TM is mostly a rebranding piece for projects to come so I cut it some slack. For the most part, I loved the heck out of it and Walter too! Unfortunately Gary & Mary didn't really contribute much to the film. The script just neglects to make the most of their time on screen. They’re just kind of in the way. And who's idea was it to give Amy Adams a duet with Miss Piggy, but do it all in separate cutaways? It was a lost opportunity to get the Muppets into the human's dance numbers. Just weird. The Muppet Show and Muppet Theatre sequences at the end set everything right. It’s only fitting the next film will pick up where they left off - on a great Muppety moment!
Just my two cents. I cant wait for the next movie!
I'm actually mixed about the human interaction in TM. Seems like whatever else that would have built the characters better up was tossed along with all the cut scenes. I really think Disney lost a HUGE opportunity to release either a Donner cut or a special feature of all the deleted sequences into a separate mini-movie like they did with Anchorman the first time around. Gary and Mary were kinda just there, and Walter was the focus of the film until it was the Muppets' turn.
Then again, I look at these human adaptions (Chipmunks, Garfield, Yogi Bear), and the movies are almost exactly obsessed with the main human characters trying to get together in a relationship with the Mary Sue of the movie while the almost separated CGI characters basically hold up the rest of the film, just barely. Yogi was an egregious example of that. In fact, say what you will about the Smurf films, but the breath of fresh air was that the main human characters were already married. The Muppets knew well enough to push the humans off to the side as a B plot that only gets significant with "Man or Muppet." Again, my only issue is that they tried to fill so much into one 90 minute movie that it came off a little jumbled.
MCC has a beautiful spirit to it. The set design was gorgeous and the background Muppet cameos were fun to see. I'm sure Jim would have added his magic touch to make the thing absolutely spectacular. Instead, the film inherits a somber tone after the loss of two powerhouse performers and that seems like the right direction for the time period. I've had ideas of changing things about the film in past threads. In retrospect, I wouldn't change a thing. The film is a solid classic and it's what it needed to be.
I'd almost say the best way to improve the film would be to either remove the Muppets entirely and make it a Creature Shop Christmas Carol or to have put Scrooge in a world free from other humans where everyone else is a Muppet. I agree that the cloud of losing Jim and Richard casts a shadow in the film's direction. It is a wonderful Christmas film and a great Christmas Carol adaption, but the Muppets feel like the very same guest stars in their other movies. But that really couldn't have been helped. Meanwhile, I grow to appreciate the fact the Ghosts were original characters more every time I watch it. Jerry's Ghost of Christmas Present steals the show.
I always bash the crap out of this movie, and if we can recall that glory period after VMX where they were sifting through all those old scripts there were better concepts. Not to mention, say what you will about MCC and MTI, Jerry Juhl's scripts at least packed in some sly humor. MoZ could have been far better than it was. Instead we get a rushed project with a poor actor as the star that wants to capture the lightning in a bottle of VMX by slavishly trying to copy the same edgy Simpsons/early Family Guy-esque humor that hamfistedly advertises American Idol (that's what Fox's credit in the film's production was...if it wasn't for the Disney buy out, it probably would have aired on Fox). The product does look good in spots, but those Batman '66 camera angles cause seasickness. Piggy should have been a better witch, but comes off pretty disturbing. It looks like she's making a snuff film instead of a reality show. And I reiterate... listen carefully to the lyrics of "The Witch is in the House." "Shiver Me Timbers" and the line "Dead men tell no tales" was far less violent.MWoO has so much potential and rich material to draw from. I think they probably should have cast a different lead and revised the entire script before shooting. Ashanti did most of the singing, until the Muppets chimed in and were promptly cut-off after a few notes. The Muppets in an Oz special that’s not carpeted with Muppety music? Someone was spending too much time in those poppy fields. Some of the CG is clunky and doesn’t seem to be finished baking, but the production design as a whole is attractive. I just wished the world had more of a density to it. I was expecting something more like Labyrinth. Something with creatures and strangeness filling up every corner. I love Piggy’s witch and her biker gang. The elements are there. It just plays out like a checklist of events rather than a compelling story.
I'd improve it in three simple steps.
- Different human star that can act as well as sing. That was a choice of stunt casting.
- Piggy as a villain can work, but there should have been moments where she broke character to keep apologizing to Kermie and references to her being "carried away." Seriously... she's almost Frieza levels of evil in that film. Not the passive aggressive evil of the Muppet Babies Snow White episode (or when she played the same role in the comics)
- Less attention to being accurate to the book and more attention to being Muppety.