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    Movie Review

    The Happytime Murders' obscene puppets fail to bring laughs to life

    Alex Bentley
    Aug 24, 2018 | 10:50 am
    The Happytime Murders' obscene puppets fail to bring laughs to life
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    On the surface, there’s plenty of evidence that a movie like The Happytime Murders should work. The Tony Award-winning Avenue Q proved that foul-mouthed puppets can be popular, and boundary-pushing comedies like Girls Trip and Blockers draw plenty of people to laugh at things that are just plain wrong.

    But The Happytime Murders has neither the charm nor the cleverness to pull off its intended goal. The conceit of the film is that puppets have evolved to the point that they live side-by-side with humans, although they still face much derision and discrimination. Most of them seem to live on the periphery of normal society, getting by however they can.

    Phil Phillips (voiced by Bill Barretta) is a run-down puppet private investigator who’s still smarting from the ignominious end to his time with the police and his partnership with human detective Connie Edwards (Melissa McCarthy). When puppets from the TV show The Happytime Gang start being murdered all over town, Phillips and Edwards are thrust together once again, each trying to figure out who’s responsible.

    Directed by Brian Henson (yes, son of Jim), the film tries to have lots of fun portraying Barretta as the cliché of a private eye, complete with a ditzy human secretary, Bubbles (Maya Rudolph). And if the title wasn’t clue enough, they dispel any notion of the film being family friendly by filling it to the brim with profanity, sex, drugs, and grisly violence — well, as grisly as puppets being obliterated can be.

    A handful of individual moments are laugh-out-loud funny, including a murder-by-dog and pretty much anything involving Rudolph. But the vast majority of the film feels like they’re either trying too hard to get a laugh or overestimated how funny certain elements would be. The story is strictly by-the-numbers, so the comedy is all the film has going for it. When it fails, so does everything else.

    Since earning her Oscar nomination for Bridesmaids in 2011, McCarthy has mostly failed to live up to that reputation. She’s had eight starring roles in films since then, and only a couple of them can even claim to be decent. Given the right role, she still has the potential to be transcendent, but instead she keeps settling for/being given dreck like this.

    Combining puppets and obscenity has worked before and it could work again, but The Happytime Murders never approaches the level of storytelling or comedy necessary for it to be considered a success.

    Joel McHale and Phil Phillips in The Happytime Murders.

    Joel McHale and Phil Phillips in The Happytime Murders
    Photo by Hopper Stone
    Joel McHale and Phil Phillips in The Happytime Murders.
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    cult classic

    Performer John Cameron Mitchell celebrate 25 years of Hedwig at Houston show

    Eric Sandler
    Dec 23, 2025 | 3:30 pm
    Hedwig and the Angry Inch movie still
    Courtesy of John Cameron Mitchell
    Hedwin and the Angry Inch will celebrate its 25th anniversary in 2026.

    Next year will mark the 25th anniversary of Hedwig and the Angry Inch, the 2001 cult queer musical and directorial debut of veteran stage actor John Cameron Mitchell. First debuting in Sundance before hitting theaters later that summer, Hedwig (based on the 1998 off-Broadway play Mitchell co-wrote and starred in) became a favorite for those who like their rock musicals anarchic and androgynous.

    Mitchell will be celebrating Hedwig’s anniversary early – right here in Houston. This Sunday, December 28, the film will be shown at legendary Montrose club Numbers, and Mitchell will be there for a live director’s commentary and a post-screening live performance. The screening is one part of a day-long event for Mitchell, who will be teaching a sold-out master class at Cafe Brasil later that day.

    Local nonprofit Arthouse Houston reached out to Mitchell about revisiting Hedwig in H-Town. “I got good buddies from there,” the El Paso-born military brat, 62, tells CultureMap during a Zoom call from his New Orleans home. “My friend Amber Martin, who's from the area and who I’ve sung and DJed with for many, many years, is coming – especially for this. She used to go to Numbers as a kid. My friend Jonathan Caouette, who directed the film Tarnation, lives there. He used to go to Visions in the '80s. So, it's kind of fun to come to an old, classic club and show the film, do some songs, hang around, and do a drunk live director's commentary – or maybe stoned, depending on my feelings that day.”

    John Cameron Mitchell John Cameron Mitchell will perform at Numbers this Sunday, December 28.Courtesy of John Cameron Mitchell

    For Mitchell, revisiting Hedwig takes him back to a simpler time, when an actor/playwright could get a film about a gay, East German rocker whose signature song is about his botched sex reassignment surgery (now you know where “angry inch” comes from) financed and distributed by a major studio. Even though Hedwig flopped in theaters, it would eventually gain a cult following. Mitchell would follow it up with an even more provocative film, the 2005 ensemble comedy Shortbus, which featured actors engaging in graphic, unsimulated sex.

    “That was the last golden age of independent film in the U.S.,” he says. “It was the '90s and 2000s, which pretty much ended at the financial collapse of 2006, which coincided with the rise of the streamers, which really put the final nail in the coffin for independent film as we know it in terms of it being a viable commercial thing. So, a lot of people made fewer films. They had to have more stars. They had to have more Oscar gloss. And the habit of going to see the best-reviewed film that week just because the critics were telling you went away, of course.”

    MItchell still does the acting thing from time-to-time – in February, he’ll take over as Mary Todd Lincoln in Cole Escola’s Broadway drag hit Oh Mary!. But, these days, he;s been teaching master classes and film courses at various colleges (like his “Problemagic Cinema” course at the University of Michigan).

    Along with teaching them film history, he encourages his students to take things – whether it’s a film they want to make or a movement they want to start – in their own hands. “I'm telling my students it's like this: now is the time to create a new kind of underground film, and other things,” he says. “The big question, of course, is how do you get them out there? How do you monetize them so there can be more? I can't quite answer that, but I also know that when corporations abandon a certain form, that's the time to step up and take it back.”

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