The Hobbit, or There and Back Again
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What do you think about Peter Jackson adding a new character in The Desolation of Smaug movie?
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Narek
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Aug 13, 2013 08:54AM

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1) I don't know what a Tolkien "purist" is. I consider myself appreciative and respectful of his work, but I thoroughly enjoyed Jackson's LOTR movies. Sure, things changed, but that's the nature of adapting to a new medium.
2) Though bonus points go to any filmmaker who cleaves closely to the source material, that's not always possible or desirable. And sometimes a radical re-think creates a brilliant film. Exhibit A: Blade Runner. Utterly unlike the book in numerous ways, but incredible in its own right.
3) I agree Gimli was reduced to little more than comic relief in LOTR. Which is saddening and drops an important point about the beginning of reconciliation of Dwarves and Elves. Still, understandable, as this is not Gimli's story. The main character arc is Frodo & Sam's, with a B arc for Aragorn.
4) Still, finally saw Hobbit on DVD in the past few weeks and ...was underwhelmed. Not for any of the stated reasons of fidelity to the book. My big problem was it's inability to find a tone. One minute silly comedy, the next reaching for serious epic. I get that it was probably hard melding the children's tale tone of the Hobbit into the existing world created for the LOTR films, but this just seemed muddled. Especially the cameo from Frodo just seemed forced and a little too on the nose.
I did like that some things that were dropped from LOTR were fit back in here. I enjoyed Martin Freeman as Bilbo.
I hope it comes together better as a whole when all three films are out. But what you have to understand, and accept if you are to enjoy these movies, is that they are being transformed into an epic tale to rival LOTR. That's a big stretch from a nice, little, children's adventure tale of "there and back again." Growing pains are inevitable.
And those who want it to be "just like the book" should probably not even bother.

That said I will say the first Hobbit movie changes bugged me quite a bit and I tried just to enjoy the unchanged parts.
For Tauriel, I will wait to reserve judgment until I see the movie, but her inclusion by itself doesn't bother me too badly. It's been a while since I read the hobbit but I don't remember the leader of the Silvan Elf guards being named at all. I don't think Legolas should be in that role because he wouldn't have achieved sufficient rank by that point (I don't think he has such a rank in Fellowship either, but it's been a while since I read the book too). Still, I've been waiting since I was 5 to see Smaug in live action on the big screen and the closest I've had is the cartoon so I am looking forward to this movie.

One of my favorite parts of the Hobbit is the whole Beorn sequence, but I'm not holding my breath.
Hope they at least make the spiders appropriately creepy/scary.

It's in Jackson's hands, and there's three movies, so I guess we have to expect... wait for it... the Beorn Identity.


First of all, no offense...but "The Hobbit" was published in 1937, so those "growing up" with it probably aren't all that interested in the movies. As far as Peter Jackson adding new characters and plots into "The Hobbit."
Most people don't know, but "the hobbit," was written as a children' bedtime story. That is why it has such a simple plot, and is only about 300 pages. The Necromancer, Azog the Defiler, Thorin's hatred of elves, are not in the Hobbit, but are in fact written out in the LOTR trilogy and in other Tolkien canon. Most people don't know that. I too was confused by all the extra stuff, until I started reading other lesser known Tolkien books.

I fail to see the justification. Should they add characters of different complexion to pacify other factions? Cosmopolitan social mores should be left out of fantasy. It was written as predominantly male, and it should stay that way. It is not a sexist novel, and it is not anti-feminist. It just happens to have very few strong female characters. This does not need to be corrected any more than Pride & Prejudice needs more gun totin' guys on horses. It just does not fit, and it just should be left out. There's nothing to fix.

However, that said some of the things done were really quite good. For example, I think some of the scenery for Middle earth is perfect, really amazing. The hobbit hole is just... perfect. Not a nasty smelly hole indeed. Some of the costumes are pretty good, especially for the elves.



What Tom and the downs sequence do for the story is deeply enriching. They develop the narrative much more than 1.5Hrs of Helm's Deep did.


I found the first movie a little disappointing and did not meet the expectations one would have from watching the LOTR, his masterpiece. Yes, it was silly at times, too much so, with the fat dictator in the mountain and Dumbamore...the latter verifying Saruman`s take on his personality.

It just infuriates me.

I suppose if the need is to focus on a single thread of a complex story so that it will be digestible by mass audiences, then I would have to concede you're right.

So now you are a psychotherapist? You know exactly what motivates Jackson? Unless you have seen a news clip in which he talks about the HOBBIT, I don`t see how you could conjecture his "delusions of being Tolkein`s successor".

So now you are a psychotherapist? You know exactly what motivates Jackson? Unless you have seen a news clip in which he talks about the HOBBIT, I don`t see how you could conjecture his "delusio..."
Maybe I should have used the word 'editor' instead of 'successor'. And instead of talking about his delusion, I should have said 'bare faced cheek'. But, Geoffrey, if you think it's OK for movie makers to re-write classics to suit their profession, then no more to be said. We must agree to disagree.


Not the point .. I just hate it when original works are tampered with or facts distorted to make a good film. I'm even unhappy with 'modernised' Shakespeare. I know, one of those, a traditionalist, but that's me.
At first I didn't mind. I thought a female character would be cool. I had dreamed about it while first reading the Hobbit, actually.
The Hobbit was a bit disappointing, but honestly even adding Legolas as part of the story line bothers me a little. Even though he's been one of my fav characters since LOTR was introduced to me.
But after Narnia, I hate change. Please Jackson. Tell me that the last few movies aren't going to be that different from the book......
The Hobbit was a bit disappointing, but honestly even adding Legolas as part of the story line bothers me a little. Even though he's been one of my fav characters since LOTR was introduced to me.
But after Narnia, I hate change. Please Jackson. Tell me that the last few movies aren't going to be that different from the book......



^This. Well said, Geoffrey.



I completely agree. Most of the time, movies based on books just can't be everything the book was. But they can be entertaining and creative in their own right. There are some things that a movie just cannot do... it cannot pull its visuals straight out of every audience member's imagination. It cannot keep every single line of dialogue or depict every single scene... the movie would be 18 hours long... and only the most avid Tolkien fans would be interested in watching it (I would be one of them).
Douglas Adams (author of Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy) understood this. His story began as a radio series, then a "trilogy" of five books, a tv series, and eventually the movie. Lovers of the book didn't love the movie so much, even though Adams himself wrote the screenplay - none of the iterations of the story are identical. Adams understood that different mediums excel in different places.
As for this female elf character... I have no problem with her. We live in an era where movies will be shunned if there is no strong female character. Jackson gets that, and is coping with that cultural trend while trying to stay pretty true to the feel of the stories. Does he get everything "right"? no. He left out a lot of my favorite scenes/lines/and even a character or two in the LOTR trilogy. But his movies don't (and can never) detract from the masterpiece that Tolkien wrote. I see them as separate entities. I love the movies for what they are, for the brilliant technical achievement, and for the fact that I can now share this story I have loved my entire life with friends who will never (or would never have) read the books - but now, because of the movies, have fallen in love with the story (and some have even read the books!). For that alone, Peter Jackson has my gratitude.

I doubt readers are as concerned with how the films will affect their own opinion of the book/story experience as much as they are with the general public's opinion of their prized possession.


I would say there's the same peril, in the case of myths it's very likely even more perilous. That is, taking something that is a success, and (for whatever reason) going another direction is to take a winner and roll the dice on it. There are any number of reasons for a later artist to do that (the limits of technology, budgets, outright hubris, etc.) but there's almost always a good counter argument to all those rationalizations.
When it comes to classic myths, that's particularly problematic as those stories have not only succeeded, but withstood the test of time. So, a change to a classical myth from, let's say a Renaissance artist, is a pretty dubious thing to do as it is to take something that is as near to a guaranteed success and revise it.
In the case of myths, however, there is at least one really good rationalization for changing it. We don't usually have an actual author--or that author is unknown, so changes aren't quite like contradicting that author. Sometimes there is an oral tradition that predates any written account, so that makes for an abstracted story in the first place. In that sense, because myths become cultural icons, there's a value to such revisionism in an artistic sense. That is, taking the Arthurian myth and changing it is less of a problem than making changes in an adaptation of, say, Catch-22.

I thought making him a comic figure was overblown. His last bit of dialogue made me both facepalm and wish I had a Peter Jackson voodoo doll and a great big hatpin.

In contrast to the viking sagas that inspired him, Tolkein was not writing for a generation who needed bloodshed and violence to keep the story interesting. In fact, in the half of the book that made up the first movie, there was exactly one paragraph of violence (unless you want to count the "flashbacks" of Bullroarer Took and the descent of Smaug onto the Lonely Mountain). I am somewhat disturbed that Jackson thinks his audience needed all that hack-and-slash. Who does he think we are, a bunch of blodthirsty Scythians?
I guess I'm just old fashioned in that I don't need my movie to feel like a video game. I have already declined the invitations by my Tolkein-fan friends to attend the next movie. Maybe on video, but I don't want to waste money on the big-screen-experience if I already know I will be disappointed.


My complaints:
>How many more times could they fall off of ledges that should have killed them with only minor injuries?
>The Pale Orc (or, as I like to say, The Pale Dork)
>Much,much, too long. Serious over-embellishment. I could care less about Rhadagast's rabbit-drawn sleigh. I can understand mentioning him, yes. But morphing him into a VIC (Very Important Character)? Totally pointless.
So, I am not going to waste money on the other two movies, and to me this new fact proves my point...I wish Tolkien had more female characters too, but making one up to fill this need is morphing the story line to the point of nonrecognition.

It's a good question. It can definitely get to the point that something is unrecognizable. Generally, I think that's because the film isn't meant to be related to the original and the title is just taken for marketing purposes. The film I, Robot is only connected to Asimov through a few tangents, for example.
Jackson's work isn't as far off as that. If I, Robot is a 1 and, let's say Sin City is a 10, then Jackson's version of The Hobbit is about a 5 or 6.


Agreed. Adding characters to The Hobbit just feels like a way for Jackson to stretch a small book out into three movies.

At least he's adding a woman!
Let's be honest, in the book this was an all-male adventure. While I'm not much for movie adaptions that change so much I have to hand it to Jackson: at least he's adding a female character. Something Tolkien himself didn't do.
Anyway, I'm trying to look at the movies a bit differently now because let's be honest: movies tell stories in a different way than books.

At least he's adding a woman!
Let's be honest, in the book this was an all-male adventure. While I'm not much for movie adaptions that change so much I have to ha..."
Point taken; I'm still irritated though.

Mean-spirited? Perhaps, but still very funny.

I so agree.

Thanks for saying so.
It's too bad, really. What a great opportunity to do something astounding. He literary has hundreds of millions of dollars at his disposal... and he's making schlock. Sad. I mean, on the grand scale of things, it's not the massive banking boondoggle of the so-called "banking crisis" but it's such a wasted artistic effort.

Jackson is selling $10 donuts and calling them croissants.



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