Calgary Herald

Sesame Street grouchy about trailer

Puppets spouting filth ‘defile’ reputation

- avi Selk

The creators of Sesame Street are suing over a new movie trailer that they claim suggests certain puppets live depraved, brutal lives when offstage — snorting hard drugs through licorice straws, selling sexual favours to humans and succumbing to gun violence.

Set for release in August, The Happytime Murders does not actually feature Big Bird, the Cookie Monster or any other resident of 123 Sesame Street, where puppets have been teaching children basic math and literacy since 1969. But the movie is directed by the son of late Muppets creator Jim Henson. It is set in a fictional Los Angeles where former stars of a children’s puppet show are being gunned down for unknown reasons.

“What really goes down when kids aren’t around,” promises the movie’s official trailer, which prompted Sesame Workshop to sue STX Entertainm­ent in federal court on Thursday, claiming the production company has “diluted and defiled” the beloved Muppets’ reputation­s.

The film is R-rated, and includes scenes in which:

A puppet in a spiked collar, vaguely resembling an emaciated Fozzie Bear, offers to perform oral sex for 50 cents on the movie’s star, Melissa McCarthy.

A squid puppet and a llama puppet are both decapitate­d by shotgun blasts.

Two puppets have sex “that culminates in (a) scene where a puppet is depicted copiously ejaculatin­g for an extended period,” as the lawsuit describes the trailer, accurately, though the ejaculate appears to be silly string.

Such scenes have been paired with the trailer’s tagline, “No Sesame. All Street,” and examples of director Brian Henson’s nonsexual work, such as The Muppets Christmas Carol.

Taken together, Sesame claims, STX “seem intent on seeding confusion in the mind of the public as to the associatio­n between the movie, Sesame Street, and its beloved Muppets.”

The PR campaign has even gone too far for the Jim Henson Co., which co-produced the movie with STX, according to internal emails submitted with the lawsuit.

In her reply, Lisa Henson apologized but said she and her brother were powerless to stop STX from marketing the film as it wished.

After Sesame Workshop sued on Thursday, STX responded with a public statement attributed to “Fred, Esq.” — a puppet lawyer.

The trailer does not infringe on any trademark, and merely depicts “the untold story of the active lives of Henson puppets when they’re not performing in front of children,” reads Fred’s statement.

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