Showing posts with label It's a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label It's a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

It's a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie 2010 DVD Review


It's a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie
2010 Widescreen Edition DVD Review




Ryan Dosier - Universal just released It's a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie on DVD again today. It is being called a "Digitally Remastered" "Widescreen" release and comes with two discs, one of the movie and a few bonus features, and one that includes nine holiday songs. Let me preface this review by saying that this is a very odd release... for more than a few reasons. Let's go through them, shall we? For one, no one at all predicted a release of an unknown 2002 Muppet Christmas special that isn't owned by Disney being released. 

Second, this release is billed as being "Digitally Remastered in Widescreen for the First Time Ever!" and, well, it certainly is! A few inches is added to the right and left side of the screen and those trademark black bars are tacked on the top and bottom of the screen. Is it enough to make a noticeable difference? Let's put it this way... I had to put in my other DVD of the special to really see the difference. Here, see for yourself...

The old, fullscreen presentation.

New, larger, obviously improved widescreen presentation. Notice Dr. Teeth and Robin are now fully in frame, and another chicken (along with the Muppeteer under it) can now be seen.

This release is also getting a very odd special treatment from Universal. The DVD comes in an O-Sleeve and the packaging has an awesome design to it. It's only ten bucks at Wal-mart, so go get it if you don't already own it... but should you get it if you don't already own it? I have no idea. If you're a Muppet completist and you love It's a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie like I do, then yes, go spend a measly ten bucks and pick it up. The new, apparently digital remastering looks fantastic and the widescreen is nice. It's especially fun in group shots like the Muppets having their meeting in the theater seats and the whole "Moulin Scrooge" number.

The weirdest part of this release, however, is the totally pointless and very, very strange second disc. As I mentioned earlier, the second disc is a 9-song music CD filled with Christmas music. You would expect this to be Muppet Christmas music, right? Well... you're wrong! So terribly, terribly wrong... terribly because what is in place of Muppet music is terrible. The CD has nine songs sung by some random, nameless, bad-voiced guy just pushing out Christmas music for a quick paycheck. Universal really pushed the envelope with this CD.

But aside from that this really is a nice DVD. The bonus features included are deleted scenes and bloopers--all of which can be found on the 2003 DVD as well. Oddly enough, each of the deleted scenes and bloopers have retained the "Inside Pepe's Studio" watermark at the bottom right hand corner. This is odd because Inside Pepe's Studio isn't mentioned once on this DVD. Seems like they were just too lazy to take off the logo... or the clips don't exist without it. Either way, all of the deleted scenes and bloopers were included on the 2003 DVD--including the hidden Easter Egg scenes.

Overall, I do recommend this DVD. It's not the best release from the Muppets... but for a DVD released by a studio other than Disney, it's pretty impressive. The box art is wonderful--especially the big group picture on the back--and the menus are a LOT less annoying than the 2003 DVD. Thankfully nothing moves or talks to you... there's just a nice instrumental of "Deck the Halls" that plays over the menu.

Should you buy this DVD if you already own the 2003 release? Well... that's entirely up to you. As a Muppet fan, I'm obligated to say yes--especially since it's only $10 at Wal Mart--but as someone who understands lack of cash flow... I'd say just think about it or ask for it for Christmas or something. If you don't get it, you're not missing too much, but if you do you've got a shiny new Muppet DVD to add to your collection! And... a crappy Christmas CD to microwave!











The Muppet Mindset by Ryan Dosier

Monday, October 11, 2010

It's a Verry Merry October Christmas Release

Greetings, Muppet fans! Ryan Dosier here with a friendly reminder for you all... Tomorrow, October 12th, Universal is releasing a new, (apparently) 2-disc DVD release of It's a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie. Nobody seems to know what that second disc might contain--or even if the set will contain a second disc at all. If any of you Muppet fans out there manage to find this DVD tomorrow, be sure to send me an email at ryguy102390@gmail.com. We'd love to know what's on that mysterious second disc and also where you managed to find the DVDs. I know I'll be scouring my local Wal-Mart and Best Buy for it!

To pre-order this DVD, be sure to check out Amazon!









The Muppet Mindset by Ryan Dosier

Thursday, September 2, 2010

News Update: September 2, 2010

NEWS UPDATE: September 2, 2010

The Muppet Show Comic Book has won the Harvey Award for Best Original Graphic Novel Publication for Younger Readers! This exciting award was given to The Muppets against their stiff competition from the likes of Diary of a Wimpy Kid and 3-2-3 Detective Agency. HUGE congratulations to our friends at BOOM! Studios for the win, and even bigger congratulations to the uber talent that is Roger Langridge, writer and illustrator of The Muppet Show Comic Book. The picture at right was drawn by Langridge after winning the Harvey Award. For the complete list of Harvey Award winners and nominees, check here!

After some digging on Amazon.com, it was discovered that Universal Studios will be releasing It's a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie on DVD once again on October 12th. According to the Amazon page, the DVD will present the movie in widescreen (for the first time ever on Region 1 DVD), but it also says that it will be a 2-Disc DVD set, so who knows whether either is true? Either way, this is a very exciting release and we'll be sure to keep you updated on bonus features and more as the information surfaces!

Some more digging on Amazon.com has revealed that the new Muppet Monopoly Collector's Edition set has been released. The game was released by USAopoly and costs $34.99 on Amazon. But the really exciting thing about the game is that there appears to be NEW Muppet poser puppet images used on the box cover. Check out the likes of Rowlf, Scooter, Gonzo, Camilla, Pepe, Fozzie, Swedish Chef, Animal, and Miss Piggy on the box art below and see for yourself!




Finally, the biggest news of the week, The Muppets are officially casting for the new Muppet movie! The announcement and call for auditions and actors has been circulating through the Los Angeles and Hollywood trade papers this week and also, Autidions for Disney has posted the official call on their website. Here are the main highlights...
  • Shooting is scheduled to start in Los Angeles this month and go through November, 2010, with a release date of December 25, 2011.
  • Big names apparently already attached to the project include Ben Stiller, George Clooney, and Jason Segel.
  • If you're an actor in California with a head shot and a resume, they want you to audition!!
  • The plot centers on the Muppets' reunion as they try to save The Muppet Studios in Hollywood from evil business tycoon Tex Richman. They'll have help from human friend Gary (probably Segel).
  • They are going to need TONS of extras.
All VERY exciting stuff, huh? Well, you know what this means... in just a few weeks, we'll be witnessing the official start of the filming of a brand new Muppet movie!!! As always, keep your eye on The Muppet Mindset for all the latest updates!












The Muppet Mindset by Ryan Dosier

Thursday, February 25, 2010

It's Not Easy Being Mean, Part 5

The British Correspondent - Personally, I love to hate my Muppet villains just as I love to hate my coffee: a latte. One of the things that I love to hate most is that the Muppet villains are often many-layered and, having removed the lid of the cappuccino cup, you’ll find it contains many layers, much as a hot chocolate contains a layer of marshmallows, a layer of spray-cream, and thick layers of chocolate and steamed milk. (Note: I may be mixing up my drink metaphors. But what can I say, I’m writing this from a Costa Coffee in an undisclosed location within the United Kingdom, hoping to avoid detection by my agent so they won’t realise my deadline date went whooshing by weeks ago.)

Now, as with most drinks, what you get out of character analysis is related to what you put into it (Much as dried leaves in hot water, generally leads to tea...sometimes just leads to soggy leaves). Character analysis can be influenced by how you read the character, how you see their experiences through your own eyes, and what meaning the character traits bring to you. Whether the original actor intended a certain character trait to reveal something of their character, or whether they just tried not to laugh after the director shouted, “Action” is up to you to decide.

With that in mind, here is my deep and thoughtful (and caffeinated) musings on Ms Rachel Bitterman. If you have your own theories as to why she is the way she is, please feel free to send them to me at the address below:

The British Correspondent,
Undisclosed Coffee Shop,
Nondescript British High Street,
Britain, UK

Ms Rachel Bitterman (It's a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie)
Many of the Muppet Villains are given a slow-burn to villainy. Doc Hopper, for example, starts out as a humble sales-frog in a green costume with some rather snazzy opera-glasses. Nicky Holiday appears as a charming sibling...and even gets to help a brownie across the road (or visa versa) early on in the movie before later turning evil and pulling a gun on our frog. Even the shady talent manager from The Muppets Take Manhattan agreed to put on their show...right before trying to scam them outta their money. But Ms Bitterman isn’t given this treatment, instead the effects of her devilry are demonstrated from the start with Kermit (yes, KERMIT) suffering from a serious case of the upsets, Fozzie sighing sadly, Miss Piggy being shrugged off and Johnny not truly appreciating Sal’s solid gold record player. (Okay, that last one wasn’t really her fault.) The point is, before we’ve even met the woman, we pretty much despise her for what she has done to our friends...

Perhaps if the story was told in a linear fashion, she’d have been given more of a fighting chance?

Perhaps not.

From the moment she steps onto the scene, she appears to hold the Muppets in contempt, referring to them as Muffins. But, let’s give her the benefit of the doubt and assume that she greets each and every one of her clients as breakfast carbohydrate based food products, she still only gets about ten seconds to introduce herself, before once again her contempt snakes across the screen as she glibly informs the Muppets that their former banker, Mr Bitterman, is dead.

We never find out exactly what relationship this fellow has to Rachel (for the purpose of this article we are assuming father) but her deadpan expression upon announcing her bereavement and subsequent segue into payment details on the theatre or foreclosure suggest that whoever he was, she didn’t care for him all that much.

And so it continues, every sentence that pours from the woman’s lips simply aches with contempt and utter lack of regard for dreams or imagination – except that one moment when she accidentally lets slip the line about being the queen of a Polynesian tribe.

Now, here’s where we deviate from straight facts and I start speculating heavily. As I watch Ms Bitterman talking, I feel as though it is not her speaking. I mean, obviously, she’s speaking...but I don’t feel that it comes from the core of herself but rather the lines seem forced and rehearsed and said with utter contempt – not just for the Muppets but also for the words she is speaking. I’d like to invite you to imagine a scene, don’t worry, we’ll have a little fun with it.

Imagine a young Rachel (let’s imagine her played by Rachel McAddams, shall we?). Now let yourself imagine her as punk rocker with the leather studs, purple hair...in short, one of the pierced and tattooed rave monkey she appears to loathe so much. (See, I told you it would be fun.) Imagine she’s the lead singer of a punk rock band, staying out one Christmas Eve at her biggest gig yet...while at home her parents wait up disapprovingly for her to return by Midnight for ‘Family Christmas’. It’s funny how one day can mean so many different things. Finally, she returns home filled with the hopes and dreams and stardust that comes from having a band, determined to make it to the big time.

I imagine her parents would have acted fast and hard to remove any such dream from her mind, reminding her that she cannot work for stardust and that you cannot eat a dream, you cannot sell a dream. After they had told her this time after time, eventually, she gave up her dream of becoming a punk-rock goddess of the stage and sufficed herself with becoming an accountant. What’s more, having suffered under those guiding principles of harsh reality and contempt for dreams, she clearly began to pass that contempt on to others, inflicting on them what she felt herself.

Now go back to the beginning of the story...Her father, who would never invest in her dreams, has given the Muppets plenty of time to pay off their debts, investing in their dreams. He then dies, and Rachel (probably already a partner in the firm) takes over the company. Why shouldn’t she take that moment to go smash up someone else’s party?

I know what you’re thinking, is the point of this article series just to give the Villains an excuse to act the way they do? NO. I’m trying to understand their motivation, but a motivation is certainly not an excuse. Rachel...poor little Rachel...still had a choice, she still could have stood by what she wanted to do and she could certainly have stopped the loop by not crushing the dreams of others the way that her own were crushed.

She’s even given a moment for redemption right at the last minute when Bunsen suggests that she invest in the theatre and make it the best Christmas ever! But even this, she rejects...determined to follow her villainy through to its ultimate, lonely, bitter end.

Ruthlessness: 8 (Rachel was the only villain to really make Kermit give up on his dream... Where Doc Hopper tried to stop him, Rachel succeeded. Where Nicky tried to separate Piggy and Kermit, Rachel succeeded.)
Sidekick: 6 (Pepe played an important part as her sidekick, having been lured away by the fact ‘she is hawt, h’okay!’ and I would give him a 10, but her other sidekick was the employee she took home to decorate her tree, and he brought the side-kick rating down to 6.)
Evil appearance: 8 (Deliciously devilish in her pouty sexiness...she lured Pepe away and is an expert at the cats’bum lip pout so we’ll give her an 8 for that.)
Talking the talk: 10 (She gets high points for calling the Muppets ‘Muffins’ and for screaming and shouting! Plus, she paused halfway through the movie to effectively say, “I’d have thought you’d have figured out by now that I’m the bad guy...”)
Likability: 4 (She’s funny, and interesting, but there’s nothing really very likable to her character. I don’t think you’d want to share a cup of coffee with this woman...which reminds me...I left that coffee shop in such a hurry earlier after seeing someone who looked rather like my agent passing by and am now typing this quickly from the bus-stop...I probably should have paid before I left...)
Returnability: 6 (I’m sure she could have something interesting to add in another encounter with the Muppets, but once again I feel as though her story has fully told.)
Likelihood to offer you a rather nifty Christmas bonus: 10 (I offered my agent a Christmas bonus once, but that still hasn’t let me off the hook. I better mail this in before the #14 bus arrives.)











The Muppet Mindset by Ryan Dosier