As promised, I have returned with more to say and with less of a time limit. First... responding to various other posts.
Beauregard said:
The 'Father issues' storyline that they added to Jim's character for this movie was a little strange and forced. In the book his dad just died sometime after Billy Bones arrived.
I never found it at all strange or forced... but then again, this was my first introduction to the story of
Treasure Island. When I read the book for school in seventh grade, I remember noticing all sorts of differences between the book and
Muppet Treasure Island, but the "father issues" bit was not one of them--or at least, not that I recall.
Beauregard said:
But scarier still...BLIND PEW.
Blind Pew TERRIFIED me as a kid. I mean, not to the extent that I would run out of the room, which was my usual reaction to anything remotely scary on TV... but he SCARED me. He's even scarier in the computer game that was based on the movie. (You know, the one that was the subject of that series I started ages ago on The Muppet Mindset, and never finished? I should do something about that...) In almost every scene of the game at the Benbow Inn, I was mildly paranoid about where I clicked, because it wasn't hard to randomly have Blind Pew creeping by.
Now, I find him hilarious... but my knee-jerk reaction when he shows up is always to flinch.
Beauregard said:
Interesting fact about me, this was the first Muppet movie that I actually remember actively watching. I had seen them as a kid, of course, and sort of knew who most of the characters were, but didn't even realize that Squire Trelawny was Fozzie...so it must have been quite early in my Muppet fandom.
For me, too, this was the first Muppet movie I remember seeing. I'm sure I had seen bits of MCC on television before, and I somehow knew who Fozzie was... But this was my real introduction to Muppets. Well--this, and the computer game, which shows some of the characters in slightly different capacities and includes some lesser-known characters as well.
Beauregard said:
Captain Smollet, maybe you should have checked the crew BEFORE you left port.
That ALWAYS bothered me. I mean, maybe not the first time I saw the movie, but by the second time (which was the very next night) I remember thinking, "Um... isn't it a little late?" But then when I read another sea-faring book,
The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle, the first roll call didn't happen until they had been at sea for several hours. So either it actually was common not to take roll until
after leaving port, or it just tends to happen that way in literature. (Or I just tend to be drawn to literature where that happens... Hmm.)
Beauregard said:
But that compass really annoys me...not being in the original book AT ALL.
Oh, come on now, Beau! That compass is AWESOME. It's a wonderful piece of emotion that the Muppets added when they took this story and made it their own. And the best thing about it is that it doesn't look like anything special--no fancy engraving or elaborate design. It's just a compass, but it means
so much more to Jim... and Long John respects that.
Beauregard said:
Its good to see that Kermit is still a good leader and is prepared to order Jim to give him the map (also that Mr Arrow was listening at the door).
What
I love in that moment is that Kermit is such a leader... but still has to brace himself to give that order. Note the way he places his hand on the desk, pulls himself up a little bit... He knows what has to happen, but he really doesn't want to force it--he wants to guide Jim to make the choice himself. He does, of course, give the order, but that little bit of reluctance there is so wonderful.
Another point in the movie when there is just a WORLD of storytelling just in the movement of Kermit's hand? Just after Jim tells him that Long John is planning mutiny, and Kermit responds by sending Long John and the pirates to the island. Jim whispers, "Don't do that!" and Kermit, without ever looking away from Long John, quietly puts his hand on Jim's arm. That, to me, is just a fantastic gesture--calming and reassuring, while also quieting Jim so he's less likely to accidentally tip the pirates off that something's afoot. (Of course, Silver figures it out anyway, but that's beside the point.)
zoebell said:
love led us here is ok, but i think they kind of ruined it by having it play with them hanging upside down in the scene, it's too silly
Silly? They're about to
die! How is that silly? Just because they're upside-down? Well, if you want to dangle someone over a cliff so that they'll be perfectly alive and conscious for a while before plummeting to certain death, upside-down is the way to go. If you hang them by their wrists, they can slip their hands out; plus, it would be a lot easier for them to swing over, get their feet on the cliff, and save themselves. I suppose you could tie the rope under their shoulders, but that would take a lot more rope and a lot more work. Easier just to hang them by their ankles, so their feet hold them in place, and they have a long, miserable time to spend contemplating their death. (Or, y'know, singing a love song. Whatever works.)
Drtooth said:
The problem is, there WAS no place to put Piggy as far as the story go to begin with. Jerry managed to find a way to add her in, gender swapping a character and changing the character's role. I agree her role was kinda... well... contractually obligated in the film. Not her best one, but I'm starting to dislike her role in MFS more.
Two things here. One--Piggy's role as Benjamina is far more significant than her role as Mrs. Cratchit. (And, for the record, if you compare
Muppet Christmas Carol to the book, you'll see that the part of Mrs. Cratchit was actually
toned down to fit Piggy better.) Two--Is it really that
small of a role? I did the math at some point, and if I'm remembering right, Piggy comes into MTI about forty minutes into the movie. That may sound awful at first, but in
The Muppet Movie, Piggy is introduced... about forty minutes into the movie. Even in
The Great Muppet Caper, which was arguably her best (or at least most prominent) role, she doesn't show up at all for the first twenty minutes. My opinion of Piggy's role in MTI: She's fashionably late, as usual. Then she has a HUGE grand entrance, turns the role of "being marooned" completely on its head, takes a fairly major role in how the plot plays out, yells at the frog and then defends him, kicks some bad-guy butt... oh, and looks great doing it, of course. I realize I'm probably in the minority here, but I honestly don't see much to complain about.
And with that, sadly, I am out of time again. So I will just have to come back again some other time and ramble even more!