scooby doo movie
What I can say, I think, is that a movie like this should in some sense be accessible to a non-fan like myself. I realize every TV cartoon show has a cadre of fans who grew up with it, have seen every episode many times and are alert to the nuances of the movie adaptation. But those people, however numerous they are, might perhaps find themselves going to a movie with people like myself--people who found, even at a very young age, that the world was filled with entertainment choices more stimulating than "Scooby-Doo." If these people can't walk into the movie cold and understand it and get something out of it, then the movie has failed except as an in-joke.
Velma scooby doo movie
Zoinks! Two years after a clash of egos forced Mystery Inc. to close its
doors, Scooby-Doo and his clever crime-solving cohorts Fred (Freddie
Prinze Jr.), Daphne (Sarah Michelle Gellar), Shaggy (Matthew Lillard)
and Velma (Linda Cardellini) are individually summoned to Spooky Island
to investigate a series of paranormal incidents at the ultra-hip Spring
Break hot spot.
- Release date: June 8, 2002 (USA)
- Director: Raja Gosnell
- Film series: Scooby-Doo in film
- Box office: 275.7 million USD
- Budget: 84 million USD
- Screenplay: James Gunn, Craig Titley
As for myself, scrutinizing the
screen helplessly for an angle of approach, one thing above all caught
my attention: the director, Raja Gosnell, has a thing about big breasts.
I say this not only because of the revealing low-cut costumes of such
principals as Sarah Michelle Gellar, but also because of the number of
busty extras and background players, who drift by in crowd scenes with
what Russ Meyer used to call "cleavage cantilevered on the same
principle that made the Sydney Opera House possible." Just as Woody
Allen's "Hollywood Ending" is a comedy about a movie director who forges
ahead even though he is blind, "Scooby-Doo" could have been a comedy
about how a Russ Meyer clone copes with being assigned a live-action
adaptation of a kiddie cartoon show. I did like the dog. Scooby-Doo so
thoroughly upstages the live actors that I cannot understand why Warner
Bros. didn't just go ahead and make the whole movie animated. While
Matthew Lillard, Sarah Michelle Gellar and Linda Cardellini show pluck
in trying to outlast the material, Freddie Prinze Jr. seems completely
at a loss to account for his presence in the movie, and the
squinchy-faced Rowan ("Mr. Bean") Atkinson plays the villain as a
private joke.