Escape to the Movies: The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey

HBaskerville

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Ed130 said:
You didn't question where Gandalf went? Or who the Necromancer was if he was defeated? Or why Bolg son of Azog was a bitter enemy of the dwarves?

The book while good skimped out alot of the world and various events to focus on Bilbo's adventure. Several of the examples I mentioned got maybe one or two sentences near the end of the story which really annoyed me when I was little.
The book IS Bilbo's adventure. It's not about the whole world. It's purposely not Lord of the Rings. Making into another history book like LotR misses Tolkein's point. If you don't like that, fine. But that is what the book is. I'm sure many people will love all the extra stuff that gets added into this story. Nothing wrong with liking stuff.
 

F'Angus

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Saw it yesterday morning. (at the lower framerate) It was fantastic. Gonna go see it again. And seriously I did not mind the 3D in this at all either, really worked well. :)
 

Crazy_Dude

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Saw it a few days ago, it truly was amazing. Ofcourse it would not top LOTR but it knows that and stands firmly on its own feet in the franchise.

And the "Riddles in the Dark" segment was just the best scene of the year for me. Andy Serkis should atleast get nominated for an Oscar for his role as Gollum.
 

unacomn

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For once I've managed to see a movie before a MovieBob review, and I must say, that it was sweet. Did not expect so many action scenes.
The "prove himself" angle got a bit old really fast, but everything else that was happening compensated. Gandalf was hella-cool, busting caps left and right and AOE-ing left and right. Radagast got a damned big part that was awesome, Frodo was in it, Galadriel was there, Saruman too!
It felt a lot like a Lord of the Rings prequel, rather than a straight up adaptation of the book. Though they did keep the songs, and they were great. Sadly, no dwarves tied up by spiders yet, though I may be remembering the story in the wrong order, and sadly, the guy that turns into a bear wasn't in it.
At three hours long, I'm still itching to see the extended version, because bits from the trailer aren't in this.

Also, had no idea what framerate the movie was, since it's the first time I've seen a movie in 3D that isn't red/cyan, but during fast paced action scenes, things got a little blurry, though it could have been the glasses fogging up. Also, could have used a bit more light.
 

iamscottevil

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Nov 24, 2009
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Strange experience, amazing movie. Saw it in 48fps, stereoscopic shutterglass 3d, dolby atmos and it was one of the most entralling experiences ever, but there is something very jarring about 48fps in that every kind of camera move provides a different feel. Static shots looks like the most amazing 3d high definition version of a movie, huge sweeping shots from helicopters feel hyperrealistic and grand, but anything with a quick camera move, or worse a handheld move starts standing out as different. To me it feels like cheap productions shot on video, so it's probably only baggage brought along by me. Someone who grows up with this movie style would definitely see it differently, but by the end I started to ignore it a bit. It all has to do with motion blur, the more the camera moves, the more my brain missed the motion blur that is no longer there, so you get to see a tremendous amount of detail at all times so it feels less ethereal and more real real. I was absolutely spellbound though, but I think the medium has some work to do to figure out how to mix the camera moves to better smooth out that jarring effect of missing the expected motion blur, or wait for us to be replaced by young people who don't know better. But i'm spoiled and saw it the best of theaters. (Some people had bought collectors 3d glasses, but in a shutterglass theater they were useless!) CG artists are really going to have to step up their game, anytime they cheat with vertical acceleration to make things looks more dramatic, 48fps makes them look really cartoony now. We'll see what is done with the tech.
 

twesterm

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I really really hope the too long comment at the end wasn't pointed at Les Miserables.

I so want that movie to be good, but I'm just really worried about it, especially when a lot of the commercials for it don't involve any singing. I'll just keep telling myself that's because the marketers feel that musicals don't sell as well as huge drams and not because the whole live singing thing wasn't a good gamble.
 

Spider RedNight

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Oct 8, 2011
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RaikuFA said:
Gonna skip out on this one. Was bored out of my mind with the first two films. Didn't bother with the third.

I did see all the action in all the trailors and I bet it's all cut from the film and it's all walking and talking.
I can't help but be slightly sad at reading your post while noticing your Regular Show icon. Does it help to think of it as a stand-alone movie instead of "just another LotR movie"?

OT: Good to know he liked it; I know critics were all over the place when reviewing it, and I saw it last night, REALLY glad that it was much better than even I expected, and I had high expectations. I think it's because I didn't compare it to LotR; it's not. It's a great movie by itself with some familiar characters~
 

Psykoma

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I saw it at IMAX last night, and I absolutely loved it.
The movie was 2 hours and 50 minutes long, but I have -never- been as heartbroken that a movie was ending so soon as I was last night when the credits started rolling, but I suppose that's good for the first movie in a trilogy.

Yes, the first bit in the shire is rather slow - but it has to be. There are going to be a lot of people who watch this movie who haven't read the book, and they need to spell everything out.

But once they left the shire, it was amazing, super fast pace, a lot of battles, and I loved the Dol Goldur related scenes.

I didn't mind the 48fps, it was a bit off for the first 5ish minutes, but I guess I adjusted and it didn't give me more problems after that.


My only visual complaint with the movie (other than the goblin kings pus and pimples being really gross), is Bilbo's feet. They seemed like they were at least two times larger than any of the hobbit feet from LoTR.
 

TheSchaef

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I'll see your "movie running too long", and raise you The Thin Red Line.

There literally was no contribution to the story from before George Clooney's 30-second appearance that still somehow earned him title billing.
 

Smolderin

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I just got back from seeing the movie! It was really awesome!

You know what I love about these kind of movies, specifically Peter Jackson's Tolkien films? It actually feels like your on a adventure, as if you are there with the characters experiencing and feeling with them every step of the way. The world of Peter Jackson created to reflect Tolkien's world is so damn convincing every one of his Tolkien movies sucks me into his world and never lets me go. The Hobbit was no exception to that. Really, no one can capture my imagination like Jackson can. It is a shame there are so few movies that can capture that magical feeling. I eagerly await the next Hobbit film.
 

McShizzle

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Saw it last night, it was OK not too bad. However, the Tolkien nerd in me was disappointed (once again) at the amount of dramatic license taken with parts of the material. In some cases I sort of get it, and the inclusion of material outside The Hobbit is cool, but other times I'm just left wondering why.


-Setting up an enmity between Thranduil and the dwarves of Erebor - Yes they didn't like each other but it was for reasons far older than that depicted in the movie, but I guess they needed a reason within the scope of the movies for why Thorin dislikes elves so much and why Thranduil is going to be so grumpy later on.

- They fiddled with the troll scene - Not that much, not really a big deal

- Radagast never meets Bilbo or the Dwarves - I knew he was going to be in the movie and that's fine, but I was surprised Jackson had them meet up like this.

- They fiddled with Thorin's back story and the War of Dwarves and Orcs - Not a huge deal, but cutting out Thrain and Dain Ironfoot is a little annoying

- Not everybody knows this, and I'll concede it's easy to confuse without extra reading, but goblins and orcs are the same thing. Goblins was just another name applied to the race of Orcs, "Orc" being there proper name. It's why they couldn't go out in the sun, orcs hate that shit (and Sauron wasn't back to his full power). Goblins MIGHT be a name applied to a smaller breed of Orc, but that's debatable.

- The big change, Azog - Azog was dead before The Hobbit ever happened! It was Azog's son Bolg who was the secondary antagonist of The Hobbit and he doesn't actually show up until the end of the story, at the battle of five armies. Having this new Azog antagonist guy around threw me off every time he showed up.

There is more stuff (the wargs and pine trees scene, Riddles in the Dark wasn't dark) but they aren't a huge deal either. I still liked the movie, I just don't get why Peter Jackson had to frig around with some parts that didn't really need altering seemingly just to pad the running time.
 

The_State

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McShizzle said:
This is a discussion I would like to have, and I wish more of my friends were as into Tolkien lore as I was.

Do you think that these alterations were to the detriment of the material, or do you think that they actually made the story feel a bit more "complete"?

Now, I generally didn't like the prologue at all. It was too succinct, and did not allow for enough exploration of the character of Thorin. You never get to discover why he is so disdainful of non-dwarves because the film just straight tells you in the first ten minutes. Another very minor nitpick: Thorin was, according to some of Tolkien's notes, "too young to bear arms" during the sacking of Erebor.

The troll scene bugged me as well. Why not have the dwarves get captured initially? Why did there have to be a fight scene? That bothers me. Is it because Bilbo couldn't "prove his worth" until the climax?

Finally, one you didn't touch on that really bugged me. Why did Gandalf seem to understand the importance of the ring? When Bilbo is about to pull it out, Gandalf gets his "concerned face" on and changes the subject suddenly. Now, I haven't read the book in a while (yeeears!), but I don't recall that bit at all. I recall Gandalf assuming that it was one of the minor rings forged as a sort of practice in the craft taught by Annatar. I understand why the movie had to recognize the importance of the ring, but why did Gandalf?

The change with Azog I can understand. A movie needs a driving antagonist more than a book does. There needs to be palpable tension, and Azog fills that gap. It would have been more accurate if it had been Bolg, but then you couldn't have had Thorin get all uptight about killing him. Then Bilbo could not have "proved himself" right at the climax. It would not have fit the extremely rigid structure that movies are almost always forced to adhere to. I don't like it, but I understand how it came to be.
 

Tumedus

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Ed130 said:
You have read the book right?

You didn't question where Gandalf went? Or who the Necromancer was if he was defeated? Or why Bolg son of Azog was a bitter enemy of the dwarves?

The book while good skimped out alot of the world and various events to focus on Bilbo's adventure. Several of the examples I mentioned got maybe one or two sentences near the end of the story which really annoyed me when I was little.

Reducing the story to just one movie would cut out most of the world and leave a bare bones story, doing a massive dis-service to the world Tolkien created.
You know, I found all of those questions you are left with make the book better and the overall story better. They give the story reality and depth. To be fully immersed in Bilbo's tale it helps to understand things in the same way as Bilbo does (which is to say he doesn't a lot of the time) and to keep things scaled towards Bilbo's interaction in the world. As Bob eluded to in the video, and in other reviews I have seen, the exposition of other events makes Bilbo's adventure look almost inconsequential and small with the possible exception of his acquisition of the ring.

It's cool to look at the histories after the fact and go "whoa, thats what that was all about". But at the time, it just weakens the primary tale we are being told.

I hate to bring it up in a thread like this, but its very much like Star Wars. One of the reasons the originals were so much better than the prequels was, perhaps by lucky accident, all the detail we didn't have about the history. We heard about things like the Clone Wars, and Luke's father, and Ben's fall from grace but didn't know the details. Han's criminal past and relationship w/ Chewbacca was intriguing. Boba Fett was cool because he had no backstory. We found out so much, but it left us with so many quesionts. It gave the story depth.

The prequels basically tried to tie everything up, and in so doing, came across and very shallow and small (amongst many other problems, of course).

tehpiemaker said:
I'm sorry, but anyone that sports a Rosario + Vampire avatar is automatically marked off of my list of people I should listen to.
I just changed it a couple of days ago and already its working! Awesome!
 

CardinalPiggles

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I'd heard that this movie is a bit of a drag and that the low fps is off putting, but my god, how wrong those people were. This is easily my film of the year. It had everything I've come to want in an action movie. And the tie-ins are just the icing on the cake.
 

CardinalPiggles

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RaikuFA said:
Gonna skip out on this one. Was bored out of my mind with the first two films. Didn't bother with the third.

I did see all the action in all the trailers and I bet it's all cut from the film and it's all walking and talking.
Nope :)

There is so much action the characters even address it at one point.

Also, the third one is the most actiony film in the trilogy.
 

Ashley Blalock

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I'll admit that I was a wee bit worried if they could effectively work in the extra material. Thankfully it worked out rather well so the story gets expanded beyond the view of Bilbo. Throw in some changes from the book to make the pacing work better and I'd say I'm about as happy as I could get for a movie adaptation of one of my favorite books as a child. Doesn't really hurt that some of the action reminded me of the fast paced fun of things like the good Indiana Jones movies.

Now that Superman trailer, ugh they are really going to have to do something different to get me excited about that movie.
 

McShizzle

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The_State said:
McShizzle said:
This is a discussion I would like to have, and I wish more of my friends were as into Tolkien lore as I was.

Do you think that these alterations were to the detriment of the material, or do you think that they actually made the story feel a bit more "complete"?
A good question, I know the writings so well, and am such a big fan of Tolkien, that I may have lost the ability to be objective on the subject. The alterations I guess help to tell the story of "Peter Jackson's: The Hobbit". Peter Jackson's story is more like "The stuff that happens just before The Lord of the Rings, involving some dwarves, specifically one named Thorin (Also, a hobbit named Bilbo Baggins was along)". In my opinion the story as Tolkien wrote it was about a funny little hobbit named Bilbo who comes out of his small world and grows to be the hero of the story. The focus of the story is the character of Bilbo (as per the title "The Hobbit"), not a struggle against a single adversary (that's Sauron's job later on) which is part of the reason why the whole new Azog thing bugs me.

As for the Gandalf spying the ring thing, well I don't think it hurt's things too much. In the book, I'd say that Gandalf didn't know Bilbo had a ring, but Gandalf being wise, knew Bilbo wasn't telling the whole truth about how he got away from Gollum and past the goblins. He of course didn't know Bilbo had "The One Ring" until much later on. The movie I guess is setting up that Gandalf knows Bilbo has a ring, to tie into the Lord of the Rings movies.
 

bumpz

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I was twelve and in tears when i first watched the ending of the "The Fellowship",
Course 9 years later "The Hobbit" can't compete with all that nostalgia and childhood love developed afterwards.
But it sure as hell made me developed one thing... Respect for Peter Jackson.

This film, is honestly, the best prequel ever made, it all makes sense!
The tone is more lighthearted (as bob mentiond) wich adds up, since there's no mayor invasion goinge down jet.
Motivation Frodo for having trust in Smeagollum has more clearity (wich i felt was needed)
There are little winks to the fanboys who enjoyed the previous films or the books.
The extra stuff that was added was sometimes kinda ludicrous, but i can imagine that if you have a giant walking tree in your first movies
you could ask yourself the question; why not a giant walking moutain in de next one?!!!
O and it was all extremly well paced.

there only but one thing that i can't wrap my head around,
WHY THE CGI ORK?!

kinda poor badguy but besides that, WHY CGI ?!
you've got the minions wearing orc suits so why not their cheff?
any whats up with the (in my situation 48FPS) 10 seconds, full close up shot, of this white out of tune medieval version of walking dead's Merle?!!!!!

Btw, is it just me? or did PJ realy just say FUCK YOU! to all the peeps who kept whining about that eagle plot-hole thingy, at the end of the movie?