EäEl Viejo wrote:Not only Middle Earth - a whole universe called (damn, my memory fails me)?DaddyHoggy wrote:Tolkien was already working on the whole history of Middle Earth (which became The Silmarillion) ...
The Hobbit
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Re: The Hobbit
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Re: The Hobbit
Well remembered, according to my original 1977 (but 5th imprint), Eä means in Elvish "It is" and is their vague description of the Universe they found themselves existing in when Eru created them.
Oolite Life is now revealed hereSelezen wrote:Apparently I was having a DaddyHoggy moment.
Re: The Hobbit
Well, we just got home from the theatre (not really, had time to pop into the sauna first...) and I must say that the movie was not as hooking as the LotR trilogy. I loved the HFR, but it was a pity that they could not include even a little bit of more story into the 3 hour movie. And how they treated Radagast was... disappointing. Super-bunnies, indeed...
Towards the end, I was thinking at least three times that "this is the end", but no... they had more action sequences that they had to show... and then some more...
Towards the end, I was thinking at least three times that "this is the end", but no... they had more action sequences that they had to show... and then some more...
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Re: The Hobbit
Well that's disappointing. I hate that feeling when you think the movie is going to end and it doesn't - usually a sure-fire sign that a movie is no good.Wolfwood wrote:Well, we just got home from the theatre (not really, had time to pop into the sauna first...) and I must say that the movie was not as hooking as the LotR trilogy. I loved the HFR, but it was a pity that they could not include even a little bit of more story into the 3 hour movie. And how they treated Radagast was... disappointing. Super-bunnies, indeed...
Towards the end, I was thinking at least three times that "this is the end", but no... they had more action sequences that they had to show... and then some more...
"I'll laser the mark all while munching a fistful of popcorn." - Markgräf von Ededleen, Marquess, Brutal Great One, Assassins' Guild Exterminator
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Re: The Hobbit
I'm not ready to say that the movie was no good. I suspect that it might have been a little bit better if I had been able to watch it in two reasonably long parts. But three hours of it was much too much. It made me wonder why they had added all that extraneous stuff in there (stuff "interpolated" from Tolkien's text - which actually means that it was made up by the screenwriters). Without it, it would have been a more compact and probably more enjoyable movie.
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Re: The Hobbit
For work as detailed as Tolkien's, the screenwriters would have been best to consult Tolkien scholars if they really wanted to extend the story, rather than make things up (seems that they didn't). I'm skeptical, but of course, I will still see it, eventually .Wolfwood wrote:I'm not ready to say that the movie was no good. I suspect that it might have been a little bit better if I had been able to watch it in two reasonably long parts. But three hours of it was much too much. It made me wonder why they had added all that extraneous stuff in there (stuff "interpolated" from Tolkien's text - which actually means that it was made up by the screenwriters). Without it, it would have been a more compact and probably more enjoyable movie.
"I'll laser the mark all while munching a fistful of popcorn." - Markgräf von Ededleen, Marquess, Brutal Great One, Assassins' Guild Exterminator
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At the helm of the Caduceus Omega, 'Murderous Morrígan'
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At the helm of the Caduceus Omega, 'Murderous Morrígan'
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Re: The Hobbit
Money, basically. It's all about franchises: the studios have been living on them for years, with (especially) the Harry Potter films, the LOTR trilogy, the damp-vamp Twiglet saga, etc. They want bankable blockbuster generators, and they think they've got one with The Hobbit. Why waste a whole book with an all-but-guaranteed mass audience by turning it into just one film, when you can turn it into three? What I'm struggling to understand is why they've turned it into three incredibly long films ... although given that in the final LOTR film it took ages for the increasingly annoying hobbits just to say goodbye, I don't think brevity is Jackson's strong suit. That could be a too-much-money problem: with a vast budget, maybe he gets self-indulgent.Wolfwood wrote:It made me wonder why they had added all that extraneous stuff in there
Just for comparison, the LOTR is around 500,000 words long, and The Hobbit is around 95,000. Even if the film-makers do want to "join up" The Hobbit and LOTR, giving them equal screen times shows that there must be a huge amount of padding in there.
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Re: The Hobbit
I've almost dreaded the release of The Hobbit (dreading what Jackson would do to it).Disembodied wrote:Money, basically. It's all about franchises: the studios have been living on them for years, with (especially) the Harry Potter films, the LOTR trilogy, the damp-vamp Twiglet saga, etc. They want bankable blockbuster generators, and they think they've got one with The Hobbit. Why waste a whole book with an all-but-guaranteed mass audience by turning it into just one film, when you can turn it into three? What I'm struggling to understand is why they've turned it into three incredibly long films ... although given that in the final LOTR film it took ages for the increasingly annoying hobbits just to say goodbye, I don't think brevity is Jackson's strong suit. That could be a too-much-money problem: with a vast budget, maybe he gets self-indulgent.Wolfwood wrote:It made me wonder why they had added all that extraneous stuff in there
Just for comparison, the LOTR is around 500,000 words long, and The Hobbit is around 95,000. Even if the film-makers do want to "join up" The Hobbit and LOTR, giving them equal screen times shows that there must be a huge amount of padding in there.
From what I understand - You take The Hobbit, then you take the bit where Gandalf disappears for several chapters and you do almost a whole other film based on that (but spilt that between the two core The Hobbit films) then, in the third film, you do a backtrack from The Lord of the Rings (using stuff from The Silmarillion, Unfinished Tales and the Appendices of LotR) to the end of The Hobbit sucking in the life stories of the major players and their motivations for supporting either the cause to destroy The Ring or capture it for their own use.
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Re: The Hobbit
<chuckles> You are about to enter the Twiglet Zone! <cue eerie music>Disembodied wrote:... the damp-vamp Twiglet saga, etc.
Vampires and zombies - ever popular, for some strange reason.
I would advise stilts for the quagmires, and camels for the snowy hills
And any survivors, their debts I will certainly pay. There's always a way!
And any survivors, their debts I will certainly pay. There's always a way!
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Re: The Hobbit
Don't forget the werewolves! In this day and age you can't have vampires without werewolves, for some even stranger reason.El Viejo wrote:<chuckles> You are about to enter the Twiglet Zone! <cue eerie music>Disembodied wrote:... the damp-vamp Twiglet saga, etc.
Vampires and zombies - ever popular, for some strange reason.
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Re: The Hobbit
If one cliche works well then two will work twice as well!Commander McLane wrote:Don't forget the werewolves! In this day and age you can't have vampires without werewolves, for some even stranger reason.El Viejo wrote:<chuckles> You are about to enter the Twiglet Zone! <cue eerie music>Disembodied wrote:... the damp-vamp Twiglet saga, etc.
Vampires and zombies - ever popular, for some strange reason.
Oolite Life is now revealed hereSelezen wrote:Apparently I was having a DaddyHoggy moment.
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Re: The Hobbit
Ah yes... the werewolves! Heh... I should follow that with something by The Silver Bullet Band.Commander McLane wrote:Don't forget the werewolves!
I would advise stilts for the quagmires, and camels for the snowy hills
And any survivors, their debts I will certainly pay. There's always a way!
And any survivors, their debts I will certainly pay. There's always a way!
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Re: The Hobbit
One of my favourite jokes from Futurama:
Leela: What else can we slay? Is that a hobbit over there?
Bender: No, that's a hobo and a rabbit ... but they're making a hobbit.
Leela: What else can we slay? Is that a hobbit over there?
Bender: No, that's a hobo and a rabbit ... but they're making a hobbit.
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Re: The Hobbit
I love Futurama, much to the consternation of my wife who prefers daytime drama's and reality programs. Yuck! To tell the truth, I watch very little TV anymore. I do enjoy having a beer and watching footy matches at my local bar. It's owned and operated by this very interesting Iranian fellow. His place is an attraction to all true football fans in the area. Oops, sorry for the thread derailment.Disembodied wrote:One of my favourite jokes from Futurama:
Leela: What else can we slay? Is that a hobbit over there?
Bender: No, that's a hobo and a rabbit ... but they're making a hobbit.
Re: The Hobbit
They cannot use stuff from The Silmarillion or Unfinished Tales. They have filming rights only to The Hobbit and to The Lord of the Rings, so those two books are where all the material has to come from - and the screenwriters' imaginations, of course.DaddyHoggy wrote:From what I understand - You take The Hobbit, then you take the bit where Gandalf disappears for several chapters and you do almost a whole other film based on that (but spilt that between the two core The Hobbit films) then, in the third film, you do a backtrack from The Lord of the Rings (using stuff from The Silmarillion, Unfinished Tales and the Appendices of LotR) to the end of The Hobbit sucking in the life stories of the major players and their motivations for supporting either the cause to destroy The Ring or capture it for their own use.
But, yes, the first part was at least filled with unnecessary action sequences. I wonder what the Extended Blu-Ray version will have in addition to this. It is supposed to be 20 or so minutes longer... Knowing Jackson, he's left all the good stuff into that 20 minutes and all the action into the theatrical release, because that's what the theatre goers like...
Author of Tales from the Frontier - official Elite 4 anthology.
Author of Marcan Rayger adventures - unofficial fan-fic novellas set in the Frontier universe.
Author of Marcan Rayger adventures - unofficial fan-fic novellas set in the Frontier universe.