Premiered September 27, 2017.
"Halloween isn’t about candy and dressing up as topical celebrities. The ancient roots of the holiday are tied to the autumn equinox and the Gaelic harvest festivals."
"Is no one else bothered by the crass commercialization of Halloween?"
-Velma
"Like, I just noticed without candy as a distraction, Halloween is utterly terrifying and filled with disturbing imagery!"
-Shaggy
When Fred Jones (Frank Welker) was a little boy, he went trick or treating at a house he had never seen before.
Fred (center) trick or treating as a young boy, dressed as his favorite detective. |
On Halloween eleven years later, Fred is visiting a town called Newtown with his friends Scooby Doo (Welker) Shaggy (Matthew Lillard),Velma (Kate Micucci) and Daphne (Grey Delisle). Shaggy, Scooby and Daphne are all excited about costumes and candy.
Shaggy and Scooby dressed as a pocket and candy vending machine. |
In contrast to his friends, Fred plans to skip the Halloween celebrations and stay in his hotel room. His “failure” to solve the mystery of the disappearing witch house has taught him that Halloween is the one night when mysteries are impossible to solve. However, Fred’s friends eventually talk him into joining them for trick or treating.
Shaggy and Scooby’s quest for candy leads them to a house in the woods. Unfortunately, it’s the residence of a witch! She chases the gang until Scoob and Shag create a diversion.
The witch scares the locals so much that Newtown’s Neighborhood Watch cancels Halloween.
Fred realizes the house (and the witch) is the same one he stumbled on in a different town eleven years earlier! But how could the house move? Velma recalls a Russian folk tale about a witch named Baba Yaga who lived in a house that had chicken legs which enabled it to move around.
When the gang returns to the house to search for clues, the house sprouts chicken legs and chases them once again!
Could this witch really be the Baba Yaga? Can Halloween be saved from cancellation? Will Fred finally solve the mystery that has haunted him for eleven years?
J.A. Morris says:
As you may have gathered by looking at the screencaps above, Be Cool, Scooby Doo featured redesigned versions of Scooby and friends. In spite of these changes, the characterizations and the stories were very much in the spirit of earlier Scooby TV series.
"Halloween" is a very good holiday episode. In addition to the usual seasonal trappings, Velma gives her friends (and the viewers) a lesson about the Celtic origins of Halloween. I'm guessing her complaints about the "commercialization" of All Hallow's Eve are meant to remind us of the similar sentiments Charlie Brown expressed about Christmas.
Like most Scooby Doo episodes, we get a "monster of the week" and entertaining chase scenes. Baba Yaga is a great antagonist and using a witch from Russian folklore is a nice touch.
The voice actors here are all A+ cartoon talents. Frank Welker does great performing double duty as Fred and Scooby Doo. It's worth noting that Scooby displays a much more varied vocabulary that we've heard in earlier incarnations. He exclaims "the logic is impeccable" near the beginning of "Halloween." That's a big leap from his usual "ruh roh!"
Matthew Lillard, who played Shaggy in the live action movies is also great as Scooby's best bud. Velma is voiced by Kate Micucci, best known for her work in the comedy musical duo Garfunkel and Oates (and she's also voiced tons of other animated characters) is a great Velma. Rounding out the cast, Grey Delisle has been voicing Daphne since 2001 and she instills Daphne with a little more sarcasm and depth than in earlier iterations.
However, one thing bothered me about this episode. Velma mentions refers to Halloween as Samhain, the original Gaelic name for the occasion. She pronounces it "Sam Hane." This bugged me, because I believe Velma, the smartest and most resourceful member of the mystery gang, would make an effort to research Samhain and pronounce it correctly. It gives me the impression that the writers and producers didn't do their research on Samhain.
"Halloween" is a very enjoyable Scooby Doo episode that is recommended for every fan of Scoob and gang. The mispronunciation of Samhain prevents me from giving it our highest rating.
J.A. Morris' rating:
3 and a half jack o'lanterns.
RigbyMel says:
"Halloween" is a fun episode of what looks to be a generally series. Be Cool, Scooby Doo! is the 12th incarnation of the franchise and has lots of meta-fun going on in it. The characters may be redesigned, but their traits hew pretty closely to the original 1969 series, with perhaps a bit more of a comedic slant with gags going to all the characters, not just Shaggy and Scooby.
There are some great little in-jokes, like 11 year old Fred dressing up as his favorite Nordic detective. I think I also spied a visual reference to The Creeper - a villain from the original series - in a scene involving kids out trick or treating.
Shaggy and Scooby's costumes and quest for candy were much appreciated as well and I really liked their attempt to fool the witch by promoting a fake cereal called "I Can't Believe It's Not The Fear Of Children."
I quite enjoyed this episode's references to Baba Yaga and to the Celtic origins of Halloween. Unlike J.A. Morris, I am going to attribute Velma's mispronunciation of "Samhain" to "reader vocabulary" (i.e., having read the word only and not being quite sure of how to pronounce it) and not hold it against her, or the show!
The central mystery of the witch traveling from town to town over the course of years and causing Halloween to be cancelled in each town visited rings interestingly in the current age of "trunk or treat" and generally spurious Halloween candy paranoia.
This is a super-fun Halloween episode with trick or treating, candy, witches, zombies, folklore (of the Celtic AND Russian variety) and the Scooby Gang. It's well worth a look should you have the time and inclination.
RigbyMel's rating:
4 jack o lanterns!
The voice actors here are all A+ cartoon talents. Frank Welker does great performing double duty as Fred and Scooby Doo. It's worth noting that Scooby displays a much more varied vocabulary that we've heard in earlier incarnations. He exclaims "the logic is impeccable" near the beginning of "Halloween." That's a big leap from his usual "ruh roh!"
Matthew Lillard, who played Shaggy in the live action movies is also great as Scooby's best bud. Velma is voiced by Kate Micucci, best known for her work in the comedy musical duo Garfunkel and Oates (and she's also voiced tons of other animated characters) is a great Velma. Rounding out the cast, Grey Delisle has been voicing Daphne since 2001 and she instills Daphne with a little more sarcasm and depth than in earlier iterations.
However, one thing bothered me about this episode. Velma mentions refers to Halloween as Samhain, the original Gaelic name for the occasion. She pronounces it "Sam Hane." This bugged me, because I believe Velma, the smartest and most resourceful member of the mystery gang, would make an effort to research Samhain and pronounce it correctly. It gives me the impression that the writers and producers didn't do their research on Samhain.
"Halloween" is a very enjoyable Scooby Doo episode that is recommended for every fan of Scoob and gang. The mispronunciation of Samhain prevents me from giving it our highest rating.
.5
3 and a half jack o'lanterns.
RigbyMel says:
"Halloween" is a fun episode of what looks to be a generally series. Be Cool, Scooby Doo! is the 12th incarnation of the franchise and has lots of meta-fun going on in it. The characters may be redesigned, but their traits hew pretty closely to the original 1969 series, with perhaps a bit more of a comedic slant with gags going to all the characters, not just Shaggy and Scooby.
Shaggy and Scooby take their trick-or-treat planning VERY seriously! |
The character redesign is fun rather than jarring in this series. |
I quite enjoyed this episode's references to Baba Yaga and to the Celtic origins of Halloween. Unlike J.A. Morris, I am going to attribute Velma's mispronunciation of "Samhain" to "reader vocabulary" (i.e., having read the word only and not being quite sure of how to pronounce it) and not hold it against her, or the show!
The central mystery of the witch traveling from town to town over the course of years and causing Halloween to be cancelled in each town visited rings interestingly in the current age of "trunk or treat" and generally spurious Halloween candy paranoia.
Shaggy and Scooby are disappointed they only collected a "mound" of candy, rather than a "mountain" |
RigbyMel's rating:
4 jack o lanterns!
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