Michael Scott
Partner / Reviewer
More
- Preamp, Processor or Receiver
- Yamaha TRS-7850 Atmos Receiver
- Other Amp
- Peavy IPR 3000 for subs
- Universal / Blu-ray / CD Player
- Panasonic UB820 4K UHD Player
- Front Speakers
- Cheap Thrills Mains
- Center Channel Speaker
- Cheap Thrills Center
- Surround Speakers
- Volt 10 Surrounds
- Surround Back Speakers
- Volt 10 Rear Surrounds
- Rear Height Speakers
- Volt 6 Overheads
- Subwoofers
- 2x Marty subs (full size with SI 18's)
- Video Display Device
- Sony 85 inch X950H FALD TV
After watching Scooby-Doo for nigh on 20+ years (sorry, I’m a big kid at heart), we’re FINALLY getting a spin adventure, starring our two female leads of the 5 man group (well, 4 if you don’t include Scooby himself as a human). And by FINALLY, I mean that I’m really surprised that it took them so long to separate off the two females and make a Scooby-Doo adventure squarely aimed at young females. Produced by the Tisdale Sisters (Ashley, the young Disney kid who everyone knows from Highschool Musical, and her older sister Jennifer), Daphne & Velma is a goofy little girls adventure that really thrives on being DIFFERENT than the rest of the Scooby movies. By that I don’t mean that we are devoid of mystery, secret ghosts, and mystery reveals, but more due to the fact that it changes up the origins of Daphne and Velma themselves, and has the audience reimagine them outside of the Scooby game
Daphne and Velma is a goofy adventure that takes off of the standard Scooby-Doo tropes, complete with “gadzoinks!” style humor, nerdy and hot girls, mysterious ghosts, and a secret reveal that everyone saw coming a mile away. Basically you average adventure in the series sans the rest of the boys. The big changes come from the fact that the girls are no longer their “hot and not” personas that they usually are. Daphne is a good bit smarter, and not nearly so obsessed with her looks, while Velma is a nerdy underachiever who has a few secrets of her own (which are explained later on in the movie). So instead of the normal “ditz and smarty pants” personas, they’re completely reinvented for a new audience.
Rating:
Rated G for general audiences by the MPAA
Video:

Audio:

Extras:

• An Updated Classic Mystery
• Iconic Styles of Daphne & Velma Reimagined
• Gag Reel
Final Score:

Daphne & Velma isn’t exactly canon Scooby-Doo and it’s really not in line with the tone and theme of most of the Scooby-Doo films (live action OR animated), but this is a movie that’s really aimed at young girls more than rabid Scooby-Doo fans. It’s G-rated, fluffy, made by the Tisdale sisters, and includes all of the goofy tropes from their type of sensibilities. I’m not the target audience of the film by ANY stretch of the imagination, even as a solid fan of Scooby-Doo in general, but it makes for a decent babysitter if you have young ones in the house. Rental area most likely.
Technical Specifications:
Starring: Sarah Jeffrey, Sarah Gilman, Vanessa Marano
Directed by: Suzi Yoonessi
Written by: Kyle Mack, Caitlin Meares
Aspect Ratio: 1.78:1 AVC
Audio: English: DTS-HD MA 5.1, Spanish DD 5.1
Subtitles: English SDH, Spanish
Studio: Warner Brothers
Rated: G
Runtime: 75 minutes
Blu-Ray Release Date: Own on Digital, Blu-ray and DVD on 5/22
Recommendation: Rental
Last edited: