Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed Movie Review
Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed Review

"Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed" Overview

Rating: PG
2004
Cast and Crew
Director : Raja GosnellProducer : Charles Roven,Richard Suckle
Screenwiter : James Gunn
Starring : Matthew Lillard,Sarah Michelle Gellar,Linda Cardellini,Freddie Prinze Jr.,Alicia Silverstone,Seth Green,Peter Boyle
Clearly, the Scooby-Doo franchise is geared toward kids; after all, it is a
cartoon. Yet, as I sat through a Saturday morning screening of Scooby-Doo 2:
Monsters Unleashed, the youngsters at my screening were astonishingly quiet.
The abundance of laughter I anticipated was absent; this surprised me
considering the same team behind the amusing first film was responsible for
this one. A farting CGI Scooby-Doo does generate laughs in a few strategic
spots, but mostly, the filmmaker’s failure to hit the target audience cripples
this film’s ability to be lighthearted and fun.
The initial setup is a simple. Scooby and the Mystery Inc. gang find themselves
fighting a series of monsters they have previously conquered that are
miraculously brought back to life. The monsters were part of a new exhibit at
Coolville’s Coolsonian Museum until an anonymous masked villain releases them
to wreak havoc on the city. Mystery Inc. to the rescue? Nope: Their
investigation is hampered by a public relations nightmare created by an
overzealous reporter Heather Jasper-Howe (Alicia Silverstone) who criticizes
the gang on local television. Instead of focusing on the task at hand, Fred
(Freddie Prinze Jr.) and Daphne (Sarah Michelle Gellar) spend most their time
trying to protect their image.
This inability to focus on the adventure paves the way for the introduction of
other extraneous subplots that further obstruct the film’s buoyancy. The museum
curator, Patrick (Seth Green), asks the frumpy Velma (Linda Cardellini) on a
date, but because she thinks so little of herself, Velma refuses to go. Later,
after a Daphne-style makeover, a prettied-up Velma agrees to the date; she is
disappointed, though, when Patrick has an unfavorable reaction to her new
style. While Velma deals with her self-esteem issues, Shaggy (Matthew Lillard)
and Scooby-Doo deal with similar personal problems after they botch-up the
latest investigation. Did anyone call for a shrink?
It’s not just the ridiculous subplots that handicap Monsters Unleashed. The
film also suffers from a convoluted storyline that even I could barely follow,
let alone a child. We’re introduced to so many possible villains, it’s
impossible to determine who’s behind all the madness. There are just too many
people who could be villains who later turn out not to be actual villains, but
are finally linked to someone else’s villainous activity. The mystery is
resolved in the final five minutes, when, I guess, the filmmakers decided to
make up their minds and stop stringing us along.
This time the mystery is too difficult to fit together, and kids will spend
more time trying to make sense of the extra detritus than letting loose at the
gang’s wild antics.
The DVD adds 7 minutes of deleted scenes, music videos, making-of featurettes,
and various other kid-friendly features.
Yoiks! Green stuff!
Reviewer: David Levine





