So Many Christmas Carols!: The Muppet Christmas Carol (1992)
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- Опубліковано 13 гру 2020
- This is an entry I've been looking forward to covering! The Muppet Christmas Carol is an all-time classic, and we're going to be breaking things down and looking at how it became so beloved.
EXTENDED MARLEY AND MARLEY CLIP:
• "The Muppet Christmas ...
IT FEELS LIKE CHRISTMAS PERFORMANCE:
• A Muppet Christmas Car... - Фільми й анімація
Sam the Eagle: "Oh, you will love business. It is the American way."
Gonzo: "Uh...Sam? *whisper whisper*
Sam The Eagle: "Oh, it is the _British_ way!"
This makes me laugh every single time, and I watch this movie every year
I like also Sam's slow reaction, after hearing Gonzo behind him. XD
If you listen closely he says "Uh, Sam the thing is this is set in England."
My favorite line from Charles Dickson. "LIGHT THE LAMP NOT THE RAT." Charles was decades ahead of his time.... that great literary writer.
Light the lamp, not the rat!
My favourite line too
That and “God save my little broken body! Dah-oof”
That was Rizzo, not Dickens.
It was a great line. Not Dickens though. It was the screenwriters injecting humor to lighten the mood.
You wanna know why some people call this the best Christmas Carol adaptation?
Because they trusted the audience could handle heavy themes, and because they weren't out to parody. They were out to tell a traditional story, but with Muppets in select roles. Now THAT is how you show the world you can still make great stories without your prior lead director.
I think Gonzo as Charles Dickens is one of the best ways to implement a narrator into a kid's movie I've seen in a long while, held up primarily by the excellent adaptability of the muppets
‘Jim Henson and Richard Hunt were dead to begin with’ is such a perfect way to start this video
One thing that makes "When Love is Gone" a good thing to have in the movie yet wasn't mentioned in the video: that song gets reprised as "The Love We Found" right at the end.
Without the original, heartbreaking version, the latter lacks much of its emotional impact.
IMO, they still compensate for it, as the line before the cut song, "You did, once.", still carries a bit of weight. It sucks that they cut out the song, tho.
There were so many right decisions made and so many people responsible for the triumph this film was, but IMHO, the performance that brings everything together so well was Michael Caine's flawless portrayal of Scrooge. His decision to play the role straight combined with his phenomenal acting talent really became the anchor that drew everything else into place.
I still say that Caine’s Scrooge is the best version of that character ever put on film.
Second is George C Scott in the 1984 version
Sim. @@BigBWolf90
10:11 Right here when Scrooge is crying, just before he ends up facedown on his bedsheets it looks like it's the ghost's robe that he pulls down to the ground. As kids my brother and I theorized that if he hadn't switched locations at just that time then the next moment would be him sheepishly looking up, still in the cemetery. He'd see a creature like the one you were picturing, wearing only boxer shorts now, looking down at him with a very ticked off expression on it's face.
That sounds like a very Muppet-y gag, and I'm glad they played that scene straight all the same.
The issue is that the ghost of Christmas future DOESNT HAVE A HEAD, you can seek the inside of the cloak
Whilst I definitely love this film, the thing I actually love about the book (& the most faithful adaptations) is that it does more to humanize Scrooge fairly early on. The scenes from Christmas Past show how Scrooge's father sent him away to boarding school, permanently, so that he almost never got the chance to experience a proper family Christmas-at least until rescued by his younger sister, Fran. We also see that, whilst working for Fezziwig, he fully embraced the Christmas spirit, but only later became obsessed with wealth, to the exclusion of all else. These moments also help explain his initial hostility towards Fred-a difficult reminder of the sister he's lost, and his happy marriage is a reminder of the love he threw away.
Try the animated Christmas Carol: the Movie. That's the only one I've found that covers Ebenezer's childhood.
Only as an adult do I appreciate some of the more subtle choices made in this movie. "When Love Is Gone", for example, is reprised at the end as "The Love We Found". They serve as musical bookends to Scrooge's solitary life. Someone else on UA-cam mentioned that (at the outset of the story) the only characters Scrooge sees as potentially being his equal are those played by humans; he sees all the Muppet characters as beneath him. This makes Belle's departure more impactful since she is currently the only other human in his world. Compare that to the finale song, where humans and Muppet are gathered shoulder to shoulder around the table. Brilliant work!
Alright, so.... story time. In 2010, I got the chance to meet Dave Goelz (for those who don't know, he's the long time performer of Gonzo, Dr. Honeydew and a number of others), and while there were a lot of stories told about Jim, or different productions, he had mentioned that his favorite productions with The Muppets were Emmet Otter, Fraggle Rock and.... well, this.
I never got to meet him personally (jealous but glad for you), however, I did get the privilege of attending the D23 Anniversary Panel for this movie. He was one of the speakers along with Brian Henson, Paul Williams, & the lead costume designer for Christmas Carol (I forget her name sadly). You could tell how much love went into this movie through the way they all spoke. One of my favorite things said was that Dave never gets through this movie dry-eyed, regardless of how many times he’s seen it (hell.. he was literally Gonzo). It’s so special.
the actor for the ghost of Christmas Present later became famous in the UK voicing popular puppet character Basil Brush a fox puppet loved by adults and children alike
My fave Christmas movie and you certainly did it justice! I am SO STOKED that When Love is Gone will be back in the movie, I cry every time I see Bean shivering in the cold and Beaker giving Scrooge his scarf. My heart breaks when Scrooge says "Perhaps...I've never understood about Christmas." It's also so sad when he says "Do people play games at Christmas?" He sounds so surprised that you instantly know he never had a chance to be included in a celebration like Fred's when he was younger.
I agree. Michael Caine's performance in the Christmas Present scenes is excellent. It's a very human take on Scrooge that we don't always get to see.
Dude I thought I was crazy. Watched on Disney+ with my kiddo and I freakin knew something wasn’t right. I knew “the love is gone” was missing!!! Miss my old vhs copy. One of my favorites to watch around Christmas.
finally someone wlse who knew about that extended marley and marley
Yeah I love that extend the song
Is it wrong that I liked Scrooge's line "Can we go back to being funny?" Micheal Caine is praised for taking his role seriously, in spite of working with goofy characters, so it's usually nice to see him let loose in a few scenes. It's like watching several other amazing live actors work with these guys. The best ones treat The Muppets like real people, but are still willing to be silly when they need to.
An easter egg I noticed: "Scrooge" and "Marley & Marley" use the same rhyme structure, ABCB.
Scrooge:
A - There goes "Mister Humbug"
B - There goes "Mister Grim"
C - If they gave a prize for being mean,
B - The winner would be him!
Marley & Marley
A - We're Marley and Marley,
B - Avarice and Greed!
C - We took advantage of the poor,
B - And just ignored the needy!
This is because, if Scrooge doesn't change his ways, his afterlife will echo-or rhyme with-the Marleys'. Their songs are similar, and so will be their fates.
I don't believe Disney lost the song at all. I grew up with the VHS. Love it. Watched it on Disney last year, and even my kids didn't understand where the song was and my youngest actually asked why Rizzo was crying. That is why it's supposed to stay in. Scrooge is crying, Rizzo is totally broken up and no one (who hasn't seen it before) understands why they are so upset.
I think they lost a good version? Like, they definitely COULD have put the 4:3 vhs quality version back into the movie if they'd wanted to, but that would have been distracting
I find Steve Whitmire to be a saving grace to Jim Henson's creation. Not only Steve Whitmire is the best voice of Kermit the Frog, But also the one who helped Jim Henson's creation rise to this very day.
I saw a review of the costuming for this film, and the expert on fashions of the period was blown away by the tiny details and variety used.
The Ghost of Christmas Future reminds me of a dementor from Harry Potter. If it had revealed its face, it would have "kissed" Scrooge and sucked out his soul. Thank goodness that didn't happen.
That’s honestly how I pictured them when I read the book. It’s honestly creepier than the movies. How they’re described, sounds like they’re what those who were kissed would turn into.
And how does one spend Christmas on the unemPLOYMENT LINE!?
I'm not a particularly big Muppet fan but I adore this film, it and the 1951 Alistair Simm version are tied for my favourite film adaptations of A Christmas Carol
Maybe it's weird to put into words, but I've always liked The Muppets best when they were a little British. Like having to film the Muppet Show in the UK gave them a bit of a different vibe, if that makes sense. More whimsical maybe?
You know, the original Muppet Show was filmed in Hertfordshire.
Best version of the story IMO.
Sir Michael Caine yelling at Kermit the frog is amazing. I grew up on this movie too. I am almost 40 and this is still one of my favorite movies.
The Muppets version of any classic is always one of the best, Christmas Carol, Wizard of Oz, Treasure Island, all wonderful
this will always be my favorite christmas carol adaptation
I got to sit in at the D23 Anniversary Panel for this movie. Brian Henson, Paul Williams, Dave Goelz, & the lead costume designer for this movie (I forget her name!) all spoke. It was genuinely one of the most special things I ever got to experience. They did a musical number at the end and I swear I’ll never be happier than watching the muppet performers live. The way in which they spoke about this movie was so full of love. Brian said everyone on set felt like a family. Dave said he never gets through this movie with dry eyes. It’s such a special film for so many reasons.
Being born in the early 70’s I’ve grown up as the muppets have matured. This movie is their best. I’d say this should be Disney’s benchmark to become. Sadly their current path only makes it impossible
Remember watching The Muppets in the 70s with my sister and brother
I admit, I liked that "civilized conversation" bit too. The book had Scrooge just mutter and complain about giving Cratchit the day off. But it's like, the whole COUNTRY is closed. What are you going to do being OPEN ON CHRISTMAS DAY??
A nice intelligent revue that covers all aspects of the film well .... And a great memory for me as I was there as a puppeteer ... That fake snow would get everywhere! :)
Wow, thanks for contributing to such a wonderful movie! Can I ask which characters you performed?
@@ColinLooksBack Hi Colin, I did lots of characters ... Animals, Monsters and Veggies, but my only 'oneshot' was the rat and the roller blind ... Photos in my Facebook folders if you would like to look
When I watch this movie, I watch the widescreen DVD, switch over to the VHS at "The Love is Gone", then switch back. I always liked the song.
Whenever I watch this movie, I bring When Love Is Gone up on youtube, pause the movie at just the right moment, watch the youtube scene, then continue the movie, I just can't watch Muppet Christmas Carol without When Love Is Gone.
Actually the love is gone seen was removed by Jeffrey kassenberg without Brian's consent not the producers All because it was too sad for kids
I always enjoy your videos, so positive, nostalgic and informative. :) Thank you!!
Also - SO happy to hear the song is coming back! As a kid I also generally felt bored during slow songs, but the sad romance of this one kept me interested. If they treated all slow songs the same way as "The Love is Gone" we wouldn't have "Feed the Birds," "When You Wish Upon a Star" or "I'll Be Your Candle on the Water," and missing those would be tragedies!
We watch this every year on Christmas Eve, started before the kids were born, still watch it with the kids who are now in their twenties. It's a family tradition and really fun
Truly love this very special Muppets Christmas story. Thank you so much for your review! Can’t wait to watch it again in the Christmas season. Looking forward to when they upload the improved classic version on Disney plus!
Gonzo and Rizzo really stole this movie with the way they told the story becoming the story tellers while living within the narrative.
Though they do take a break when the Ghost of Christmas Future appears, they come back when everything is back to normal on Christmas Morning.
One of my fave films ever!
I watch this one every December
Agreed, it is a great Muppet film and a great adaptation in general. I'm glad they finally put the version with "When Love is Gone" on Disney+. Paul Williams also wrote the songs for my favourite musical film of all time, Bugsy Malone (1976) and he also had a cameo in one of my favourite movies of all time, Baby Driver (2017).
But this year about one beautiful song in Disney plus that amazing and I enjoy it
🎶 It's the singing of a street corner choir
It's going home and getting warm by the fire
It's true wherever you find love it feels like Christmas 🎶
Also for The Love is Gone...I always tear up not just cuz you hurt for Scrooge but Rizzo is in tears & Gonzo just says "oh Rizzo" while hugging his friend tightly
The lady who played Scrooge’s fiancée was also in the original Les Misérables on Broadway. She was also in Starlight Express in 1984.
Who did she play? Cosette? Epinine? Fantine?
@@AnInkStick sorry. She played Epinine.
Both the nostalgia critic and Minty have already done videos on this movie so this is the year of The Muppet Christmas Carol I guess.
Wouldn't that be TWO videos that Doug Walker has done on this movie, one being the Nostalgia Critic review and the other being a Nostalgia Critic editorial or something? Because I know for a fact that he already did a review of this some years ago.
EntertainmentFan he did it for disneycember
Last year Cinema Sins did one.
@@dillonohlemiller9027 That was 4 years ago.
I'd just like to add this one little tidbit as well; as someone who has read the original novel TWICE, I can say with no dishonesty whatsoever, that the Muppet version is also one of the most accurate to the book, ever. ESPECIALLY in its depiction of the ghosts!
This was a late watch for me. I'd see it advertised on several videos, but I was 10 or 11 when I finally saw it. Definitely one of my favorites, both Muppet and Dickens wise.
You forgot to mention the fact that Ghost of Christmas Present has a bad memory, he keeps repeating things he says.
When I first read the Harry Potter books as a kid, I imagined the Dementors looked like the ghost of christmas past. Both are really creepy!
happy 30th anniversary the muppet christmas carol!! :3
Luckily, we are getting the version of Muppet Christmas Carol with When Love Is Gone on Disney+ this year on the 9th December
"Hopefully it will be up for streaming next year."
One year later, we got it!
I haft to give a lot of credit to Jerry Nelson for voicing the ghost of Christmas present. He would make a great Santa Clause.
Who else thought the shooting star at the end of One More Sleep Till Christmas wished Kermit a merry Christmas? It wasn't until I listened to Brian Henson's commentary of the film that it wasn't, but so many unintentionally thought it was.
I remember my grandma had this one on VHS. But I remember never getting further than either Scrooge arriving at his house or Statler and Waldorf as ghosts. Either I was too young and the story wasn't fun enough for me or part of me was frightened of what was to follow. I'm probably going to look it up again someday and watch it in full.
I did see the full Disney version, which is equally as good. If you get a chance to review that one, do it, because it is a wonderful version with Scrooge McDuck getting the opportunity to play the role that inspired him. A tribute if you like.
He already did. Check his channel.
@@EntertainmentFan11 I will. Just like with the Muppet version, the Disney cast too is cast perfectly in their roles. And it's cast is interesting as it is both the final preformance of the original Donald Duck, Clarence Nash, and the start of a then new Mickey, the late Wayne Allwine.
When I finally read the book, I was amazed by how accurate this movie was to it. They had a lot of respect for the source material. This is not the first version I watched (that'd be Flintstones) but it is my favorite. Came out during my first Christmas.
I liked all songs when I was little
One of the things I love about this movie that so many Christmas Carols lack, even the ones I love like the George C. Scott 1984 version, and heck I like the 2009 Jim Carrey version despite it's awkwardness (And yet is one of the most book accurate adaptations with all the attention to detail) is the warmth, all the other versions, there's a coldness to it all, the Muppets even after all this time, there's just such a warmth and love that radiates from the screen you do feel the joy of Christmas
And Michael Caine's scene at the Graveyard works so well because unlike everyone else who doesn't know who's grave they're going to. Caine knows exactly what he's about to see and tries begging and pleading with the ghost and yet he still has to face his grave head on and Scrooge finally accepts he's got to change and means it.
I also always fast forwarded through Bless Us All, but not because of the slowness, I just thought it sounded bad.
I keep rewatching 1:04 because I love watching Kermit do that cute little dance
I thought Miss Piggy hammed it up a bit.
Why does the ghost of Christmas present remind me of Hagrid
If they ever did a muppet Harry Potter the ghost of Christmas present could definitely play Hagrid
Robbie Coltrane DID play the Ghost of Christmas in the Blackadder Christmas Carol. Full beard, Scottish accent, he basically is Hagrid. Also, he enters the room by comically knocking the door down. JK Rowling has even said his appearance as the Ghost of Christmas is one of the main reasons she thought of him when it came to casting Hagrid.
Everyone is talking about this movie in this Christmas season, you, Minty, and even the Nostalgia Critic.
For me, hands down the best adaptation of A Christmas Carol. I love how they didn’t treat it as a Muppet movie, but rather a movie that has Muppets in it, if that makes sense. Also, Gonzo as the narrator added a ton to the overall tone.
My all time favorite Christmas movie unbelievably nostalgic
A fantastic rundown of one of my favorite movies. Thank you for this video and Merry Christmas. As a kid I also fast forwarded through what has become one of the best songs. Amazing how time changes things....
The full cut is now on Disney+ under the Extras section.
I absolutely fast forwarded through the slow songs at least half the time when I watched and rewatched this movie as a kid. I gradually came to appreciate them more as I got older. ^o^;>
Also, I'd like to request that you make a video about the 1999 made-for-TV version of A Christmas Carol with Patrick Stewart, which is my second-favorite adaptation of the story (the Muppet one is first, of course!). I think it's really quite excellent.
Great Video!!! I always watch the Muppet Christmas Carol with Love is Gone every Christmas eve along with 5 other versions of A Christmas Carol like Mickey's Christmas Carol, A Christmas Carol starring Patrick Stewart, A Christmas Carol the Musical with Kelsey Grammer, Scrooge with Alistair Sim and Real Ghostbusters Xmas Marks the Spot!!
I love this movie! it's one of my favorites of all time out of any movie! very well done!
I'll be real with y'all. As a kid, I was positively bored by When Love is Gone, they were absolutely right when they said kids(or at least some kids) would be bored. But I still would have never gotten rid of it!
YES! THANK YOU!!!!
I have a strong suspicion that some of the Gonzo as the Ghost of Christmas Future concept art was carried over to the recent Muppets Haunted Mansion...
my favorite adaptation as well! (thoughts on Christmas Carol: the Movie? (2001))
I've never seen "The Movie" all the way through, but I've heard some interesting liberties were taken with the plot. It's definitely on my watch list.
@@ColinLooksBack
1.Can you do the so many prince/princess and the pauper videos?
2. Can you do the villains in cinderella and sleeping beauty?
the doorknocking scared me so much I was afraid of someone's real doornocker coming alive on Halloween every year I went Trick or Treating
Without the song about the love being lost, the song about the love being found at the end has no resonance.
I think I like this movie more as a Christmas Carol, one of the best in fact, than a Muppet movie. It's a fine Muppet movie, don't get me wrong, but I think that out of the three novel based films, Muppet Treasure Island is the most Muppety film. Sure, that's because they take a ton of liberties with the source material and were allowed to be more wacky than heartfelt, but I attribute the Muppet feel to the new characters specifically made for MTI. Of course, if I'm in the mood for a Christmas movie, I'd go with this film no question. It's lovely, it's well made, it's something Jim would have been proud of. But if I'm looking for a Muppet movie, the original three, the new two, and MTI would go first. Maybe MFS, definitely NOT Wizard of Oz. We don't talk about Muppet Wizard of Oz.
That said, I wonder if you'd take a look at the other Disney Christmas Carol. Apparently, there's an Italian graphic novel that only uses the Duck characters, but still featuring Scrooge McDuck as his namesake. I almost bought it last year, but got the Frankenstein one instead.
I remember being so excited when Muppet Wizard of Oz was coming up, since it had been a while since there was a big Muppet production at the time (if memory serves correct), not to mention seeing characters like Scooter and some of the Treasure Island pirates returning. I ended up being pretty disappointed by it, not gonna lie.
I'm kind of curious about the Duck comic Christmas Carol, but it looks incredibly straightforward from what I've seen. I think at some point I'm just going to have to do a video covering multiple "Carols" that don't offer enough content for a whole entry.
While there are some nice moments in Muppet OZ, overall it was very cynical and jaded. Sure, A Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie was very much an early 2000's movie in terms of humor and parody reference overdose, but there was still a level of heart deep down. Muppet Oz was just a relic of the movie being made for and by Fox to air on the Fox network and basically advertising American Idol all the way. Plus, I heard the sample songs from the unproduced Kermit of Denmark film, and it's downright heartbreaking we never got the movie we deserved instead of something so vapid.
One thing I feel was a detriment to muppet’s wizard of Oz is that it treated the story like the wiz, a modern adaptation of the mgm movie. If you’re gonna do wizard of Oz, you gotta treat it like they did with Christmas Carol, or treasure island. Make it it’s own thing. Especially since the wizard of Oz book was pretty dark. The muppet casting was almost perfect, Kermit, Fozzy and Gonzo were fine as Scarecrow, Lion and Tin Man. Miss Piggy is fine as either the WWW or Glenda, but I don’t think she should’ve been all 4 witches. When it comes to muppet book adaptations is that it should be treated as an adaptation first, and a muppet movie second. Muppets Oz was wasted potential. They had elements from the books, but didn’t do much with it
@@tgiacin435 Muppet Wizard of Oz sucked because it was trying WAAAAAAY too hard to be like Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie with at the moment references and very early 00's style humor, only it didn't work on ANY level. Not to mention the movie was originally produced and meant to air on the Fox network, which explains the obnoxious tie in to American Idol. While I can give them credit on trying to reference the book, the iconic 30's movie and The Wiz, the whole project was an inadvisable mess that took the place of MUCH better concepts that were floating around at the time.
What makes me REALLY hate the project is we lost Kermit: Prince of Denmark. A potential film where Kermit thinks he's boarding a plane to Denver, but ends up in a weird Hamlet parody. The worst part is, the songs were partially written by Robert Lopez (YES. The same Robert Lopez that wrote music for Frozen), and demo music was leaked. They were fun, wacky, Muppet spirited music with one emotional punch of a song about how he missed the other Muppets. It's heartbreaking that telefilm never got made and a lame Wizard of Oz adaption got greenlit. Especially since The Muppet Movie WAS a Wizard of Oz parallel.
@@mightyfilm that too. They could’ve done better. I mean by having the movie take place in modern day, we don’t see the muppets as the characters, we just see the muppets.
I think the edited Marley & Marley song shows up on tv cuts specifically for a reason.
When you're editing around ad breaks, it changes pacing. What doesn't work in a theatrical cut, what'd seem too long and meandering to just watch straight through, ends up fitting in near flawlessly into the almost episodic ebb and flow a tv movie thrives on.
Honestly, broadcast cuts and tv movies deserve more respect that they get. Different isn't the same as bad, yano?
When I first saw this I didn't like it so much because I kept comparing it to mr.magoo's a Christmas carol. Buy when I put that thought aside and watched it again. I realized it is true this version of a Christmas carol is very good.
I didn't watch this movie until I was an adult, but I did watch the animated Tim Curry Christmas Carol a lot as a kid. It had a very similar song to When Love is Gone and I'd often fast forward through that for similar reasons.
Guess what?!? WHEN LOVE IS GONE IS GOING BACK INTO THE FILM! A whole video about the song is highly recommended, even if you already covered it here.
a theory i have about why this scrooge is able to interact with frogs and bears with no issue is that other scrooge’s see the people around them as less than human, and muppet christmas carol just puts it into a literal sense- he doesn’t think of anyone but his family and former love as his equal, therefore they aren’t human in his mind
The scariest moment for kid me was when the spider muppets and the others and going through Scrooge's old clothes and curtains
Who the hell thinks getting the theatrical cut is better than the director’s cut D: I simply cannot fathom that at all.
The Muppet Christmas Carol is one of the best adaptations of the Charles Dickens novella. Michael Caine is superb as Scrooge. I also like the actor playing Fred
I used to hope that the ghost of future was bean in disguise
Here's a Muppet related question for Colin:
Have you seen the Sesame Street MadTV skits?
What can I say about Muppet Christmas Carol, it went from a okay hit to now what many consider as the definitive/ personal faved version of Charles Dickens' story. As for it's a very merry muppet Christmas movie or letters to Santa, those two are fine but contain huge flaws and features tons of dated references. But at last, the muppets are forever known as the true champions of Christmas!!! 🎄🎄🎄
Disney announcement that’s love is gone will be add to Disney + version
Hay hey hey light the lamp not the rat! Light the lamp not the rat !!
JOY!
BORN 1974 - and lovingly grew up with nothing else but the Muppets - going to wvu after graduating college 1992 - then having pituitary removed my dad told me to get to the creative arts center... LOVE THE LORD JESUS CHRIST for that glorious 25 yrs ago - when Jane Henson asked me if i was a rat --- I spoke to her ak Kermit and said "do you need a pepperoni pizza? - she laughed.... and to this day LOVE how that moment I got her to have me do Kermit and BIG BIRD ----- who else had a name like to Muppets take Manhattan --- who worked at pizza place like my great uncle had in NYC! whos dad is the one in USA who made 14 of his boys take the pepperoni all over this country!!! Hence FERRUZI!!! GOD BLESS!
I think the only thing that after all these years I find is slightly weak in this movie is the fact Scrooge seems ready to change fully by the end of the 2nd ghost and not needing the 3rd ghost, tiny Tim's death and Scrooge's. Maybe something like he slides back a little when he sees how little he's respected, this makes it important that he see after he does he won't be missed if he doesn't change his ways, and that changing his ways can directly save a life.
I wish the Muppets would continue doing other classic retellings.
Me too
To say "cashgrab" is a little harsh, but that's the essence of this show. Mr. Magoo's version is canonical though.
Could you do a review of the sesame street episodes that are about Elmo's father being deployed in the military, and the one where Elmo's uncle (? IIRC) being killed in action. (Although they didn't come right out and say "killed in action", they were a bit more vague for the younger audience.)
They were a great resource.
can you do a script to screen of the wizerd of oz you got me interestid with onother so many Christmas carols
Cool
Neat
I've seen Muppet Christmas Carol regarded as one of the best adaptations of the Charles Dickens story. It definitely is great, though I can't help but feel like Michael Caine gives a rather weak performances as Ebenezer Scrooge, particularly during the graveyard scene. Still, it's hard to be on-par with the Muppets in these kinds of movies. I really do love what they did with the Ghosts, especially the Ghost of Christmas Present, and how he always lives in the present and thus tends to forget what he said a few seconds ago, I always thought that was clever. Songs are great, too!