orangerful: (Default)
I FINALLY sat down and started rewatching Fraggle Rock this morning. I asked for the 35th Anniversary blu-rays for Christmas but just haven't made the time. Since I'm all caught up on Queer Eye and Dark, I needed a breakfast show for my quiet mornings. I figured I would document the experience a bit to see how this show holds up so many years later.

I mean, for me, Muppets are timeless. The Fraggles, in their underground world, are even more timeless because there is very little pop culture/style to give away that this show was filmed in the early 80s. Well, until we see Uncle Travelling Matt talk about the "silly creatures".



S1E1:Beginnings

The first episode is mostly setup. I was actually surprised that the first character we meet are the human Doc and his dog Sprocket. But it does establish that the show takes place in our world. Doc has decided to convert this room into a workshop and when he moves a box out of the way, it reveals a large hole in the wall. Moments later, Uncle Mat, who is out exploring the caves, finds the whole and discovers "Outer Space."

I was surprised again that Uncle Travelling Matt was the first Fraggle we see too! He gives us a very "Concerning Hobbits" style voice over and explains who The Fraggles are as a people, complete with describing their dignity and grace as a species as we watch Red throw herself across the room on a rope swing and then Wembley trip over her a second later.

Mat also mentions that Fraggle Rock is the center of the universe. As a kid, this would just make you giggle, but as an adult, I can see the metaphor for Fraggles as humans at work. Because we do assume that our world, our lives, our struggles are the center of the universe. But really, the universe could care less and there is no center. But this is an interesting concept to introduce into a program meant for children because it creates an opportunity for families to talk about points of view and how our experiences shape how we interpret the world.

The only truly befuddling thing about Matt's first adventure into Outer Space is that he instantly understands how the U.S. Postal Service works and mails Gobo a postcard via Doc's address. :P

I did like that Gobo struggles with his feelings about how to handle Matt's request to venture into Outer Space to pick up the postcard. He asks Madam Trash Heap and she tells him the obvious thing - talk to your friends! It's so SIMPLE but it is one of the things that doesn't happen enough in shows. So often, the main character takes on the struggles alone. But that is not how Fraggles (or any of us) should face life. Gobo tells his friends, and while they don't immediately believe him, they do come with him on his first adventure.

S1E2: Wembley and the Gorgs

Speaking of, I have now decided that anytime I get mail addressed to the wrong person sent to my house, it is clearly meant for some Fraggle.



Music is such an important part of this series. I love all the different styles and genres in the show. In just these first two episodes there were big group sing-alongs, an homage to "Jailhouse Rock" and then this sweet little rhyme.

At first, I thought this episode was just going to be about how Wembley doesn't seem to have his own opinion of anything. Gobo has a whole conversation with him and Wembley just keeps agreeing or saying he will do whatever Gobo wants to do. Then Wembley gets captured by the Gorgs.

At first it looks like he will be kept as the Junior Gorg's pet but Wembley's constant flattery and agreeing quickly puts him on the good side of "The King of the Universe". (Again, Traveling Mat told us that Fraggle Rock was the center of the universe, but the Gorgs clearly believe they are). The King and Queen Gorg feed Wembley and sing songs with him and Wembley is gracious and salutes and flatters everyone.

So when Gobo and the gang show up to rescue him, they are shocked that Wembley doesn't seem to be in any kind of distress. Unfortunately, while they are talking with Wembley, Junior drops his Fraggle trap on them and catches them. When the King leans in to ask if they will be humble servants like Wembley, Gogo stabs him in the nose with his wooden sword.

Here is where the plot and moral of the story kind of shifted. Gobo reads the group Travelling Matt's postcard while they are locked in the cage. Matt writes about seeing "flying creatures" that were tied with strings (kites and balloons). Mat tried to free the creatures and saw one set of them fly away (balloons) but the other creature immediately fell and waited for its master (the kite). Mat makes a comment about how differently they value freedom from Fraggles.

The next morning, Junior says he wants to "thump" the Fraggles but Wembley demands they receive a fair trial. Surprisingly, the King agrees. He asks Wembley if the Fraggles deserve to be thumped and Wembley gives a speech about the qualities that his friends have ("Boober knows special stuff that means a lot to him.") Even more surprising, the King goes for it! He says he won't thump them...just keep them as slaves. At this point, the Fraggles do finally manage to break free and run away.

In the final moments of the show, Wembley and Gobo are back in their home, getting ready for bed. Wembley apologizes to Gobo and says "It didn't seem like I was a slave. I guess some slavery feels like freedom." He also says that he didn't realize what they (the Gorgs) were doing to him until they did it to his friends.

Yeah, that was NOT where I thought this episode was going.

In "Outer Space", Doc cuts short his visit to the Tinkerer's Convention because he realized that those people were not his friends and he wanted to be back home with his "real friend" Sprocket the Dog.

So I'm not quite sure what this episode was about? -- slavery? friendship? Both? Relationships to other people?

Should I post my other Fraggle Rock thoughts here? Let me know if they are worth reading.
orangerful: (kermit)
For any of you fellow 80s children/Henson fans out there:



Pre-order is $76, not too shabby for the whole series on shiny blu-ray. I sent my Mom a very subtle email asking her to buy it for me for Christmas (well, I asked her to please forward a message to Santa...she knows him!!!!)

I have the series on DVD but it has to be one of the WORST boxed sets ever. The case was pretty much a giant binder with paper folders so the discs slid all over. I had to return it twice when I bought it because of scratches. So I'm really happy to upgrade. Plus, BLU-RAY quality! YAAAAAAAS!

The winter episode is one of my favorites, I watch it every Christmas and I think it still has one of the best messages about tradition and family. But I would love to watch them all again and this set should make it worth it on so many levels.

And it comes with an Uncle Traveling Mat cutout to take with you into the land of the Silly Creatures ala Flat Stanley. I love this and I'm so doing it.
orangerful: (Default)
OMG Funk Pop has my number (and all my money): they just announced a Fraggle Rock POP set, due out in December.

THEY EACH COME WITH A LITTLE DOOZER OMG!

I need them ALL! I'm such a sucker for Jim Henson related merch LOL. Oddly, I did not buy the Muppets POPS but these just seem cuter. They've started to loosen up on their designs a bit.

Also, there is apparently an Emperor's New Groove set coming next year - I just want Kronk.

Of course, if I get Kronk, I'll want Yzma...which means I should get Llama Kuzco...slipperly slope.

#nerdproblems, amIright?
orangerful: (muppets kermit fozzie reading // lostaca)
"The attitude you have as a parent is what your kids will learn from more than what you tell them. They don't remember what you try to teach them. They remember what you are."
--- Jim Henson
orangerful: (holiday yoda // orangerful)
We watched "The Bells of Fraggle Rock" yesterday as part of my Christmas viewing marathon and I think...I think it may be the best non-denominational holiday winter special of all time.

I'm not sure if everyone can watch it or not, but Hulu has it highlighted on their front page today so it may be free to view.

It really gets to the core of what holidays are for. Of what any festival is for. The celebrations that are meant to lift us up when the world is at its coldest. To keep us active and around friends when the days are shortest. That tradition has a purpose, though it might not be a measurable or tangible one. It's about faith, but not in one specific god, but just faith in life, in the world, in your friends, in your family.

And that you should always bring your mittens.

I don't think this episode gets enough credit or attention. Seriously, if you have 20 minutes tonight, watch it.
orangerful: (one girl // orangerful)
Jim Henson's The Storyteller has to be one of the buried treasures of television. I'm so sad to see that the DVD is out of print and Netflix no longer has it available to stream. The series aired in 1988 and only had one season, oh but what a glorious season it was.

The gist of the show is that back in olden times, everyone would crowd around the town's storyteller and he would tell them about their past, their history, their whole culture by giving them the shared stories. Each story is based on a lesser known European (mostly German and Russian) fairy tale. John Hurt played The Storyteller, and the episodes had both actors and puppets. Brian Henson was the voice of the dog, who sat by the Storyteller's chair and asked him questions about the stories and characters, helping the audience understand situations and being the voice of the children when things got too scary.

I adore this show because it exposed me to fairy tales and myths I would never have encountered otherwise. These are not Disney-fied princess stories. They have some tense and frightening moments. But it's always fascinating to see the common threads that connect us through each of these stories and also how cultures approached life, death, love, hate, romance etc. through their stories. It was smart television, something that could be enjoyed by the entire family. The puppets were well done and the stories had a sense of humor and wonder.

My all time favorite episode is The Soldier and Death. I found a little clip on YouTube posted by the Jim Henson Company. This is just short scene where the Soldier tries to help out the village by ridding their local castle of devils. Because the devils have one weakness - the are gamblers!



And, yes, that is Robert Peck from Jurassic Park as The Soldier. You'll find quite a collection of actors - Sean Bean, the chick for Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade - oh and the series was scripted by Anthony Mingella who went on to write The English Patient.

While the series is no longer available on DVD, it does appear that iTunes has it for purchase, along with it's even shorter-lived spin off Greek Myths. If you can find a copy somewhere, I recommend watching a few.
orangerful: (muppets kermit fozzie reading // lostaca)
We're going to see Muppets Most Wanted tomorrow and I am far more excited than someone my age should be. I love the Muppets. ADORE them.

For many people, when you say Muppets, they think of Sesame Street, and rightly so - that show has been on the air for 45 years. But the Muppets I adore are from The Muppet Show. And even though they have been toned down a bit since becoming a Disney property I still love them to bits.

The Muppet Show was just ending it's initial TV run when I was born but I some how managed to catch a lot of the shows as reruns. Some tv station in Virginia must have run them every morning and I (or more likely my Mom) set up the VCR and taped them every day, on SLP, so I had a huge collection of Muppet Shows that I watched over and over and over. It gave me an appreciation for all different kinds of music (guest stars ranged from Opera Singer Beverly Sills to 70s pop singer Leo Sayer to brilliant comedienne Gilda Radner), a twisted sense of humor (torturing Beaker is so wrong yet so right) and how a show can work on so many different levels. The Muppet Show was truly a family show, with something that everyone could appreciate.

I know Jim Henson and Company, and in particular The Muppets, shaped the way I view the world. Over the next week or so I'm going to do little appreciation posts to highlight The Muppets, Jim Henson, and the Henson Company because they can never have enough.

Expand3 songs, then it's your turn! )

I could go on but I think that's enough from me for tonight -- but what about you? What are some of your favorite Muppet Music Moments?

March 2023

S M T W T F S
   1234
5 67891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031 

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

Expand All Cut TagsCollapse All Cut Tags