Velma Season 1 Review: Episodes 1-8 (2024)

Below is a review of the first eight of ten episodes provided to press.

Much has been said about Velma being the unsung hero of Mystery Inc., the Scooby-Doo sleuth who's never been given her chance to truly shine. To many, she's the brains behind the teenage mystery solving outfit. But while it's true the character in most of her iterations has typically played second fiddle to the rest of the cast, HBO Max’s Velma proves exactly why the character, at least this version, isn’t exactly ready for the spotlight.

Mindy Kaling lends her voice to a drastically different (and wholly irksome) version of Velma who’s a far cry from her original portrayal. Clocking in at ten half-hour episodes -- the first eight of which were provided for review -- this animated prequel is full of raunchy laughs and some fun story beats, but its insistence on reinventing Velma as a sarcastic, self-loathing outsider prevents it from becoming the genre-disrupting adult comedy it aspires to be. Instead, it feels like a biting, hateful version of Daria without the character growth.

This notably Scooby-less series follows teen Velma Dinkley as she attends Crystal Cove High School while a serial killer is on the loose. Their target? Attractive girls. When Velma is accused of a murder she didn’t commit, she tackles the case to clear her name. The only problem? She has a mystery of her own that needs solving: the disappearance of her mother Diya (Sarayu Blue). Along with pal Norville Rogers (Sam Richardson), estranged bestie Daphne Blake (Constance Wu), and spoiled rich kid Fred Jones (Glenn Howerton), she’s determined to figure out who’s behind the murders and unravel her absentee mother’s secrets.

In this animated series, Velma isn't just a spunky, sarcastic teen who wants to fight the patriarchy and solve mysteries. She's also kind of a jerk. When she isn't complaining or putting someone down, she's a veritable quip machine who never runs out of sardonic remarks that never feel as pointed as she believes they are.

She’s quick to judge others based on their looks and social status. Her peers may never let her forget she isn’t a “hot girl,” but her personality is by far the most unattractive thing about her. And even though it’s easy to understand why she might behave this way after internalizing years of feelings of misogyny and inadequacy, her perpetually grating wisecracks make her difficult to watch, let alone empathize with.

The series does seem to be self-aware enough to recognize these qualities about Velma, but it’s unclear if this is deliberate or an attempt at making viewers laugh at her shortcomings. "You think every girl deep down is like you, but you're wrong," popular girl Olive (Fortune Feimster) asserts after Velma gives the "hot girls" of Crystal Cove an "uggo” makeover to avoid attracting the ire of the serial killer running rampant. "In fact, your definition of womanhood is even more restrictive than ours,” Olive continues.

There are plenty of genuinely funny, laugh out loud moments.

"I have no idea how to be a woman that doesn't judge other women," Velma concludes after this brutal takedown. Velma eventually reasons that she's all "sass and glasses" compared to her conventionally attractive peers, realizing both ideologies should be equally respected. But it's a lesson that rings hollow. It’s as if the writers made her just self-aware enough to condone her unsavory antics.

Velma isn’t the only character to have undergone an odd transformation. Shaggy, who goes by his birth name Norville in the series, starts off as little more than a wannabe paramour. His only concern is wooing Velma, and when he isn't actively trying to get her attention, he's scheming to make himself look attractive to her. This is a plot thread that’s later subverted, but the schtick wears itself out long before then.

Luckily, the humor doesn't rely on Velma's jokes or Norville’s jarring new personality to work. There are plenty of genuinely funny, laugh out loud moments in every episode that don't involve her at all. This is Scooby-Doo through the same adult lens that made DC's Harley Quinn series such a hit, and when it works, it works extremely well.

Daphne Blake and Fred Jones are characters many Scooby-Doo fans have written off as vapid, privileged teens, especially in the classic series. Funnily enough, in Velma, they end up becoming the most interesting members of the cast. Daphne is a wickedly smart and funny member of the popular crowd who's looking for her birth parents -- though her moms (Jane Lynch and Wanda Sykes) seem to know more than they let on. Constance Wu is absolutely hilarious as the flame-haired cool girl, and would have made a fantastic frontwoman instead of Velma.

Glenn Howerton gives the best portrayal of Fred the animated Scooby universe has ever seen. Simultaneously selfish, boyish, and virulently stupid, he's given some of the funniest lines of the entire show. There's a psychopathic lilt to him that has always seemed to simmer below the surface in every version of Fred, and Howerton elevates this personality trait in ways that make for side-splitting situations – including Fred going to jail.

For those hoping Velma would give the character space to explore her sexuality given her recent unambiguous portrayal as a gay woman, the series does get this mostly right. It wasn’t immediately obvious from early promotional clips, given Velma’s initial crush on Fred. Velma and Daphne do ponder the implications of their relationship beyond the bounds of friendship and admit that there's much more to it than that. But this acknowledgement comes about without little more than a “blink and you’ll miss it moment” in one episode.

This prequel does give Velma and Daphne's relationship a chance to blossom, even if it isn't a perfect one.

While the girls’ romance does become a major component of the series as it goes on, Velma and Daphne’s relationship gets less development than Harley Quinn and Poison Ivy’s had before the pair became a couple in the Harley Quinn animated series. At the very least, this prequel does give Velma and Daphne's relationship a chance to blossom, even if it isn’t a perfect one.

Velma is an often funny take on the classic Scooby-Doo series with plenty of risqué humor. But it’s unfortunate that most of what makes Velma funny is completely unrelated to the character who gets a starring role. This show likely came about because of fans who have always wanted more for the teenage super-solver. Ironically, the series would be exponentially better without its namesake – or, at least a version of her with a bit more character growth.

Velma Season 1 Review: Episodes 1-8 (2024)

FAQs

Who is the killer in Velma Season 1? ›

Velma figures out that Victoria Jones is the killer, trying to recreate Dr. Perdue's work to switch Fred's brain to a more competent person, so he could be a proper heir to the family company.

How many episodes will Velma Season 1 have? ›

Season 1 consisted of 10 episodes, running from January 12, 2023 to February 9, 2023. Season 2 consisted of 10 episodes, released in full on April 25, 2024.

What happens in the first episode of Velma? ›

Velma is accused of killing a classmate and has 24 hours to find the real murderer.

Is Velma Season 1 finished? ›

Two episodes were released per week, with the final episodes available for streaming on February 9, 2023.

Who killed Brenda and Krista in Velma? ›

She is the second teenage girl to be murdered by Victoria Jones. In "A Velma in the Woods", she is discovered to be alive in a brain form along with Brenda and Lola.

How bad is season 2 of Velma? ›

Instead, Season 2 is full of mostly unfunny gags from the same cast of characters that struggled to work with similar material last season. One minute, there's more of the ridiculous “explanation” for why Norville is transforming into the Shaggy we know and love from 55 years of Scooby-Doo cartoons.

Is Velma Season 2 confirmed? ›

Season Guide

Season 2 of Velma was confirmed to be under development on February 13, 2023. It was released on on April 25, 2024 with a total of ten episodes.

Why is Velma rated R? ›

Violence is a shade more intense than viewers might expect given the comic tone. We see dismembered body parts, dead bodies, dripping blood and brains, bones. Velma hallucinates a werewolf-like monster who appears and sometimes invades her body, bursting out of her belly and sending tentacles into her eyes.

What was Velma's Rotten Tomato score? ›

Velma on HBO Max is officially awful — Rotten Tomatoes audience score is 6% HBO Max's Velma has proven to be one of the most divisive shows on TV as of late, but one metric is definitely showing that many fans are giving it a big thumbs down.

What race is Velma? ›

Much will be made of the demographic swaps, as “Velma” is indeed a “Scooby-Doo” that looks like America. Velma is Indian American, Norville is Black, and Daphne appears to be of Asian descent, though she's the adopted daughter of married lesbian detectives Donna and Linda (Jane Lynch and Wanda Sykes).

Why is Scooby-Doo not in Velma? ›

Charles Grandy, Velma's showrunner, has explained that what made the original Scooby-Doo content for children was the presence of Scooby-Doo. Warner Bros. Animation also said that the show could not use the dog in this adult spinoff, which ultimately coincided with the creative team's desire to make a more mature take.

Who did Velma have a crush on? ›

The subject of Velma's affections is an original character named Coco Diablo, who is also bespectacled with a turtleneck like Velma's, and is also apparently the leader of a crime syndicate the Mystery Gang is pitted against.

Who was the killer in Velma season 1? ›

Type of Villain

Victoria Jones (nee Meeting), is the main antagonist of the HBO Max animated series Velma. She is the mother of Fred Jones and the one who helped build Jones Gentlemen Accessories into the juggernaut it's known as.

How old is Velma? ›

According to Scooby-Doo Team-Up #50, Pup's Velma is 9 years old. This would make Fred and Daphne 10, and Shaggy 11. Scooby would be 1. According to vast amounts of promotional material, in Where Are You, Velma is 15, Fred and Daphne are 16, Shaggy is 17 and Scooby is 7.

What is Velma's last name? ›

There are five main characters in the franchise: Scooby-Doo, Norville "Shaggy" Rogers, Fred Jones, Daphne Blake, and Velma Dinkley—known as "Mystery Incorporated".

Who was the villain in Velma? ›

Victoria Jones (nee Meeting), is the main antagonist of the HBO Max animated series Velma. She is the mother of Fred Jones and the one who helped build Jones Gentlemen Accessories into the juggernaut it's known as.

Is Fred the killer in Velma? ›

Velma Season 1 reveals Victoria Jones, Fred's mother, as the Crystal Cove serial killer. In this case, she is shown trying to use Edna's research to place a woman's brain inside Fred's body, so he can maintain the family's corporate empire.

Is Velmas mom the killer? ›

Velma unmasked Victoria as the killer after tying her up, which was followed by the villainess revealing her father's past, lambasting her father for ruining her family, while adding that she resurrected the research for her business.

Why did they make Velma black? ›

In the new TV-MA-rated series, Velma Dinkley is Indian. This decision to change the character's background (she's been a white character since 1969) was partially inspired by Peter Ramsey, Bob Persichetti, and Rodney Rothman's animated film Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse, which features a Black Spider-Man.

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