Parents need to know that Scoob! is an animated reboot of the Scooby-Doo franchise. It starts out as an origin story and then follows the gang on their adventures as teens. Scoob is a film that sadly does little to improve over the live action films.
The actual adventure they go on with vapid and vain superhero Blue Falcon (Mark Wahlberg) isn't all that compelling. The scaredy-cat Scooby-Doo—as a dog himself—is the key. Unlike "Trolls World Tour," "Scoob" is rather immature and random, the type of kids movie that parents can turn on and leave the room.
Review: This Hanna-Barbera Shared Universe Launchpad is a Fail. Scoob! tries to deliver a touching story about friendship, but the movie's cringey pop culture references and cliche superhero story ruin it all. The studio's decision to shift the movie's release from pandemic-shuttered theaters to premium video-on-demand may partly represent a. SCOOB! is a new Scooby-Doo feature length animated movie that begins with an short origin story about how Scooby met Shaggy, Fred, Daphne, and Velma. After exposing a fake haunted house hiding stolen loot, the children decide to solve mysteries. Ten years later, Shaggy and Scooby are kicked out of Mystery, Inc. because an investor thinks they contribute nothing to the company.
Trailer Scoob!
With Will Forte, Mark Wahlberg, Jason Isaacs, Gina Rodriguez. Scooby and the gang face their most challenging mystery ever: a plot to unleash the ghost dog Cerberus upon the world. As they race to stop this dogpocalypse, the gang discovers that Scooby has an epic destiny greater than anyone imagined.
The best part of Scoob!, a computer-animated reboot of the Scooby-Doo franchise, is the part in which the movie painstakingly recreates the opening credits of the original series. A cop in a tight outfit is as "bad" as the movie gets. Anyone who thinks this movie is inappropriate should see Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Antz, The Simpsons Movie, or any of the Shrek series. Those have way more iffy content than Scoob. 'Scoob!': Film Review Debuting on demand, rather than in theaters, this attractive but calculated attempt to connect 'Scooby-Doo' to other Hanna-Barbera characters abandons the show's fun teen.