The movie adaptation of Fraggle Rock is getting a new screenwriter - for an "edgier" script.
Down at Fraggle Rock they had things just about figured out. Of course they had problems; space gets cramped underground you know, but oh what little those caves did to their spirits. Living with no sun to speak of would drive the best of our moods spiraling downward but not those little guys. You ask one of them what it's like to live in a dark stone cavern and they cheerily reply with how well it carries their voices on their many daily songs, how it melds their voices together to something more. That's what the Fraggles were all about; individuals each strong alone coming together for something greater still.
They did their work with us, with their "Ambassador" Henson, for four years. It was a big four years for them, they were explorers at heart and loved the idea of a new world above to strike out and learn about humanity. And we lapped up every second of it, didn't we, their catchy tunes and their oddly relevant lessons? Here we had beings so foreign who somehow understood us better than we did ourselves. It wasn't at the price of introspection that they knew so much and still remained cheerful. No, they were deep people, they after all knew only darkness really. It was through strict discipline of mind that the Fraggles kept things running as they were lest they fall into the traps we've all seen ourselves.
Henson saw the toll our world exacted on them as days went by. Groups of Fraggles would strike off as stowaways on boats and airplanes to examine the humans above and report back. They would gather together like they loved to do in one of the production areas, at these times strangely less welcoming of outsiders than was their nature. They would speak in hushed voices. Faint gasps could be heard. Every day some scouts returned was followed by a wary eye by the Fraggles the next day on set; stress lines began crossing their eyes. Listen closely to the final season and you might hear a note of sorrow in their song. How could they trust humans knowing what we're capable of?
It was the height of their success that the kindly muppet man requested they return home. The higher-ups were obviously less than thrilled that their merchandising and ratings would disappear just like that. Like always, Henson fought them tooth and nail on behalf of the strange creatures he'd come to love. Even seeing in his other projects how cold the money makers could be, Jim left that meeting disturbed; disturbed by the sly and slight smile on the face of one man in the back of the room. A man who was biding his time.
Things were largely normal back home for them for quite a few years. Long enough, almost disturbingly precisely perhaps, for us to forget what the Fraggles once meant to us. And maybe for them to forget what we are. Their man came to Fraggle Rock long after Jim was gone. There was quiet in the cave. They didn't like him, didn't like the menace behind the well trained publicity smile. They didn't like the greed they saw when they explained the Doozers, how he almost licked his chops at the idea of a race of workers who knew only to work and never understood why. But they listened. That's what they do.
Turns out that man didn't need contracts. He didn't need legalities. All he needed to was ask for help. Help us. It was a cry none of the Fraggles could turn down. The ones that had forgotten the world above in their twenty year absence jumped at the chance to try again to teach us what life was really about. They could sing and laugh again, for us, and we could share it. And the man just smiled sly and slight.
With props to Richter for his recent Audio Book entry on bringing this about.
QuoteDirector/Screenwriter Corey Edwards has updated his blog with a note warning Fraggle Rock fans that "there are some dark days ahead, my friends." As it turns out, The Weinstein Company, who has been working with Edwards on a big screen Fraggle Rock movie, has begun a wide search for a new screenwriter to come aboard the project after demanding the the script was "not edgy enough."
Down at Fraggle Rock they had things just about figured out. Of course they had problems; space gets cramped underground you know, but oh what little those caves did to their spirits. Living with no sun to speak of would drive the best of our moods spiraling downward but not those little guys. You ask one of them what it's like to live in a dark stone cavern and they cheerily reply with how well it carries their voices on their many daily songs, how it melds their voices together to something more. That's what the Fraggles were all about; individuals each strong alone coming together for something greater still.
They did their work with us, with their "Ambassador" Henson, for four years. It was a big four years for them, they were explorers at heart and loved the idea of a new world above to strike out and learn about humanity. And we lapped up every second of it, didn't we, their catchy tunes and their oddly relevant lessons? Here we had beings so foreign who somehow understood us better than we did ourselves. It wasn't at the price of introspection that they knew so much and still remained cheerful. No, they were deep people, they after all knew only darkness really. It was through strict discipline of mind that the Fraggles kept things running as they were lest they fall into the traps we've all seen ourselves.
Henson saw the toll our world exacted on them as days went by. Groups of Fraggles would strike off as stowaways on boats and airplanes to examine the humans above and report back. They would gather together like they loved to do in one of the production areas, at these times strangely less welcoming of outsiders than was their nature. They would speak in hushed voices. Faint gasps could be heard. Every day some scouts returned was followed by a wary eye by the Fraggles the next day on set; stress lines began crossing their eyes. Listen closely to the final season and you might hear a note of sorrow in their song. How could they trust humans knowing what we're capable of?
It was the height of their success that the kindly muppet man requested they return home. The higher-ups were obviously less than thrilled that their merchandising and ratings would disappear just like that. Like always, Henson fought them tooth and nail on behalf of the strange creatures he'd come to love. Even seeing in his other projects how cold the money makers could be, Jim left that meeting disturbed; disturbed by the sly and slight smile on the face of one man in the back of the room. A man who was biding his time.
Things were largely normal back home for them for quite a few years. Long enough, almost disturbingly precisely perhaps, for us to forget what the Fraggles once meant to us. And maybe for them to forget what we are. Their man came to Fraggle Rock long after Jim was gone. There was quiet in the cave. They didn't like him, didn't like the menace behind the well trained publicity smile. They didn't like the greed they saw when they explained the Doozers, how he almost licked his chops at the idea of a race of workers who knew only to work and never understood why. But they listened. That's what they do.
Turns out that man didn't need contracts. He didn't need legalities. All he needed to was ask for help. Help us. It was a cry none of the Fraggles could turn down. The ones that had forgotten the world above in their twenty year absence jumped at the chance to try again to teach us what life was really about. They could sing and laugh again, for us, and we could share it. And the man just smiled sly and slight.
With props to Richter for his recent Audio Book entry on bringing this about.