Scooby Doo y el fantasma de la bruja
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaScooby-Doo and the Mystery Gang visit Oakhaven, Massachusetts to seek strange goings on involving a famous horror novelist and his ancestor who is rumored be a witch.Scooby-Doo and the Mystery Gang visit Oakhaven, Massachusetts to seek strange goings on involving a famous horror novelist and his ancestor who is rumored be a witch.Scooby-Doo and the Mystery Gang visit Oakhaven, Massachusetts to seek strange goings on involving a famous horror novelist and his ancestor who is rumored be a witch.
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- 2 nominaciones en total
Opiniones destacadas
Following the unexpected success of Scooby-Doo on Zombie Island, Warner Bros. Was eager to get a sequel. As Zombie Island had been a one off experiment, the creative team were largely left on their own as the series had been dormant for quite some time. With the massive success of Zombie Island Warner Bros. Scaled back creative freedom for the sequel with executive mandates to dial back the tone which executives felt went "too dark" in Zombie Island. Warner Bros. Hired screenwriters Rick Copp and David A. Goodman to produce their own draft for Witch's ghost which pretty much went through the standard Scooby-Doo formula but Glenn Leopold of Zombie Island was allowed to re-write the last third of the film to make some level of adjustment and tonal continuity between films. Despite the troubled production, Scooby-Doo and the Witch's Ghost is good even if it doesn't reach the level of Zombie Island.
Like the previous film, Mystery Inc. Is still their same lovable selves with intrepid leader Fred, brains Velma, and lovable cowards Shaggy and Scooby. Daphne is unfortunately a little scaled back in this incarnation as her curiosity and drive was used as a center piece for the plot in the previous film with her "Haunted America" show and her presence is rather diminished by comparison. Tim Curry is fun playing a Dean Koontz/Stephen King esque horror novelist who becomes an ally to the team and there's even some nice chemistry between him and Velma, but unfortunately by the third act his character takes a turn that largely discards much of that build-up in favor of recycling the climax of Zombie Island with considerably less stakes and menace than that film. Like the previous film, Witch's Ghost features some great music, particularly from the fictional band within the film, The Hex Girls who are basically Jen and the Holograms by way of Buffy the Vampire Slayer and are well voiced by Jennifer Hale, Jane Wiedlin, and Kimberly Brooks respectively. The plot of the movie definitely shows signs of the more micromanaged production is there's less of the self-effacing parody of the franchise formula this time around (though Fred has amusing moments regarding villains referring to Mystery Inc as "kids") and the atmosphere and intensity of certain scenes and moments has been dialed up comedically so there's much less menace. The villains in particular no longer have the depth and meance they had in Zombie Island and have been scaled back to more over-the-top "muwhahaha" type villains that have the depth of mud puddles but at least the voice actors do bring energy to them (even if the voice acting sounds overly similar to Mom from Futurama).
Witch's Ghost is a step down from Zombie Island, but not by much. There's still some fun things they do with the characters, Tim Curry is welcome in his supporting performance as Ravencroft, and the music remains great. Unfortunately the plot does show signs of "too many cooks" as the script feels more uneven, there's less of the self-satire from the first movie, and the third act feels massively shoehorned even by the standards of a franchise that has never had water tight logic. I still have an affinity for this entry, but I can't deny its flaws.
This update of Scooby Doo is much better than you'd expect it to be. The plot is just what you expect from Scooby Doo (witch haunting town but is it real or is someone up to no good etc). However it does have a little added spice by having some modern twists like the fact that Fred always wants to go off with Daphne when they split, or Fred being tired getting called a `kid', or Thelma's geeky status nicely kept.
The plot is good for the most, with plenty of red herrings to make it less than obvious as to who's behind everything. The animation is good the gang are nearly identical to the original, with the exception maybe of Fred. However the feel of the film is quite like the dark mood of the Batman animated series. The only complaint is that you can that it is modern by the use of car chases, supernatural battles and Batman-type fights. However it is good to see the characters in a well animated adventure even if some of the ghosts are more scary and less comedy that they are usually.
The voice work is good except Fred doesn't sound quite like he should. Tim Curry is good but really you know that if he's going to do the voice then his character is going have some meat on it. The `ghost' is poor all `thee' and `thou'. But in the most case the voices are fine.
Overall it is a modern telling so we really do have ghosts etc, but apart from this it's actually very enjoyable the humour, the pop culture references etc all made it much better than I thought it would be, even if some of (The Hex Girls) doesn't work very well. Oh and did we need to have the Scooby Doo theme song by Billy Ray Cyrus?
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaAt the time of this direct-to-video production, Tim Curry was voicing Nigel Thornberry in Nickelodeon's then-popular animated safari series Los Thornberrys (1998).
- ErroresWhen Shaggy and Scooby crash on Ben, Velma and Fred after escaping the Witch's Ghost, Daphne is nowhere to be seen. But after some explanation, Daphne is then heard and appears under Fred.
- Citas
Sarah Ravencroft: [Shaggy is running alongside Scooby, who has the book, when Sarah Ravencroft soon grabs Scooby by the tail and holds him up in front of her] Give me my book, meddling hound!
[Takes the book out of his mouth]
Scooby Doo: Round? Rhere?
Norville 'Shaggy' Rogers: Scooby!
[picks up a bucket of water and runs towards her]
Norville 'Shaggy' Rogers: Let my buddy go, you creepy crone!
[Throws the water onto her, getting her dripping wet]
Sarah Ravencroft: What... was that?
Norville 'Shaggy' Rogers: You're not melting, like it worked in "The Wizard of Oz"!
Sarah Ravencroft: Fool! I shall destroy thee!
[Shaggy starts running and she drops Scooby and stretches her arm to grab Shaggy by the shoulder, who throws the bucket behind him where it lands on top of her and gets her head stuck in it]
- Créditos curiososThe film gets closed out for the end credits via Scooby-Doo waving his cape to the screen
- ConexionesFeatured in Cartoon Corner: Top 10 Best Scooby-Doo Movies (2016)
- Bandas sonorasHex Girl
Music by Bodie Chandler
Lyrics by Glenn Leopold
Produced and arranged by Gary Lionelli and Bodie Chandler
Performed by The Hex Girls: Jennifer Hale, Jane Wiedlin and Kimberly Brooks
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