I liked this about the new movie. A Muppet Christmas Carol was telling a classic story, starring the Muppets. This new movie was about the Muppets as real people. Even Kermit says, "Didn't you see our first movie?" That's actually one of the things I really enjoy about the Muppets in general...they can be deeply entrenched in the story they're telling, or they can break the fourth wall and acknowledge their audience, and it all comes across just fine.My biggest problem was that too much of the script felt like self-insertion fanfic by Jason Segel, and both he and Amy Adams were playing it hugely tongue-in-cheek with a huge wink to the audience. Contrast that to Michael Caine in The Muppet Christmas Carol, delivering the line "This is old Fozziwig's rubber chicken factory!" with such wide-eyed earnestness that you'd think Dickens wrote it that way all along. He plays a completely straight Scrooge, which is exactly the secret to co-starring with Muppets.
Fox News must be really bored right now.It ain't easy being green, but according to Fox Business, Kermit the Frog and his Muppet friends are reds.
Last week, on the network's "Follow the Money" program, host Eric Bolling went McCarthy on the new, Disney-released film, "The Muppets," insisting that its storyline featuring an evil oil baron made it the latest example of Hollywood's so-called liberal agenda.
Bolling, who took issue with the baron's name, Tex Richman, was joined by Dan Gainor of the conservative Media Research Center, who was uninhibited with his criticism.
"It's amazing how far the left will go just to manipulate your kids, to convince them, give the anti-corporate message," he said.
I liked this about the new movie. A Muppet Christmas Carol was telling a classic story, starring the Muppets. This new movie was about the Muppets as real people. Even Kermit says, "Didn't you see our first movie?" That's actually one of the things I really enjoy about the Muppets in general...they can be deeply entrenched in the story they're telling, or they can break the fourth wall and acknowledge their audience, and it all comes across just fine.My biggest problem was that too much of the script felt like self-insertion fanfic by Jason Segel, and both he and Amy Adams were playing it hugely tongue-in-cheek with a huge wink to the audience. Contrast that to Michael Caine in The Muppet Christmas Carol, delivering the line "This is old Fozziwig's rubber chicken factory!" with such wide-eyed earnestness that you'd think Dickens wrote it that way all along. He plays a completely straight Scrooge, which is exactly the secret to co-starring with Muppets.
This movie was a re-introduction to the Muppets. I think they made the right call interacting with the audience in the ways that they did.
That's fantastic.Apparently Fox News thinks the Muppets are communists
Fox News must be really bored right now.It ain't easy being green, but according to Fox Business, Kermit the Frog and his Muppet friends are reds.
Last week, on the network's "Follow the Money" program, host Eric Bolling went McCarthy on the new, Disney-released film, "The Muppets," insisting that its storyline featuring an evil oil baron made it the latest example of Hollywood's so-called liberal agenda.
Bolling, who took issue with the baron's name, Tex Richman, was joined by Dan Gainor of the conservative Media Research Center, who was uninhibited with his criticism.
"It's amazing how far the left will go just to manipulate your kids, to convince them, give the anti-corporate message," he said.![]()
I didn't miss your point. I was just including Jason and Amy in "the Muppets" as a part of the cast. I had no problem at all with them breaking engaging the audience the way they did. Muppets or Humans...I thought it was funny.I liked this about the new movie. A Muppet Christmas Carol was telling a classic story, starring the Muppets. This new movie was about the Muppets as real people. Even Kermit says, "Didn't you see our first movie?" That's actually one of the things I really enjoy about the Muppets in general...they can be deeply entrenched in the story they're telling, or they can break the fourth wall and acknowledge their audience, and it all comes across just fine.My biggest problem was that too much of the script felt like self-insertion fanfic by Jason Segel, and both he and Amy Adams were playing it hugely tongue-in-cheek with a huge wink to the audience. Contrast that to Michael Caine in The Muppet Christmas Carol, delivering the line "This is old Fozziwig's rubber chicken factory!" with such wide-eyed earnestness that you'd think Dickens wrote it that way all along. He plays a completely straight Scrooge, which is exactly the secret to co-starring with Muppets.
This movie was a re-introduction to the Muppets. I think they made the right call interacting with the audience in the ways that they did.
You're completely missing my point. I said that Adams and Segel were playing their parts with their tongues firmly planted in their cheeks, with nearly every line delivered with a gigantic wink to the audience, whereas actors like Michael Caine, Tim Curry and even Steve Martin were playing their roles in their movies like it was any other movie.
I wasn't complaining about the Muppets doing the same thing. For the Muppets to break the fourth wall is fine -- even expected; they've been doing that since day one. But when the human characters are trying to be in on the joke, too, it hurts the product as a whole.
You're completely missing my point. I said that Adams and Segel were playing their parts with their tongues firmly planted in their cheeks, with nearly every line delivered with a gigantic wink to the audience, whereas actors like Michael Caine, Tim Curry and even Steve Martin were playing their roles in their movies like it was any other movie.
I wasn't complaining about the Muppets doing the same thing. For the Muppets to break the fourth wall is fine -- even expected; they've been doing that since day one. But when the human characters are trying to be in on the joke, too, it hurts the product as a whole.
That's fantastic.Apparently Fox News thinks the Muppets are communists
Fox News must be really bored right now.It ain't easy being green, but according to Fox Business, Kermit the Frog and his Muppet friends are reds.
Last week, on the network's "Follow the Money" program, host Eric Bolling went McCarthy on the new, Disney-released film, "The Muppets," insisting that its storyline featuring an evil oil baron made it the latest example of Hollywood's so-called liberal agenda.
Bolling, who took issue with the baron's name, Tex Richman, was joined by Dan Gainor of the conservative Media Research Center, who was uninhibited with his criticism.
"It's amazing how far the left will go just to manipulate your kids, to convince them, give the anti-corporate message," he said.![]()
Those people are truly demented.
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I hope the success of this movie means more will come.
It's worth noting that Tex Richman isn't the villain because he's rich. Kermit seems to have become somewhat wealthy in this film himself. Tex Richman is the villain because he deliberately misrepresents the contents of contracts he tricks people into signing, in order to trick them into accepting less payment than their property is worth -- and then he tries to illegally sabotage their efforts to clauses of those contracts to protect their property.
Tex Richman isn't a villain because The Muppets thinks capitalism is bad and he's rich. Tex Richman is a villain because he engages in what amounts to fraud.
... on the other hand, I can see where that might make Wall Street's servants feel uncomfortable...
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