I left after my negative comment, so I'm just getting back to seeing the negative comments about my negative comment.
It's not about requiring Jim back from the dead. It's about finding a better team. You don't go to teenage pulp writers for a Muppet script. Their next film needs great writing above anything else. I worry about the team behind "Forgetting Sarah Marshall" because that was such a sleaze fest. If they can make it intelligent and inoffensive, then good.
Jim created, just as God created us. His creation is here. His gifts were creating them and using them while he lived. His gift was made available to the future, through his children. If they misuse what he gave, or let it wither away, it does not detract from what he already provided- but it is a shame.
The next film needs to be relaxed, without pop culture jokes and without forced comedy. Subtlety was one of Jim's best traits. Yes, even in the mayhem of The Muppet Show, Kermit was a source of balance and moderation. When someone thinks they're very, very funny- they are not, so much. It's when they're funny and pull off not realizing they're funny... ah, that's funny.
They also need an all out musical. Paul Williams, who also worked on Letters to Santa songs, is the one to go to. He and the Muppets belong together, and his great resources should be tapped for as long as he's willing to contribute. I'm talking full-on full length soundtrack to make history. Like Little Mermaid, Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin... or, like The Muppet Movie.
I'm probably older than a lot of you, and have probably spent more money on Muppet merchandise than a good amount of you, too. So I do have a right to complain. If you sit around garbling up junk food because that's all that you think you're worth, then that's what you get. Even Ocean Spray has taken out high fructose corn syrup due to customer demand.
I'm not really still here because I've lost faith, which I have. I am here because there must be an ounce of it left. All I'm saying is, "Walk with caution" and "It had better be good."