The Hobbit, or There and Back Again
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One of the reviewers for The Hobbit The Desolation Of Smaug said it was "The Grandest Vision Of Middle-Earth Yet"
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Michael
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Jan 29, 2014 08:36PM

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Okay rant over now. Carry on. :)

I liked the film but for some reason I felt the first was better. Some things I found too silly as it seemed it packed three action scenes in one part or just tried way too hard.
I also wish Jackson shouldn't have felt he had to add his own character Tauriel and then Legolas into the mix, quickly following that with a clichéd love triangle. Come on!

It's not so cool when events expire and people are introduced who have nothing to do with the story of Hobbit. I love Legolas, but he's a giant misfit. How exactly are we to make sense of his hatred towards dwarves at the start of LoTR now? I have a sinking feeling that Tauriel falling for Kili is going to be the source of his hatred. Yuck.
What I loved about Jackson's LoTR movies is that they captured the heart and soul of the books. His Hobbit movies are killing the heart and soul of the book.
Smaug was fantastic though. And his interaction with Biblo was great fun.


Well. There's a lot of simpletons out there, among the fans of this execrable blockbuster franchise.

I agree on this. it was an amazing movie and do not regret seeing it on my birthday. I think the comparisons to the book and movie should stop, let them be their own.
The book is amazing and it is a one of a kind and think that the cinema will NEVER be able to get that correctly no matter how hard they try.

(Furthermore I pretty much made a lengthy list of contrasting-thoughts).
Smaug, was indeed, stupendous...

I completely agree with this. I enjoyed The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug, despite the out-of-place Elf infestation. They changed parts of the storyline but we should have already come to terms with the fact that they will always change parts of the storyline, and that the cinema will never compare with Tolkien's genius.
Did that make sense to anyone else?



I agree to that. Also, what we have seen of "The Hobbit Trilogy" as films until now shows them to be much inferior to the LOTR films. One revealing detail : the scenes in the extended version of LOTR are mostly excellent and add a lot to these films; the "extended scenes" cut from The Hobbit are embarrassing. It is sad.



If this was Tolkien, I'm an octopus. If Tolkien could have seen this he would have been very annoyed.

What disguises this from Tolkien. Mostly every part from this half of the book was included in this movie, the rest were add ons. Please explain.

It should have been called, "Elves, Barrels and a Dragon" by Peter Jackson. Leave Tolkien out of it altogether if you intend to change it that much. But they would never get the crowds along if the left Tolkien's name out if it. As far as I can see Jackson wanted to write his own story but cash in on having Tolkien's name on it.
The Hobbit is a gently-paced children's fantasy, not an adult action-thriller.
Also, the children's book is so good that I have happily read it over and over again to many children in my life as a teacher. However I spent the entire movie rolling my eyes and sighing with boredom, as I watched fight scene after fight scene after fight scene that was not ever in the book. I was thinking "If I have to watch one more ridiculous fight scene I'll scream."

It should have ..."
The Hobbit was not "written" for children, if you go to a bookstore it is in the adult section under science and fantasy fiction, there is only one edition in the children department. So if its to grown up for you and has to much action, well that's not a crime against Tolkien.

Sorry, but the Hobbit was written for children, specifically for Tolkien to read aloud to his own children - says so in either his Biography or his Letters and by the style of writing in the book. The fact that the book shop people just lump everything Tolkien under the Fantasy section or can't categorise books properly is not the dead author's problem. Last time I went to one of the bookstores here they had all the post apocalyptic science fiction novels stuck in amongst the bibles in the Christian books section, Lord of the Rings was under the classics with Homer and Shakespeare, and The Fall of Arthur was under the Fantasy section. These are really confused book shop people! ;)
The movie has tonnes more action than the book ever did. (view spoiler) It might make for a movie that is entertaining for today's "glued to the computer game" audience but with the huge amount of random additional material it is simply not the Hobbit.
PJ should give up adapting books for movies and just write his own fantasy script. Then he can have all the acrobatic ninja elves he likes, with as many craky dragons, non-sensical love triangles, bad-guy fight scenes, and special effects, and no-one will get miffed because he mangled the book (again!).


It ..."
The Hobbit IS a childrens book - Tolkien always intended it to be that way and what with him being the author and the creator I think we should all choose to believe what he says and that is the fact that the Hobbit is a childrens book!

I suppose that we now see the PJ adaptation project go to the bottom in extreme commercialism.

Oh, I never knew that Tolkien wrote this fro his own children. And yes I agree people at book stores are very sloppy. Like once I went to borders for the release of a book and they didn't even put it out, they had to go get me a copy that was still packed away in the back. But what people don't understand is situations like the barrel scene cant work in movie format, I mean them just riding from that into lake town, it would be an anti climatic scene and boring to anyone who isn't a Tolkien reader. That is why so many thing are changed because filmmakers have to put the casual movie goer first.

That's just the ways movies are.

A lot of books would never be filmed, which in itself would be a shame.


Although I was disappointed with the portrayal of Beorn. His bear-form looked less like a bear than an obese dog with stumpy limbs, and his human-form looked like some dude wearing cheap wolf-man makeup. And his scenes weren't long enough to do him justice anyway. It was more like "Hi, Beorn. Bye, Beorn. Wow, that was easy."

that was my biggest gripe with the movie as well. I'm hoping that with the extended edition there will be more Beorn, and hopefully more Mirkwood. I just wish they had the actual version of how they met him, idk why but that really stands out for me when I look back on the book.

I totally agree, but there will be more of beorn in the extended edition.

There is.

There was such potential, and all of it unrealized.


Thank you! Everyone points at that scene as a high point in the movie. It was comical, ill-done, and a waste of precious screen time. Any scene with Legolas felt extraneous actually. Because, of course, they were.
I will say that I enjoy Jackson's vision of Middle-earth: the sweeping shots of the landscape, the grim and dour dwarves, and of course, Smaug. But everything he shoe-horned into the story to fill out 3 movies has been uneven at best.

Grandest vision? Not for my tastes. A bit too uneven and silly in parts, but it had its moments. Not a classic, regrettably.

I went to see the film with my son (aged around 12 at the time) and a group of his friends. They enjoyed it far more than I did. In fact they enjoyed the bits that I hated - especially the CGI elves.
The Hobbit is very much a children's book - indeed the character of the hobbit is a metaphor for a child. It was written for children, marketed for children and read by children. Yes, adults enjoy it too, but that doesn't change what the book is.
You don't like the film. That's fine. It's your opinion. Other opinions are also available.

Bilbo - a home-loving and shy man who is prompted to go on an adventure and finds that he enjoys it more than expected.
Gandalf - an older wiser man who encourages Bilbo to go on the adventure because he knows that it will be good for him.
Gollum - a creature who has become obsessed with a magical ring to the point where he has lost his humanity.
Thorin - heir to a lost fortune who must face a physical battle to recover his fortune whilst coming to terms with his own character flaws, especially pride.
I could go on, but I'm not sure what the point is. These basic character arcs are in the book and they are also in the films. That doesn't prove anything.
Some people like the films, some didn't. There is no point in looking for some form of definitive proof that these aren't good films. It comes down to matter of opinion.
I am hereby giving up on this thread because it is only a matter of opinion when people are defending garbage. One professor has stated that one has to be able to actually defend their opinion. Chanting "matter of opinion" is not a valid defense.
Jackass' masturbatory fantasy of being an Elf, his inability to characterise characters beyond appearance, and the fact that his films make battles and violence BORING are not matters of opinion, but demonstrable facts. As I hinted earlier, the presence of people in the world chanting "matter of opinion" make me wish I could just leap off it.
(EDIT: Essential reading.)
Jackass' masturbatory fantasy of being an Elf, his inability to characterise characters beyond appearance, and the fact that his films make battles and violence BORING are not matters of opinion, but demonstrable facts. As I hinted earlier, the presence of people in the world chanting "matter of opinion" make me wish I could just leap off it.
(EDIT: Essential reading.)

I totally agree. Shouting "just opinions" and all exchange of thought, as this thread and others could aspire to be, becomes meaningless. AKA booring.
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