Actually, yeah! Have you guys seen The Muppet Movie and The Muppets Take Manhattan? They're two of the most emotionally manipulative movies that ever lived, lol. And they're both about getting the band together. And they were both well received and continue to be beloved. And I'll even add to that Muppet Christmas Carol, which is over flowing with tear inducing musical numbers, and remains a beloved holiday tradition for many. Great Muppet Caper has its fans too, but it's very often relegated to third place because it's nowhere near as sentimental.
Well, I'd say that The Muppet Movie and Muppets take Manhattan were emotional, but not manipulatively so. Heck, Tm is in TV Trope's page for Sadist Show...
Have you ever seen a group of characters get [crapped] upon as badly as Kermit and the gang does in this movie? Even the ending is more or less a depressingly unhappy one.
I really don't want to speak ill of the tone, since it worked for that movie specifically. They were a little heavy handed in the world without the Muppets bit though. I think the Reno bit and the reality show joke were just enough.
I don't want it to go down as me saying that TMM and MTM are more
genuine in emotion than TM, just Tm felt like an entire conspiracy was about to keep Kermit depressed and down outside of the reasons for it. And TMM would be more emotional rollercoaster. It manages to go from Bullwinkle quality snappy repartee to Kermit's emotional journey and talk with himself to parody gunfight at the OK Coral.
People need a reason to see films these days and they felt no reason to shell out cash to visit the Muppets in theaters last March. Most people wait for video and ondemand these days. Heck, even a lot of fans do. You know what I call these fans?
Bad fans! (in an Animal voice).
The Muppets' commercials and ad campaigns were highly successful in that people enjoyed them. Unfortunately that didn't translate into ticket sales. But that's not a complete loss. The ads were so cross-promoted that they paid for themselves. In the end, MMW made its budget back and a small bit of profit too. So what does this tell us? People want to see the Muppets on the small screen.
And that's the part of your post that I agree with. Disney needs to figure out a way to broadcast, YouTube or stream new content to us and we'll watch it. T
he mountain isn't going to come to the Muppets. The Muppets have to go to the mountain...er...viewer's homes.
My sentiments exactly. Netflix and Redbox are kinda screwing their own industry in as many ways as they're revolutionizing them. The
entire Box Office was down this year, partially for that reason. And while we can call fans bad or good on how they chose to see the film if any (I went to a convention the weekend it opened and made
darn well sure to rush to the theater afterwards on the last day of it), the more causal fans who only get their Muppet fix on Family Guy cutscenes would probably rather waited until a day they were bored and it was on Netflix. And again, 40 bucks for a family to see one thing vs 8 bucks a month to see a lot of things... unless it's huge and noisey enough to demand to be seen on the big screen, it's a cheaper, better option.
But I agree completely.
We need another venue for the Muppets besides movies. Why did they stop doing viral videos? How come they haven't thought about putting material, old or new on Netflix other than a couple movies? I don't think TV is the right fit for them other than the occasional special, but an internet series is prime for the Muppets. For all of Henson, actually. SW is putting it's British Sesame program for Britain on Youtube rather than forcing it into the show.