Wow. I've been away from here for a bit but this thread was sure to bring me around! I LOVE this movie. When I saw this movie for the first time (which was NOT when it originally aired) I felt like my guys had come home again. Kermit was...kermit-y. He was sweet, affable, hopelessly unworldly and had this wonderful naive faith in the idea that you could make people happy by entertaining them, and that making people happy was a admirable goal in and of itself.
Gonzo was perfect in this. His coming timing (watch his continual reactions and ad-libs while other performers are speaking--he so gosh-darned REAL that it hurts!) and his soulful depth finally get the respect that they had long been due. His song about how miserable Christmas could be was just amazing--it knifed right through all the commercialism of the season with an honesty that was breath-taking. (No--I'm not joking. He actually brought tears to my eyes.) And there was something sublime about Gonzo's skewed view of their Christmas program, including his take.
Fozzie gets to shine in this one, too. There were SO MANY great character moments. Fozzie's good intentions and ineptness were heart-wrenching to watch. Just thinking about Kermit's sad little "Oh Fozzie...no!" makes me want to cry. To try SO HARD and still be the reason that everything goes wrong--what could be worse for a bear who has spent his career teetering on the edge of egotism and insecurity. I think there is much to be said for a bear that would run through lasers--twice--for the sake of his friends and their dream.
Piggy was most felt in her absence here, but I don't mean that as a complaint about her lack of air time. Simply put, this was the beginning of the franchise's realization that the muppets just aren't the muppets without Miss Piggy as the star of the show. (This realization was derailed after NBC sold the muppets, and is only NOW getting back on tract--but that's another post for another--grumpier--thread.) There was a...hmmm...how do I want to say this. There was a general acknowledgement among ALL of the muppets that knew Kermit best that they--and Kermit--just could make it without her. Everyone expects Kermit to "love" the "five golden rings" (bizarre as they are) because Piggy is at the center of it. And the scene where everyone crowds around Kermit, pressuring him to go after Piggy and bring her back home is one of my favorite scenes in muppetdom. There is such...UNDERSTANDING there among them of the way Kermit and Piggy need each other, and how they balance their pride and professionalism and yes, even love, for each other in the face of many trials. And when push comes to hi-yah, the muppet gang knows that Kermit will go and bring home the bacon--right back to where she belongs.
I liked the friends-exchanging-gifts sequence--it was touching.
I LIKED all of the loopy cultural references to "Moulin Rouge" and "A Beautiful Mind" and "Windows." Oh! OH! And DID YOU NOTICE that the doorbell to God's office rings the NBC sound? Talk about advertising!
I liked Scooter with his lampshade on his head trying to impress the chorus girls.
I like Janice and her harp, and Sam and his Propecia.
I, like others, fell in love with Pepe for his rascally sense of justice and his hormonally-induced weaknesses.
Gosh--so much to like about this.
OH! And the kiss scene at the end--everything about that--Piggy's miff, Rowlf's reaction to her after the kiss, Johnny and Sal's catcalls from the audience--oh--it's all too wonderful. Not to mention Piggy's sparkly Kermit-green Christmas frock and styling new gloves. And what a absolute JOY it was to see Kermit--dare I say it--HAPPY to have found himself in the love of his friends and the kisses of his pig.
As far as I'm concerned, it doesn't get much better than this.
So, all you ney-sayers about this one--are you crazy? You won't convince me. This movie is a sure cure for the holiday blues.