The Hobbit, or There and Back Again
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What is up with Gladerial?
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Lynette
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Aug 29, 2012 10:14AM

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This is not necessarily a bad thing. We shall wait and see. (I'd trust Peter Jackson more than George Lucas)



As pieces of cinema they are fantastic. As a telling of LotR they are awful. The deconstruction of the main characters was heart breaking, in particular that of Aragorn.
Jackson turned him into a reluctant hero who sort of steps up towards the end. Tolkien's version is much more dramatic - Aragorn loves Arwen if he wants to marry her he has to accomplish the following - Destruction of Sauron, Become King of Gondor, Rebuild the state of Arnor and take on the responsibility of ruling the Western world.
Aragorn's response - basically Ok and then he spends 50 years in the wilderness, spying on Sauron's allies, fighting in Gondor and Rohan (years before the time LotR is set) attempting to bring this about.
And Jackson had him crawling on all fours performing tricks. I can only hope he does not destroy the Hobbit like that. The problem is that given the Hobbit is about half the size of one book of LotR and the movie is THREE parts I'm not very hopeful.

As pieces of cinema they are fantastic. As a telling of LotR they are awful. The deconstruction of the main chara..."
seriously 3 parts? Ohhhhh noooooo

As pieces of cinema they are fantastic. As a telling of LotR they are awful. The deconstruction of the main chara..."
I very much agree. If you take them as just movies, they are great, probably one of the best trilogies around. However, as book-to-movie adaptations? Really disappointing.
It's interesting, because I watched them years before actually reading the books, and I used to love them so much. They are the reason why I started reading the books in the first place.
But I can't enjoy watching them as much as I used to anymore. I simply can't overlook all the changes. Too many to list, and most of them are pointless.
At first, I was kind of excited when I read about The Hobbit turning into 2 movies. A relatively short book getting two movies? It'll sure stay faithful to the original story, I thought. Now I'm afraid that they are just milking the franchise. Three movies for a 350 pages long book is obviously too much. This is the reason why they're adding all these new characters, I suspect. They'll probably make up new events as well.




Having said that I do agree with previous commentary; stretching The Hobbit into three movies sounds like excessive cinematographic fluff, and although I fear a re-telling of the story I loved as I remember it and the addition of characters not present the first go-around, I do know this much: it will be good fluff...I will see the fluff...I will like the fluff...and I will buy the fluffy DVDs.
Why? Because I must see the precious when it's on screen. I wants it. I needs it. I'm a fan and it's that simple.

You mean Jackson? Peter Jackson is the director, not George Lucas.

You mean Jackson? Peter Jackson is the director, not George Lucas."
He was commenting on a prior post.

You mean Jackson? Peter Jackson is the director, not George Lucas."
He was commentin..."
My mistake! And to you Michael, allow me to take my foot out of my mouth and let you know that I agree wholeheartedly. A man is truly lost when he begins quoting George W Bush. "Not only am I the decider, I am the creator."

There are large sections of the Hobbit where Gandalf is away on other business. Essentially this involved dealing with "the necromancer" (later known as Sauron) who was holed up in Southern Mirkwood (Dol Guldur) causing no small amount of trouble. Galadriel was part of the group, the White Council (as were Saruman, Rhadagast and our old pal Elrond amongst others) involved in this little expedition. They manage to chase him out of his lair only for him to reappear later back in his old haunt of Mordor. But you already know that story...
At any rate this is about the only Tolkien related reason to draw Galadriel into the Hobbit movie. As I said, though, who knows what Jackson &co are up to. However, if they're interested in trying to tie the events of the Hobbit in more closely to those of LoTR and just generally create a good sense of continuity between these two films and the three LoTR films it would make sense to include the White Council's battle with the Necromancer.
Just sayin'...

When I heard it was going to be two movies long I didn't think too much of it - I thought the Lord of the Rings was a good adapation of a few peoples interpretation of the books - so figured The Hobbit movies would be the same. I am more concerned now that it has been stretched into three films but I still trust in Jacksons ability. What he is doing is making 'his' version after all and from what I saw in the extended editions he cares about the details.
I never found The Hobbit as good as I did Lord of the Rings so if he is adding in the the necromancer I would be glad as it certinaly, in my opinion, adds to the appeal of the films.

Have I missed something? Three films of The Hobbit? I'll have to go and look it up...
Ah, yes: "Upon recently viewing a cut of the first film, and a chunk of the second, Fran Walsh, Philippa Boyens and I were very pleased with the way the story was coming together," Jackson said in a statement. "We recognized that the richness of the story of The Hobbit, as well as some of the related material in the appendices of The Lord of the Rings, gave rise to a simple question: Do we tell more of the tale? And the answer from our perspective as filmmakers and fans was an unreserved 'yes'."
Well, I'm dumbfounded ... in a sort of bemused way.



There's no doubt he played with those characters. To the detriment of the story.

She is in the movie as part of the white council, saruman will also be there.


You've hit the nail on the head here: cinematic narration has a different timescale from that on the page. And in any case, audio readings of The Hobbit seem to last around the four-hour mark--that's at least two-movies worth! The 1977 animated movie (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mfrhGX...) lasts over an hour-and-a-quarter, missing out an awful lot, and although it seems fairly faithful to the story it remains nevertheless a fairly basic retelling.




Pre-publicity suggests it isn't 3 movies worth of Hobbit, but includes material from the LOTR appendices to bridge the time period between Hobbit and LOTR.
Some will always feel a successful adaptation must be a faithful realization of the novel as written. I look for more feel, tone, and broad adherence to the story. For me, the original LOTR movies met that. I don't think they're perfect, but some of their imperfections mirror the books (the very walky/talky Two Towers) while others were created as part of the process of making the movie as they saw it (the changes in Merry and Pippin's characters and the pacing early on to make it faster and more cinema friendly are ones that stand out in my mind).
I look forward to it along with a very few other movies this fall.

I've got faith in Jackson to pull it off.
Someone mentioned the audiobook running around 4 hours...the unabridged version I listened to was 11 hours.

I agree that adaptations from the novel have to be made in order to make The Hobbit into a working movie (or 3). However, I do not see the need to dwell very long on events that are outside the scope of The Hobbit. Bilbo is our narrator; if we do not identify to him, at least we relate to him. What feels mysterious to him will appear mysterious to us. The whispered half-guesses about the identity of the Necromancer that Bilbo hears will remain that way to us, for the duration of the movie. We are not stupid. We know the Necromancer is in fact Sauron. Thank you, we got it. No need to write it on our collective noses with silly expository dialogue, and thus take us out of narrative of our beloved protagonist.

Yes, I noticed there was at least one audiobook that wasn't significantly longer than four hours. Is that because the shorter versions have been edited down? Or because the eleven-hour version includes songs and dramatisations?


Ah, that explains it, thanks!

Yes, I noticed there was at least one audiobook that wasn't significantly..."
I bet the four hour version is abridged. I looked on audible.com and there was only a 6 min difference between the abridged and unabridged, which can't be accurate. "We left out two sentences to save time!". The version I listened to, can't remember what site I bought it from, was dramatized, but it felt like a movie, I never felt like the story was sagging or too slow.

A great deal of The Silmarillion was based on LOTR appendices.





There is in fact one story-wise good reason to include Legolas. In TROTK Legolas beats Gimli (a friggin' dwarf!) in a drinking contest in order to look awesome. How did he learn to drink like that? Now let's think about that one for a sec. Bilbo used elven susceptibility to wine to free his dwarven companions from captivity. Did king Thranduil order his guards and warriors to build up their alcohol resistance by increased consumption? Or did he issue some kind of neutralizing drug? Either way, it'd be great fun to see Legolas fall asleep on guard duty in one of the upcoming movies.

I think Jackson is putting pieces of the Silmarilian in with The Hobbit. There is some history of Middle Earth that is making it's way into the movie that was not in The Hobbit. I know the Necromancer is part of the Silmarilian not The Hobbit. This should be interesting.

I think Jackson is putting pieces of the Silmarilian in with The H..."
Jackson can't use any material from the Silmarillion, because the Tolkien estate hols the rights.

I think Jackson is putting pieces of the Silmarilia..."
All I know is that in interviews he has made mention of the Necromancer as it pertains to the movie. Have to wait and see.

As pieces of cinema they are fantastic. As a telling of LotR they are awful. The deconstruction of the main chara..."
Three movies out of one rather small book? I'm not anticipating an accurate telling of "The Hobbit".

As pieces of cinema they are fantastic. As a telling of LotR they are awful. The deconstruction of t..."
No, I'm not either. I have a feeling a lot of the history of Middle Earth will be added into these films. Not quite sure how I feel about that. Have to wait and see how it's done. If they do it right, it could be fun to see. The Silmarilian was a sloggish read and I never did make it past half the book. I think I could get interested in it in movie form though.

these alterations will only destroy how well the hobbit was written and how good the story by itself was, sticking ot the original almost word for word would be so much better.
if anyone needs the likes of legolas in the movie just so they can make a connection then they clearly have no idea about lotr at all.

I think it would all depend on how much you trust Jackson as a director - if you like what he did with The Lord of the Rings then you will likley not enjoy The Hobbit, but considering how much Jackson draws on the appendices for scenes within Lord of the Rings I think it highly unfair to say people who would accept a connection between the series "have no idea" about the them.
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