Rating: Summary: an earnest, yet unsucessfull attempt to film the unfilmable Review: Being a lifelong fan of the book, and having re-read it just weeks prior to the viewing, it is completely impossible for me to give Peter Jackson's FOTR an reasonable evaluation from an artistic standpoint. I couldn't help but dissect the film scene-by-scene as opposed to percieving it as one cinematic whole. At times it felt like a protracted illustration and little else. Perhaps a second or third viewing will correct that. For now, on first impression, I can only say that the film was uneven, at times frustrating. Frustrating because some of its aspects worked beautifully; and some were pulling it into quite the opposite direction. Frustrating because Jackson does have a strong personal vision, yet he did make some grave and obvious concessions to Hollywood. Here's the breakdown: THE GOOD: 1) Visuals: Landscapes, Architecture and Interiors. Flawless. Majestic. Alan Lee, as design consultant worked miracles. And furthermore, it made New Zealand a lucrative travel destination for me. 2) Certain Actors. Specifically portraying Gandalf, Bilbo, Sam, a few others... mostly dead-on, much like I always imagined. 3) The "creative license" scenes. Surprisingly enough, most of them did not detract from the movie, and even enlivened it a bit. Arwen's involvement did not seem out of place, and her "flight to the ford" scene is easily one of the finest setpieces of the whole 3 hours. In fact, I would have liked to see even more of her. The allusions to various chapter titles were in good spirit, and the comic relief for the most part worked decently, although it was somewhat upsetting to see Merry and Pippin reserved strictly for that purpose. The subtitled Elvish was a nice touch, in part because it eliminated the prospect of listening to Aragorn's and Arwen's romantic dialogue in English (!) 4) Action Scenes. Nicely staged, esp. the entire Moria sequence. THE MEDIOCRE: 1) Heavy Cuts. It's true that the film is rushed. The only clues to how much time elapses between various scenes are periodic edits to the transformation of Isengard, and that is insufficient. Many scenes feel shortened in order to meet the 3 hour obligation, especially those of Lorien and I would hope the more complete version makes it to DVD. 2) At times, overdramatic. Some of the players' approach is not very authentic, overly self-aware, Elrond most of all. Aragorn and Boromir overact on occasion, but sparingly. Saruman and Gandalf, bellowing spells at each other across mountain passes come off as a pair of grand opera singers. 3) Derivative Effects. While impressive in their own right, the Wizard duel scene, Cave Troll, and Balrog seem to be inspired by latter-day videogames rather than by Tolkien's descriptions. THE BAD: 1) Frodo's cleanliness. While Elijah Wood's undoubtedly put his heart and soul into the role, his physical appearance was just a tad bit overpolished. He resembled a computer generated model rather than a living, breathing hobbit. And throughout the film, not a speck of dirt seemed to have touched him - does being the ringbearer automatically merit a daily bath in wartime conditions? 2) Prologue. Cheezy and unnessesary. Much of it is repeated through subsequent flashbacks anyway. Could have done without it and went on straight to the original storyline. The initial shot of Sauron holding up the ring is laughable, straight out of a grade-Z flick. He is better left unseen. 3)The Soundtrack. Atrocious, absolutely atrocious. The single element of LOTR that tipped the scale toward the negative for me. If it was used half as much, the movie would have been greatly eleveated in my mind. But this generic tripe...too closely reminiscent of Titanic for comfort. Remeber that secne in South Park when a character was tortured to death by Enya's music? Well, that's precisely how I felt...
Rating: Summary: A Whole Year? Review: I have waited nearly all my life for someone to translate Tolkien's masterpiece to th big screen. I watched the cartoon versions annually as a child, dressed up like Eowyn, and just longed for the big screen version. I began to hear rumors about 3 years ago and have been anxiously awaiting the release. Sometimes I thought the movie would never live up to my dreams since I have had them for so long. Oh how happily wrong I was! The movie is absolutely brilliant! The casting is brilliant! The Shire, Rivendell, and Lothlorien are absolutely breathtaking. The special effects are wonderful. I cannot hardly stand it that I have to wait a whole year to see the next installment and then another year afterr that to see the final chapter! The Fellowship of the Rings definately beats Harry Potter. Harry was good, but lacks the depth and beauty of Middle Earth! I sat in awe during the entire movie and when it was over, I could not believe that three hours had gone by! The work that everyone put into the movie must be applauded because it was absolutely breathtaking and brilliant! I can't wait to see it again!
Rating: Summary: Book is masterpiece = Movie a masterpiece Review: The formula of a great book = a great movie is almost never true. The Fellowship of the Ring is a wonderful movie because it has sucessfully brought the book to the screen. There are wonderful special effects and exciting action scenes, but they are all in support of the fanstastic story created by Tolkein -- rather than being created for their own sake. I applaud everyone involved with this movie for achieving this seemingly impossible task. Liked it so much I went home at 1AM and got out my copy of the "Fellowship of the Ring" for a fresh re-reading.
Rating: Summary: Excellent story and special effects... Review: This film has an excellent mixture of real footage and special effects. It is freaquently difficult to tell the difference between the real and computer generated. From the previews and trailers it was hard to tell that they had digitally shortened the Hobit characters, but in the movie it is amazing how they accomplished this. I can't wait to see the making of the movie that I am sure will be on the DVD when it comes out. This movie deserves five stars, no question in my mind. As many people have, I am sure, I read these stories when I was in high school, and I can't remember the finer points of the novels. From what I remember however, I think that the movie did ample justice to the book. Many things in the movie happened differently than I had imagined -- bigger and better! One caution though, don't take the PG-13 rating for granted. This is a violent and dark/evil film at times. I saw several children in the theater that were under 10; this is far more violent and scary than Harry Potter. At times the battles reminded me of Braveheart's, but condensed. In all, for adults and older teens, this is a great film about the classic battle between good and evil, in a fairy tale setting.
Rating: Summary: Totally Awesome!!!! Review: I have been eagerly awaiting this movie to come out forever. Everytime a preview came out I practically had a heart attack. The only thing I was a little wary of was if it would follow the book. Seeing that I've read Fellowship five times I was hoping it wouldn't disappoint me. So, on Dec. 19 I slept out at the theatre with some of my friends in below zero temperatures and waited for about tweleve hours before I got to see the first show in my city open to the public. It was completely and utterly amazing! First of all I decided after seeing it I was packing up my bags and moving to Rivendell! The sets are amazing, the casting is utterly perfect. The movie only strays from the book in two places which annoyed me slightly but the overall effect was amazing. I have to rave now about Orlando Bloom who plays Legolas. He was so amazing not only is he good looking for the ladies but he embodied completely Legolas, the other character that was simply perfect was Pippin. All the cast was wonderful Ian McKellen was born to play Gandalf and Eligah Wood nails the part of Frodo. This movie surpassed my wildest dreams. For people very true to the book be expected to not see Tom Bombadil and Farmer Maggot in the Shire and be prepared for instead of Glorfindel they have Arwen's part a bit expanded. Also the end is slightly different but you can see that for yourself. See this movie it is defnitly up there on the best movies ever made!
Rating: Summary: Tolkien's Masterpiece Becomes a Film Classic Review: As a long-time fan of Tolkien's classic works, I couldn't have been happier with the first film adaptation of his benchmark series. Obviously the film-makers are not only top-notch in their field, but also true fans of Tolkien's work. The adaptation of the original "Fellowship of the Ring" to this movie was flawless. In fact, this is the best book-to-movie adaptation I've ever seen. Although I could act like a fan-boy and complain about the parts I like that they skipped, I have to admit that the changes they made for time were well-chosen, and that the things that were cut that were not for length were mostly for the purpose of maintaining the mood and feel that the filmmakers were trying to get across with the film. As for changes, I cannot imagine the few alterations in the plot that they made as being more well-crafted than they were. Often the changes were simply for the purpose of setting up various parts of the plot that will come out in parts 2 and 3. In fact, I thought that some of the changes actually improved on Tolkien's original! Which considering how classic and well-written the books are is quite a statement. Overall I haven't been this awestruck by a movie since I watched "Star Wars: A New Hope" for the first time as an 8-year-old. The only complaint I have about the movie is that I can't wait to see the next chapter!
Rating: Summary: It worked. Against all odds, it worked. Review: There were ten thousand ways it could have gone wrong, but it was right -- beautifully, lovingly right. First, the characterizations were exactly correct. Ian McKellan simply was Gandalf. Ian Holm was a perfect Bilbo. The minor changes in Aragorn, Arwen, Pippin and Merry were acceptable and reasonable, given that a lot of scenes had to be cut, and therefore some motivations had to be changed. (For instance, with no time for a conspiracy in the Shire, Merry and Pippin needed a new way to join the party.) Sean Bean's Boromir, Sean Astin's Sam and Elijah Wood's Frodo worked well. I won't say much more about the characterization, because I never thought about actors or characterizations during the film. I just watched Frodo's journey. But the strength of The Lord of the Rings is more than the characters. The major character in any trip through Fairy-land is Fairy-land itself, and the books contain brilliant and emotional descriptions of the various places in Middle-Earth. They succeeded. I could recognize every place immediately. Bag End, Bree, Rivendell, Moria, Caras Galadhon, the Argonath, Barad-Dur, the Cracks of Doom, Caradhras and Orthanc were clearly and obviously Bag End, Bree, Rivendell, Moria, Caras Galadhon, the Argonath, Barad-Dur, the Cracks of Doom, Caradhras and Orthanc. With one exception, I can't name *any* way in which these places don't match Tolkien's descriptions. C. S. Lewis was once asked why he liked Shakespeare so much, and he replied, "Because he takes me somewhere I've never been before." By contrast, this movie took me back to a place I *have* been before -- the end of the Third Age of Middle-Earth. It felt much like going back to my old college, or the house I grew up in (which, in a very real sense, it was). Peter Jackson's direction impressed me with both how true he was to the original, and with how and when he chose to deviate from it. Tolkien spends much more time describing things that Jackson shows in a single shot. Jackson spends more time on movement and combat and other things that take time to show. He was equally concerned with being true to Tolkien's vision and with making the best movie possible (which is not the same thing as filming the best book). He did not balance the two goals - he aimed at both. Examples: many things that are discussed in the Council of Elrond are actually shown in the movie -- dialog about action is not as cinematic as action. The council itself takes a different course, which gets all the essential information in quickly. (Consider thirty minutes to an hour of a bunch of people sitting around and talking. As much as I'd like to see that scene, imagine the effect it would have on non-Tolkien fanatics.) Some events were moved because of the necessary time compression. Since the long discussion in Bag End about Gollum's origins was cut, the lines about Pity were moved to the first time we see Gollum. That kept an essential plot point, while reducing the amount of exposition. Some changes were dictated by the medium. The thoughts that went through Frodo's mind near the end turned into dialog so that they could be shown on screen, so he had to tell it to somebody. It seemed a reasonably elegant solution. There are several things that are put in for the fans but are unremarked on and will be ignored by the others. The sign on the gate, Legolas walking on the snow, some chapter titles turned into dialog, Bilbo's book and maps done in Tolkien's hand, etc. Mostly, the effects were wonderful -- both technically and artistically satisfying. There was one special effect that left me cold. (No, I won't identify it.) But, oh the Balrog! And the Fords of Bruinen. And the Eye of Sauron. And the pits at Orthanc. And,... but enough. The effects made the fantasy real. One comment about the fighting -- Gimli fought like a dwarf, Legolas fought like an elf, Boromir fought like a warrior, Aragorn fought like a loner, the troll fought like a troll, the Uruk-Hai fought like a group of people who weren't good at cooperation. I thought Bob Anderson put a lot of attention into individual styles. I don't agree with all the choices made. But it is a worthy and delightful vision of Middle-Earth. It was clearly a labor of love, by people who loved Tolkien and loved films.
Rating: Summary: Almost Review: O.K. I'll preface this with an overview opinion of the source material, which I read only once, a lifetime ago. The novels by their nature, given the amount of information to be disseminated, were a tad dry. Though detailed, they were not emotionally engaging. Fantasy seldom, if ever, is. Humanity and humor are traditionally given short shrift. They are detailed intellectual games, based on moral simplifications. Their characters are constructed to serve the plot not drive it. That said, the film version is visually striking for the most part. However the use of computerized color filters was a tad distracting, particularly when not applied to all characters in the same frame. Speaking of color, Mr. Wood's turquoise eyes did became a bit much at times. Also obvious rotoscope effects, or their computerized cousin, jar a bit in contrast to full CGI. A Hobbit size quibble I admit. The scaling techniques worked quite well, with minimal slips of continuity. The blending of CGI and real footage was admirable. Speaking of footage, for all the talk of the hobbit prosthetics, how truly necessary were they, other than in a few closeups. In most cases you were, forgive the pun, too many feet away. I give the film credit for not bowing to a juvenile audience in that it does not attempt to dilute the menace/threat of evil. Of course Orcs, while fierce, frightening and plentiful, really can't fight for a hill of beans, now can they. Thank goodness the hobbits finally got some smudges on their faces, even Frodo. I never knew wizards were such talented break dancers. My audience found the homing eagle sequence amusing. Someone, obviously not from middle earth, gave the effect the bird. Elfville, elegant though it was, got a bit static. Hugo Weaving should lighten up, come on you're an elf, live with it. A number of the audience used this sequence for a visit to the little hobbit's room. Hey where did whats'r'name the dark haired elf come from. Recessive genie perhaps. Great costumes, sets (a bit to clean), hobbit housekepping I guess. Perhaps a germanic influence. Loved the horses. Is there a horse award out there? For the uninitiated it was a lot to follow, no fault to the filmakers, it is simply a lot to follow. Emotionally engaging? Not in the least, but as I said, neither is/are the book/books. Film, however has the need to infuse the humanity and humor that a book might leave to the reader's imagination. The audience I saw it with was primarily adult or semi-adult and appeared to leave somewhat nonplussed. Although I believe a good number were ready to move to New Zealand. Well, to the nice Orc-free neighborhoods at least. All in all I enjoyed the movie. I guess I'll have to look elsewhere for magic.
Rating: Summary: How Dare You????? Review: I read this book and the trilogy in the late sixties when I was nine or ten. I still can vividly remember how I imagined the charactors. I never thought anyone could make a movie which depicted the saga or "Epic" if you will. When the animated version came out, yes, I was disappointed, but also pleased that someone had any type of imagination to try to reproduce the intensity of this masterpiece. I have not yet seen this movie. I am taking my family to see it as a Christmas present. All of my children LOVED the animated version, and my 18 year old daughter has read the books at least three times. How dare anyone say that TLOR is silly. "1984" (George Orwell) came and went. A scary thought. "2001: A Space Oddessy" came and went. "Star Wars", "E.T.", "Never-ending Story", ETC., have all came and went. All of these are awesome classics in their own right. I am sure that there will be a couple of disappointments, but what an "awesome" undertaking; to attempt to indulge our imaginations. I will write again after seeing the movie, but, I for one, will enjoy entering into someone elses imagination for the "Adventure of a Lifetime". Never mind the "racist, sexist, childish, silly" comments. GO SEE IT. At the very least, it will entertain you and you might even enjoy it. I myself, CAN'T wait!
Rating: Summary: The Rings... Review: The Triliogy of the Rings were the first books I can remember reading that made me really think about what I was reading. They were the first books that made me feel something, they stirred something deep inside of me. To prepare to watch this movie I did everything in my power to isolate myself from the hype of the movie and refused to re-read the books before seeing it so I either "wouldn't be disappointed" or "wouldn't wind up mentally spouting dialog along the characters as I did with Harry Potter". I refused to watch trailers, I ignored comericals dealing with the movie, and even didn't read any of the reviews posted on other websites, blogs and journals. I can't even tell you how much it grossed on opening night. I wanted the experience to be new, and different. I wanted to be totaly "naive" going into the movie. What I didn't expect was to be moved like I was. The movie started off slowly, but you could tell the director was taking the time to pay attention to every detail. The Shire was incredibly well done, and as a result the acting was better than some of other parts of the movie where the characters were obviously trying to interact with CGI generated scenery. Disclaimer here...the characters interacted fine with the CGI animated characters, but not with the generated scenery there is a difference. Despite that I found the beginning of the movie to be slow and ponderous, but that may have been because I was trying to force myself to enjoy the movie. I wanted to enjoy it...but it seemed the harder I tried to enjoy it the further I distanced myself from the movie. Until the flight to the ford... Racing through the tree's Frodo clasped in the elf princesses arms on a white horse while the Shadow Wraiths chased them. That's when it hit me. The scene was exactly like I pictured it while I had been reading so many years ago. The panting of the horses breath, the frantic dodges, the sounds the texture, all of it. Only in the movie it was shorter. At that point I let myself go and enjoyed the show. Then came a scene that brought about some unexpected feeling, emotion that changed the movie from just a movie into something else. The Fellowship stands separated on a broken stairway, a stairway that is crumbling slowly tilting its way into the abyss that it spans. And suddenly the only thing I could think of was the WTC. I don't know why, and I don't know how, but for some reason the images of the twin towers collapsing leapt strongly into my mind. Of course the Frodo and Strider make the leap as the stairs finish their tumbling, and the Fellowship is rejoined. But I still couldn't shake that feeling, that odd emotion that welled up inside me. Just a few moments later it happened again. Gandolf stands at the edge of the broken bridge facing the demon and he says something along the lines of "It stops here, you will not pass. Return to the fires of evil that spawned you." And all I could think of were the passengers on United Flight 93, the plane upon which the passengers stood up to the terrorists. The plane that crashed in the Pennsylvania country side, and part of me wondered if their last moments were like that. Giving all they had in defense of themselves and their own. Knowing hope as they almost succeed in overpowering their captors completely only to feel the despair well up again as they feel the demonic claws drag them down into the abyss. The movie ends with a quote that I'm going to need to look up and see if its in the book or not. Frodo is standing alone on the beach preparing to strike out on his own, the "One Ring" clenched in his hand, and you hear him thinking (paraphrased) "I wish the ring had never come to me" and then you hear Gandolf say "Everyone born in times like this make that wish, but it is up to you to choose how you will live in these moments". I also feel compelled to make one warning before recommending this movie. It is as graphic and at times as scary as the books were. It doesn't shrink from showing death and destruction in all its cruelty (though it avoids gore) and as such you might want to think carefully before taking your nine-year old daughter I as did. Let me stress this point. This is not the action/adventure comic strip violence so common on tv and movies. This is bone chilling trample the gatekeeper behead the mayor in dark shadows violence. With that said, let me encourage each of you to go see this movie...and most importantly let yourself enjoy it.
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