Well this brings up a very key question;I just don't buy into the doom and gloom, now or never talk. It's always around and serves little purpose. I am excited about the prospects of a new project, but we'll have to wait and see. The very fact that the Muppets are still out there and growing in the public's consciousness (albeit in ways I don't prefer) speaks to the fact that they have a place in our culture and aren't going anywhere.
A project will come along and get green-lit down the road. It will be a longer road than fans would like, but we'll keep waiting. The Muppets have plenty of songs to fill the musak!
Yup, VMX has certainly shifted a ton of DVD's over here in Europe and is on our TV schedules for christmas. Oz is just sitting on store shelves. I don't think financially it was that much of a failure for them since at some point early on they seemed to stop putting money into it, decide not to promote it and hide it away as much as possible. There were a few good moments but given all the problems i don't think they expected any triumphant Muppet return by that point, it was more a display to the shareholders and viewers that Disney now owned the Muppets.It wasnt a comercial failure but it was not as much of a success as a Very Merry Muppet Christmas
The Muppets just aren't slipping into obscurity lately. They are very, very slowly inching forward, but it is a forward move. I'm not pleased with the pace. I'm not too worried either.Im hoping sometime in 2008 we'll flip on the computer, hit our bookmarks, and have our jaws on the floor from unbelievably exciting Muppet news and a clear new strategy.
Till then, one can only wait and hope for the best while realizing the Muppets continue to slip farther into obscurity.
Yeah, but that's the hook. It wasn't a real failure, but it wasn't an instant surefire mega ultrahit. And these days, if you don't have a sucess right off the Bat, it's not worth looking into a second time. And since almost everyone in the Muppet community (plus a few TV critics) didn't like it, they assumed it was a failure.The Muppet Wizard of Oz was not a commercial failure. Not in the least. It didn't skyrocket anything, but I don't think that was expected by anyone? You may like it and many fans feel the same. Many don't. It wasn't perfect, but it had some great moments. I know many non-fans that really liked Oz and appreciated how it followed the book rather than the MGM production. Disney didn't launch any significant project afterward, but I don't think that was in the cards. I do think the special was rushed and that the director was upset about Disney's refusal to give it more money and a theatrical release.
I wouldn't doubt for a second they aren't fading into obscurity. People still know who they are, and there have been various mentions of them in different media projects. Look at Family Guy and American Dad. 1 out of 5 episodes has some reference to a muppet in it. Why, they had Jim Henson and Kermit trapped in a Superman 2 prison square on American Dad last week.The Muppets just aren't slipping into obscurity lately. They are very, very slowly inching forward, but it is a forward move. I'm not pleased with the pace. I'm not too worried either.
I stated that a while ago. And now that Disney owns Pixar, they have no use for them. Or it at least seems that way. I mean, the best we got since OZ was having 1 out of three comics published before they randomly decided to pull out of Disney Adventures (while not even aknowledging the fact it was gone).The Muppets were bought in a bargain basement fire sale as part of a post Pixar last ditch hail mary political salvo, and right when Muppet fans thought it couldn't get any worse...the real axe came down *after* Eisner left the building.
I think they do understand now but they've just always had this bad sense of timing and judgement. As you say, the Fraggle movie is perfect for the current marketplace, we should really have been seeing it about now, or earlier. Except years back they never understood the Fraggle potential until HIT Entertainment went out there and agressively marketed it and multitudes of fans signed petitions for DVD's. When the people behind the Smurfs or Chipmunks were planning their return movies, Henson were buying up Fantasy books that never made it past development. We just have to hope now they are into Fraggle stuff it isn't too late or won't have the same reception it would have.It's not just Disney moving tentatively with the Muppets. Henson has been moving far too slow with the new Fraggle movie. That should have come before Crystal. I don't think they understand what a goldmine they're sitting on with the Fraggles in the current marketplace.
They have Muppet shot glasses? !frogboy4 said:They have come out with a backpack, some cool T-Shirts, shot glasses and the daily calendar. That's a start.
Wow, that part hit me like a flash of lightning.Maybe I'm wrong. Maybe I'm just full of way too much foolish optimism.
But ya know what?
So was Jim.