The Happytime Murders Quiz – Which Character Are You?

<span class="author-by">by</span> Samantha <span class="author-surname">Stratton</span>

by Samantha Stratton

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Respond to these rapid questions in our The Happytime Murders quiz and we will tell you which The Happytime Murders character you are. Play it now.

When it comes to dirty-talking puppets, there isn’t enough of them available in today’s cinema to suit your preferences and tastes, I’ve got a movie for you. “The Happytime Murders,” directed by Brian Henson under the auspices of a production company called “HA!”—which stands for “Henson Alternative,” complete with an exclamation point!—is a film in which felt characters in the style of the Muppets (for yes, Brian is the son of Jim and Jane Henson) cuss, smoke, and have sex, all for the purpose of ostensibly amusing the audience. “The Happytime Mur

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Dirty-talking puppets are nothing new; a search through the history of Las Vegas entertainment would turn up dozens, if not hundreds, of examples, and the recent Broadway hit “Avenue Q” has demonstrated that they WORK, or at least that they have the potential to work. “The Happytime Murders,” which is executive produced by human star Melissa McCarthy and her husband Ben Falcone, is an indirect outgrowth of Henson’s “Puppet Up!” improv show, which had a successful run in Las Vegas and New York a couple of years ago. “Puppet Up!” is an improv show that had a successful run in Las Vegas and New York a couple of years ago. This was a traditional audience suggestion set, with the more outrageous the suggestions the better, and the puppeteers and their puppets presided over it.
But you shouldn’t waste any more time and start this The Happytime Murders quiz.

The Happytime Murders Quiz

The world-building for “The Happytime Murders” is inspired by the film “Who Framed Roger Rabbit,” with the tensions between cartoons and humans being replaced by a society in which “meatbags” are entertained by but distrust “fluff”-filled felt-faced sentient beings in “The Happytime Murders.” The conceit doesn’t work nearly as well as it did in “Roger Rabbit” because the characters are different. That classic’s self-reflexive absurdity, epitomized by Jessica Rabbit’s famous line “I’m not bad, I’m just drawn that way,” doesn’t translate as easily to this scenario, which is a good thing. No amount of mental effort is required to grasp the fact that an autonomous puppet is a blatant contradiction in the first place.
Also, you will find out which character are you in this The Happytime Murders quiz.

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It’s not so much that “The Happytime Murders” wants you to be transported to a comedic world as it is about seeing and hearing your favorite characters act in ways you’ve never seen or heard them act before in a film before. The storyline is as fluffy as the insides of any of the puppets. A case is thrown at puppet P.I. Phil (Bill Barretta) by femme fatale Sandra, and wherever he goes, another cast member of a once-famous puppet television show, “The Happytime Gang,” gets the stuffing knocked out of him or her as a result. It turns out that Phil was once a cop, and a good one at that, until a mishap shattered the department’s confidence in him. The latest string of homicides brings him back together with his human partner, Connie (McCarthy), a good but now bitter cop who wears a sugar monkey on her back as a badge of honor. Just so you’re aware, sugar is equivalent to heroin in the world of puppets.
Also, you must try to play this The Happytime Murders quiz.

Because of all the puppet shenanigans, there is no need to be overly concerned with the plot. While they start out with profanity, they soon progress to the use of puppets whose forms are fairly familiar to us—fluffy bunnies, frisky doggies, a porn shop proprietor who looks like a distant relative of Sam The Eagle gone severely to seed, and so on—doing generally unexpected things, such as flashing pubic hair and ejaculating. Is this something to laugh at? The audience at the screening I attended did not erupt in applause, and I found scenes of amusing human interaction, such as a detective hunt undertaken by McCarthy and Maya Rudolph, who plays Phil’s loyal secretary, to be more amusing than the puppet scenes. But I don’t want to be too harsh on this film because, despite the fact that it doesn’t work, the high spirits with which it was made appear to have remained unblemished. In other words, if you’re susceptible to a certain kind of atmosphere, particularly one that McCarthy and his colleagues can conjure up (other human cast members include Elizabeth Banks and Joel McHale; among the puppeteers is Kevin Clash, who was one of Elmo’s original handlers), you might enjoy it. However, please do not bring your children. Seriously. Just don’t do it.

For more personality quizzes check this: Proud Mary Quiz.

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