They're completely different aside from a few vague design similarities.
OK, then was the K-9 I had in mind the one from the one-episode "K-9 and Company: A Girl's Best Friend"?
They're completely different aside from a few vague design similarities.
So kinda like the Muppets in Muppet Treasure Island and Muppet Christmas Carol, then.[/QUOTE]Same character, different universe. Basically Robbie was "playing himself," like when actors play fictional versions of themselves in movies or cartoons.
So kinda like the Muppets in Muppet Treasure Island and Muppet Christmas Carol, then.
So kinda like the Muppets in Muppet Treasure Island and Muppet Christmas Carol, then.
Except some Muppets in "The Muppet Movie" were from "The Muppet Show", but some still had their roots in "Sesame Street". And Kermit predated them all. Jim Henson's Creature Shop, the Children's Television Workshop and Lew Grade all..., umm, had a hand in there somewhere.
OK, then was the K-9 I had in mind the one from the one-episode "K-9 and Company: A Girl's Best Friend"?
So kinda like the Muppets in Muppet Treasure Island and Muppet Christmas Carol, then.[/QUOTE]Same character, different universe. Basically Robbie was "playing himself," like when actors play fictional versions of themselves in movies or cartoons.
No, he means the central conceit behind the Muppet Movies is that the Muppets are literally actors, and in the movies they're just playing parts. Even the movies seemingly set in the "reality" the Muppets inhabit as opposed to the remakes of classic stories like Muppet Christmas Carol. The movies aren't supposed to have "actually" happened in any sense from the perspective of the Muppets, they're fiction within fiction, performances put on by the Muppet troupe.
It is so weird to talk in these sorts of terms on the subject of the Muppets.
No, he means the central conceit behind the Muppet Movies is that the Muppets are literally actors, and in the movies they're just playing parts.
Isn't the first use of "Muppet Babies" a segment in one of the movies, when someone says, "Imagine if we'd all known each other as children?", and there's a dream/flashback.Just for the sake of completeness, as far as I know Muppet Babies is not. Did I miss anything, and is this all about right?
Edit: Just because I'm not entirely sure I have this straight, and I'd like someone to check for me (why do I care so much about Muppets canon all of a sudden): In what I'll call the "Muppetverse" for the sake of this, as far as I understand the Muppet Show and Sesame Street are "real". All the Muppet movies are productions put on by the Muppet players with occasional guest roles from their friends on Sesame Street and elsewhere. The Sesame Street movies are "real". Just for the sake of completeness, as far as I know Muppet Babies is not. Did I miss anything, and is this all about right?
Isn't the first use of "Muppet Babies" a segment in one of the movies, when someone says, "Imagine if we'd all known each other as children?", and there's a dream/flashback.
I don't see it as being much different than talking about, say, Marilyn Monroe playing various characters in her films, considering that "Marilyn Monroe" was an entirely artificial persona adopted by Norma Jeane Baker. Or Gilbert Gottfried playing various characters based on his loudmouthed "default" persona, which is itself an assumed voice and personality unlike who he really is off-camera. Sometimes human actors are playing artificial roles even when supposedly being themselves. So I have no trouble accepting Kermit the Frog or Bugs Bunny or Robbie the Robot as an actor who can play other roles.
It's not that systematic.
It's not that it's weird talking about the concept. It's that it's weird talking about the likes of Fozzie Bear so seriously and metafictionally.![]()
This can get really funny/weird in interviews, where (for example) Kevin Clash will be answering a question while operating Elmo sitting on the desk in front of him, and Elmo will interrupt with, "Elmo doesn't agree with Kevin on that one."Where the Muppets are concerned, the line between reality and fantasy has always been hair-thin and extremely porous. Just look at the behind-the-scenes specials where they show the human performers working the Muppets -- but the Muppets are still acting like separate "living" characters staring down in shock at the people beneath them, going "Where did they come from?" and the like. Which, really, is part of the nature of puppetry, the way the puppet can be simultaneously an obvious contrivance operated by the performer and a separate, independent personality from the performer. There's no effort to define a clear dividing line between reality and fiction.
^But isn't the Henson Company based in England?
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The UK approach to copyright is unusual (and I don't know of any franchise other than Doctor Who where character creators have taken advantage of it), but the closest ST equivalent I can think of is the funky licencing arragement around Star Fleet Battles.
When the "Crucible" books came out, and in his subsequent "unpaid merchandising royalties" lawsuit, Harlan Ellison claimed he had control of elements originating in "City on the Edge of Forever," .
When the "Crucible" books came out, and in his subsequent "unpaid merchandising royalties" lawsuit, Harlan Ellison claimed he had control of elements originating in "City on the Edge of Forever," above and beyond the oft-referenced royalty payments for future on-screen use that turned T'Pau into T'Pol and Nick Locarno into Tom Paris.
Harlan Ellison claimed he had control of elements originating in "City on the Edge of Forever"
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