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Scooby Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed
America’s favorite cowardly canine and his crime-fighting cohorts
are back for round two in the meager follow-up film, Scooby Doo 2:
Monsters Unleashed. They would have got away with it too, if it wasn't
for you damn meddling cinema goers!
Scooby Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed
(2004). Warner Brothers. 1 hour 33 minutes. Starring: Freddie Prinze,
Jr., Sarah Michelle Gellar, Matthew Lillard, Linda Cardellini, Alicia
Silverstone, Seth Green, Tim Blake Nelson, Peter Boyle Directed
by: Raja Gosnell.
Well,
America’s favorite cowardly canine and his crime-fighting cohorts
are back for round two in the meager follow-up Scooby Doo 2: Monsters
Unleashed. Yes, that harried hound Scooby Doo - all in his CGI made-up
glory - is back for more spooky adventures after the relatively
successful original film made its splash back in 2002. Of course
the live-action Scooby Doo flicks are based upon the popular 1970’s
Hanna-Barbera animated TV show that dominated the Saturday morning
airwaves for millions of tykes everywhere.
Unfortunately for SD2: MU, it does try to clumsily borrow from
the first installment in terms of trying to satirize the Mystery
Inc. crew as youthful celebrity-seeking sleuths with a flair for
investigating unsolved mysteries at a high price for their valued
services.

This not only is a repetitive and lazy concept but it goes against
the gamy spirit of the old cartoon series where Scooby Doo and gang
were "meddlesome kids" that innocently traveled in their
Mystery Machine van while stumbling upon mysteries and solving them
in spite of their unconventional approach. Instead, there’s this
stubborn insistence that the Coolsville clan become media misfits
for their detractors while inspirational Teen Beat icons for their
adoring onlookers.
Although the direction to make Scooby and his human pals a bunch
of desired detectives with big egos that accompanied their so-called
self-importance ruled the course of the first film, it was a refreshingly
different departure and twist for the Coolsville kids and their
mischievous mutt Scooby in tow. But director Raja Gosnell (who was
at the helm for the first Scooby Doo movie) and writer James Gunn
try to awkwardly expound upon the Mystery Inc. mob’s supernatural
scope by indulging them in overwrought silly-minded encounters meant
to spice up the proceedings. For instance, watching a goofy-minded
Scooby sport a Linc Hayes Mod Squad-style Afro hairdo for comic
effect feels like a desperate stretch to incorporate its slapstick
mode.
Or having the group step out on the dance floor to the smooth tunes
of heavyweight American Idol winner Ruben Studdard velvet-sounding
voice seems like a shameless marketing ploy to pad the secured interests
of the targeted kid-friendly moviegoers. Overall, the meandering
mayhem to the shoddy sequel Scooby Doo 2: Monster’s Unleashed is
as untested, shaky, and crooked as pesky puppy Scrappy Doo’s hind
leg.
For the most part, the Mystery Inc. mystery solvers haven’t changed
too much since their first outing a couple of years ago when they
were asked to look into the gory goings-on at Spooky World Island.
The personalities are still in tact and the gang hasn’t gotten over
their taste for overexposed media recognition. Fred Jones (Freddie
Prinze, Jr.) is the pretty boy leader with the vanity as neatly
placed as his blonde follicles. Daphne (Sarah Michelle Gellar) is
the clueless babe with the misplaced passion for wearing gaudy purple
outfits.
Velma (Linda Cardellini from NBC-TV’s hospital drama ER) is the
cerebral-minded but adorable dorky doll of the operation. And then
there’s the petrified pair of the crew—goofballs Shaggy Rogers (Matthew
Lillard) and his lovable four-legged flea-bitten sidekick Scooby
Doo. Once again the individual members of Mystery Inc. are trying
to distinguish themselves as a viable element in their celebrated
mystery-busting union.
The premise is quite simple: Fred, Daphne, Velma, Shaggy and Scooby
are given a hero’s welcome home celebration from their hometown
fans of Coolsville, USA. The gang returns to the venue as bona fide
celebrities based on their ghost-busting experiences and their appreciative
community wants to dedicate a special section of their past work
in the town’s museum. Every ghoulish and monstrous adversary that
the Monsters Inc. crowd has confronted and defeated is being displayed
as an exhibition. This event is very momentous for the mystery solvers
and they are touched by the reception of the people and the spectacle
in general.
But Scooby and the kids should know that trouble has a way of chasing
after them based on past bizarre developments. It’s not long into
the grand opening ceremony that things go completely awry.
Specifically, a majority of the costumed displays miraculously
come alive and start to trash the museum while causing havoc in
the process. Soon, a spiteful TV reporter (Alicia Silverstone) responds
to this devastating incident by accusing the befuddled Mystery Inc.
bunch of causing this haunting happening. This accusation takes
the wind out of the celebrated gang’s sails and they soon are turned
from coveted media sweethearts to unsavory sour notes.
Naturally, the Mystery Inc. members are bothered by the criticism
of their fellow Coolsville brethren that turned on them so suddenly
because a television journalist decided to point an unfair finger
at them based on the blame game. Feeling rather down in the dumps
about this avenging reporter looking to exploit this incident at
the museum while crippling Mystery Inc. of its fleeting glory the
kids must come up with a plan to tame the unleashed museum monsters
and restore their notable reputation.
Being the seasoned detectives that they are, the group decides
to split up and seek out different angles in an effort to get down
to the bottom of this latest mystery. The comedy team of Scooby
and Shaggy find themselves going undercover in the ghostly gallery
as the remaining threesome of Fred, Daphne and Velma look to expose
the Evil Masked Figure in hopes of clearing their good name. Plus,
they all need to find a strategy in returning these creepy creatures
to the costumes they previously escaped from.
For some inexplicable reason, the spark doesn’t seem too energized
the second time around for Scooby and his company. Gosnell has a
jovial time in the way he flashes around the assortment of devilish
demons all dressed up in its splashy special effects duds. However,
as a kid-coated vehicle, Scooby Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed probably
has the needed ingredients to satisfy the kiddies with its nutty
nuances coupled with scattered product placements.
But there’s something so lacking and incomplete that fails to
capitalize on the giddy magic that made the first film so flexible
and enjoyable. The computer-generated images fly every which way
but loose yet there’s no initiative to make these images come alive
as three-dimensional sources. Even Scooby Doo’s CGI sluggish look
has, um, gone to the dogs so to speak.
Besides the fact that SD2: MU is skating on thin ice as becoming
the millennium-based juvenile version of Ghostbusters, the performances
from the Mystery Inc. participants are suitable. Prinze is passable
as the doltish boytoy Fred and his fling with damsel-in-distress
dish Daphne (Prinze’s real life companion Gellar) is a side track
subplot worth some consideration despite its gimmicky connection.
Lillard’s fun-loving impersonation of beatnik Shaggy is undeniably
right on the mark.
The interplay between Shaggy and Scooby in Monsters Unleashed isn’t
as inspired as their shenanigans in the film’s first edition, though.
Cardinelli’s Velma has taken center stage in this creepy caper as
she manages to make her geeky girl rather sexy and intoxicating.
In fact, the physically enhanced Velma gives perky pin-up princess
Daphne a run for her money in the Mystery Inc. babe-a-licious sweepstakes.
The resident museum curator (Seth Green from the Austin Powers
movies) definitely has taken notice of Velma’s girly goodies as
he is quite smitten with the brainiac beauty. Peter Boyle (from
CBS-TV’s Everybody Loves Raymond) is also on board as a wasted villainous
and cantankerous old coot that figures into the mixture of the kooky
events.
No one can doubt the frolicking nature of Scooby Doo 2: Monsters
Unleashed as some of the sight gags and in-jokes hits its stride
effectively every once in a while. While the first session of Scooby
Doo and his human buddies were mildly fun to watch as the campy
chaos of monsters and human zombies unfolded around them, Monsters
Unleashed seems like an overproduced and toiled undertaking.
Hence, reaching for laughs are as involved as solving one of the
film’s mawkish mysteries. Still, there’s nothing Scooberific about
this slight second presentation trying to rehash the flighty formula
that gelled so effectively the first time around. Sorry, but there
won’t be any Scooby snacks to pass out regarding this latest lightweight
loony tale of trick or (mis)treats.
Frank Ochieng
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