After seeing his human friends suffer, that is.
Becoming the Costume: Played with, as it is the costumes themselves that get turned into real monsters, and some of them become far more dangerous that the criminals that wore them.Bad-Guy Bar: The "Faux Ghost" is a hangout for criminals the gang had unmasked before where they casually make fun of Mystery Inc such as sticking them on a Dartboard of Hate or playing a Wack-A-Mole variant of them.Ax-Crazy: The monsters are actively trying to murder Scooby and the gang as opposed to chasing them away.And Starring: Alicia Silverstone gets the honor of an "And Starring" credit.It isn't clarified whether Jacobo truly felt attracted to Ned or was merely pretending to be as part of his disguise. Ambiguously Gay: While under the guise of Heather Jasper Howe, Jacobo flirted with Fred and was mentioned to have cuddled with Ned.All There in the Manual: The featurette "True Ghoul Hollywood Stories" reveals the Cotton Candy Glob's true first name: Timmy.One can only assume people who were only vaguely familiar with the franchise confused the Creeper with the Zombie. However, the most he gets is that his costume can be seen in the Coolsonian. Multiple advertisements and reviews at the time said that the Creeper, one of the franchise's most iconic villains, was one of the monsters appearing in the film. Adaptational Villainy: The monsters are much more Ax-Crazy in the film than they were in the cartoon.
Jonathan Jacobo, the original Pterodactyl Ghost, differs from Johnny, his counterpart in The Scooby-Doo Show episode "Hang in There, Scooby-Doo", in several ways, the most notable being that he is a scientist rather than the driver of a catering truck using the Pterodactyl Ghost to assist in music piracy.
Scooby-Doo 2: Monsters Unleashed is the 2004 sequel to the 2002 live action movie Scooby-Doo, directed by Raja Gosnell and written by James Gunn.