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my daughter loved this dvd. This feature length adventure has Scooby, Shaggy, Daphne, Fred, and Velma investigating a haunted isle, deep in a Louisiana bayou. There are laughs and scares in equal measure, as the Mystery Inc. crew finally come across ghosts who are not just crooks in masks.
Scooby and Shaggy get their fill of Cajun cooking, which is great until scooby and the gang find the island to be crawling with Zombies, except this time they're not some guy in a mask, they're real.
this film is a new look and format for Scooby and his friends, but it does hold its own when compared to the older style shows, plus it's soundtrack is done by rock group Third Eye Blind.
well worth renting out.
this is very good to anyone who a scooby doo fan then i recommend it to you it's something the family would enjoy.
Well I didn't hear a peep out of my kids whilst this was on so it must be a good 'un!!!!!!
full of surprises and a little bit scary, excellent.
this scooby doo film is slightly different from the rest because instead of men in masks the ghosts are real. this didn't take any enjoyment away from the film though, as my son loved it. recommended for all scooby fans
my daughter loved this dvd. This feature length adventure has Scooby, Shaggy, Daphne, Fred, and Velma investigating a haunted isle, deep in a Louisiana bayou. There are laughs and scares in equal measure, as the Mystery Inc. crew finally come across ghosts who are not just crooks in masks.
Scooby and Shaggy get their fill of Cajun cooking, which is great until scooby and the gang find the island to be crawling with Zombies, except this time they're not some guy in a mask, they're real.
this film is a new look and format for Scooby and his friends, but it does hold its own when compared to the older style shows, plus it's soundtrack is done by rock group Third Eye Blind.
well worth renting out.
this is very good to anyone who a scooby doo fan then i recommend it to you it's something the family would enjoy.
Well I didn't hear a peep out of my kids whilst this was on so it must be a good 'un!!!!!!
The gang finally get around to investigating real ghouls - the kids loved it
this scooby doo film is slightly different from the rest because instead of men in masks the ghosts are real. this didn't take any enjoyment away from the film though, as my son loved it. recommended for all scooby fans
The ghost is here and its always a fake/Crooks in a suit protecting something/Oh give us the truth/- It's a fake..'
The refrain, from one of the songs from Hanna-Barbera's enjoyably revisionist cartoon feature, gives the game away as much does a false hand or mask: that this is growing up time for those who watched the series before, as much as it is for the fictional characters. Scoobie-Doo, Daphne, Fred, Shaggy and Velma, the members of Mystery Inc.', were fixtures of children's television during the 70's. (So much that some cultural historians have referred to that age group of viewers as the Scooby-Doo generation'.) Their show presented an unvarying formula of mild scares, broad comedy and a reassuring resolution.
In Scooby-Doo on Zombie Island' the intrepid teenage investigators are revealed once again pursued by a monster who, once again, allows Shaggy and Scooby their so-frightened-its-funny routine. And when the monster is felled, and its mask is removed, it is naturally revealed to be none other than the real estate agent Mr Beeman, whose final words are said in time honoured fashion: `..and I would have got away with it too, if it wasn't for that dog and you meddling kids'.
The meddling kids' however, have grown up, along with their audience. Far from being a closing sequence, Beeman's downfall is shown at the start of this film, as Daphne Blake, now a reporter with her own show Coast to Coast', replays an earlier adventure of the team on a chat show. An Oprah-like hostess elicits the truth. Since the old days, it turns out that Daphne is not the only one who has gone her own way. Fred (still with the boyish good looks) is the producer on her show, Velma has opened Dankley's Mystery Bookstore' whilst, in a ludicrous twist, Shaggy and Scooby have become contraband sniffers for customs. The team in short, has broken up, their independence an indication of distancing and maturity.
Daphne's desire to find genuine spooky occurrences for her show's second season is the motivation for the famous team to reform. Their Mystery Machine now a source of nostalgia. But there's an awareness that all of the past hauntings' have been fakes, which brings an air of frustrated realism. Fred is the cynic, saying that `there's always a logical explanation for these things'. And remembering 300-odd shows that have been before, the viewer must perforce agree with him. There's a symbol of this new mood of disillusionment, in the box of Scooby Snacks given by Velma to Scooby and Shaggy just before they set out. The biscuits are stale.
Speeding to New Orleans, the rest of Mystery, Inc. find Fred's rational view to be correct. Every ghost, it seems, is fake. Daphne is left to gloomily contemplate the lack of any real supernatural encounters. As she admits, all they have found so far have been `guys in masks, mechanical claws and hologram projections', `Just like the good old days' adds Velma ironically. The group's precipitous meeting with the mysterious Lena then, who promises them a real haunted house, is a turning point.
At first, their investigation of Simone and Lena's haunted house seems to be following the same path. Scooby-Doo discovers cats to chase, and he and Shaggy find food to scoff (including some Cajun peppers literally hard to swallow'!) But there's a suspicion of romance between Freddy and Lena, and change creeps still further over the film as ghastly events, connected with the pirate Morgan Moonscare, defy rational explanation vexing Velma. For once, the suspicion is that Scooby-Doo and the gang are up against the genuine article. Freddy is at the heart of much of this. (A subtle indication of his new role is when, getting dressed, he impulsively discards his trademark Ascot.) From sceptic, he is forced to believe an intellectual process central to the success of many adult horror films.
At the heart of Zombie Island' there's a remarkable scene which epitomises the film's new world-view. The group succeed in discovering the recumbent body of a zombie. Ready for the all-important unmasking the janitor' scene Freddy tries to pull off the supposed mask. Yanking at the head, he ritualises the process of exposure with suggestions of who the zombie will prove to be, itemising the suspicious characters they have encountered: `.. it's the gardner. It's the fisherman. Maybe the ferryman. Maybe animatronic.. ' Alas for Freddy, the zombie's entire head comes off, and then is promptly reattached as the creature wakes. For once they are faced with the genuine article a seismic shift in their ghoul-chasing careers.
In previous Scooby-Doo outings, the viewer is reassured by assuming that the evil will be explained away. On Zombie Island this safety net is suddenly removed, and the adventure approaches a level of supernatural unease that the television series failed to achieve leaving the Scooby-Doo fan in new territory.
The following zombie attack and the discovery of the voodoo cat-cult provide an exciting enough conclusion. In accord with the general air of rediscovery, Scooby and all find that, this time, the zombies are the good guys'. There's a new song played too, reflecting with some justice that `It's terror time again' as events proceed.
All in all this is a pleasant surprise, the film reflecting a timely and refreshing reinterpretation of the Scooby-Doo franchise by Hanna-Barbera. The films which followed: Scooby-Doo and The Witches Ghost' (1999), The Alien Invasion' (2000), Cyber Chase' (2001) continue this change, but Zombie Island' was the creative breakthrough. Values are higher than the TV series, as one might expect given the higher budget and the involvement of a Japanese animation team. A must for fans!
Scooby-Doo on Zombie Island is a horror movie, just like all Scooby-Doos, but I would only recommend 8+ chiildren watch it as it is a very scary movie which may frighten and give nightmares to younger children!
full of surprises and a little bit scary, excellent.