Scooby-Doo! e il terrore del Messico
Titolo originale: Scooby-Doo! and the Monster of Mexico
VALUTAZIONE IMDb
6,3/10
5420
LA TUA VALUTAZIONE
Scooby-Doo e la Mystery Inc. hanno un incontro da pelle d’oca con un mostruoso mostro del Messico in questo mucho spaventoso e nuovo film di Scooby-Doo!Scooby-Doo e la Mystery Inc. hanno un incontro da pelle d’oca con un mostruoso mostro del Messico in questo mucho spaventoso e nuovo film di Scooby-Doo!Scooby-Doo e la Mystery Inc. hanno un incontro da pelle d’oca con un mostruoso mostro del Messico in questo mucho spaventoso e nuovo film di Scooby-Doo!
- Regia
- Sceneggiatura
- Star
Casey Kasem
- Shaggy
- (voce)
Frank Welker
- Fred
- (voce)
- …
Nicole Jaffe
- Velma
- (voce)
Heather North
- Daphne
- (voce)
- (as Heather North Kenny)
Jesse Borrego
- Luis Otero
- (voce)
- …
Maria Canals-Barrera
- Sofia Otero
- (voce)
- (as Maria Canals)
- …
Castulo Guerra
- Señor Fuente
- (voce)
- …
Benito Martinez
- El Curandero
- (voce)
- …
Darlene Mendoza
- Natalia Otero
- (voce)
- …
Candi Milo
- Charlene Otero
- (voce)
- …
Rita Moreno
- Doña Dolores
- (voce)
- …
Casey Sandino
- Sebastian Otero
- (voce)
- …
Eddie Santiago
- Alejo Otero
- (voce)
- …
Rip Taylor
- Mr. Smiley
- (voce)
- …
Recensioni in evidenza
Back again in the brand new slicker animation form, the Mystery Inc gang head down to Mexico to visit Fred's e-mail pal but get caught up in the Chupacapra mystery as said beast begins terrorising the locals. It's not very good as the plot is practically discarded in favor of endless running around scenes and over-indulgence in set pieces.
The recent Scooby Doo feature-length animations have had decent stories, nice atmospheres and a couple red-herrings. It's very post modern and has certainly help revamp the franchise. But Monster of Mexico feels very dated and 60's. The gang are back wearing their old clothes instead of the modern gear they wore in the first four animated movies.
The ending is no surprise and completely unsatisfying. I don't like it. I wish for the next one to be a little more sophisticated. I mean children are intelligent and they deserve intelligent entertainment. Monster of Mexico may have been okay back in the 60's but in the modern day it's quite poor.
The DVD has a great 1.33:1 picture and a rather good Dolby 5.1 soundtrack. The extras are rubbish apart from the commentary by Shaggy and Scooby which is actually a really neat touch. I was excited at the Batman: Mystery of the Batwoman trailer featured here but it's 20 seconds long and shows you nothing. What's the point?
The recent Scooby Doo feature-length animations have had decent stories, nice atmospheres and a couple red-herrings. It's very post modern and has certainly help revamp the franchise. But Monster of Mexico feels very dated and 60's. The gang are back wearing their old clothes instead of the modern gear they wore in the first four animated movies.
The ending is no surprise and completely unsatisfying. I don't like it. I wish for the next one to be a little more sophisticated. I mean children are intelligent and they deserve intelligent entertainment. Monster of Mexico may have been okay back in the 60's but in the modern day it's quite poor.
The DVD has a great 1.33:1 picture and a rather good Dolby 5.1 soundtrack. The extras are rubbish apart from the commentary by Shaggy and Scooby which is actually a really neat touch. I was excited at the Batman: Mystery of the Batwoman trailer featured here but it's 20 seconds long and shows you nothing. What's the point?
Essentially when you have seen one Scooby-Doo animated movie, then you have virtually already seen them all, as they are all cut from the same mold. But isn't that part of the charm of the Hanna-Barbera franchise? And while "Scooby-Doo! and the Monster of Mexico" is indeed an animated movie that follows the blueprint to the letter, then it still turned out to be one of the more entertaining and fun of the adventures of the Mystery Gang.
This time Scooby-Doo and the friends are in Mexico, where they have a face to face encounter with local Mexican legend El Chubacabra. I found the story to be fun and entertaining to watch, and the take on the mysterious El Chubacabra was actually nice.
The animation is good and the art style is good. I love the consistency of the franchise, that they stick to what was initially established back in the early days and continue on with the same style.
As an animated movie, then having a proper cast for the voice acting is very essential, and "Scooby-Doo! and the Monster of Mexico" is true to the legacy of Scooby-Doo and brandishes some great talents on the voice acting cast. It is, as always, a real treat to have Casey Kasem and Frank Welker do voices in the animated movies.
"Scooby-Doo! and the Monster of Mexico" is definitely one of the better of the numerous animated Scooby-Doo movies that I have seen. If you are a fan of the franchise, then this is definitely a good addition to the Collection.
This time Scooby-Doo and the friends are in Mexico, where they have a face to face encounter with local Mexican legend El Chubacabra. I found the story to be fun and entertaining to watch, and the take on the mysterious El Chubacabra was actually nice.
The animation is good and the art style is good. I love the consistency of the franchise, that they stick to what was initially established back in the early days and continue on with the same style.
As an animated movie, then having a proper cast for the voice acting is very essential, and "Scooby-Doo! and the Monster of Mexico" is true to the legacy of Scooby-Doo and brandishes some great talents on the voice acting cast. It is, as always, a real treat to have Casey Kasem and Frank Welker do voices in the animated movies.
"Scooby-Doo! and the Monster of Mexico" is definitely one of the better of the numerous animated Scooby-Doo movies that I have seen. If you are a fan of the franchise, then this is definitely a good addition to the Collection.
The opening song was worth it. It really was. Actually, the music as a whole was worth it.
And some of the jokes were fully even if one or two of them may have bordered on blatant stereotypes, but in a harmless way.
It starts off strong. It starts off like an old episode of Scooby Doo...it just sort of ends with a "meh." In fact, what kills it is that one can walk away and forget how it ended by the time you get done using the bathroom.
But the first half is memorable and the songs are catchy, so it's a wash.
And some of the jokes were fully even if one or two of them may have bordered on blatant stereotypes, but in a harmless way.
It starts off strong. It starts off like an old episode of Scooby Doo...it just sort of ends with a "meh." In fact, what kills it is that one can walk away and forget how it ended by the time you get done using the bathroom.
But the first half is memorable and the songs are catchy, so it's a wash.
Scooby-Doo Monster in Mexico was boring and the animation was less than spectacular for me at least. I will give it credit for having a complex plot that required 2 pages in the summary section of Wikipedia. That doesn't change the fact that the voice acting was incredible with the best being Daphne who had a pleasant cougar voice rest in peace Heather North. Shaggy's voice actor Casey Kaseem also died which is unfortunate. The animation is an acquired taste. You'll either tolerate it, like it, or hate it. For some reason, it looks worse than the direct to video late 90s movies despite this film coming out 5 years after Scooby-Doo on Zombie Island. I will give the movie credit for having so many twists and turns especially for a kid's film quite surprising the main villain unmasking even though I think I saw this film as a kid when I was around 7-9. I was half entertained. It's all right but this is one of the weaker Scooby-Doo animated films better than the Reluctant Werewolf, Ghoul School, and Mask of the Blue Falcon. However, it is far weaker than the Classic VHS films like Zombie Island, Cyber Chase, Alien Invaders, and Witch's Ghost. WWE crossovers were also more entertaining and the other late 2000s films greatly improved upon this film's animation, formula and voice acting. This is the second film created after Cyber Chase in 2001 so I'll give it some credit there. Still in the bottom third. If you're Mexican and/or you have Mexican kids you might like the scenery and reference. However, it could make the film even worse for your viewing experience.
TLDR; This is one of the weaker Scooby-Doo Animated Films avoid this one and the 80's TV Movies check out the VHS films, late 2000's films, and pretty much all of the 2010's films. Avoid Mystery Map, and the Lego films unless you have very young kids even still I wouldn't recommend them.
TLDR; This is one of the weaker Scooby-Doo Animated Films avoid this one and the 80's TV Movies check out the VHS films, late 2000's films, and pretty much all of the 2010's films. Avoid Mystery Map, and the Lego films unless you have very young kids even still I wouldn't recommend them.
I received this Scooby-Doo movie on VHS tape few years ago.
The opening song: Viva Mexico by Maria Carmen Diaz is memorable.
Some laughs or humour the gang receiving email notifications in terms of their catchphrases: (Alright, Jeepers!, Jinkies!", Zoinks! You have mail!")
Some trivia points Fred mentioned to his pen-pal Alejo that Shaggy has got a high metabolism.
In this movie, the Mexican mythical monster terrorising Veracruz is mentioned Chupacabra as some purple Bigfoot. Should be reptilian that sucks blood from goats.
Some unnecessary moments like Alejo's brother Luis lied about being hit knocked unconscious.
That robotic eagle Paco reminds me of bilingual parrot (same name) in "Maya & Miguel".
This is also the last time Nicole Jaffe and Heather North voice Velma and Daphne, respectively, before North died from bronchitis in November 2017.
Obviously, this movie is good or rather I like on its own, yet hardly outshines some of the others like Witch's Ghost (with Hex Girls and Tim Curry).
The opening song: Viva Mexico by Maria Carmen Diaz is memorable.
Some laughs or humour the gang receiving email notifications in terms of their catchphrases: (Alright, Jeepers!, Jinkies!", Zoinks! You have mail!")
Some trivia points Fred mentioned to his pen-pal Alejo that Shaggy has got a high metabolism.
In this movie, the Mexican mythical monster terrorising Veracruz is mentioned Chupacabra as some purple Bigfoot. Should be reptilian that sucks blood from goats.
Some unnecessary moments like Alejo's brother Luis lied about being hit knocked unconscious.
That robotic eagle Paco reminds me of bilingual parrot (same name) in "Maya & Miguel".
This is also the last time Nicole Jaffe and Heather North voice Velma and Daphne, respectively, before North died from bronchitis in November 2017.
Obviously, this movie is good or rather I like on its own, yet hardly outshines some of the others like Witch's Ghost (with Hex Girls and Tim Curry).
Lo sapevi?
- QuizThe site www.ancientmexicanwisdom.com is a real site owned by Warner Brothers.
- BlooperThis movie portrays the Chupacabra as a Mexican legend in origin; however this is not accurate since the Chupacabra has its origins in Puerto Rico.
- Citazioni
Sofia Otero: [speaking to some kids] Now, forget all about this scary monster nonsense and play with your skeletons among the tombstones.
- Curiosità sui creditiDuring the opening credits, El Chupacabra's green eyes are following the credits throughout. Once they are finished, he growls at the camera, as we zoom through his eyes.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Cartoon Corner: Top 10 Worst Scooby-Doo Movies (2016)
- Colonne sonoreViva Mexico
Written by Rich Dickerson and Gigi Meroni
Performed by Maria Carmen (as Maria Carmen Diaz)
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Dettagli
- Data di uscita
- Paese di origine
- Lingua
- Celebre anche come
- Scooby-Doo and the Monster of Mexico
- Aziende produttrici
- Vedi altri crediti dell’azienda su IMDbPro
- Tempo di esecuzione1 ora 15 minuti
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 1.78 : 1
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