Disney seems to want to strike while the Muppets are hot. That's a good thing. This is an approximate breakdown of what is required for a Summer 2013 release:
- 3 months to complete & polish the script
- 3 months of preproduction, soundtrack, set building, location scouting etc.
- 3 months of production and filming
- 3 months of post-production editing, effects and mixing
It can be done and not be rushed if they hit all green lights without any substancial set-backs over the next year. Television is an entirely different creature than film so I wouldn't compare the rushed specials to this sequel. However, I suspect this will be a holiday 2013 release. Either way, this is great news!!
Of course, with the first film, they were working on the script for years, even before Disney picked it up. That script had quite a bit of polishing to it, and thank frog it did.
Somehow, the writers are the ones saying 2013 is unrealistic... there's either something to put us at ease or completely unsettle us there depending how things work out. I'm sure we won't get something rushed, but this
is barely a year of work to go on. I'm all for seeing a movie next year, but if I have to wait for 2014 for something a little more polished, I'm not complaining. Hopefully if the writers don't feel the script is perfect, Disney would give them the extra time to complete it.
But the very fact we're getting another movie and with the same writing talent is nothing but great news all around.
Somebody tell that to John Carter!
There was a real problem marketing that movie, and I bet the move to drop "Of Mars" from the title made the film blend in with all the other ill conceived fantasy action flops to begin with. They dropped the ball with Prince of Persia (a game that I'm sure no one under the age of 27 has ever heard of anyway), and I'm guessing the public say previews for John Carter and said "It's the same movie." They could have and SHOULD have marketed it better, but there's such a flood of that kind of movie (Wrath of the Titans came out a couple weeks later) that it blends in quietly with the background, and no one, not even the marketers saw what was special about it.