Scooby-Doo Movie Review
Scooby-Doo Review

"Scooby-Doo" Overview

Rating: PG
2002
Cast and Crew
Director : Raja GosnellProducer : Charles Roven
Screenwiter : James Gunn
Starring Matthew Lillard, Freddie Prinze Jr, Sarah Michelle Gellar, Linda Cardellini, Rowan Atkinson, Isla Fisher
Children of original fans have made Scooby-Doo the Must-See-TV of the
Nickelodeon set, and it's this demographic that openly salivates for Warner
Brothers’ live-action version of the affable cartoon. Won’t they be pleased to
discover that Raja Gosnell’s Scooby-Doo happens to be as clever, mysterious,
and inventive as an episode of the popular cartoon series, a high compliment
indeed.
This new Scooby gets off on the right paw by recruiting CGI effects specialists
Rhythm & Hues Studio to create the lively title character. Employing a live
dog would have been certain death. Scooby may look transparent from time to
time, his complexion always appearing a bit lighter than the human actors
surrounding him. But his existence is no more bizarre than the fact that these
kids speak to a dog that talks back. Remember, this is based on a cartoon.
Scooby takes animated Roger Rabbit interactions to the next level, and it never
derails this train.
The film then relies on spot-on casting to fill the shoes of Scooby‘s four
Mystery Inc. teammates. Going one step farther, Scooby even explores assorted
issues we’ve secretly suspected these crime-fighting kids must face: frumpy
Velma (Linda Cardellini) hates that egotistical Fred (Freddie Prinze Jr.) takes
the credit for the plans she devises, while helpless Daphne (Sarah Michelle
Gellar) hates being the perennial “damsel in distress.” Shaggy (Matthew
Lillard) is content, as long as there’s food in his future. Yes, these actors
are playing cartoon characters, but they do it well, and Lillard as Shaggy just
nails it. You’d think he just walked right out of your TV set and adopted a
third dimension. Zoinks!
James Gunn and Craig Titley’s screenplay even concocts a decidedly complicated
whodunit for the members of Mystery Inc. The devious plot lures Scooby and
friends to Spooky Island, where monsters disguised as teenagers rob
unsuspecting kids of their essences and detain them in a giant cauldron of
souls. All this certainly sounds scarier than it appears, as Gosnell never
loses sight of the film’s youthful target audience and the playful mood stays
light from start to finish.
Without spoiling much, I will say the film’s choice of a villain seems odd, and
I’m not talking about Rowan “Mr. Bean” Atkinson, here playing Mondavarious, the
owner of Spooky Island. But the action sequences are charged, the humor
occasionally clever and the plot holes scarce. Also, those who remember the
days of celebrity cameos on the Doo will chuckle at the sites of Pamela
Anderson and the guys from Sugar Ray in minor parts. Perhaps Jonathan Winters,
Don Knotts, and the Harlem Globetrotters were too busy to resurrect their roles.
As summer brain candy, Scooby-Doo is about as filling as one the title
character’s confidence-boosting Scooby Snacks. Probably as nutritious, as
well. Just don’t let that stop you from gobbling it up.
Scooby's DVD has plenty of extras -- one commentary from cast and one from
crew, plus a number of deleted scenes that better establish why, say, Thelma's
hairstyle suddenly changes mid-film and where Daphne learned how to fight. But
what about the "your name means poop!" scene seen in the trailer... where are
you?
Do the Doo.
Reviewer: Sean O'Connell





