“The Muppet Movie”
behind him, clearly made for and dedicated to the unbounded imagination of children, literal and those of us north of 39, Jim Henson moved
forward with “The Great Muppet Caper” as a 1940s mystery movie that’s honest to
God something made for himself, with a wink of genius satire. Once again in
the “We’re making a movie” vein, Kermit the Frog (Henson) and Fozzie Bear
(Frank Oz) play twin (!) newspaper reporters who get caught up in a diamond
heist masterminded by Charles Grodin against his diva sister (Diana Rigg) in
London. Along the way, they meet Miss Piggy (also Oz), and end up staying in a
hotel populated by other Muppets (Scooter, Animal, etc.), and ride bicycles,
drive in a bus, break in into a museum, and skydive. The bike scene blew my
7-year-old mind in 1981, and still does. Henson directs this go-round and it’s
just a magical romp that again let’s children be in on the joke, no cynicism. Happiness. Best gag:
Kermit teaching a taxi driver (Beauregard) to, well, drive, when the guy does not understand straight from reverse. New films pale. A
Monday, June 30, 2014
The Great Muppet Caper (1981)
Labels:
1981,
bicycles,
Charles Grodin,
children,
classic,
Dianna Rigg,
Fozzie Bear,
Frank Oz,
Great Muppet Caper,
Jim Henson,
London,
Muppets,
mystery,
Scooter,
The Muppets,
Twins
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