Faced with the combined forces of simian menaces like Gorilla Grodd, the Ultra-Humanite and Monsieur Mallah, Scooby and the gang team up with DC's greatest ape heroes: Congorilla, Sam Simeon and Detective Chimp! But when things take a turn for the monstrous, can even our heroes save the city from the king-sized carnage of...Titano the Super-Ape?
Granted, the plot gets a little thin at certain moments, but things are so ridiculous, self-aware, and genuinely delightful that it's still a standout read. Read Full Review
Thankfully Scooby-Doo and the gang can rely on the help of Congorilla, Sam Simeon, Detective Chimp, and others in order to fight Grodd and save the day. It's completely bananas, but it's also quite appealing. Okay, I'm done with the puns. Worth a look. Read Full Review
Scooby-Doo Team-Up is at its best when it's successfully fusing the title cartoon's traditional mystery with obscure DC continuity. Scooby-Doo Team-Up #42 definitely has the latter, but it's so stuffed with guest stars that it loses sight of the former. Read Full Review
Brizuela and Riesco do a wonderful job of keeping the art simplistic enough and very close to the cartoons throughout. It’s always difficult trying to review the art for this type of comic because you buy it expecting to see the Scooby gang how you know them in the cartoons and not necessarily reimagined - we’ll leave that to Scooby Apocalypse. Read Full Review
Onemight think Scooby-Doo Team-Up is ajoke of a book; maybe so. But it serves a purpose in providing a forum formaintaining the copyright to DCs more obscure characters. Perhaps some of themshould lapse, but its been the strategy for many team-up titles since thebeginning. So for long-time fans of comic book history, it can be a specialtreat to be reunited with old friends. Read Full Review
I love a great ensemble cast of guest-villains. The only problem is that when there are so many characters on the stage, it can be easy for some of the regulars to play a limited role. I would have liked to see a little more involvement from Scooby and the team, but they were limited to functional dialogue in this story. There were plenty of hairy shoulders to carry the weight of the story, but that left most of the humans standing around. Read Full Review
Be the first to rate this issue!
Click the 'Rate/Write A Review' link above to get started.