Here’s a useful review of Scooby-Doo on Zombie Island (1998) that balances nostalgia, technical merit, and practical viewing advice.
are... working customs at an airport (and getting fired for eating all the contraband). They reunite for Daphne’s birthday to find a Scooby-Doo on Zombie Island
: After years of unmasking "guys in masks," Mystery Inc. has disbanded. Daphne and Fred host a supernatural talk show, Velma owns a bookstore, and Shaggy and Scooby bounce between odd jobs. For Daphne’s birthday, the gang reunites for a road trip to find a real haunting for her show. Here’s a useful review of Scooby-Doo on Zombie
For the first hour, the audience is led to believe the old formula is holding. Velma finds trap doors. Fred sets up rigged nets. They chase the zombies, expecting a human in a mask. But the reveal comes not in a drawing room, but in a flooded underground cavern. They reunite for Daphne’s birthday to find a
The horror is not played for laughs. The zombies—the "cat creatures," the ghost pirates—move with a jerky, unnatural quality. There is a sequence in the plantation’s crypt where a zombie rises from a pool of water, its face slowly decomposing, that rivals the atmosphere of any live-action horror film of the late 90s.
Daphne’s breakthrough: a television segment hunting real ghosts. The catch? She hasn’t found any. Every "haunted" location they visit is just a man in a costume. The gang is suffering from success—or rather, the lack of supernatural success.
The gang travels to the mysterious, fog-shrouded Moonscar Island in the bayou. They meet Lena Dupree, a beautiful but melancholic innkeeper, and her gruff, one-eyed boat captain, Simone Lenoir (who runs a popular pepper sauce company). The island is supposedly haunted by the ghosts of the pirate Captain Moonscar and his undead crew, who terrorize the locals every full moon.