post_page_cover

Sarah Michelle Gellar Says Positively Steamy Kiss Was Cut From 2002 Scooby-Doo

Feb 26, 2023



Sarah Michelle Gellar wants justice for the “steamy” kiss she shared with Linda Cardellini as Daphne and Velma in the 2002 Scooby-Doo movie.
“There was an actual kiss between Daphne and Velma that got cut,” Gellar said on Watch What Happens: Live! with Andy Cohen on Thursday.
A “Steamy” Kiss
Gellar, who played Daphne, called the kiss with Cardellini’s Velma “steamy.”
“There was a steamy — I mean, I said it was steamy, but they [the studio] probably didn’t think it was, hence it was cut,” she said.
“There was a steamy kiss?” Andy Cohen asked.
“Yes. It got cut,” Sarah Michelle Gellar confirmed. “I feel like the world wants to see it. I don’t know where it is.”
The Buffy the Vampire Slayer star also remembered another LGBTQ element of the original script that was cut, too.
Also Read: Things I’ve Learned as a Moviemaker: James Gunn
“There was a great line too that I’ll never forget,” she said. “We were having a fight, Daphne and Fred, and then I yell at him, ‘And that ascot makes you look gay!’ And I slam the door and they cut that, too.” 
That joke on Fred — played by her now-husband Freddie Prinze Jr. — was actually “the reason I actually signed onto the movie,” Sarah Michelle Gellar said.
“It’s something everyone’s thought for a long time!” she added. “There’s always been an implication about Fred being interested in both parties. It all got cut.”
James Gunn Original Plan for Velma
In a since-deleted tweet from 2020, James Gunn, who wrote the screenplay, confirmed that in the original script he wrote, Velma was queer.
“In 2001, Velma was explicitly gay in my initial script,” Gunn wrote at the time. “But the studio just kept watering it down and watering it down, becoming ambiguous (the version shot), then nothing (the released version) and finally having a boyfriend (the sequel),” the since-deleted tweet said, according to Variety.
Now, the beloved Scooby-Doo character Velma is finally getting to be canonically lesbian in the new Trick or Treat, Scooby-Doo! animated movie as well as in the HBO Max series Velma.
Directed by Raja Gosnell, the 2002 Scooby-Doo movie’s cast also included Matthew Lillard as Shaggy, as well as Isla Fisher, Rowan Atkinson, and Neil Fanning.
You can watch Gellar’s full interview alongside Rosie Perez on Watch What Happens: Live! above.
Main Image: Sarah Michelle Gellar, Linda Cardellini, Matthew Lillard and Freddie Prinze Jr. in Scooby-Doo (2002) Photo Credit: Warner Bros.

Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by filmibee.
Publisher: Source link

YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE
Erotic Horror Is Long On Innuendo, Short On Climax As It Fails To Deliver On A Promising Premise

Picture this: you splurge on a stunning estate on AirBnB for a romantic weekend with your long-time partner, only for another couple to show up having done the same, on a different app. With the hosts not responding to messages…

Oct 8, 2025

Desire, Duty, and Deception Collide

Carmen Emmi’s Plainclothes is an evocative, bruising romantic thriller that takes place in the shadowy underbelly of 1990s New York, where personal identity collides with institutional control. More than just a story about police work, the film is a taut…

Oct 8, 2025

Real-Life Couple Justin Long and Kate Bosworth Have Tons of Fun in a Creature Feature That Plays It Too Safe

In 2022, Justin Long and Kate Bosworth teamed up for the horror comedy House of Darkness. A year later, the actors got married and are now parents, so it's fun to see them working together again for another outing in…

Oct 6, 2025

Raoul Peck’s Everything Bagel Documentary Puts Too Much In the Author’s Mouth [TIFF]

Everyone has their own George Orwell and tends to think everyone else gets him wrong. As such, making a sprawling quasi-biographical documentary like “Orwell: 2+2=5” is a brave effort bound to exasperate people across the political spectrum. Even so, Raoul…

Oct 6, 2025