip A. Patterson
Executive Producers - Robert Engelman,
Andrew Mason and Kelley Smith-Wait
Producers - Charles Roven and
Richard Suckle
Co-Producer - Alan Glazer
Casting - Mary Vernieu
Production Designer - Bill Boes
Art Directors - Bill Booth,
Donna Brown, Helen Gabrielle Gliniak
and Christian Wintter
Set Decorators - Jodie Allen,
Suza Maybury, Matthew Putland
and Sandy Wingrove
Costume Designer - Lessa Evans
Hair/Makeup Supervisor - Lesley Vanderwalt
Director of Photography - David Eggby
Second Unit Director/Stunt Coordinator -
Guy Norris
Special Effects Supervisor - Brian Cox
"Scooby Doo" Designer/Cyber-Scan Model
Sculptor: Jim Henson's Creature Shop/
Rhythm + Hues - Brian Wade
Visual Effects Supervisor - Peter Crosman
Visual Effects Supervisor: Rhythm + Hues -
Betsy Paterson
Additional Visual Effects Supervisor -
Neil Krepela
Visual Effects Producer - Kurt Williams
Digital Effects Supervisor: Rhythm + Hues -
Todd Shifflet
Director of Photography: New Deal Studios -
Tim Angulo
Animation Supervisor - Richard Baneham
Animation Supervisors: Rhythm + Hues -
Leon Joosen and Bill Kroyer
Animation Sequence Supervisors: Rhythm +
Hues - Erik De Boer, Keith Roberts and
Lyndon Barrois
Animation Leads: Rhythm + Hues -
Bud Myrick and Danny Speck
Editor - Kent Beyda
Supervising Sound Editor - Michael D. Wilhoit
Sound Designer - Scott Sanders
Production Sound Mixer - Paul 'Salty' Brincat
Re-Recording Mixers - David E. Campbell,
John T. Reitz and Gregg Rudloff
Music - David Newman
Music Supervisor - Laura Ziffren
Music Recordist and Mixer - Bruce Botnick


Review
Originally made as a risqué, adult-oriented take on the cartoon franchise, SCOOBY-DOO got toned down to be a kids' movie by the studio that owns the property from Hanna-Barbera. I grew up with this film and didn't care how bad it was when it had a few good aspects. For example, Matthew Lillard was consistent with his role as Shaggy. In future reference, he would inherit the character in later Scooby productions. Unfortunately, there are disappointing parts that ruin it for everybody. The attempts at humour (except in a few scenes) and outdated CGI characters didn't age well. Not to mention that the story is poorly executed (concerning a plot twist involving the real villain that comes out of nowhere), and it happens to be written by James Gunn. Yes, that man, James Gunn, who 12 years later would successfully bring Guardians of the Galaxy to the big screen. I didn't even realise that the live-action adaptation was just a rehash of one of the direct-to-video Scooby-Doo movies called Zombie Island.

The acting (save for Matthew Lillard) is far from perfect, including Linda Cardellini, who sounds so bored in her role as Velma. She did a magnificent job with her voice. Freddie Prinze Jr. had no big shoes to fill as Fred. The same goes for Sarah Michelle Gellar when playing Daphne. Rowan Atkinson's character was underused. It should have played a significant part in the movie.

It's "ruh-oh" for Scooby-Doo fans as the movie adaptation felt short of the ongoing mystery in the series. It spawned a sequel that's considered a slight improvement of the original Monsters Unleashed and a few others that have shifted to direct-to-video.

I would rather sit through watching the first few direct-to-video animated movies than revisit the lowbrow cinematic interpretation.

Star rating: (4/10) Below Average

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