Luke
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Apr 13, 2002
- Messages
- 7,405
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- 98
What i mean by it is that the same old lines were being used over and over when asked about their relationship. While Jim and Frank carried it off very well there's only so many times you can be asked about Kermit and Piggys relationship in an interview and come out with a different answer (usually something about baby figs, lol) - especially in the 80's. I think Eric and Steve have the advantage of the times changing, the characters have now got a little looser and celebrity relationships are a lot more exposed in the media - so they can go a bit further with the jokes and theres similar things in the celebrity world they can poke fun at. I think the new stuff does compliment the old stuff in that they still do the relationship thing but times have changed and the Muppets can't really just stop still, real people dont.See that's the thing, I don't like it when the Jim-era material is called things like "the same old cliches." The new material should compliment the classic material, not force it out of the way.
I think Piggy was actually a lot more Muppety in that breakfast TV interview where they had her with Gonzo and Rizzo. It wasn't the same old lines and they were all having fun. I actualy find all the "classic personalities" of the characters come out way better when they are in groups and usually when adlibbing.
I do agree there have been a few problems with Kermit - the "bad self" line in MFS, a few lines in VMX and to a lesser extent the Hip Hop comment - Kermit can be funny and zany without having to try to be cool.
The other thing about the character development is that i think there are people high up who see the Muppets as a puppet version of The Simpsons, see their success and try to simpsonize them a bit. I don't think it comes from our Muppeteers or our Muppet writers (like Jim or Craig who i have mass respect for) as it seems on things like XD (the office or lift skits) or adlibed appearances they are being more classic Muppety than they have ever been since Jim Henson's death but in any of the TV movies which i guess are way more tightly controlled and go through so many approvals the Simpsons writing seems to creep in. In a way it isnt a bad comparison because there is some similarity and people today are obviously fans of that style of writing, and used to it as Simpsons is so popular but i think there are also subtle differences in the way the characters act and the levels they go to.