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Sound Stage Spook is the second and final story in Scooby-Doo #18, by DC Comics. It was preceded by Are We Scared Yet?
Premise[]
Theodore Jones, grandfather of Fred, requires the gang's assistance again. This time a ghost is haunting the sound stage of his new giant crab movie, Bisque, Horror From the Deep.
Synopsis[]
Insert details here.
Characters[]
Main characters:
Supporting characters:
- Theodore Jones (final appearance)
- Tom Burden (first appearance)
- Tim Sevine (first appearance)
- Nick (only appearance)
Villains:
- Ghost of Clayton Lonney (only appearance)(no lines)(Lucas Spiegel's disguise)
- Lucas Spiegel (only appearance)
Other characters:
- Actors (only appearance)(miscellaneous speaking)
- Clayton Lonney (mentioned)(deceased)
Locations[]
Objects[]
- TBA
Vehicles[]
- None
Suspects[]
Suspect | Motive/reason |
---|---|
Tim Sevine | He said that Clayton Lonney would be disgusted with actors today. |
Nick | He wasn't happy with the large fake scar he had to wear to play the race car villain. |
Culprits[]
Culprit | Motive/reason |
---|---|
Lucas Spiegel as the Ghost of Clayton Lonney | To mess up his rival's movie, so that his movie would reach the theaters first. |
Continuity[]
- Theodore Jones previously appeared in Legend of the Silver Scream.
Notes/trivia[]
- TBA
Cultural references[]
- In the beginning, Shaggy gets directions from Zandor of the Herculoids, while Igoo looks on (as an unmasked actor).
- Clayton Lonney seems to be an reference to Lon Chaney, a famous horror movie actor.
- Lucas Spiegel's name is a play on filmmakers George Lucas and Steven Spielberg, and also resembles the former, somewhat.
- Claws is a parody of the film Jaws, directed by Spielberg.
- Cartoon Network Studios is a real animation studio, which produces content for its own channel, Cartoon Network. It was originally a subsidiary of Hanna-Barbera, but after H-B was folded into Warner Bros. Animation, Cartoon Network Studios branched off as a separate facility from Warner.
- Tom Burden, the director, and Tim Sevine, the makeup artist, are recurring characters of John Rozum that he has used in several other stories, but he says "they didn't always look the same."[1]
Reprints[]
- Scooby-Doo, Where Are You? #5 (March 2011).
Coloring mistakes[]
- None known.
Inconsistencies/continuity errors and/or goofs/oddities[]
- Fred mistakenly says "Tom" as the first name of Tim Sevine, but the latter is correct, as seen in the short How to Make a Monster. There's already a Tom Burden, and it would be odd to have two Toms in the same story.
Reception[]
Ray Tate of Comics Bulletin's Line of Fire Reviews, says Joe Staton does a "smashing storyboard."[2]
Quotes[]
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