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Frank Oz camera Little Shop

Feature films directed by Frank Oz.

Feature films[]

Poster Description
DarkCrystal.poster.1

The Dark Crystal

The Dark Crystal was co-directed by Jim Henson and Frank Oz.

Jen, a Gelfling raised in solitude by a race of the peace-loving wizards called the Mystics, embarks on a quest to find the missing shard of the Dark Crystal, restore the balance of the universe, and defeat the evil Skesis.

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The Muppets Take Manhattan

The Muppets Take Manhattan is the third feature film starring The Muppets, and the first film directed solely by Frank Oz.

After graduating college, the Muppets travel to Manhattan in an attempt to find a producer for their Broadway musical "Manhattan Melodies".

Frank Oz provides an audio commentary on the 4K Blu-Ray release.

Little shop of horrors

Little Shop of Horrors

Little Shop of Horrors was turned into a film, directed by Frank Oz in his first non-Henson directorial job.

The film starred Rick Moranis as Seymour Krelborn, Ellen Greene as Audrey, Vincent Gardenia as Mr. Mushnik, and Steve Martin in an acclaimed turn as sadistic dentist Dr. Orin Scrivello, D.D.S.

Frank Oz provides two audio commentaries on the home video release: one by himself, and another with effects artist Richard Conway.

Dirtyrottenscoundrels

Dirty Rotten Scoundrels

Dirty Rotten Scoundrels, a 1988 loose remake of the 1964 comedy Bedtime Story, was Frank Oz's second non-Henson directorial project.

The film starred Michael Caine and Steve Martin as competing con artists at the French Riviera, out to score a soap heiress (Glenne Headley). Miles Goodman provided the score and Louis Zorich played a Greek millionaire.

Martin's sole redemption in this dark period was last year's cameo in the funky film version of Little Shop of Horrors. As a sadistic biker/dentist on a heavy Elvis trip, Martin was all crotch thrusts and glib swirls. He hurled his body across the screen with exhilarated abandon, clearly delighted that director Frank Oz, the man behind the Muppets (he invented Miss Piggy), had given him so much leeway to go berserk. Now Martin and Oz are reunited in Dirty Rotten Scoundrels.... Oz has urged from Martin a performance that makes good on the Little Shop teaser; physically deft and verbally sharp, Martin does his best work since All of Me.
—Katherine Dieckman, The Village Voice. December 20, 1988.

The film is listed amongst Oscar the Grouch's favorites in the book Sesame Street Unpaved.

Frank Oz provides an audio commentary on the home video release.

Bob

What About Bob?

What About Bob? is a 1991 comedy film directed by Frank Oz, starring Bill Murray and Richard Dreyfuss.

When the extremely neurotic Bob Wiley (Murray) turns up at the door of successful psychiatrist Dr. Leo Marvin (Dreyfuss), the shrink offers Bob a copy of his new book and heads off on vacation. Bob finds out where the good doctor is vacationing, and pays his family a visit. They all welcome him into their holiday home despite Leo's protests, and slowly but surely, Bob begins to drive Leo mad. Fran Brill played the role of Lily Marvin and Miles Goodman provided the score.

Jim Henson Productions receives a "Special Thanks" credit at the end of the film.

Housesitter

HouseSitter

HouseSitter, a 1992 romantic comedy film, was Frank Oz's third non-Henson directorial project. The film is about a con artist named Gwen Phillips (Goldie Hawn) who moves into the home of an architect named Newton Davis (Steve Martin) and begins to pose as his wife. Miles Goodman provided the score.

Indianinthecupboard

The Indian in the Cupboard

The Indian in the Cupboard is a theatrical film based on a 1980 children's book of the same name. The story focuses on a young boy, Omri, who receives a magic cupboard through which he can bring his toy figures to life. He does so, beginning with a Native American figure named Little Bear, but soon finds that his "toys" have lives of their own and that there's a great responsibility involved.

Though uncredited, Jim Henson's Creature Shop worked on a couple of sequences involving a pet rat.

Frank Oz provides an audio commentary on the home video release.

Inandout

In & Out

In & Out is a 1997 romantic comedy film directed by Frank Oz and starring Kevin Kline, Joan Cusack, Matt Dillon, Tom Selleck, Debbie Reynolds, Bob Newhart, and Wilford Brimley. Whoopi Goldberg, Glenn Close, and Jay Leno appear as themselves in cameo roles, and Kate McGregor-Stewart played Aunt Becky.

The film became one of mainstream Hollywood's few attempts at a comedic "gay movie" of its era, and was widely noted at the time for a 10-second kiss between Kevin Kline and Tom Selleck.

Bowfinger

Bowfinger

Bowfinger is a 1999 comedy directed by Frank Oz and starring Steve Martin and Eddie Murphy.

Down and out filmmaker Bobby Bowfinger is desperate for a hit movie -- so desperate that he tells a big-shot Hollywood producer that he has international star Kit Ramsey lined up to star in his next effort, Chubby Rain. He wins a distribution deal on the back of this, but when Ramsey turns the film down, Bowfinger is forced to fake his way through production, shooting the unsuspecting star as he goes about his daily business and utilizing a nerdy body double. Also in the cast were Robert Downey, Jr. (as Jerry Renfro) and Phill Lewis (as an auditioning actor).

During the Spotlight On Location feature on the film's DVD release, Oz explained why he was interested in making the movie:

One of the reasons that the script was endearing to me is I started out with a group called "Muppets" - and I'm still part of the Muppets, I just don't perform that often - and we were just four people about thirty-five years ago, and we were on the fringes also. And Jim Henson wanted to shoot a movie called Time Piece which eventually won an Academy Award nomination. But he didn't have the money or the time. And we did it on weekends for a year. The four of us grabbing an old camera with a D.P. who did commercials. We would just go around, I remember, just like Bowfinger. So, I lived through that. And it was a very evocative thing to do that. To see the script that way.

Frank Oz provides an audio commentary on the home video release.

Thescore

The Score

The Score is a 2001 action/suspense caper starring Robert De Niro, Edward Norton, Angela Bassett, and Marlon Brando. It is the first dramatic film of Frank Oz's directorial career.

On-set differences between Marlon Brando and Frank Oz were widely reported throughout the media prior to the film's release. According to several reports, Brando's eccentric behavior on set included (but was not limited to) performing scenes in his underwear and altogether refusing to be directed by Oz at times, having co-star Robert DeNiro take over with Oz instructing via an assistant director (though Oz flatly denied this allegation).[1] When working with Oz, Brando would condescendingly refer to him as Miss Piggy and was quoted by TIME Magazine as saying "I bet you wish I was a puppet so you could stick your hand up my ass and make me do what you want."[2]

Despite these reports, Frank Oz has played down the conflict: "He's a very sweet, gracious -- childlike in some ways -- very, very humane, very complex person," Oz said of Brando, taking unspoken note of the reported tension on the movie's Montreal set. "But I can't say that we got along all the time. And it wasn't because he was difficult; it was a difficult situation."

"I don't want to do a puffery piece here, I want to be flat-out true: We had a difference in creative interpretation of the role. He felt one way, quite sincerely and earnestly, and I felt the other, and the producers backed me, which I'm grateful for, and Marlon did come around to my side."[3]

Frank Oz and director of photography Rob Hahn provide an audio commentary on the home video release.

Poster.stepford

The Stepford Wives

The Stepford Wives, directed by Frank Oz, is a 2004 remake of the 1975 dark comedy of the same name. The effects laden film substituted CG for puppetry in depicting the robotized spouses. The film starred Nicole Kidman and Matthew Broderick.

Frank Oz provides an audio commentary on the home video release.

DeathAtAFunerlPoster

Death at a Funeral

Death at a Funeral is a 2007 black comedy directed by Frank Oz. The film focuses on a dysfunctional British family, preparing to bury the patriarch. Each relative has their own hang-ups and anxieties, and the arrival of a mysterious stranger (Peter Dinklage) adds further complications. The ensemble cast includes Rupert Graves as Robert.

Frank Oz provides an audio commentary on the home video release.

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Muppet Guys Talking

Muppet Guys Talking is a 2017 documentary film produced and directed by Frank Oz. The film features a discussion about the Muppets with Oz, Dave Goelz, Fran Brill, Jerry Nelson, and Bill Barretta.


InAndOfItself

In & Of Itself

Derek DelGaudio's In & Of Itself is a film adaption of the stage show of the same name (also directed by Oz). The film was executive produced by Stephen Colbert and released on Hulu in January 2021. The film was cut together from a number of live performances and includes several shots of the audience; among them, Brian Henson, Mia Sara, Kate McKinnon, Susan Sarandon, Tim Gunn, Larry Wilmore, David Blaine, and Bill Gates.

Other directorial work[]

  • "Number Three Ball Film" (1971 Sesame Street insert)
  • A Disney MGM Studios backstage tour film about sound effects with Mel Gibson, Pee-wee Herman, and Daryl Hannah (1989)[4]
  • The Funkhousers (2002 television pilot)
  • Leverage: "The Carnival Job" (2011 television episode)
  • In & Of Itself (2017 off-Broadway stage show)

Other film work[]

  • Oz served as executive producer for Heidi Miami Marshall's 2016 short film "Muscle" and 2023 short film "S.P.I.C."
  • Oz served as executive producer on the 2023 film Fuzzy Head, written and directed by Wendy McColm (and produced by Oz's son Cooper Oznowicz).
  • Oz was an executive producer (along with Spike Lee) on the 2024 documentary Rolling Along, focusing on the life of former basketball player and senator Bill Bradley.

See also[]

Sources[]

  1. Kelly, Brendan. Settling the Score Stories. Montreal Gazette, July 2, 2001
  2. Cagle, Jess. How To Make A Score. TIME Magazine, July 16, 2001
  3. Anderson, John. Director veers far away from Miss Piggy. The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, July 15, 2001
  4. "Disney Legends in Conversation: Exclusive Q&A with Frank Oz" August 7, 2024
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