Image Unavailable
-
-
-
- Sorry, this item is not available in
- Image not available
- To view this video download Flash Player
Scooby-Doo Where Are You!: The Complete Series (Repackaged 2018/DVD)
Format: DVD
$67.34$67.34
. Terms | Shop items
Additional DVD options | Amazon Price | New from | Used from |
DVD
"Please retry" | 7-Disc Version | $67.34 | $67.34 | — |
Enhance your purchase
Frequently bought together
- +
Total Price:
To see our price, add these items to your cart.
One of these items dispatched sooner than the other.
Choose items to buy together.
Customers who viewed this item also viewed
Page 1 of 1 Start overPage 1 of 1
- New Scooby-Doo Movies: The (Almost) Complete CollectionNEW SCOOBY-DOO MOVIES: THE (ALMOST) COMPLETE COLLECTIONDVD
Product description
This comprehensive set contains every episode of the animated series SCOOBY DOO, WHERE ARE YOU! following the adventures of a mystery solving Great Dane and his human pals.
Product details
- Product dimensions : 1.78 x 19.05 x 13.72 cm; 226.8 Grams
- Media Format : NTSC
- Dubbed: : English
- Studio : Warner Bros.
- ASIN : B089MDVFBS
- Number of discs : 7
- Best Sellers Rank: 8,099 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
- 1,921 in TV Shows (Movies & TV)
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
4.8 out of 5 stars
4.8 out of 5
5,232 global ratings
How are ratings calculated?
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyses reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Top reviews
Top reviews from Australia
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
Reviewed in Australia on 5 November 2021
Verified Purchase
One of the windows of the haunted house packaging instead of featuring an animation of a Scoobie Gang member instead held a Scoobie Doo miniature keyring - brilliant gift idea for a Scoobie Doo fan or someone wanting to introduce a friend or relative to Scoobie Doo and his adventures. Packaging is definitely one of a kind. Arrived in a timely manner, undamaged and happy it was as the packaging is what makes this a truly unique item.
Reviewed in Australia on 7 September 2020
Verified Purchase
Beautifully packaged and a sense of nostalgia when opening the collectors box set. The video quality is incredible for a show from that era. Most importantly, it was not region locked, so our family could enjoy it in Australia!
4 people found this helpful
Report abuse
Reviewed in Australia on 28 March 2021
Verified Purchase
We love our Scooby doo DVD collection. I’ve been looking for the original DVD collection for years and it’s so hard to buy in Australia. But this set was worth the wait. I have seen a larger version of the book which would have been nice but other than that I can’t recommend this set enough. And we can watch it with no problems in region 4. Love it!
One person found this helpful
Report abuse
Reviewed in Australia on 22 January 2021
Verified Purchase
I grow up watching Scooby Doo and to have a little piece of my childhood is amazing!
These Blue Ray Disc work in Australia which makes me super happy. I get to enjoy this collection with my children now.
I'm very happy with the delivery, this product came on time.
These Blue Ray Disc work in Australia which makes me super happy. I get to enjoy this collection with my children now.
I'm very happy with the delivery, this product came on time.
2 people found this helpful
Report abuse
Reviewed in Australia on 22 July 2021
Verified Purchase
Arrived packaged well and great product
Reviewed in Australia on 23 October 2020
Verified Purchase
Good but can cracked
Top reviews from other countries

Total Truth
5.0 out of 5 stars
YET ANOTHER CHEAP ASS WARNER RELEASE
Reviewed in the United States on 6 September 2019Verified Purchase
I'll try and be brief: the show itself = obviously a five star rating.
Warner's way of celebrating the 50th anniversary of the show? = pretty crappy really.
First off: no way is this set worth $70 — $80 of your hard earned bucks, simply no way.
So what exactly do you get?
A flimsy, cheapo PET type plastic outer packaging — when you would expect a solid well made embossed case.
Design of the 'Mystery Mansion' box (external artwork)? = admittedly very good here, with a 'horror funhouse' type feel, including cut-out windows with the Scooby-Doo gang all peeking out on iridescent inserts. It's really well designed — so credit where credit is due.
Conversely, the design of the 'Mystery Mansion' box (internal structure) ? = very poor, you would expect the blu rays to fit horizontally and snug within the box — but they don't — they're just thrown in vertically with a nice big gap for them all to rattle back and forth in — so no thought and a poor design.
The 'Collector's Book' is just a smaller version of an already pre-existing book — it's slight and inconsequential in terms of content (i.e it's aimed at 7 year olds ) and it's also rattling back and forth inside the main box with a nice big gap.
Moving on ......
The actual disc case is the cheap fold out digi-book type, complete with bland 'no-colour' budgetary disc design.
Next, a bargain basement toy key-ring is included — next to yet another MASSIVE unused gap in the box — again it is indicative of just a thrown together packaging concept: "Oh it'll do, as they're gonna buy it anyway".
Plus, the key-ring's presence within the box? — it's only there to promote that specific toy line, so it's basically a cynical marketing ploy, endorsed by Warner.
Moving on now to the actual disc content.......
Here, they continue to pig-headedly insist on calling the last 16 episodes of this set 'Where Are You' when everyone knows they were always really part of 'The Scooby-Doo Show' from 1978 — it's just so they can justify (to themselves) charging you more money for 41 episodes — instead of the historically correct 25.
Now on to the most irritating part — bearing in mind that this is supposedly the 'celebratory 50th anniversary edition of the show' — if your looking or expecting the first three episodes to have their original opening and closing themes restored back to their original broadcast versions — then you're gonna be sorely disappointed — Warners simply don't do that you see — it's way too much to care about, way to much to think about and it's certainly way too much money for them to invest in this type of product (as it would surely cut deep into their profit margin).
Plus I doubt that even the producer/overseer of this half-assed release — would be even aware of the incorrect archive soundtrack issue on the first three episodes — as he would be too busy projecting that said profit margin.
And yet these are the kind of people who produce and oversee this kinda crap that's ostensibly 'aimed at collectors', and they're also the very same people who still refuse to release 'The Tom & Jerry Golden Collection' Vol. 2 on blu-ray — all because of their stupid SJW paranoia.
As it stands, I'd say this set is worth $40 - $45 tops.
But of course Mr. Warner wants double that off you. Honestly if it had the restored soundtracks on episodes 1-3, then I'd say it was totally worth it, but you just know that ain't never gonna happen. Jeez ..... even I can find the original Ted Nichols opening & closing themes for these episodes to listen to on Youtube !!
So after 50 years!! and this being the anniversary of the show — if they can't even get that right and restore them properly, then exactly what hope is there with them?
In fact, instead of the crappy toy key-ring promotions — to justify their asking price — they should do all the necessary archive research on the 1969 broadcast soundtracks (which they should've done already prior to releasing this) and then be petitioned by fans who care — to offer a FREE DISC REPLACEMENT PROGRAM for all those affected episodes.
Are you happy to have the bovine imbeciles at Warners Animation oversee the beloved shows of your childhood? — I know I'm not.
Even I as a nobody-fan, I can come up with a better concept in ten seconds:
25 episodes across 3 coloured discs with the correct soundtracks/ embossed solid case with velour interior/ lavish fold out artwork that actually fits inside/ 10 art-cards/ independently commissioned documentary instead of 'in-house' navel gazing crap/ and a well researched 80 page book from a historical perspective. Now wouldn't that be worth your money?
So to sum up, what exactly are you getting for your $70 / $80 bucks? — just the syndicated versions of the episodes in a cleaned-up blu-ray quality (which undoubtedly is a very good thing) plus the usual few cheapo 'in-house' mini documentaries — in what is overall, a crappily designed packaging gimmick (the cool external box artwork notwithstanding).
Bear in mind it's taken Warner 13 years since blu ray first caught on, to finally release 'Scooby-Doo Where Are You' — proof yet again that whoever oversees their animation releases — completely mismanages it — and hasn't got the slightest clue about their real customer base.
And, if it seems like I'm harshing on them way too much here, well really I'm not, as it's long overdue. Warners have habitually released poor animation packages for the better part of two decades now — and they totally deserve to be called out over their poor marketing decisions that are entirely at odds with the archive history of the animated shows that make up their own catalogue.
Warner's way of celebrating the 50th anniversary of the show? = pretty crappy really.
First off: no way is this set worth $70 — $80 of your hard earned bucks, simply no way.
So what exactly do you get?
A flimsy, cheapo PET type plastic outer packaging — when you would expect a solid well made embossed case.
Design of the 'Mystery Mansion' box (external artwork)? = admittedly very good here, with a 'horror funhouse' type feel, including cut-out windows with the Scooby-Doo gang all peeking out on iridescent inserts. It's really well designed — so credit where credit is due.
Conversely, the design of the 'Mystery Mansion' box (internal structure) ? = very poor, you would expect the blu rays to fit horizontally and snug within the box — but they don't — they're just thrown in vertically with a nice big gap for them all to rattle back and forth in — so no thought and a poor design.
The 'Collector's Book' is just a smaller version of an already pre-existing book — it's slight and inconsequential in terms of content (i.e it's aimed at 7 year olds ) and it's also rattling back and forth inside the main box with a nice big gap.
Moving on ......
The actual disc case is the cheap fold out digi-book type, complete with bland 'no-colour' budgetary disc design.
Next, a bargain basement toy key-ring is included — next to yet another MASSIVE unused gap in the box — again it is indicative of just a thrown together packaging concept: "Oh it'll do, as they're gonna buy it anyway".
Plus, the key-ring's presence within the box? — it's only there to promote that specific toy line, so it's basically a cynical marketing ploy, endorsed by Warner.
Moving on now to the actual disc content.......
Here, they continue to pig-headedly insist on calling the last 16 episodes of this set 'Where Are You' when everyone knows they were always really part of 'The Scooby-Doo Show' from 1978 — it's just so they can justify (to themselves) charging you more money for 41 episodes — instead of the historically correct 25.
Now on to the most irritating part — bearing in mind that this is supposedly the 'celebratory 50th anniversary edition of the show' — if your looking or expecting the first three episodes to have their original opening and closing themes restored back to their original broadcast versions — then you're gonna be sorely disappointed — Warners simply don't do that you see — it's way too much to care about, way to much to think about and it's certainly way too much money for them to invest in this type of product (as it would surely cut deep into their profit margin).
Plus I doubt that even the producer/overseer of this half-assed release — would be even aware of the incorrect archive soundtrack issue on the first three episodes — as he would be too busy projecting that said profit margin.
And yet these are the kind of people who produce and oversee this kinda crap that's ostensibly 'aimed at collectors', and they're also the very same people who still refuse to release 'The Tom & Jerry Golden Collection' Vol. 2 on blu-ray — all because of their stupid SJW paranoia.
As it stands, I'd say this set is worth $40 - $45 tops.
But of course Mr. Warner wants double that off you. Honestly if it had the restored soundtracks on episodes 1-3, then I'd say it was totally worth it, but you just know that ain't never gonna happen. Jeez ..... even I can find the original Ted Nichols opening & closing themes for these episodes to listen to on Youtube !!
So after 50 years!! and this being the anniversary of the show — if they can't even get that right and restore them properly, then exactly what hope is there with them?
In fact, instead of the crappy toy key-ring promotions — to justify their asking price — they should do all the necessary archive research on the 1969 broadcast soundtracks (which they should've done already prior to releasing this) and then be petitioned by fans who care — to offer a FREE DISC REPLACEMENT PROGRAM for all those affected episodes.
Are you happy to have the bovine imbeciles at Warners Animation oversee the beloved shows of your childhood? — I know I'm not.
Even I as a nobody-fan, I can come up with a better concept in ten seconds:
25 episodes across 3 coloured discs with the correct soundtracks/ embossed solid case with velour interior/ lavish fold out artwork that actually fits inside/ 10 art-cards/ independently commissioned documentary instead of 'in-house' navel gazing crap/ and a well researched 80 page book from a historical perspective. Now wouldn't that be worth your money?
So to sum up, what exactly are you getting for your $70 / $80 bucks? — just the syndicated versions of the episodes in a cleaned-up blu-ray quality (which undoubtedly is a very good thing) plus the usual few cheapo 'in-house' mini documentaries — in what is overall, a crappily designed packaging gimmick (the cool external box artwork notwithstanding).
Bear in mind it's taken Warner 13 years since blu ray first caught on, to finally release 'Scooby-Doo Where Are You' — proof yet again that whoever oversees their animation releases — completely mismanages it — and hasn't got the slightest clue about their real customer base.
And, if it seems like I'm harshing on them way too much here, well really I'm not, as it's long overdue. Warners have habitually released poor animation packages for the better part of two decades now — and they totally deserve to be called out over their poor marketing decisions that are entirely at odds with the archive history of the animated shows that make up their own catalogue.
598 people found this helpful
Report abuse

A. Felipe Gonzalez Barroso
3.0 out of 5 stars
Edición cara, sin doblaje ni subtítulos.
Reviewed in Mexico on 28 December 2020Verified Purchase
Es una edición cara, ya que sólo contiene 4 discos con las tres temporadas de "Scooby Doo. Where are you?" (en México se conoció como "Misterio a la orden"). Para mi gusto sólo hubieran colocado los discos en un estuche y ya, y con un precio accesible. La casa de cartón, el librito y el llavero son superfluos e inflaron el precio. Otro detalle a destacar es que los discos no están serigrafiados.
En México se comercializaron 16 episodios de los 17 de la primera temporada, en 4 discos DVD individuales, rotulados y con el doblaje original en español. En Estados Unidos se vendió una primera edición de la primera temporada en 4 discos DVD individuales, pero serigrafiados y también con el doblaje original en español. Una segunda edición estadounidense en DVD, incluía en 4 discos serigrafiados las dos primeras temporadas (estuche negro de cartón), pero ahora sólo incluía subtítulos en español y retiraron el doblaje. Una tercera edición de 3 discos con las dos primeras temporadas (estuche de plástico con carátula roja), mantuvo los subtítulos.
En conclusión, es lamentable que una edición en alta definición no haya incorporado ni doblaje ni subtítulos en nuestro idioma. Lo mismo ocurre con las ediciones en blu-ray de "Johnny Quest" y "Los Supersónicos". Una excepción afortunada es la de la serie "Los Picapiedra", que sí cuenta con el doblaje original. Esperemos que en la edición de otras series de Hanna-Barbera en HD tomen en cuenta al público hispanoparlante, como lo hicieron en algún momento con las primeras ediciones en DVD.
En México se comercializaron 16 episodios de los 17 de la primera temporada, en 4 discos DVD individuales, rotulados y con el doblaje original en español. En Estados Unidos se vendió una primera edición de la primera temporada en 4 discos DVD individuales, pero serigrafiados y también con el doblaje original en español. Una segunda edición estadounidense en DVD, incluía en 4 discos serigrafiados las dos primeras temporadas (estuche negro de cartón), pero ahora sólo incluía subtítulos en español y retiraron el doblaje. Una tercera edición de 3 discos con las dos primeras temporadas (estuche de plástico con carátula roja), mantuvo los subtítulos.
En conclusión, es lamentable que una edición en alta definición no haya incorporado ni doblaje ni subtítulos en nuestro idioma. Lo mismo ocurre con las ediciones en blu-ray de "Johnny Quest" y "Los Supersónicos". Una excepción afortunada es la de la serie "Los Picapiedra", que sí cuenta con el doblaje original. Esperemos que en la edición de otras series de Hanna-Barbera en HD tomen en cuenta al público hispanoparlante, como lo hicieron en algún momento con las primeras ediciones en DVD.

Amazon Customer
1.0 out of 5 stars
Frustrating
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 30 January 2020Verified Purchase
Bought this for my son for Xmas just opened it up but got no packaging. Dvds won't play saying not in region?? It was quite expensive very disappointed
Trying to explain to my son who's autistic that he can't watch it
Trying to explain to my son who's autistic that he can't watch it
5 people found this helpful
Report abuse

jill northcote
1.0 out of 5 stars
Scooby Doo
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 2 January 2021Verified Purchase
Absolutely no good, when arrived it was region 1 and not 2. Will not play on DVD or Xbox!
4 people found this helpful
Report abuse

Felix Fredriksson
5.0 out of 5 stars
Highly recommended.
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 16 October 2015Verified Purchase
This is the complete (Region 1) collection of the "Where are you!" series. Season 1 (1969-70), season 2 (1970-71) and season 3 (1978-79), though the third seasons 16 episodes got the syndicated "Scooby-Doo show" opening and closing credits. Only the first nine episodes from the third season originally aired under the "where are you" title in 1978. The remaining (7) episodes aired as a part of the program block "Scooby's All-Stars". In 1980 the episodes from the third season, together with the Scooby episodes from the 1976 "Scooby Doo/Dynomutt hour", were grouped together under the blanket name "The Scooby-Doo show" for syndication. The box contains a dvd case with 8 discs. Disc 8 contains bonus material. Highly recommended.
9 people found this helpful
Report abuse