Why is it that the cage dancing Scooter upsets people more than the rave Sam sporting a pacifier (a known mark of drug use with Ecstasy)?
Why weren't religious groups that loved the Muppets upset at the Hare Krishna jokes in the Muppet Movie or all that time spent in bars and around alcohol, the gun use, the metal fork shot into the plywood Kermit target, the fact that being rich and famous is what life is all about?
For the record, I agree, the Sam pacifier thing was worse for me. It didn't seem like they were saying "Oh no, Sam's not himself anymore in this alternate universe!" It felt more like, "Haha, let's laugh at Sam with the Ecstasy pacifier!"
This is all just my opinion, but the Hare Krishna joke is a clever pun. The use of a bar setting and movie violence in The Muppet Movie to me is sophisticated, as in it helped create a deep, mature, interesting movie that adults can enjoy as well as kids. And one that kids can more fully appreciate later in life.
Some of the stuff in VMMC to me was vulgar and not subtle. It's immature as opposed to mature. A teenager trying to seem grown up. In contrast, the maturity seen in TMM would have been shocking in VMMC.
It's like how the TV show
All in the Family used "naughty" words in order to prove a deeper point. But nowadays, we have all these shows throwing about the same "naughty" words with no meaning behind them, just for shock value, and then claiming they're being "edgy." Yet today, networks would be terrified of putting something like
All in the Family on the air today. So which is the truly edgy one?
But again, that is just my opinion. (And there were parts of VMMC that I did like).
And I am religious and I appreciate the Muppets' edge as well as their cuteness. But this has been an interesting discussion and I respect everyone's opinion!
And I appreciate change, I have nothing against it. But I do resent it when older material that is still relevant and still quality is hidden away simply because it is old. Kids today refuse to watch movies if they are in Black and White (trust me I have seen it). If the movie is good, it shouldn't have to apologize for itself by colorizing or changing itself. It's the audience that needs to change and appreciate quality no matter how old it may be.
In our society, time and again, we have destroyed beautiful things in the name of "modernization." And time and again it has not worked. The answer is not to reject the past, but to learn from it and be inspired by it, and in that way create new things. Otherwise we have no history, we have no culture. We have flavor of the moment. And that's as long as we will last.