Posted in: Recent Updates, Review | Tagged: boom, muppet show, roger langridge, vic reeves
Review: The Muppet Show #4 By Roger Langridge For Boom! Studios

And he's writing and drawing The Muppet Show.
And it's amazing.
Now, I liked The Muppet Show, a strange puppet programme intended for the US audience but filmed in the UK, leading to a very odd mixture of guests, A List Americans prepared to travel and whichever Brits were hanging around Soho that day. So you have Steve Martin, George Burns and Alice Cooper – but also Bruce Forsyth, Spike Milligan and Chris Langham. And it's that exact tone that Roger has captured here, without resorting to the bad jokes that often let down the original show. Roger's gags are up there with Steven Wright, Tommy Cooper and Milton Jones. Fast, snappy, funny and thrown away as we bounce to the next one.

But of course that would have had a different plot, and this expose on the tricks and schemes behind a famour TV psychic provide a backbone for the show and,… hang on, is that an apearance by the Talking Houses? Who remembers the Talking Houses apart from… well, Roger. Down to rewatching all those taped-off-the-telly videos I expect.
But I love that this comic goes to the heart of the original show. No external shooting, no trips into space, no reprisals of Dickens' novels, this is The Muppet Show, boosted by modern sensibilities and stylistic tricks, and I'm loving every panel, the line of Kermit's mouth, the anger in Miss Piggy's face and the wonderful to-camera piece by Uncle Sam bemoaning the supernatural. This is ridiculously good and too many people won't pick it up because they may believe it's beneath them. It's not. This is up there with Acme Novelty Library and Robert Crumb in the way it makes the comic book it's natural medium.

This is quite possibly the finest book out this week. And I guarantee it will have better pig jokes than any of the five Wolverine comic books also out.









