A surreal stream of consciousness montage about time and related bizarreness.A surreal stream of consciousness montage about time and related bizarreness.A surreal stream of consciousness montage about time and related bizarreness.
- Nominated for 1 Oscar
- 4 wins & 1 nomination total
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaJim Henson provides most of the vocalizations (coughs, hiccups, etc), as well as the only spoken lines: four times, he says "Help!".
- Alternate versionsAllthough originally shot in color, most versions circulated are in Black and White. Just as The Cube (1969).
- ConnectionsFeatured in The Muppets Celebrate Jim Henson (1990)
Featured review
time is on Jim Henson's side
It was only after "Sesame Street" debuted that Jim Henson became a household name. Of course, that wasn't his first foray into the public eye. The man who created the Muppets had been working on stuff since the '50s, but his avant-garde 1965 short "Time Piece" is also worth seeing. This film has no discernible plot. It focuses on time, whether as an abstract concept, or as the dominant force in our lives (to the extent that it imprisons us). Henson plays a man who walks to the beat of a ticking clock. A few other things happen, all set to a beat.
The antics of Bert & Ernie, as well as Kermit & Piggy, showed everyone that Henson was capable of creating some far-out material. But here, he goes for the surreal. In a good way. Definitely worth seeing. Watch for a young Frank Oz (the voice of Fozzie, and the director of "The Muppets Take Manhattan", "Little Shop of Horrors", "Dirty Rotten Scoundrels", "What About Bob?", "In & Out", "Bowfinger" and the original "Death at a Funeral") in one scene.
The antics of Bert & Ernie, as well as Kermit & Piggy, showed everyone that Henson was capable of creating some far-out material. But here, he goes for the surreal. In a good way. Definitely worth seeing. Watch for a young Frank Oz (the voice of Fozzie, and the director of "The Muppets Take Manhattan", "Little Shop of Horrors", "Dirty Rotten Scoundrels", "What About Bob?", "In & Out", "Bowfinger" and the original "Death at a Funeral") in one scene.
helpful•10
- lee_eisenberg
- Oct 2, 2011
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