The 13 Ghosts of Scooby-Doo
The 13 Ghosts of Scooby-Doo is an American animated television series produced by Hanna-Barbera Productions, and the seventh incarnation of the studio's Scooby-Doo franchise. It premiered on, and ran for one season on ABC as a half-hour program. Thirteen episodes of the show were made in 1985. It replaced The New Scooby-Doo Mysteries and aired alongside Scooby's Mystery Funhouse, a repackaging of earlier shows.
The series also aired in reruns on USA Network in the 1990s, on Cartoon Network, and currently on Boomerang. With 13 episodes, it is currently the shortest-running series in the Scooby-Doo franchise. A follow-up film from a different creative team, Scooby-Doo! and the Curse of the 13th Ghost, released in 2019, featured the previously unseen 13th ghost and ended the series.
Plot
In the initial episode, the gang are thrown off course on a trip to Honolulu in Daphne's plane, but accidentally landing instead in the Himalayas. While inside a temple, Scooby and Shaggy are tricked by two bumbling ghosts named Weerd and Bogel into opening the Chest of Demons, a magical artifact that houses the 13 most terrifying and powerful ghosts and demons ever to walk the face of the Earth. As the ghosts can only be returned to the chest by those who originally set them free, Scooby and Shaggy, accompanied by Daphne, Scrappy-Doo, and a young boy named Flim Flam, embark on a worldwide quest to recapture them before they wreak irreversible havoc upon the world.Assisting them is Flim Flam's friend, a warlock named Vincent Van Ghoul, who contacts the gang using his crystal ball and often employs magic and witchcraft to assist them. The 13 escaped ghosts, meanwhile, each attempt to do away with the gang lest they are returned to the chest, often employing Weerd and Bogel as lackeys.
Fred Jones and Velma Dinkley were both absent in this incarnation. In Scooby-Doo! and the Curse of the 13th Ghost, it is revealed that they were away at summer camp, although in Scooby Doo! Mystery Incorporated, Fred may have gone to a camp that specialized in traps as he referred to it as "Trapping Camp".
Voice cast
- Don Messick – Scooby-Doo and Scrappy-Doo
- Casey Kasem – Shaggy
- Heather North – Daphne Blake
- Susan Blu – Flim-Flam
- Arte Johnson – Weerd
- Howard Morris – Bogel
- Vincent Price – Vincent Van Ghoul
Production
The series was created and produced by Mitch Schauer. Tom Ruegger was associate producer and story editor, and the irreverent, fourth wall-breaking humor found in each episode resurfaced in his later works, among them A Pup Named Scooby-Doo, Tiny Toon Adventures, and Animaniacs. Of The 13 Ghosts of Scooby-Doo, Ruegger recalls not being fond of the Flim-Flam character or the other added characters in the cast, whom he felt had been added to appease focus groups. As with most of the other early-1980s Scooby-Doo entries after the 1979 Scooby-Doo and Scrappy-Doo series, original characters Fred Jones and Velma Dinkley do not appear, and the enemies were real ghosts and not simply humans in costume. 13 Ghosts ended its run after 13 episodes and was replaced by reruns of Laff-a-Lympics in March 1986, before the end of the season. At the time of the cancellation, twelve of the thirteen ghosts were recaptured in the chest of demons with the show-stopping production before the last ghost could be found. To date, it is the last Scooby-Doo running series to have featured Scrappy-Doo, who was removed as a regular character after the three Hanna-Barbera Superstars 10 movies in 1987-8; those three movies would be the only new Scooby-Doo content produced during the hiatus.For a brief period from 1986 to 1988, ABC revamped its Saturday morning block in hopes of targeting the preschool audience, a factor in the darker 13 Ghosts series being axed; this proved to be a colossal failure, with ABC vice president Squire Rushnell conceding in 1988 that "we got killed" in the ratings because preschoolers could not operate people meters, then recently introduced as a ratings measurement tool. When ABC reversed that plan and returned to legacy properties that would appeal to whole family audiences, Ruegger decided that they would overhaul the series entirely, developing A Pup Named Scooby-Doo in 1988.
A direct-to-video film released in 2019, Scooby-Doo! and the Curse of the 13th Ghost, resolves the open ending of the original and features the entire gang helping Vincent Van Ghoul in capturing the thirteenth and last ghost.
Shaggy and Daphne were both present and were both given new uniforms, Daphne's being more of an '80s style that was fairly similar to that of Charlie's Angels, the headband was removed and she was given bangs. Shaggy had the same clothes, except his color scheme changed to a red T-shirt, baggy blue jeans and brown shoes. A reason for this color change has, to this day, not been specified. He would only wear this outfit four more times in the more than three decades since it was introduced, the last appearance being in 2001's Scooby-Doo and the Cyber Chase as part of the gang's digital counterparts. Hints that this style may be coming back were implied in 2019's Scooby-Doo Return to Zombie Island, where Shaggy is seen wearing a red floral shirt while laying out on a boat.
Home media
On June 29, 2010, Warner Home Video released The 13 Ghosts of Scooby-Doo: The Complete Series on DVD in Region 1, which included "Don't Feed the Animals", an episode of Shaggy & Scooby-Doo Get a Clue!, as a bonus feature. Exactly the same DVD in Region 2 was Released on 17 October 2016, with the Bonus episode also included.| DVD name | No. of episodes | Release date | Bonus episode |
| The 13 Ghosts of Scooby-Doo: The Complete Series | 13 | | Shaggy & Scooby-Doo Get a Clue!: Don't Feed the Animals |