I get what you're saying. Sure, there was a sweetness. Nobody can deny that. But there's a difference between Jim's "unique sweetness" and the gooey saccharine moments of some of the post-Jim writing. The Swedish Chef hugging the chickens in TM is one of the best examples of the skewed tone. It might seem subtle, but it sets the characters in a two-dimensional course that MMW corrected.
I'd say the worst offender would have been LTS. I understand that Gonzo has understated, quiet moments from time to time, but he seemed just chronically depressed in that one. That one wasn't just gooey, it was practically oozing saccharine. Even Paul Williams's songs in that one were almost over the top in cutesyness. I liked that special and all, but it really lacked any hardcore wacky Muppet moments. Even the Jim Henson Memorial special, the most somber of
all Muppet projects, had the Accounting Marching Band bit. And just before the biggest tearjerker in the Muppet franchise hit, too.
Then again, for all Jerry's effort, the wackier bits in MCC felt off and tacked on...well... 'cept for "LIGHT THE LAMP! NOT THE RAT!!!"
Then there's the opposite of the scale seen in VMX (though not that bad), the script of the unsold Fox Muppet Show (and be ever so thankful we were never cursed with that one), and especially...
that telefilm I shall not speak the name of. While I think VMX was a step in the right direction of putting the wacky back, there were notes of Simpsons and Family Guy (at the time Family Guy that is) humor. And while it did work for that special, attempts to create it with...the other thing... were lacking at best. That film almost seemed to be
heartless! Soulless even.
I agree about the overly emotionally wrought TM movie. They were trying to strike a balance there. They almost got it, I can appreciate. What bugs me is that the
exact emotional tone was what the public liked about the film that shied them away from the genuinely Muppety MMW.