What was the last movie you've seen?
Re: What was the last movie you've seen?
The dwarves outside of Thorin actually have characterization in the movie trilogy.
Blizzard Entertainment Software Developer - All comments and views are my own and not representative of the company.
Re: What was the last movie you've seen?
While I have also had my issues with content cut out or shoe-horned in to both trilogies, I see them aimed at two different audiences. The Lord of the Rings films felt a lot more mature in their story and presentation, and the Hobbit films felt more like they were for a younger audience, like they were for children in order to prep them for the more adult themes of the LotR trilogy.dsheinem wrote:Battle of Five Armies = letdown
I can't really endorse the Hobbit trilogy. Too much fluff from what was in the books, too much hamminess in the acting, too much of the same action over and again in each film. The Battle of Five Armies had its moments, but most of them were contrived moments of fanservice.
As much good as I think Jackson did by Tolkien in the LOTR trilogy, which I found to be really quite strong, he did just as much harm to the original work with the follow up trilogy. It is a shame that this will be The Hobbit that most people know.
In short, it comes across to me like Star Wars episodes 4-6 versus Star Wars episodes 1-3. Both are family friendly, but one set is much more geared towards kids than the other.
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Re: What was the last movie you've seen?
I agree. 1990s Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles was a great movie.Sano wrote:Ninja Turtles! Great movie, at least I thought it was.![]()

Thank goodness that Michael Bay never made a remake of this. Now I'm going to close my eyes and put my fingers in my ears.
Re: What was the last movie you've seen?
I agree the very 1st movie and 2nd movie were awesome. Third movie, not so much. I did mean that I watched the new Ninja Turtles; the one with Megan Fox. I enjoyed it personally.samsonlonghair wrote:I agree. 1990s Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles was a great movie.Sano wrote:Ninja Turtles! Great movie, at least I thought it was.![]()
Thank goodness that Michael Bay never made a remake of this. Now I'm going to close my eyes and put my fingers in my ears.

- KalessinDB
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Re: What was the last movie you've seen?
The Tauriel subplot was really the only wholly manufactured addition, and it's for the same reason Arwen was ramped up in LotR, taking over Glorfindel's part and whatnot: Tolkien didn't write female characters. Half a century ago, that was well and good, but there's no reason for it these days, so in my opinion they're not only permissible but to be welcomed.Jmustang1968 wrote:Yeah the love triangle thing and addition of Tauriel is meh, and some of the over the top and at times goofy action can feel out of place, but there are also a lot of great moments as well. The Hobbit had an uphill battle to begin with as I think it isnt as movie friendly as the LotR.
As to the other "fluff" added... As noted, it all draws from source material. And really, had he conceived the entire universe at once, I imagine it would run fairly similar to the way the movies are. Going back and re-reading Hobbit, it's painfully obvious it was his story for his children written down - the language was plainer, it was less clunky, there was more fantastic for the sake of fantastic (ie Beorn... who I was very glad to see appear in the actual Battle, offhand. Could have easily seen that being excised), Gandalf disappears with no explanation whatsoever...
I would like to get my hands on a first edition of Hobbit to read the original version where the ring was given freely. I should probably just track down an ebook of it.
Absolutely, and absolutely intentional. If it seems that way in the movies, it's 10 times as apparent in the books. The Hobbit is an easy read intended to be a child's book, LotR trilogy is much more similar to the type of book a historian would write... and The Silmarillion is a damned textbook, period. Practically unreadable but so rich in setting.Ack wrote:While I have also had my issues with content cut out or shoe-horned in to both trilogies, I see them aimed at two different audiences. The Lord of the Rings films felt a lot more mature in their story and presentation, and the Hobbit films felt more like they were for a younger audience, like they were for children in order to prep them for the more adult themes of the LotR trilogy.
Yeah we discussed that during the trilogy. In the books, there was "The fat one, the kids, 9 more dwarves, and Thorin"... I could actually identify most of them by sight and personality in the movies!MrPopo wrote:The dwarves outside of Thorin actually have characterization in the movie trilogy.
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Re: What was the last movie you've seen?
You summed up my feelings on the additions quite well. Its interesting just how much the especially fantastic stuff that's still left in sticks out compared to the rest. The three trolls feel incredibly weird next to the rest of the trilogy since they differ so much from every other instance of troll we see, not to mention the rest of the movies mostly removing the silly fantastic stuff. Can you imagine them faithfully adapting Rivendell from the novel of The Hobbit? Reread that part again.
Blizzard Entertainment Software Developer - All comments and views are my own and not representative of the company.
Re: What was the last movie you've seen?
There's no reason to shoehorn women into the thing. The absence of female characters wasn't just "well and good" but was a pretty key component to the feel of the book. Shoehorning not just a female character but a cross-species romance as a major plot point into the Hobbit trilogy is just fucking horrid, as is the bevvy of LOTR cameos and what not (Legolas being the most grievous, obviously).KalessinDB wrote:Tolkien didn't write female characters. Half a century ago, that was well and good, but there's no reason for it these days, so in my opinion they're not only permissible but to be welcomed.
"Draw" is a bit of a rough term. Take, for instance, the characters Stephen Fry and Ryan Gage portray in Laketown. In the book, neither is mentioned much at all. When they are, it's basically in passing. Fry's character is a friend to Bard and Bard reciprocates in how he rebuilds post-Smaug. Gage's character isn't named other than that there's a line that the master and his councilors happily bid adieu to the dwarves. Yet each character has EXTENSIVE screen time, LARGE personalities, etc. They detract from the focus on the story, on the central characters, etc. There's just FAR too much of this in the Hobbit films, it shifts the focus and ruins the tightness of the original narrative. I mean, Bilbo may as well have been absent from the third filmAs noted, it all draws from source material.
What's so bad about it being a children's story? Why can't that be what we got on screen? The disappearance of Gandalf, etc. is fine - that creates some mystery and allows the other characters to grow. The Dol Guldur stuff was handled so horribly in the films (such cheesy acting and overblown effects) that it can hardly be seen as a valuable addition, even if it has its place in the appendices and what not of the LOTR.And really, had he conceived the entire universe at once, I imagine it would run fairly similar to the way the movies are. Going back and re-reading Hobbit, it's painfully obvious it was his story for his children written down - the language was plainer, it was less clunky, there was more fantastic for the sake of fantastic (ie Beorn... who I was very glad to see appear in the actual Battle, offhand. Could have easily seen that being excised), Gandalf disappears with no explanation whatsoever...
Fighting words! The Silmarillion is hardly a textbook, but it is a collection of ideas and fragments used in world-building and, frankly, can't really be judged fairly as a novel so much as a collection of disparate writings that were posthumously put together and added to by Christopher.The Silmarillion is a damned textbook, period. Practically unreadable but so rich in setting.
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Re: What was the last movie you've seen?
For better or for worse, modern sensibilities wouldn't, on the whole, take well to a movie with no female characters at all. I can agree with you that Legolas was certainly unnecessary to the movie (other than to facilitate Tauriel's existance), but I don't really feel he detracted from it. With the lifespan of elves there's no reason he couldn't have been alive a mere 60some years before the start of LotR, so he could easily have been there. And other than the Ian Holm/Elijah Wood bookend cameos (which I personally thought gave it a nice feel, it drove home the idea of There and Back Again being The Red Book of Westmarch), I'm struggling to think of other cameos.dsheinem wrote:There's no reason to shoehorn women into the thing. The absence of female characters wasn't just "well and good" but was a pretty key component to the feel of the book. Shoehorning not just a female character but a cross-species romance as a major plot point into the Hobbit trilogy is just fucking horrid, as is the bevvy of LOTR cameos and what not (Legolas being the most grievous, obviously).KalessinDB wrote:Tolkien didn't write female characters. Half a century ago, that was well and good, but there's no reason for it these days, so in my opinion they're not only permissible but to be welcomed.
Agreed, the characters are greatly expanded. And frankly, I also agree that it could have easily been a two film adaptation, although the breakpoints they chose seemed the most logical to me (thus making the three film adaptation the most logical)."Draw" is a bit of a rough term. Take, for instance, the characters Stephen Fry and Ryan Gage portray in Laketown. In the book, neither is mentioned much at all. When they are, it's basically in passing. Fry's character is a friend to Bard and Bard reciprocates in how he rebuilds post-Smaug. Gage's character isn't named other than that there's a line that the master and his councilors happily bid adieu to the dwarves. Yet each character has EXTENSIVE screen time, LARGE personalities, etc. They detract from the focus on the story, on the central characters, etc. There's just FAR too much of this in the Hobbit films, it shifts the focus and ruins the tightness of the original narrative. I mean, Bilbo may as well have been absent from the third film![]()
My tone may have been misconstrued -- I wasn't trying to claim the fact that it was a children's story was a bad thing. Simply that I feel had Hobbit been conceived at the same time as LotR trilogy, the writing may have been very different. Because the Hobbit movie is being adapted after the LotR trilogy was adapted, it lends itself to that.What's so bad about it being a children's story? Why can't that be what we got on screen? The disappearance of Gandalf, etc. is fine - that creates some mystery and allows the other characters to grow. The Dol Guldur stuff was handled so horribly in the films (such cheesy acting and overblown effects) that it can hardly be seen as a valuable addition, even if it has its place in the appendices and what not of the LOTR.And really, had he conceived the entire universe at once, I imagine it would run fairly similar to the way the movies are. Going back and re-reading Hobbit, it's painfully obvious it was his story for his children written down - the language was plainer, it was less clunky, there was more fantastic for the sake of fantastic (ie Beorn... who I was very glad to see appear in the actual Battle, offhand. Could have easily seen that being excised), Gandalf disappears with no explanation whatsoever...
Where you say it can't be judged fairly as a novel, etc etc... is essentially what I was getting at by referring to it as a textbook. Perhaps not the clearest phrasing, I admit.Fighting words! The Silmarillion is hardly a textbook, but it is a collection of ideas and fragments used in world-building and, frankly, can't really be judged fairly as a novel so much as a collection of disparate writings that were posthumously put together and added to by Christopher.The Silmarillion is a damned textbook, period. Practically unreadable but so rich in setting.
Really, it comes down to preference, nothing more. We just have to agree to disagree on much of it I think.
Gunning for a licensed NES NTSC-U set, follow the madness and poverty here!
Cheat sheet of my collection, always looking to increase it. 405/677 licensed games, 46/"95" unlicensed
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Cheat sheet of my collection, always looking to increase it. 405/677 licensed games, 46/"95" unlicensed
Chronically out of date BST thread
Re: What was the last movie you've seen?
Well there's a difference between having a preference and making arguments for a preference. Since I saw you were offering the latter, I engaged...KalessinDB wrote:
Really, it comes down to preference, nothing more. We just have to agree to disagree on much of it I think.
The best way I can explain the problems I have with The Hobbit trilogy as compared to the LOTR trilogy of films is that the changes from the book were reasonable and well-thought out in the LOTR films as they contributed to making three very good films. In the Hobbit films, the changes from the book seem inane at best and like cash-grabs at worst, and pretty much all of them contributed immensely to the three films all being fairly mediocre.
This is a fairly good take on it, I think.
