CensoredAlso
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- Sep 16, 2002
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That's a good point--suspending disbelief vs diminishing the characters.The only difference is how it's presented to the audience - establishing non-identical characters as "identical" through dialogue (indicating that the audience just needs to suspend disbelief for the rest of the movie), or having them look similar-but-distinguishable and just making the characters seem stupid for not working it out.
I'd be disappointed if he stayed having amnesia by the end.and the whole amnesia scene was depressing and unenjoyable to watch. I've seen the movie twice, both times thought it started off okay, but was quite disappointed by the end.
MTM is a different kind of Muppet movie, no doubt. If you stumbled upon it on TV, in a random non-Muppets scene, you'd probably think it was a grown up '80s comedy. I appreciate that they had enough faith in the Muppets to have them pull off both the gentle social commentary and angsty drama. They were never in an environment that felt that real in tone again. You know, Jenny talks to Kermit like he's a real person. Whereas Tina Fey hams it up like a cartoon villain (or a latter day SNL cast member ).
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