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- From: rhogan@chaph.usc.edu (Ron Hogan)
- Subject: REVIEW: THE MUPPET CHRISTMAS CAROL
- Message-ID: <Bzpwp1.3Ct@news.cso.uiuc.edu>
- Summary: r.a.m.r. #01637
- Sender: wsherman@ncsa.uiuc.edu (William Sherman -Visualization)
- Reply-To: rhogan@chaph.usc.edu (Ron Hogan)
- Followup-To: alt.tv.muppets
- Organization: University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA
- Date: Wed, 23 Dec 1992 15:07:45 GMT
- Keywords: author=Hogan
- Lines: 161
-
- THE MUPPET CHRISTMAS CAROL
- A ten-step film review by Ron Hogan
- Copyright 1992 Ron Hogan
-
- 1) This is the third ten-step review that I've produced so far. The
- first two were for MALCOLM X and BRAM STOKER'S DRACULA. What I've tried
- to do in each of those reviews is not so much to write a "go see this"
- or "stay away from this" review, though those have a certain value. I
- want to take the critical apparatus I've acquired in my years of film
- study (undergraduate at Notre Dame, currently in the master's program at
- USC) and apply it to contemporary film. Most film criticism at the
- academic level tends to be about the "classic" cinema, the great works
- of the auteurs or the avant-garde. In the brand new anthology FILM
- THEORY GOES TO THE MOVIES, a number of academic critics (edited by some
- of my Notre Dame faculty) break away from this trend in sixteen essays
- on films from PRETTY WOMAN to THE LITTLE MERMAID. The reviews I present
- here are sketches of a similar approach, tentative outlines of ways to
- look at contemporary film. They are by no means meant to be definitive.
-
- 2) Of course, the first two reviews I did were for films by Spike Lee
- and Francis Ford Coppola. It's very easy to write in an academic mode
- about them--they're accepted as auteurs, directors worthy of serious
- study. This is a Muppet movie; how is one supposed to expect to be
- taken seriously writing about a film starring puppets? Well, let's face
- it. The Muppets are part of our popular culture, and have been for
- decades. Many of the people who cruise through the net grew up on the
- Muppets through SESAME STREET and THE MUPPET SHOW, myself included.
- Whether we choose to acknowledge their cultural significance or not, it
- does exist, and it can be talked about. So I'll try.
-
- 3) The first thing that struck me about the film was the corporate logo
- of Walt Disney Pictures that came before everything else. It had
- slipped my mind that just before he had died, Jim Henson had closed a
- deal with the people at Disney, and that the Muppets were now a
- semi-independent subsidiary of the Disney empire. I was disturbed by
- the deal at the time and I still am to a certain extent. The Muppets to
- me had always been oppositional to the control that Disney tried to
- exert over the popular imagination, especially that of the young. The
- Muppets were cute and cuddly, sure, but they also had a sharp satirical
- side that undermined the cuteness if you knew where to look. And then
- they became part of the very hegemony that they opposed. At least they
- haven't been totally absorbed into the Disney universe.
-
- 4) And their edge is definitely present in the film, most noticeably in
- Gonzo's portrayal of Charles Dickens. His role has an extreme amount of
- self-consciousness, and the film plays it up for all it's worth. Rizzo
- the Rat confronts Gonzo as to why he knows everything that happens
- before it happens, and Gonzo replies that he's the narrator, he's
- omniscient. When the issue of whether or not the ghosts are appropriate
- for small children arises, Gonzo says, "It's okay, it's culture." The
- film knows that it is tampering/playing with an established classic, it
- knows that the audience knows this, and it decides not to pretend
- otherwise, letting everybody in on the fun. Hey, Bob Cratchit is a frog
- in this movie, so let's run with it, and not expect this to be the
- Christmas Carol we'd get from anybody else. Dickens' tale has been
- updated to modern America (with Henry Winkler), given a black cast
- (Robert Guillaume, I believe), and even turned into a commentary on
- television (SCROOGED, one of the better variations). Why not a frog as
- Cratchit?
-
- 5) Of course, one of the consequences of giving the Christmas Carol
- over to the Muppets is that it profoundly warps the meaning of the
- original text. Dickens' novels had an element of social realism; the
- accumulated details of 19th century London were there to make a point
- about and a critique of the society in which he wrote. Dickens' worlds
- of fiction had a political agenda to them. In the Muppet version, 19th
- century London is divorced from its meaning and becomes a playground for
- the Muppets. A very detailed playground, but still only a simulation--
- which has absolutely nothing to do with the real London. And it makes
- the few touches of social statement that do appear disturbing. There's
- no depiction of the real poverty of the time, except for one shot of a
- homeless bunny rabbit. Which is disturbing at one level because you see
- a cute little creature suffering, and at another level because the only
- way that suffering can be expressed through the film is through cute
- little creatures--real homeless people have no place in the Muppet
- London.
-
- 6) So the Muppets have this nice world in which they can play and do
- the things that make them the cultural icons they are. They have some
- ice-skating penguins and the baby chorus and the boomerang fish thrower
- and so on.... And they sing. It wouldn't be a Muppet film without
- songs at some point. Unfortunately, the songs aren't all that great,
- either standing alone or in comparison to other Muppet songs. Every
- number tends to be a shiny, happy Christmas song--understandable given
- the nature of the film.
-
- 7) Of course, one would expect that the Christmas Carol would center
- around Ebeneezer Scrooge. His initial appearance justifies that, but I
- suspect that he's not as important to the film as the Muppets. And
- Michael Caine, I suspect, knows this. His performance is perfunctory
- and adequate to the role, but has very few qualities that would make him
- a memorable Scrooge. It's as if he realized that his main role in the
- film is not to learn the meaning of Christmas, though he does do that,
- but to talk to the frog in a way that doesn't seem totally ridiculous.
- His scenes with the Spirits, the closest thing in the film to the
- original, do have some power to them, though, especially the Ghost of
- Christmas Future. Of course, this is the only section of the film which
- is not undermined by Gonzo....
-
- 8) And Michael Caine isn't the only human in the film, though there are
- considerably fewer humans than Muppets. And, in line with this being a
- Muppet playground, the interaction of human and inhuman is totally
- natural. It goes unquestioned throughout--we totally buy into this
- simulated 19th Century, Muppets and all. I suspect that Jean
- Baudrilliard's SIMULATIONS and Umberto Eco's TRAVELS IN HYPERREALITY
- might have some interesting points on the subject of accepting the
- unreal recreation as the real, but I'm not going to push it. It's hard
- enough to get people to accept talking about the Muppets; talking about
- the Muppets with regard to Eco is bound to drive people away. The main
- point is, the Muppets are everywhere, and it's so natural that nobody
- notices it, because there isn't anything to notice--rather like the
- Toons in WHO FRAMED ROGER RABBIT?
-
- 9) What separates this Muppet film from other films is the subject
- matter--Christmas. They aren't the first imaginary figures to do a
- Christmas film--or a Christmas Carol for that matter. Apart from the
- Mr. Magoo version, the "older cousins" in the Disney stable have taken
- their shot at it. (And if a big-eared mouse can do Cratchit, why the
- hell not a frog?) But like many Christmas texts, and contrary to the
- original, there is very little Christ in this Christmas Carol; I only
- found one oblique reference, the line about "remembering who it was that
- made the lame walk" or something like that. Instead, the film focuses
- on the warm, fuzzy feelings that we're all supposed to have, regardless
- of religious affiliation. Inspiring this kind of historical amnesia,
- corporate hegemonic aspirations aside, is another consequence of
- replacing the real with a fantasy recreation. Heck, if we're going to
- rebuild the past, we can rebuild its *meaning* just as easily--and
- maybe even more so.
-
- 10) Okay, jargon aside, it's time for one personal note. Kermit the
- Frog. Obviously, you can't do a Muppet film without Kermit, which means
- that you have to confront the issue of Jim Henson's death. This is
- acknowledged in the film's dedication. And Kermit's voice is a bit
- deeper than it used to be. He's adequate, I suppose, and Steve Whitmire
- is better than Mel Blanc, Jr., is at Bugs Bunny, but the sense of loss
- is real and palpable for me still. The innocence is gone, and the
- Muppets will sadly never be the same for me. Or, I guess, for anyone,
- except those too young to remember--except even they have access to the
- "real" Kermit, through SESAME STREET, MUPPET SHOW reruns, and the videos
- of the first movies. So maybe they'll notice the change, but will they
- appreciate the context of that change? Who knows? Not me. This isn't
- the Muppets of our youth, but maybe they're still adequate to the tasks
- their predecessors accomplished. For the sake of the next generation, I
- hope they are. (And on that pretentious note...)
-
- Follow-ups and email welcome
- Ron Hogan
- rhogan@usc.edu
-
-
- (posted by Bill Sherman with permission from the author)
-
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