| This needs a stretch. (Feel free to remove when satisfied of completion.) Needed: Synopsis. |
Miami Frights is the first of four stories in Scooby-Doo #126, by DC Comics.
Premise[]
The gang visits the beach estate of Fred's Uncle Thurmond, which is being terrorized by a land shark.
Synopsis[]
Insert details here.
Characters[]
Main characters:
Supporting characters:
- Uncle Thurmond (only appearance)
Villains:
- Land Shark (only appearance)(Max Neidermeyer's disguise)
- Max Neidermeyer (mentioned)
- TV actor (only appearance)
- TV actress (only appearance)
Other characters:
- Police officer (only appearance)(no lines)
Locations[]
- Miami
- Uncle Thurmond's estate
- Buried mall beneath the estate
Objects[]
- TBA
Vehicles[]
- Police car
Suspects[]
| Suspect | Motive/reason |
|---|---|
| Two terrified swimmers | Daphne thought they looked familiar. |
| Max Neidermeyer | His business card was found down in the buried mall underneath the estate. |
Culprits[]
| Culprit | Motive/reason |
|---|---|
| Max Neidermeyer as the Land Shark Two TV actors as accomplices, who pretended to be terrified swimmers |
To scare people into selling their homes so Max could expand his Sharkland amusement park empire. |
Notes/trivia[]
- TBA
Coloring mistakes[]
- In the arrest panel, the actor who pretended to be a witness to the death of Max has brown hair. In earlier panels he has blond hair.
Inconsistencies/continuity errors and/or goofs/oddities[]
- None known.
Reception[]
Robbie Busch opens a trio of three excellent Scooby-Snacks. His "Miami Frights" features an excellent monster cunningly designed by Robert Pope, who is also on his game when having the gang follow clues or surf the waves.
The clues lead to an imaginative hideout, which is given an eerie ambiance by inker Scott McRae. The solution draws from the fairplay deck, and the scoundrel would have gotten away with it if not for "those meddling kids and their dog."[1]
Quotes[]
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References[]
- ↑ Ray Tate in Line of Fire Reviews