The Muppets Valentine Show (1974) Poster

(1974 TV Special)

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6/10
Not among the Muppets' best, but still worth seeing.
planktonrules3 April 2021
"The Muppets Valentine Show" was a special on ABC back in 1974. Apparently, it was also a pilot for a proposed series that never was to be but evolved into "The Muppet Show" a few years later.

The theme of the show is love and all sorts of assorted Muppets, many of which you'd never see again, discuss what love is. The special guest is Mia Farrow and she and the show are a bit on the schmaltzy side compared to the later edgier Muppets. Now I am NOT saying it's bad...but sometimes mushy moments seem more the style of the program than humor and laughs. Overall, very interesting but not exactly what you'd later come to love from Jim Henson and his puppeteers.
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10/10
The first of two "Muppet Show" pilots!
wermuth60118 October 2005
Warning: Spoilers
I first saw this special when I was in the third grade, and have liked it since. This valentine special was the first of two pilots for The Muppet Show, with the second one being The Muppet Show: Sex And Violence.

This show has many similarities to The Muppet Show, such as the fact that it includes a human guest star (Mia Farrow). However, there are many differences as well. For example, although Kermit has a big part in the special, the shows main character is a hip Muppet named Wally, who would hardly ever be used again in any future production (yet the specials other main characters would be used frequently on The Muppet Show, even if only for one season). This features the first appearance of many lesser-known characters, including George The Janitor, Mildred, Brewsters (the first character performed by Dave Goelz), and Crazy Harry (who is called Crazy Donald in this special), plus various characters from previous productions, such as Thog (from The Great Santa Clause Switch), Droop (who was called Shively in The Great Santa Clause Switch), Rufus (from Hey, Cinderella!), and of course Kermit The Frog, along with brief cameos during the end credits by Rowlf, Ernie, and Bert.

Some of the highlights of this special include all three segments that take place outside of the shows setting (some sort of home, instead of a theatre), such as the Koozebanian Mating Ritual sketch (which would be redone on The Muppet Show when Florence Henderson was a guest star), Real Life Girl (with Mia farrow and Thog, a giant blue monster), and Froggy Went A'Courtin' (which is probably the first of many times that Kermit would ride a bicycle). But the whole special is great.

This special wasn't included on The Muppet Show Season 1 DVD set, but hopefully it will be on a future set. I recommend this special to anybody who gets a chance to see it.
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9/10
a weird batch of muppets; like a college short film version of the future show, with Mia Farrow!?
Quinoa198417 December 2007
Jim Henson had to prepare a pilot for the networks so that they would understand what he had in mind for them with his proposed Muppet Show idea. Unfortunately, by the looks of the special, it doesn't spell anything really about what the show would portend- aside from a few exceptions with the bits, and the fact that it has as unlikely a guest star you could imagine- so it's a good thing that Lew Grade took a chance over in Britain for the show. Does this make the Muppets Valentine Show a mess? Not really, if one knows what Henson is after here. It's a very, very, very strange show, where Mia Farrow, the guest star, seems to come in out of the blue towards the beginning, and seems (naturally) charmed by all of the muppets, including ones that were so freaky they were never used again! (Not that seeing Farrow sing a lovely ballad to an eight-foot monster isn't a wee charming).

Already Henson, head writer Jerry Juhl, and the whole muppets team were on to something with the skewed humor, the big obvious jokes (Crazy Harry, who would become an on-off again attraction on the show, is in fine form here blowing s*** up at the mere mention of a name). There's also the re-dos of songs, one of them by Kermit the Frog done in a style that starts light and then builds and builds (I forget what the name of it was, but I remember there being a cannon or something involved). And, of course, there's the Koozbanians, which would be a classic skit only very slightly tweaked by the time it was done on the regular series. The only thing that feels a little off is the extra main character- the main musician dude who seems to know everything about what's going down in the show- and feels out of place with all the other muppet friends.

So, the Muppets Valentine Show, available now on the season 2 DVD set of the Muppet Show, is a fascinating slice of Muppet-mania, where the first sight of an amalgamation of songs, skits, bears and chickens and other animals and whatevers were thrown together with a sweet, unexpected (and very pregnant) Farrow, with some very insane jokes thrown in the mix (some hilariously funny, some just 'what?') It's near-classic Henson material that will delight, or at least interest, fans of the show.
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4/10
I did not feel the love
Horst_In_Translation27 August 2017
Warning: Spoilers
"The Muppets Valentine Show" is a live action short film from 1974, so this one is already over 40 years old, which shows you how old the Muppet gang already is. However, it is not one of their earliest even, maybe earliest color films and the color sure lifts the characters to another level and that's why most of the B&W stuff about the Muppets is mostly forgotten now. This one runs for under half an hour, so definitely one of the shorter Muppet films and it may not yet star some of your favorite Muppets. But they already went with the successful formula of uniting the gang with a famous star and this time, it is actress Mia Farrow. And also as always they really love the star while not respecting each other at all. I personally am a bit biased perhaps because I am far from a big Muppets fan, but this little work sure did not turn me into one either. I did not find it funny and it certainly wasn't a romantic work at all, so it very much does come short on the occasion. Farrow, however, was a bit of a shining light and keeps it from being an even bigger and more awkward mess. Thumbs-down and I don't recommend the watch here. Go for something else.
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