Marketic
It's no definitive masterpiece but it's damn close.
Invaderbank
The film creates a perfect balance between action and depth of basic needs, in the midst of an infertile atmosphere.
Brainsbell
The story-telling is good with flashbacks.The film is both funny and heartbreaking. You smile in a scene and get a soulcrushing revelation in the next.
Geraldine
The story, direction, characters, and writing/dialogue is akin to taking a tranquilizer shot to the neck, but everything else was so well done.
cricketbat
Being Elmo: A Puppeteer's Journey isn't just a story about how one man became a Muppeteer, this is a loving tribute to Jim Henson, his work, and it's an inspiring film for anyone who has dreamed of doing what they love for a living. It also features some interesting behind-the-scenes looks at puppeteering in general. It's simple, yet touching, and it even made Elmo less annoying to me - and that's saying something.
Mike B
This is such an awe-inspiring, life-affirming documentary! How can one not admire and love the creators of Sesame Street? I still remember watching this show almost daily with my children as they were growing up.This documentary recounts how at a young age, Kevin Clash, was obsessed with puppets – and strived to be a puppeteer. He started with a local show in Baltimore, moved to Captain Kangaroo – and finally reached his dream with Jim Henson's Muppets and Sesame Street. We feel his motivation and self-starting ability – and also his humbleness as he approaches his life's dream. What is of great significance is how he was mentored, by both his parents and fellow puppeteers – and how this mentoring tradition is being kept on. That is why Sesame Street has endured; entertained and educated children – and their parents, since it's inception in 1969.A wonderful documentary – highly recommended. Life proof-positive!
The_Film_Cricket
There's an impulse within some people to create that becomes a single-minded passion. Kevin Clash remembers when the itch to create puppets first struck him. At a young age, he laid eyes on the perfect fabric and was propelled to start cutting, shaping and molding until he had created the image that was in his head. The problem, he remembered, was that the fabric came off of his father's coat. Awaiting a horrendous response, his father came home and told him. "Next time . . . ask".In a way this was a desire never left him. Brought up in a middle-class family in Baltimore, Clash had a shy personality and learned that creating puppets seemed like a means of expression. He designed puppets in his bedroom and put on shows for the kids in his mother's daycare. The creative impulse to design puppets was with him, he confesses, even before he knew what a Muppet was, although it didn't exactly make him a social prize. Kids around him accused him of playing with dolls. The teasing stopped when he was given a chance to work on a local television show while he was still in high school.Being Elmo: A Puppeteer's Journey is a proper title because it carries us along on Clash's journey from a shy kid in Baltimore to not only a successful career as a puppeteer, but also as the producer and director of "Sesame Street." His journey seems to have been divided into equal parts determination and luck that eventually put him in contact with Jim Henson, whom Clash seems to have regarded the same way most kids look as sports heroes or Superman. So great was his love for puppeteering and of the Muppets that he seemed to have regarded Henson, Frank Oz and Muppet designer Kermit Love as some sort of Holy Trinity. Clash describes the heartrending task of having to turn down Henson's offer to work on The Dark Crystal because he was working on two local kids shows back home. He would later accept a small part in Labyrinth.The encounter with Henson would lead him to "Sesame Street" and to his biggest success. One day, puppeteer Richard Hunt became frustrated while operating a small red monster whose deep caveman voice made it sound like a junior-league Cookie Monster. During the break he threw the puppet at Clash, who rethought the voice into a falsetto and ultimately brought Elmo to life. By taking away the caveman voice and giving him a gentler manner, Clash was able to endear Elmo to preschoolers in a way that few creations ever have. Elmo had the dimensions of a child that little kids could relate to. What Clash was able to bring out in Elmo would make him a global phenomenon, culminating in riots over the Tickle-Me-Elmo dolls in the mid-90s which had parents literally fighting one another in the aisles of toy stores.Being Elmo: A Puppeteer's Journey is focused almost exclusively on Kevin Clash's work. His personal life, outside of his upbringing, remains only in faint glimmers on the edges of the journey. He mentions his ex-wife but mainly talk about his daughter. Discussing his creative instincts, he is realistic on the point that he can create any kind of Muppet but nothing compares to creating a child. There is mention of his ex-wife and we are left only to surmise that the relationship ended because of Clash's total dedication to his work. We see a guy who is loving, happy, good-hearted and hard-working, but we only see faint images of his life now. He is able to give his daughter a massive sweet-sixteen party with birthday wishes from Jack Black and L.L. Cool J, but little of his current life is actually covered.The movie culminates with the death of Jim Henson, and this – based on the film - seems to be his only dark chapter. Realizing his dream of working with his hero, he remembers going on The Arsenio Hall Show and afterwards, noticing that Jim was coughing. The next phone call he got delivered the bad news.What is special about Kevin Clash is not only his skill at creating Muppets but his skill at bringing them to life. We see him in action as he explains that even when the Muppets aren't talking, you have to keep them moving so they won't seem immobile. Most Muppets don't have eyes that move independently, and their clam-like mouths don't do anything more than just open and close, but Clash is able to work around that. One moment in particular explains that clenching his fist while operating Elmo will give the character a bashful look. A twist of the fingers and Elmo looks confused. It is those details that make the Muppets so enduring.
Sean Lamberger
The super-sweet story of Kevin Clash, the puppeteer behind Elmo and a variety of other characters, which doubles as a heartwarming look back at the attitudes and atmosphere behind the scenes with Jim Henson's troupe in the glory days. Clash is a master at his craft, a by-product of spending every afternoon since childhood with an arm inside a furry marionette, and when he's not on the air with the cast of Sesame Street, he's contentedly passing that knowledge on to the next generation. It's an attitude he inherited from Henson and his close associate Kermit Love, who took Kevin under their wing and showed him the ropes without any pretense or hesitation. Too often we're too concerned with job security to share the intimate details of our craft with others, least of all the rising young stars, but Love and Henson adopted Clash with selfless warmth and care, a lesson he hasn't forgotten and continues to roll forward to others today. They're a perfect embodiment of everything the Muppets have stood for, complete with a contagious smile that didn't leave my face for hours.