Scooby-Doo et compagnie résolvent encore plus de mystères ensemble, chaque fois avec un invité célèbre différent.Scooby-Doo et compagnie résolvent encore plus de mystères ensemble, chaque fois avec un invité célèbre différent.Scooby-Doo et compagnie résolvent encore plus de mystères ensemble, chaque fois avec un invité célèbre différent.
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Scooby-Doo's 50th anniversary has been a rough one. With the DTV film Curse Of The 13th Ghost getting mixed reviews (with some criticizing it for not being true to the show it was supposed to give closure) and the new DTV, Return To Zombie Island, getting the same results (with some criticizing it for repeating the same mistakes 13th Ghost made), it seems that it may not be a good anniversary for the great dane that has solved mysteries since 1969. However, Scooby-Doo And Guess Who? is the one gem of this rocky anniversary.
With this, Warner Bros. actually brought back the original designs, ditching the horrendous cartoony designs used for Be Cool, Scooby-Doo! (which only lasted for two seasons). What makes this show great is that it revisits the concept done in The New Scooby-Doo Moves: each episode, the Mystery Inc. gang is joined by a special guest to solve the mystery of the episode, which consisted of real-life celebrities from the time like Don Knotts and the Harlem Globetrotter to fictional characters like Batman & Robin and Josie & The Pussycats. However, this show uses more recent stars, like Weird Al Yankovic, Kenan Thompson, and Penn & Teller, to fictional characters like Wonder Woman, Sherlock Holmes and even Steve Urkel.
While the episodes are thirty minutes long, it feels like the Scooby-Doo cartoons back then. The fictional characters are kept in-character (especially Steve Urkel, who is still a nerd and annoying). However, some episodes can be hit-or-miss (like the Wanda Sykes episode, which some people hated because of how Magilla Gorilla was done). But it is a good show that fixes a lot of mistakes done in Be Cool and manages to capture the feel of The New Scooby-Doo movies, even with thirty-minute episodes.
With this, Warner Bros. actually brought back the original designs, ditching the horrendous cartoony designs used for Be Cool, Scooby-Doo! (which only lasted for two seasons). What makes this show great is that it revisits the concept done in The New Scooby-Doo Moves: each episode, the Mystery Inc. gang is joined by a special guest to solve the mystery of the episode, which consisted of real-life celebrities from the time like Don Knotts and the Harlem Globetrotter to fictional characters like Batman & Robin and Josie & The Pussycats. However, this show uses more recent stars, like Weird Al Yankovic, Kenan Thompson, and Penn & Teller, to fictional characters like Wonder Woman, Sherlock Holmes and even Steve Urkel.
While the episodes are thirty minutes long, it feels like the Scooby-Doo cartoons back then. The fictional characters are kept in-character (especially Steve Urkel, who is still a nerd and annoying). However, some episodes can be hit-or-miss (like the Wanda Sykes episode, which some people hated because of how Magilla Gorilla was done). But it is a good show that fixes a lot of mistakes done in Be Cool and manages to capture the feel of The New Scooby-Doo movies, even with thirty-minute episodes.
I really don't get how this show is TV-PG. I think Scooby Doo: Mystery Incorporated is even more frightening than this.
Revenge of the Swamp Monster, whilst containing obvious flaws, delivers a promising start to the series. With a focus on more visual humour, rather than offbeat and unusual from Be Cool Scooby (However do expect a zany punchline to be delivered here and there), and an old fashioned sense of score and narrative. Fingers crossed the rest of the season delivers on such a similar aura of nostalgic fun!
Basically a belated continuation of/homage to The New Scooby-Doo Movies (1972), but thankfully abandoning that series 43 minute format, and returning to the standard 22 minute. As in TNSDM, each episode features a guest star or stars (some real-life, some fictional characters).
Season 1: Revenge of the Swamp Monster (Chris Paul) ~ 7/10; A Mystery Solving Gang Divided (The Funky Phantom) ~ 7/10; Peebles' Pet Shop of Terrible Terrors! (Wanda Sykes) ~ 6/10; Elementary, My Dear Shaggy! (Sherlock Holmes) ~ 8/10; Ollie Ollie In-Come Free! (Ricky Gervais) ~ 5/10; The Scooby of a Thousand Faces! (Wonder Woman) ~ 8/10; The Cursed Cabinet of Professor Madds Markson! (Penn and Teller) ~ 7/10; When Urkel-Bots Go Bad! (Steve Urkel) ~ 6/10; The Fastest Fast Food Fiend! (Jim Gaffigan) ~ 5/10; Attack of the Weird Al-osaurus! (Weird Al Yankovic) ~ 7/10; Now You Sia, Now You Don't! (Sia) ~ 7/10; Quit Clowning! (Kenan Thompson) ~ 10/10; What a Night for a Dark Knight! (Batman) ~ 10/10; The Nightmare Ghost of Psychic U! (Whoopi Goldberg) ~ 10/10; The New York Underground! (Halsey) ~ 8/10; The Sword, the Fox and the Scooby-Doo! (Mark Hamill) ~ 8/10; One Minute Mysteries! (The Flash) ~ 8/10; Hollywood Knights! (George Takei) ~ 7/10; Fear of the Fire Beast! (Steve Buscemi) ~ 8/10; Too Many Dummies! (Jeff Dunham and Darci Lynne Farmer) ~ 9/10; Dance Matron of Mayhem! (Maddie Ziegler) ~ 10/10; The Wedding Witch of Wainsly Hall (Jeff Foxworthy) ~ 8/10; A Run Cycle Through Time! (Malcolm McDowell) ~ 7/10; I Put a Hex on You! (The Hex Girls) ~ 9/10; The High School Wolfman's Musical Lament! (Christian Slater) ~ 9/10; Space Station Scooby! (Bill Nye and Neil deGrasse Tyson) ~ 8/10
This first season starts off so-so, but it does get stronger as it goes along, with some real 'gold standard' episodes as good as anything Scooby has done before (certainly better that The New Scooby-Doo Movies!).
Frank Welker (Fred/Scooby), Grey DeLise (Daphne), Matthew Lillard (Shaggy), and Kate Micucci (Velma) all nail it. There are some great, spooky locations, and some top drawer writing.
Overall, 8/10.
Season 2: The Phantom, The Talking Dog And The Hot Hot Hot Sauce (Kacey Musgraves) ~ 7/10; The Last Inmate! (Morgan Freeman) ~ 9/10; The Horrible Haunted Hospital of Dr. Phineas Phrag! (Kristen Schaal) ~ 7/10; The Hot Dog Dog! (Joey Chestnut) ~ 8/10; A Moveable Mystery! (Gigi Hadid) ~ 7/10; The Feast of Dr. Frankenfooder! (Alton Brown) ~ 6/10; A Fashion Nightmare! (Tim Gunn) ~ 8/10; Scooby on Ice! (Tara Lipinsky) ~ 9/10; Caveman on the Half Pipe! (Chloe Kim) ~ 7/10; The Crown Jewel of Boxing! (Laila Ali) ~ 6/10; The Internet on Haunted House Hill! (Liza Koshy) ~ 7/10; The 7th Inning Scare! (Macklemore) ~ 7/10; The Dreaded Remake of Jekyll & Hyde! ( Sandy Duncan) ~ 8/10; Total Jeopardy (Alex Trebek) ~ 6/10; Dark Diner of Route 66! (Axl Rose) ~ 8/10; Lost Soles of Jungle River! (Jason Sudeikis) ~ 8/10; The Tao of Scoob (Lucy Liu) ~ 8/10; Returning of the Key Ring! (Sean Astin) ~ 6/10; Cher, Scooby and the Sargasso Sea (Cher) ~ 7/10; The Lost Mines of Kilimanjaro! (Jessica Biel) ~ 6/10; The Legend of the Gold Microphone (Reverend Run) ~ 8/10; Scooby-Doo and the Sky Town Cool School (Billy Dee Williams) ~ 6/10; Falling Star Man (Terry Bradshaw) ~ 6/10; A Haunt of a Thousand Voices! (Frank Welker, Grey DeLisle, Matthew Lillard, Kate Micucci) ~ 9/10; Scooby-Doo, Dog Wonder! (Blue Falcon and Dynomutt) ~ 6/10; The Movieland Monsters! (Carol Burnett) ~ 6/10
Unlike the first season, season 2 has no 10/10 episodes - but also unlike the first season it has no 5/10 episodes either! As a Brit there were more guests that I was unfamiliar with this time around, but they all enter into the spirit and there's a lot of fun. Again, Frank Welker (Fred/Scooby), Grey DeLisle (Daphne), Matthew Lillard (Shaggy), and Kate Micucci (Velma) are faultless.
Overall, 7/10
Season 1 is the better of the two, but both are worth buying. Overall rating for the two seasons combined... 7.5/10.
Season 1: Revenge of the Swamp Monster (Chris Paul) ~ 7/10; A Mystery Solving Gang Divided (The Funky Phantom) ~ 7/10; Peebles' Pet Shop of Terrible Terrors! (Wanda Sykes) ~ 6/10; Elementary, My Dear Shaggy! (Sherlock Holmes) ~ 8/10; Ollie Ollie In-Come Free! (Ricky Gervais) ~ 5/10; The Scooby of a Thousand Faces! (Wonder Woman) ~ 8/10; The Cursed Cabinet of Professor Madds Markson! (Penn and Teller) ~ 7/10; When Urkel-Bots Go Bad! (Steve Urkel) ~ 6/10; The Fastest Fast Food Fiend! (Jim Gaffigan) ~ 5/10; Attack of the Weird Al-osaurus! (Weird Al Yankovic) ~ 7/10; Now You Sia, Now You Don't! (Sia) ~ 7/10; Quit Clowning! (Kenan Thompson) ~ 10/10; What a Night for a Dark Knight! (Batman) ~ 10/10; The Nightmare Ghost of Psychic U! (Whoopi Goldberg) ~ 10/10; The New York Underground! (Halsey) ~ 8/10; The Sword, the Fox and the Scooby-Doo! (Mark Hamill) ~ 8/10; One Minute Mysteries! (The Flash) ~ 8/10; Hollywood Knights! (George Takei) ~ 7/10; Fear of the Fire Beast! (Steve Buscemi) ~ 8/10; Too Many Dummies! (Jeff Dunham and Darci Lynne Farmer) ~ 9/10; Dance Matron of Mayhem! (Maddie Ziegler) ~ 10/10; The Wedding Witch of Wainsly Hall (Jeff Foxworthy) ~ 8/10; A Run Cycle Through Time! (Malcolm McDowell) ~ 7/10; I Put a Hex on You! (The Hex Girls) ~ 9/10; The High School Wolfman's Musical Lament! (Christian Slater) ~ 9/10; Space Station Scooby! (Bill Nye and Neil deGrasse Tyson) ~ 8/10
This first season starts off so-so, but it does get stronger as it goes along, with some real 'gold standard' episodes as good as anything Scooby has done before (certainly better that The New Scooby-Doo Movies!).
Frank Welker (Fred/Scooby), Grey DeLise (Daphne), Matthew Lillard (Shaggy), and Kate Micucci (Velma) all nail it. There are some great, spooky locations, and some top drawer writing.
Overall, 8/10.
Season 2: The Phantom, The Talking Dog And The Hot Hot Hot Sauce (Kacey Musgraves) ~ 7/10; The Last Inmate! (Morgan Freeman) ~ 9/10; The Horrible Haunted Hospital of Dr. Phineas Phrag! (Kristen Schaal) ~ 7/10; The Hot Dog Dog! (Joey Chestnut) ~ 8/10; A Moveable Mystery! (Gigi Hadid) ~ 7/10; The Feast of Dr. Frankenfooder! (Alton Brown) ~ 6/10; A Fashion Nightmare! (Tim Gunn) ~ 8/10; Scooby on Ice! (Tara Lipinsky) ~ 9/10; Caveman on the Half Pipe! (Chloe Kim) ~ 7/10; The Crown Jewel of Boxing! (Laila Ali) ~ 6/10; The Internet on Haunted House Hill! (Liza Koshy) ~ 7/10; The 7th Inning Scare! (Macklemore) ~ 7/10; The Dreaded Remake of Jekyll & Hyde! ( Sandy Duncan) ~ 8/10; Total Jeopardy (Alex Trebek) ~ 6/10; Dark Diner of Route 66! (Axl Rose) ~ 8/10; Lost Soles of Jungle River! (Jason Sudeikis) ~ 8/10; The Tao of Scoob (Lucy Liu) ~ 8/10; Returning of the Key Ring! (Sean Astin) ~ 6/10; Cher, Scooby and the Sargasso Sea (Cher) ~ 7/10; The Lost Mines of Kilimanjaro! (Jessica Biel) ~ 6/10; The Legend of the Gold Microphone (Reverend Run) ~ 8/10; Scooby-Doo and the Sky Town Cool School (Billy Dee Williams) ~ 6/10; Falling Star Man (Terry Bradshaw) ~ 6/10; A Haunt of a Thousand Voices! (Frank Welker, Grey DeLisle, Matthew Lillard, Kate Micucci) ~ 9/10; Scooby-Doo, Dog Wonder! (Blue Falcon and Dynomutt) ~ 6/10; The Movieland Monsters! (Carol Burnett) ~ 6/10
Unlike the first season, season 2 has no 10/10 episodes - but also unlike the first season it has no 5/10 episodes either! As a Brit there were more guests that I was unfamiliar with this time around, but they all enter into the spirit and there's a lot of fun. Again, Frank Welker (Fred/Scooby), Grey DeLisle (Daphne), Matthew Lillard (Shaggy), and Kate Micucci (Velma) are faultless.
Overall, 7/10
Season 1 is the better of the two, but both are worth buying. Overall rating for the two seasons combined... 7.5/10.
A return to form for those who want their 'classic' scooby format back. It might not be the best of the best in the series, but is something a classic scooby fan would have missed since early 2000's/90's
PROS ~~~~~ + The jokes are on-point, plenty of out louds and snickers, (no crying gut-busters though), even some innuendos, (see Mudsy from episode two at the dinner, total snagglepuss expy) + Voice actors could be way worse to legends in the field, (Frank Welker, John Dimaggio, Tom Kenny, Billy West, est.), really putting their all in to garner as close to the classic VA experience one can, definitely didn't scrimp + Utilization of minimal budget to create a visual aesthetic, (those background tones are gorgeous, with a rough hand-drawn hues to them), that brings me back to early Hanna-Barbara, but without the constant use of stock footage + Intro that will send you in a nostalgia trip, with top notch background music from musicians who did their homework + Enough to sink your teeth into for long-time fans who are on the pulse, (see episode two for a good jab at the scooby clones) + Great direction of the guest stars, where they have acted before or not. The directors and animators are using them aptly, integrating them into an episode better than half of the recent WB scooby movie plugs
CONS ~~~~~
VERDICT ~~~ 8/10 A great watch for all, a definite watch for those those that miss the older scooby vibe
PROS ~~~~~ + The jokes are on-point, plenty of out louds and snickers, (no crying gut-busters though), even some innuendos, (see Mudsy from episode two at the dinner, total snagglepuss expy) + Voice actors could be way worse to legends in the field, (Frank Welker, John Dimaggio, Tom Kenny, Billy West, est.), really putting their all in to garner as close to the classic VA experience one can, definitely didn't scrimp + Utilization of minimal budget to create a visual aesthetic, (those background tones are gorgeous, with a rough hand-drawn hues to them), that brings me back to early Hanna-Barbara, but without the constant use of stock footage + Intro that will send you in a nostalgia trip, with top notch background music from musicians who did their homework + Enough to sink your teeth into for long-time fans who are on the pulse, (see episode two for a good jab at the scooby clones) + Great direction of the guest stars, where they have acted before or not. The directors and animators are using them aptly, integrating them into an episode better than half of the recent WB scooby movie plugs
CONS ~~~~~
- Audio Special effects are missing here and there for emphasis, takes the wind out of some punch lines
- Some of the aesthetics of older cartoon vibe feel can go a little far, as mention the lip syncing is off. Makes one, when noticing, if its done on purpose or due to budget. But due to the show being more of the on-point with the animations than off, makes me think of a missed point in a last draft. Minor nitpick though
- Due to the imitation of The New Scooby-Doo Movies rather than Where are You, plot can end up being solved as 'because we must' rather than being able to follow the logical progression of the characters. A weak point, due to scooby doo cartoons being predictable, the joy was being able to follow how the characters can solve the mystery in a logical format, and why I lower it versus other contemporaries in the format.
VERDICT ~~~ 8/10 A great watch for all, a definite watch for those those that miss the older scooby vibe
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe series premiered on the year of the Scooby-Doo franchise's 50th anniversary.
- ConnexionsFeatured in WatchMojo: Top 100 Greatest Cartoon Characters of All Time (2025)
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