The Muppets Take Manhattan
Dir: Frank Oz
1984
*****
The Muppets Take
Manhattan was the third Muppet film and the last the great Jim Henson would be
part of. I love all of the Muppet films, even the awful ones, but the original
three combined are like a golden triangle to me that formed a huge part of my childhood
and made me into the Muppet-obsessed adult that I am today. I will attack
anyone (with a rubber chicken) who says that The Muppets Take Manhattan
isn't as good as the first two, I would agree though that I like it least out
of the three, although it is a masterpiece, so let’s leave it there (unless you
want to be attacked with a rubber chicken?). Filmed on location in New York
City during the summer of 1983, it was the first Muppet film to be directed
solely by Frank Oz (AKA Miss Piggy, Fozzie Bear and Animal the
drummer). Jim Henson initially planned to direct but having directed The
Great Muppet Caper and The Dark Crystal back-to-back, he decided to serve as
the producer along with David Lazer. Upon selecting fellow Muppet performer and
Dark Crystal co-director Frank Oz to handle directorial duties, Henson stated,
"I was looking at the year ahead and I thought my life was very busy and I
thought maybe it was a time to have Frank directing one of these."
The first
draft titled The Muppets: The Legend Continues, written by Muppet Caper scribes
Jay Tarses and Tom Patchett, was dismissed by Oz for being "way too over
jokey", but it would have been something I would have loved to have seen.
After being given Henson's encouragement to tinker with the script, Oz revised
the screenplay in an effort to develop the "oomph of the characters and
their relationships". Once the script was completed and the sets were
built, special consultant David Misch was brought in to write cameos for some
guest star appearances. Originally, this list of guest stars contained the
likes of Dustin Hoffman, Steve Martin, Michael Jackson, Lily Tomlin, Richard
Pryor and Laurence Olivier among many. According to Misch, Hoffman was going to
play a Broadway producer and planned to do an imitation of legendary film
producer Robert Evans (The Godfather), which he later did in the film Wag the
Dog. However, at the last minute, Hoffman decided that the role could be
offensive to Evans and dropped out, following which all the other big names dropped
out as well. Because of the dropped cameos, Misch and director Oz ended up
rewriting most of the film's dialogue. One could point at this as being the
catalyst of one the Muppet's downfalls in later films. The Muppet Movie has one
of the best cameo casts of all time. The Great Muppet Caper has a great Cameo
cast too but the thing is, the Muppets never really needed them, they were just
a bit of fun. Celebrities would do anything to appear with the
Muppets but when the cameo thing became something the Muppets sought out as
priority, it became less special. I wonder if this was a confidence thing, the
Muppet people just not realizing why people loved them so? Still, the
cameos were still good; Art Carney, James Coco, Dabney Coleman, Gregory
Hines, Linda Lavin, Frances Bergen, Elliott Gould (his second Muppet film
cameo), Mayor Edward I. Koch, John Landis, David Lazer, Liza Minnelli, Vincent
Sardi Jr, Brooke Shields and Joan Rivers is an impressive line-up and each
performance serves a purpose - with Rivers, Shields, Lavin
and Hines being particularly good. There are some brilliant sketches
within the story, Kermit with temporary memory loss is fantastic, from his
medical examination with Linda Lavin to meeting advertising executives Bill,
Gill and Jill, it's the Muppets at their funniest. The film also
introduced the Muppet Babies, as toddler versions of the Muppet characters in a
bizarre but brilliant fantasy sequence. The Muppet Babies later received their
own Saturday morning animated television series, which aired from 1984 until
1991, which is enough reason to love Manhattan alone! It's more of a musical
than the two previous films too, not because the music is any better or that
there are more songs but mostly because it is about a musical itself. 2011's
The Muppets was famous for winning the academy award for best original song but
it wasn't the first Muppet song to have ever been nominated as Jeff Moss was
nominated for his song score but just lost out to Prince for Purple Rain. The
big reason Muppet fans favour Manhattan is because it is the film where we
finally see Kermit and Piggy get married. The cast of Sesame Street, the whole
Muppet crew and even the Fraggles are invited to the wedding and it's a great
way to end the film. It also feels like a nice way for Jim Henson to have ended
his Muppet film career on looking back at it now. It's wonderful, overlooked by
Muppet and casual Muppet enthusiasts but it has plenty going for it and my
childhood wouldn't have been the same without it.
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