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After
a decade in limbo, the Muppets have once again found their
attitude. While the lovable puppets have always been geared
towards family viewing, the past few years have seen Kermit
and the gang steer too far towards being kid friendly and
forgetting about the parents. The legacy of the franchise
suffered because of it as the Muppets became out of touch
with the times and too much like Barney the purple dinosaur.
Made
for TV, It's a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie is
a medley of familiar Christmas classics such as It's
a Wonderful Life, A Christmas Story and The
Grinch, amongst others, with a distinct Muppet spin.
Kermit and the gang are going to lose the Muppet Theater to
a miserly banker (Joan Cusack). Kermit gets depressed and
wishes he'd never been born. You know where the plot is going.
And while I'm tired of It's
a Wonderful Life "homages," it worked here
to frame the story. The Muppets are first and foremost about
humor. That's why The Muppet Show used a variety format
and connected several short skits with a simple, often flimsy,
running theme. But when you expand from a 30-minute show to
a feature-length movie, there has to be a story line to hold
everything together. Very Merry Muppet Christmas provides
just enough story to get by and the rest is all gags and spoofs.
Like
any good Muppet project, Very Merry Muppet Christmas
has a manic imagination where anything can happen. Humans
and foam figures live in harmony together, eight-foot tall
"things" can walk down the street without being
stared at and don't be surprised if things just fall out of
the sky. No explanations are needed as to what something is.
They're Muppets, after all.
Another
Muppet staple is a steady diet of star cameos. Among them
are two of my least favorite actors working in Hollywood today:
David Arquette and Whoopi Goldberg. Normally I find them both
grating and obnoxious. Here Goldberg is at the very least
tolerable. She doesn't try too hard to crack a bad joke. She's
more subdued in her role as, of all people, God. Not only
is Arquette tolerable, he is commendable as a rookie angel.
With his thick glasses and dorky demeanor, Arquette fits right
in with his Muppet costars (in the context of the film, this
is a good thing). Like Gonzo or Beaker, Arquette is sweet
and lovable, even though he's often being pushed around. Other
celebrities showing up in the film include Matt Lillard (Scooby-Doo),
William H. Macy (Fargo), morning talk show host Kelly
Ripa and the cast of TV's Scrubs.
What
I appreciated most was the numerous subtle jabs at pop culture.
Kids might not have understood the gag on media synergy or
jabs at often-fanatical Internet fansites. But their parents
probably did. Very Merry Muppet Christmas even pokes
fun at the Muppets themselves. The villain in The Muppet
Movie was Doc Hopper, a rich entrepreneur who wanted Kermit
as his spokesperson for a chain of fast-food restaurants specializing
in frog legs. All but forgotten, Doc Hopper's returns. References
such as these bring the Muppets into the 21st century and
offer a welcome departure from the kid-oriented Muppet films
of recent years: The Muppet Christmas Carol, Muppet Treasure
Island and Muppets From Space.
Let's
face it, currently celebrating their 25th anniversary, the
Muppets are symbols of nostalgia. Should their style remain
like it was 25 years ago, they will never transcend being
a novelty today. After a quick fix either from a Muppet
Show rerun or a movie such as this, people will become
bored again and move on. That's why it's so important for
the Muppets, or any entertainment franchise for that matter,
to show some change. Very Merry Muppet Christmas succeeds
without compromising the heart of the Muppets, the reason
why they became so popular in the first place. Some might
cringe at the sight of Muppets in a rave, or Pepe, one of
the few good Muppet additions of the past decade, burying
his face in Joan Cusack's bosom. I say bring it on. The original
Muppet fans are adults now. We can handle edgier material.
There's nothing in Very Merry Muppet Christmas you
won't see on early primetime television.
Early
pacing did pose as a problem for the film. At one point Arquette
and Goldberg sit around and shoot the breeze for far too long.
Later on there's an inexplicable scene involving Fozzie being
chased by some Crocodile Hunter wannabe. Unless it's
Steve Irvin, the original, the crazy Aussie animal hunter
shtick isn't funny. Here it's downright awful.
But
these moments are few as, for the most part, director Kirk
Thatcher stays with the story, no matter how thin it is. And
even some throw away scenes serve a purpose because they help
build character.
Hopefully
It's a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie will serve
as a sign of things to come for the Muppets. Kermit's got
more attitude here than he has in all the other shows and
films he's been in before. He's embraced an edgier world,
one where both kids and adults can once again laugh with the
Muppets and all their rediscovered resonance.
©Movie
Views; November 29, 2002
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|
Kirk R. Thatcher |
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|
Tom Martin |
| Jim
Lewis |
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| The
Muppets |
|
David Arquette |
|
Joan Cusack |
| XWhoopi
Goldberg |
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| 2002 |
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| USA |
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| 90
minutes |
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