Fred (Frank Welker), Velma (Mindy Cohn), and Daphne (Grey Griffin) find their Parisian vacation cut short when Shaggy (Casey Kasem) and Scooby (Frank Welker) fail to show up at the appointed time. It turns out that the cowardly duo were tricked onto an “All you can eat flight” by Alphonse LaFleur (Rene Auberjonois), a world-renowned hunter who wants to find and kill the legendary Abominable Snowman, and he thinks the best way to catch a monster is to have the very best bait, which apparently is Shaggy and Scooby. Now, it is true that Shaggy and Scooby-Doo have been chased by many a monster in their time, from Dracula to the Loch Ness Monster, but for the most part, those were criminals trying to scare our heroes away, with actual monsters being a rarity even in the Scooby Universe, so a hunter desiring to find a real monster could probably do a lot better than these idiots.
Not meeting real monsters is their true superpower.
With Chill Out, Scooby-Doo! we do get a plethora of suspects — unlike the previous movie. The person behind this particular hoax becomes pretty obvious early on, but let's round up the usual suspects for old times' sake. First, we have Professor Jeffries (Alfred Molina), a man obsessed with finding the fabled lost kingdom of Shangri-La, and he is aided by Sherpa guide Pemba (James Sie), who refused to take Jeffries further up the mountain into the forbidden lands. Next is Pemba's sister, Minga (Kim Mai Guest), who ignores her brother’s orders to evacuate the area because she wants to join the group on their trek up the mountain to the weather station, claiming she came to warn them of an oncoming storm, but her real motivation is that she has a huge crush on the station’s Disc Jockey. This DJ turns out to be Dell Chillman (Jeff Bennett), who we last saw in the Scooby-Doo and the Loch Ness Monster, but who has now given up on searching for Nessie and wants to find the Abominable Snowman instead. Finally, we have the High Lama (James Hong), who explains that the large crystals he keeps in his temple are there to protect the villagers from the Abominable Snowman's powers, a large crystal that Jeffries seems very keen on checking out."Gee, I bet a crystal like that is worth a lot of money."
Stray Observations:• This is a very Shaggy/Scooby-centric movie with the rest of the Scooby gang taking a backseat to their “running in terror” shenanigans.
• The High Lama spookily floats along the ground much like David Lo Pan did in the John Carpenter film Big Trouble in Little China, and James Hong played both of these characters.
• Early on, Velma remarks that impressions in the snow left by the Abominable Snowman’s huge feet aren’t even as deep as Daphne’s boot prints. This clue immediately dismisses the idea that the monster is real, yet everyone will still react throughout the movie as if it is.
• Minga goes missing and is believed to have been abducted by the Abominable Snowman. If the Scooby Gang didn’t have the collective memory of a goldfish, they’d realize that anyone who goes missing at the beginning of the mystery is usually the monster.
• We get an impressive mine car chase that is right out of Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom.
• Shaggy briefly takes over DJ duties at the weather station and his “On Air Radio Voice” is Casey Kasem’s real voice, a nice nod to his other job of hosting “Casey Kasem's American Top 40.”
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