“And I would have gotten away with it too if it weren’t for you meddling kids.” This is undoubtedly one of the most famous lines in the history of animated television and practically everyone will recognize it as the most famous phrase from the Scooby-Doo series. The phrase usually signified the end of a case when Scooby and the gang would explain the solution and prove that the guy they caught in the costume red-handed did it. The villain would then utter these words, cursing his ill-fated encounter with Mystery Inc., without which his plan would have succeeded, as it was otherwise perfect.
While the Scooby-Doo series is primarily an animated work, there have been live-action and CGI adaptations of the series as well. And while the CGI Scoob! movie was better received than the live-action movies, no adaptation has managed to come even close to the charm of the original animated series,...
While the Scooby-Doo series is primarily an animated work, there have been live-action and CGI adaptations of the series as well. And while the CGI Scoob! movie was better received than the live-action movies, no adaptation has managed to come even close to the charm of the original animated series,...
- 5/1/2024
- by Arthur S. Poe
- Fiction Horizon
Fire up the mystery van because Netflix is about to close a deal for a live-action TV series based on the Hanna-Barbera animated series Scooby-Doo.
Sources say that the live-action Scooby-Doo project has a script-to-series commitment, which, assuming the script hits the right buttons, would mean it would receive a straight-to-series order. Josh Appelbaum & Scott Rosenberg (Cowboy Bebop) are set to write the series, as well as produce alongside André Nemec and Jeff Pinkner through their Midnight Radio banner. Greg Berlanti, Sarah Schechter, and Leigh London Redman will executive produce the project via their Berlanti Productions banner.
Related Scooby-Doo
Created by Joe Ruby and Ken Spears, Scooby-Doo, Where Are You! debuted in 1960 and revolved around Fred Jones, Daphne Blake, Velma Dinkley, Shaggy Rogers, and Scooby-Doo as they solved mysteries involving supposedly supernatural creatures. Over the decades, the franchise has spawned numerous spin-offs, TV specials, direct-to-video animated movies, comics, video games,...
Sources say that the live-action Scooby-Doo project has a script-to-series commitment, which, assuming the script hits the right buttons, would mean it would receive a straight-to-series order. Josh Appelbaum & Scott Rosenberg (Cowboy Bebop) are set to write the series, as well as produce alongside André Nemec and Jeff Pinkner through their Midnight Radio banner. Greg Berlanti, Sarah Schechter, and Leigh London Redman will executive produce the project via their Berlanti Productions banner.
Related Scooby-Doo
Created by Joe Ruby and Ken Spears, Scooby-Doo, Where Are You! debuted in 1960 and revolved around Fred Jones, Daphne Blake, Velma Dinkley, Shaggy Rogers, and Scooby-Doo as they solved mysteries involving supposedly supernatural creatures. Over the decades, the franchise has spawned numerous spin-offs, TV specials, direct-to-video animated movies, comics, video games,...
- 4/29/2024
- by Kevin Fraser
- JoBlo.com
Mystery Mistress.
After kicking off March with discussions of the Kristen Stewart vehicle Personal Shopper (listen) and Alfred Hitchcock’s Strangers on a Train (listen), we’re getting a little silly with a deep dive into Raja Gosnell‘s live-action cartoon sequel Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed (2004) for its 20th anniversary!
In the film, canine sleuth Scooby-Doo (Neil Fanning) once again joins his pals Shaggy (Matthew Lillard), Velma (Linda Cardellini), Fred (Freddie Prinze Jr.) and Daphne (Sarah Michelle Gellar) when the Evil Masked Figure breaks into the Coolsonian Criminology Museum and steals a bunch of costumes that belonged to Mystery Inc.’s previously unmasked foes! What’s worse? E.M.F. is using them to create real monsters! It’s up to the gang to stop the monsters’ attack on Coolsville, while dodging the libelous attacks of television journalist Heather Jasper-Howe (Alicia Silverstone), who is out to discredit their investigations.
Be...
After kicking off March with discussions of the Kristen Stewart vehicle Personal Shopper (listen) and Alfred Hitchcock’s Strangers on a Train (listen), we’re getting a little silly with a deep dive into Raja Gosnell‘s live-action cartoon sequel Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed (2004) for its 20th anniversary!
In the film, canine sleuth Scooby-Doo (Neil Fanning) once again joins his pals Shaggy (Matthew Lillard), Velma (Linda Cardellini), Fred (Freddie Prinze Jr.) and Daphne (Sarah Michelle Gellar) when the Evil Masked Figure breaks into the Coolsonian Criminology Museum and steals a bunch of costumes that belonged to Mystery Inc.’s previously unmasked foes! What’s worse? E.M.F. is using them to create real monsters! It’s up to the gang to stop the monsters’ attack on Coolsville, while dodging the libelous attacks of television journalist Heather Jasper-Howe (Alicia Silverstone), who is out to discredit their investigations.
Be...
- 3/25/2024
- by Trace Thurman
- bloody-disgusting.com
At the beginning of 2002’s Scooby-Doo, the Gang encounters their worst nightmare. No, not the Luna Ghost nor any of the other spookies they’ve uncovered in their long career as Mystery Incorporated. Rather, the movie begins with the Gang breaking up.
Of course, by the end of the movie, the team has reunited and put their differences besides them. Realizing that they work best as a team, the quintet learns how to share the glory. But in real life, the situation was far more fraught. In a recent interview with Esquire Magazine, Freddie Prinze Jr., who played team leader Fred alongside his wife Sarah Michelle Gellar as Daphne, revealed the drama behind the fictional Gang’s exploits.
The problems began when Prinze Jr. and his co-stars learned that they would not be making the movie they had intended, a PG-13 script by a post-Troma/pre-DC Studios James Gunn.
Of course, by the end of the movie, the team has reunited and put their differences besides them. Realizing that they work best as a team, the quintet learns how to share the glory. But in real life, the situation was far more fraught. In a recent interview with Esquire Magazine, Freddie Prinze Jr., who played team leader Fred alongside his wife Sarah Michelle Gellar as Daphne, revealed the drama behind the fictional Gang’s exploits.
The problems began when Prinze Jr. and his co-stars learned that they would not be making the movie they had intended, a PG-13 script by a post-Troma/pre-DC Studios James Gunn.
- 11/30/2022
- by Joe George
- Den of Geek
Years before he became one of Hollywood’s top superhero movie directors, James Gunn wrote two live-action “Scooby Doo” movies. “Scooby-Doo” and “Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed” both starred Linda Cardellini, Freddie Prinze Jr., Sarah Michelle Gellar, Matthew Lillard, and Neil Fanning as the beloved Hanna-Barbera characters, with Raja Gosnell directing both movies. While the material might seem like a natural fit for Gunn’s comedic sensibilities, the “Guardians of the Galaxy” director is not thrilled with how the finished products.
Gunn recently took to Twitter to air his grievances about what he saw as unnecessary interference from Warner Bros. on the films. When an official Netflix Twitter account announced that the films will be streaming on Netflix next month, Gunn responded by expressing his distaste for how the films turned out.
“Destroying mysteries 20 years later,” he wrote.
According to Gunn, the first movie was planned as a comedy aimed at...
Gunn recently took to Twitter to air his grievances about what he saw as unnecessary interference from Warner Bros. on the films. When an official Netflix Twitter account announced that the films will be streaming on Netflix next month, Gunn responded by expressing his distaste for how the films turned out.
“Destroying mysteries 20 years later,” he wrote.
According to Gunn, the first movie was planned as a comedy aimed at...
- 9/25/2022
- by Christian Zilko
- Indiewire
Long before James Gunn became one of Hollywood’s most exciting tentpole directors thanks to his work on the “Guardians of the Galaxy” franchise, he got his start in the studio system writing the scripts for Warner Bros.’ live-action “Scooby-Doo” movies. The 2002 “Scooby-Doo” release was directed by Raja Gosnell and was a box office hit with just over $257 million worldwide. The film was followed by a 2004 sequel, “Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed,” which reunited Gunn and Gosnell. Gunn recently revealed on Twitter that it was his plan from the start to make Velma “explicitly gay” in his “Scooby-Doo” movies, but Warner Bros. did not allow it and slowly phased out any story points that pertained to Velma’s homosexuality.
Responding to a fan on social media who urged Gunn to return to the Scooby-Doo franchise and make a live-action gay Velma, Gunn wrote, “I tried! In 2001 Velma was explicitly gay in my initial script.
Responding to a fan on social media who urged Gunn to return to the Scooby-Doo franchise and make a live-action gay Velma, Gunn wrote, “I tried! In 2001 Velma was explicitly gay in my initial script.
- 7/13/2020
- by Zack Sharf
- Indiewire
According to Variety, Warners is ready to answer the age-old question, “Scooby Doo, where are you?” The studio is prepping an animated feature for the world’s most famous sandwich-eating dog with the same producers that worked to bring the 2002 live-action/CGI hybrid to life. Charles Roven and Richard Suckle will be producing from a script from Matt Lieberman who recently wrote the Short Circuit reboot. The studio isn’t revealing the concept, but they won’t get away with it if the meddling internet has anything to say. The character has been through a ton of incarnations (the best, of course, involving the Harlem Globetrotters), but anytime someone plans new Scooby Doo, there’s a potential for goofy greatness. Naturally it’s difficult to see new stuff without Don Messick voicing Scoobs, but maybe there’s a great vocal talent that can do the character justice. Neil Fanning was passable in the live-action movies, and...
- 8/27/2013
- by Scott Beggs
- FilmSchoolRejects.com
My two-year-old has been known to scream .Doo Doo. on occasion. It.s not that he needs diaper assistance but he wants his favorite show on the television. Scooby Doo and his meddling friends has been a staple for many generations so it shouldn.t surprise that the big screen called and this set collects both films. He.s only two, but he has learned to scream .Scooby Doo. instead of .Doo Doo. (although some may say that the latter might describe these two movies precisely). Those meddling kids, Fred (Freddy Prinze Jr.), Velma (Linda Cardellini), Daphne (Sarah Michelle Gellar), Shaggy (Matthew Lilliard), and their dog Scooby (a CGI creation voiced by Neil Fanning) solve mysteries. Scooby Doo (2002) had the...
- 12/14/2010
- by Jeff Swindoll
- Monsters and Critics
Scooby-Doo 2
Opens
Friday, March 26
In a rare sequel-making situation, the big-screen "Scooby-Doo"'s original director (Raja Gosnell) and original screenwriter (James Gunn) both came back to do "Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed."
But rather than taking an if-it-ain't-broke-don't-fix-it approach to the follow-up to their $150 million-plus-grossing hit, they've instead chosen to take those beloved Hanna-Barbera characters and give them a garish, extreme makeover.
What managed to capture that goofy, far-out charm of the animated series has been reduced to a loud, obnoxious mess of lame humor, CGI overload and (jinkies!) the Mystery Inc. gang stopping the action dead to confront their own personal demons during extended self-analysis sessions.
Given the broad appeal of the first installment, parents will dutifully trot their kids out to this one, though the prevailing level of intensity could prove a little much for the younger ones.
Without the added benefit provided by a summer release, however, not to mention all those nostalgic, curiosity-seeking twenty- and thirtysomethings who came out in droves the first time around, the sequel's got a ghost of a chance of matching the original's total take.
Still basking in the glow of their previous crime-solving caper, Fred (Freddie Prinze Jr.), Daphne Sarah Michelle Gellar), Velma (Linda Cardellini), Shaggy (Matthew Lillard) and Scooby (voiced by Neil Fanning) have become the collective toast of their Coolsville, USA, hometown.
In addition to having moved from their humble Mystery Inc. digs into swank corporate headquarters, they're being honored at an evening affair at the Coolsonian Criminology Museum, which is exhibiting the costumes of all the ghoulish villains they've unmasked over the years.
But all hell breaks loose when the Pterodactyl Ghost costume turns out to be The Real Thing and Scoob and company find themselves at the center of an ugly smear campaign.
Could the masked figure responsible be "Old Man" Wickles (Peter Boyle), the former Black Knight Ghost out to avenge his jail time?
Or how about the annoying Heather Jasper-Howe (Alicia Silverstone), a TV reporter who seems intent on making Mystery Inc. look bad?
Or Patrick Wisely (Seth Green), the museum's curator with whom Velma has become incurably smitten?
Actually, the biggest mystery is why Gosnell and Gunn, who nailed the tone so effectively the last time, have seen fit to sabotage the enterprise by, among other things, introducing ridiculous character arcs that have the kids taking time out to look within and do some psychological unmasking.
And then there's the sequence in which brainy Velma is given a slinky Bond-girl makeover (goodbye specs and, apparently, considerable pounds) in order to be more attractive to Wisely.
By the time they're done with all the tinkering, "Scooby-Doo" ends up bearing as much a resemblance to Hanna-Barbera as the recent "Cat in the Hat" did to Dr. Seuss.
Stripped of their defining traits, Gellar and Prinze (who has been given a new, un-Freddie-like do) don't have much to do except run a lot, leaving the physical comedy, as in "all fart jokes all the time," to Lillard and his CGI pal.
But even Lillard, who so convincingly stole the show last time, seems to run out of creative steam as the bug-eyed, frantic guy with the zoned-out Casey Kasem voice, giving the kiddies a lot less opportunity to laugh.
If it hadn't been for those meddling filmmakers ... .
Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed
Warner Bros.
Warner Bros. Pictures presents a Mosaic Media Group production
A Raja Gosnell film
Credits:
Director: Raja Gosnell
Producers: Charles Roven, Richard Suckle
Screenwriter: James Gunn
Based on characters created by: Hanna-Barbera Prods.
Executive producers: Brent O'Connor, Kelley Smith-Wait, Joseph Barbera
Director of photography: Oliver Wood
Production designer: Bill Boes
Editor: Kent Beyda
Costume designer: Leesa Evans
Visual effects supervisor: Peter Crosman
Music: David Newman
Cast:
Fred Jones: Freddie Prinze Jr.
Daphne Blake: Sarah Michelle Gellar
Shaggy: Matthew Lillard
Velma Dinkley: Linda Cardellini
Patrick Wisely: Seth Green
Jeremiah Wickles: Peter Boyle
Dr. Jonathan Jacobo: Tim Blake Nelson
Heather Jasper-Howe: Alicia Silverstone
Scooby-Doo (voice): Neil Fanning
MPAA rating: PG
Running time -- 88 minutes...
Friday, March 26
In a rare sequel-making situation, the big-screen "Scooby-Doo"'s original director (Raja Gosnell) and original screenwriter (James Gunn) both came back to do "Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed."
But rather than taking an if-it-ain't-broke-don't-fix-it approach to the follow-up to their $150 million-plus-grossing hit, they've instead chosen to take those beloved Hanna-Barbera characters and give them a garish, extreme makeover.
What managed to capture that goofy, far-out charm of the animated series has been reduced to a loud, obnoxious mess of lame humor, CGI overload and (jinkies!) the Mystery Inc. gang stopping the action dead to confront their own personal demons during extended self-analysis sessions.
Given the broad appeal of the first installment, parents will dutifully trot their kids out to this one, though the prevailing level of intensity could prove a little much for the younger ones.
Without the added benefit provided by a summer release, however, not to mention all those nostalgic, curiosity-seeking twenty- and thirtysomethings who came out in droves the first time around, the sequel's got a ghost of a chance of matching the original's total take.
Still basking in the glow of their previous crime-solving caper, Fred (Freddie Prinze Jr.), Daphne Sarah Michelle Gellar), Velma (Linda Cardellini), Shaggy (Matthew Lillard) and Scooby (voiced by Neil Fanning) have become the collective toast of their Coolsville, USA, hometown.
In addition to having moved from their humble Mystery Inc. digs into swank corporate headquarters, they're being honored at an evening affair at the Coolsonian Criminology Museum, which is exhibiting the costumes of all the ghoulish villains they've unmasked over the years.
But all hell breaks loose when the Pterodactyl Ghost costume turns out to be The Real Thing and Scoob and company find themselves at the center of an ugly smear campaign.
Could the masked figure responsible be "Old Man" Wickles (Peter Boyle), the former Black Knight Ghost out to avenge his jail time?
Or how about the annoying Heather Jasper-Howe (Alicia Silverstone), a TV reporter who seems intent on making Mystery Inc. look bad?
Or Patrick Wisely (Seth Green), the museum's curator with whom Velma has become incurably smitten?
Actually, the biggest mystery is why Gosnell and Gunn, who nailed the tone so effectively the last time, have seen fit to sabotage the enterprise by, among other things, introducing ridiculous character arcs that have the kids taking time out to look within and do some psychological unmasking.
And then there's the sequence in which brainy Velma is given a slinky Bond-girl makeover (goodbye specs and, apparently, considerable pounds) in order to be more attractive to Wisely.
By the time they're done with all the tinkering, "Scooby-Doo" ends up bearing as much a resemblance to Hanna-Barbera as the recent "Cat in the Hat" did to Dr. Seuss.
Stripped of their defining traits, Gellar and Prinze (who has been given a new, un-Freddie-like do) don't have much to do except run a lot, leaving the physical comedy, as in "all fart jokes all the time," to Lillard and his CGI pal.
But even Lillard, who so convincingly stole the show last time, seems to run out of creative steam as the bug-eyed, frantic guy with the zoned-out Casey Kasem voice, giving the kiddies a lot less opportunity to laugh.
If it hadn't been for those meddling filmmakers ... .
Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed
Warner Bros.
Warner Bros. Pictures presents a Mosaic Media Group production
A Raja Gosnell film
Credits:
Director: Raja Gosnell
Producers: Charles Roven, Richard Suckle
Screenwriter: James Gunn
Based on characters created by: Hanna-Barbera Prods.
Executive producers: Brent O'Connor, Kelley Smith-Wait, Joseph Barbera
Director of photography: Oliver Wood
Production designer: Bill Boes
Editor: Kent Beyda
Costume designer: Leesa Evans
Visual effects supervisor: Peter Crosman
Music: David Newman
Cast:
Fred Jones: Freddie Prinze Jr.
Daphne Blake: Sarah Michelle Gellar
Shaggy: Matthew Lillard
Velma Dinkley: Linda Cardellini
Patrick Wisely: Seth Green
Jeremiah Wickles: Peter Boyle
Dr. Jonathan Jacobo: Tim Blake Nelson
Heather Jasper-Howe: Alicia Silverstone
Scooby-Doo (voice): Neil Fanning
MPAA rating: PG
Running time -- 88 minutes...
- 7/9/2004
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Scooby-Doo 2
Opens
Friday, March 26
In a rare sequel-making situation, the big-screen "Scooby-Doo"'s original director (Raja Gosnell) and original screenwriter (James Gunn) both came back to do "Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed."
But rather than taking an if-it-ain't-broke-don't-fix-it approach to the follow-up to their $150 million-plus-grossing hit, they've instead chosen to take those beloved Hanna-Barbera characters and give them a garish, extreme makeover.
What managed to capture that goofy, far-out charm of the animated series has been reduced to a loud, obnoxious mess of lame humor, CGI overload and (jinkies!) the Mystery Inc. gang stopping the action dead to confront their own personal demons during extended self-analysis sessions.
Given the broad appeal of the first installment, parents will dutifully trot their kids out to this one, though the prevailing level of intensity could prove a little much for the younger ones.
Without the added benefit provided by a summer release, however, not to mention all those nostalgic, curiosity-seeking twenty- and thirtysomethings who came out in droves the first time around, the sequel's got a ghost of a chance of matching the original's total take.
Still basking in the glow of their previous crime-solving caper, Fred (Freddie Prinze Jr.), Daphne Sarah Michelle Gellar), Velma (Linda Cardellini), Shaggy (Matthew Lillard) and Scooby (voiced by Neil Fanning) have become the collective toast of their Coolsville, USA, hometown.
In addition to having moved from their humble Mystery Inc. digs into swank corporate headquarters, they're being honored at an evening affair at the Coolsonian Criminology Museum, which is exhibiting the costumes of all the ghoulish villains they've unmasked over the years.
But all hell breaks loose when the Pterodactyl Ghost costume turns out to be The Real Thing and Scoob and company find themselves at the center of an ugly smear campaign.
Could the masked figure responsible be "Old Man" Wickles (Peter Boyle), the former Black Knight Ghost out to avenge his jail time?
Or how about the annoying Heather Jasper-Howe (Alicia Silverstone), a TV reporter who seems intent on making Mystery Inc. look bad?
Or Patrick Wisely (Seth Green), the museum's curator with whom Velma has become incurably smitten?
Actually, the biggest mystery is why Gosnell and Gunn, who nailed the tone so effectively the last time, have seen fit to sabotage the enterprise by, among other things, introducing ridiculous character arcs that have the kids taking time out to look within and do some psychological unmasking.
And then there's the sequence in which brainy Velma is given a slinky Bond-girl makeover (goodbye specs and, apparently, considerable pounds) in order to be more attractive to Wisely.
By the time they're done with all the tinkering, "Scooby-Doo" ends up bearing as much a resemblance to Hanna-Barbera as the recent "Cat in the Hat" did to Dr. Seuss.
Stripped of their defining traits, Gellar and Prinze (who has been given a new, un-Freddie-like do) don't have much to do except run a lot, leaving the physical comedy, as in "all fart jokes all the time," to Lillard and his CGI pal.
But even Lillard, who so convincingly stole the show last time, seems to run out of creative steam as the bug-eyed, frantic guy with the zoned-out Casey Kasem voice, giving the kiddies a lot less opportunity to laugh.
If it hadn't been for those meddling filmmakers ... .
Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed
Warner Bros.
Warner Bros. Pictures presents a Mosaic Media Group production
A Raja Gosnell film
Credits:
Director: Raja Gosnell
Producers: Charles Roven, Richard Suckle
Screenwriter: James Gunn
Based on characters created by: Hanna-Barbera Prods.
Executive producers: Brent O'Connor, Kelley Smith-Wait, Joseph Barbera
Director of photography: Oliver Wood
Production designer: Bill Boes
Editor: Kent Beyda
Costume designer: Leesa Evans
Visual effects supervisor: Peter Crosman
Music: David Newman
Cast:
Fred Jones: Freddie Prinze Jr.
Daphne Blake: Sarah Michelle Gellar
Shaggy: Matthew Lillard
Velma Dinkley: Linda Cardellini
Patrick Wisely: Seth Green
Jeremiah Wickles: Peter Boyle
Dr. Jonathan Jacobo: Tim Blake Nelson
Heather Jasper-Howe: Alicia Silverstone
Scooby-Doo (voice): Neil Fanning
MPAA rating: PG
Running time -- 88 minutes...
Friday, March 26
In a rare sequel-making situation, the big-screen "Scooby-Doo"'s original director (Raja Gosnell) and original screenwriter (James Gunn) both came back to do "Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed."
But rather than taking an if-it-ain't-broke-don't-fix-it approach to the follow-up to their $150 million-plus-grossing hit, they've instead chosen to take those beloved Hanna-Barbera characters and give them a garish, extreme makeover.
What managed to capture that goofy, far-out charm of the animated series has been reduced to a loud, obnoxious mess of lame humor, CGI overload and (jinkies!) the Mystery Inc. gang stopping the action dead to confront their own personal demons during extended self-analysis sessions.
Given the broad appeal of the first installment, parents will dutifully trot their kids out to this one, though the prevailing level of intensity could prove a little much for the younger ones.
Without the added benefit provided by a summer release, however, not to mention all those nostalgic, curiosity-seeking twenty- and thirtysomethings who came out in droves the first time around, the sequel's got a ghost of a chance of matching the original's total take.
Still basking in the glow of their previous crime-solving caper, Fred (Freddie Prinze Jr.), Daphne Sarah Michelle Gellar), Velma (Linda Cardellini), Shaggy (Matthew Lillard) and Scooby (voiced by Neil Fanning) have become the collective toast of their Coolsville, USA, hometown.
In addition to having moved from their humble Mystery Inc. digs into swank corporate headquarters, they're being honored at an evening affair at the Coolsonian Criminology Museum, which is exhibiting the costumes of all the ghoulish villains they've unmasked over the years.
But all hell breaks loose when the Pterodactyl Ghost costume turns out to be The Real Thing and Scoob and company find themselves at the center of an ugly smear campaign.
Could the masked figure responsible be "Old Man" Wickles (Peter Boyle), the former Black Knight Ghost out to avenge his jail time?
Or how about the annoying Heather Jasper-Howe (Alicia Silverstone), a TV reporter who seems intent on making Mystery Inc. look bad?
Or Patrick Wisely (Seth Green), the museum's curator with whom Velma has become incurably smitten?
Actually, the biggest mystery is why Gosnell and Gunn, who nailed the tone so effectively the last time, have seen fit to sabotage the enterprise by, among other things, introducing ridiculous character arcs that have the kids taking time out to look within and do some psychological unmasking.
And then there's the sequence in which brainy Velma is given a slinky Bond-girl makeover (goodbye specs and, apparently, considerable pounds) in order to be more attractive to Wisely.
By the time they're done with all the tinkering, "Scooby-Doo" ends up bearing as much a resemblance to Hanna-Barbera as the recent "Cat in the Hat" did to Dr. Seuss.
Stripped of their defining traits, Gellar and Prinze (who has been given a new, un-Freddie-like do) don't have much to do except run a lot, leaving the physical comedy, as in "all fart jokes all the time," to Lillard and his CGI pal.
But even Lillard, who so convincingly stole the show last time, seems to run out of creative steam as the bug-eyed, frantic guy with the zoned-out Casey Kasem voice, giving the kiddies a lot less opportunity to laugh.
If it hadn't been for those meddling filmmakers ... .
Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed
Warner Bros.
Warner Bros. Pictures presents a Mosaic Media Group production
A Raja Gosnell film
Credits:
Director: Raja Gosnell
Producers: Charles Roven, Richard Suckle
Screenwriter: James Gunn
Based on characters created by: Hanna-Barbera Prods.
Executive producers: Brent O'Connor, Kelley Smith-Wait, Joseph Barbera
Director of photography: Oliver Wood
Production designer: Bill Boes
Editor: Kent Beyda
Costume designer: Leesa Evans
Visual effects supervisor: Peter Crosman
Music: David Newman
Cast:
Fred Jones: Freddie Prinze Jr.
Daphne Blake: Sarah Michelle Gellar
Shaggy: Matthew Lillard
Velma Dinkley: Linda Cardellini
Patrick Wisely: Seth Green
Jeremiah Wickles: Peter Boyle
Dr. Jonathan Jacobo: Tim Blake Nelson
Heather Jasper-Howe: Alicia Silverstone
Scooby-Doo (voice): Neil Fanning
MPAA rating: PG
Running time -- 88 minutes...
- 3/22/2004
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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