Whoa someone else noticed that stuff too? Great! Now I can agree with you without sounding completely nit-picky.Rattja said:When I can clearly see the lenses in the elf king eyes, and able to point out nearly every single CGI, or see the glue that keeps the fake beard on, it just breaks the whole thing for me. I just can't believe any of it when it feels like I am looking at a set and not peaking into another world.
Yes there has been bad effects before, but not as distracting as this.
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Oooh, I like that one!TakerFoxx said:Popular theory holds that he was horribly burned while fighting fire drakes in the North (more-or-less openly stated in the film) and is wearing a glamour to disguise the damage, but during his talk with Thorin he got so angry that his control slipped for a second. I personally hold to that theory, though it is also possible that he was healed from his injuries, but used magic to show Thorin what they had looked like to drive the point home.Boba Frag said:Anyway, are we not gonna talk about Thranduil's rotting cheek in the scene where he's trying to cut a deal with Thorin?
I mean, his cheek starts rotting away and his eye turns white!!
What do people think it signifies? I have my own theories, but I'd love to hear what others think when they see the movie.
I wouldn't call Tolkien a progressive either, but that automatically makes him the opposite, i.e. sexist or racist in this context, judged by the standards of the period he lived in. And, sorry, the arguments in the blog entry you linked there are not of the quality to convince me otherwise.MatsVS said:I'm sorry for not responding with the care your comment deserves, but I have an exam tomorrow and I really should stop procrastinating, so I'll link to an article that quite utterly puts all myths of Tolkien being progressive to rest.
http://requireshate.wordpress.com/2012/01/29/the-tolkien-fanboy-fallacies-yes-tolkien-was-a-racist-sexist-bore-deal-with-it/
Well, yes.Endocrom said:So the Denny's commercials [http://www.ispot.tv/ad/75h6/dennys-hobbit-home-breakfast] got it right and an actual movie about it [http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0077687/] got it wrong. Funny.Psykoma said:Because it's, linguistically, how it's supposed to be pronounced?Zhukov said:Bob pronounces "Smaug" funny.
"Smowg."
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Appendix E said:All these diphthongs were falling diphthongs, that to stressed on the first element, and composed of the simple vowels run together. Thus ai, ei, oi, ui are intended to be pronounced respectively as the vowels in English rye (not ray), grey, boy, ruin: and au (aw) as in loud, how and not as in laud, haw.
People always complain about that, it's nonsense though. In folklore dragons come in many forms; two-legs, four-legs, no legs. It's British heraldry specifically that says wyverns have two legs and dragons have four. The traditional "English Dragon" has two legs (as a holdover from the Kingdom of Wessex whose symbol was a dragon with two legs) while a "Welsh Dragon" has four.Frostbyte666 said:While I enjoyed the movie I preferred the first one. this one felt like it was stretching the time out a bit too much. I'm also a bit annoyed with the dragon design, first Skyrim now Hobbit they've made Smaug a flipping wyvern NOT a dragon...dragons have 6 limbs, the wings are a separate limb, compared to a wyverns 4 limbs integrating the wings and forearms...ok deep breathes...calm. Otherwise Smaug was epic.
So, you mean like the Gandalf and Saruman going harry potter wizard battle on your ass scene in Fellowship of the Ring? Or Gandalf going harry potter etc etc on the Balrog?umbraticus said:hmm, seems like i'm in the minority that prefered the first hobbit movie over the second.
the whole 'gandalf goes harry potter wizard battle on your ass scene' was also completely unnecessary and felt out of place to me.
btw, if anyone reads this that hasn't seen the movie yet, i think the 3d HFR version isn't really worth it. it's just as good as the 2d version.
I have to agree. I didn't notice the examples Rattja pointed out but the thing that bugged me the entire movie was Legolas' eyes. It was pretty obvious his eyes were CGI, and an unnatural shade of blue that looked like he was about to fire lasers every time he stared intensely at something--which is all the time.Story said:Whoa someone else noticed that stuff too? Great! Now I can agree with you without sounding completely nit-picky.Rattja said:When I can clearly see the lenses in the elf king eyes, and able to point out nearly every single CGI, or see the glue that keeps the fake beard on, it just breaks the whole thing for me. I just can't believe any of it when it feels like I am looking at a set and not peaking into another world.
Yes there has been bad effects before, but not as distracting as this.
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That really bothered me as well, but what's worse is that I got a headache from watching the movie in such high res. So appeartly I'm one of those people sadly and that's honestly enough to make me not want to see the movie again, at least not on the big screen. But in general, I didn't really like this movie because it just felt too overlong. Even if they just had to give the additions to the book, I think they could have easily cut off 45 mintues of the film and be better off for it. I did pretty much enjoy every screen with Smaug and I would re-watch those parts of the movie, but nothing else.
Which makes sense, seeing as it is based in the movie universe Peter Jackson created for the LOTR. If he made the Hobbit as a film first, it would definitely have been different. It makes sense that the Hobbit acts much more as a prequel, than a standalone set of films for Jackson.daveNYC said:This isn't The Hobbit, it's a Lord of the Rings prequel; and that's not what The Hobbit was written to be.
in both those cases it's less pronounced. (i haven't read the books, only seen the movies btw) i always thought of the magic in LOTR lore as less visual and 'fireball in your face' stuff. saruman en gandalf battle is almost comical, haha! two old men swinging each other around. balrog was also more of an enchantment on the bridge or something. usually they just use the forces that are already in nature and amplify those or in some way manipulate those. letting a rock drop out of a mountain being the most eye-catching thing we could see or scaring away nazgul with his presence.Taunta said:So, you mean like the Gandalf and Saruman going harry potter wizard battle on your ass scene in Fellowship of the Ring? Or Gandalf going harry potter etc etc on the Balrog?
I'd argue that wizard battles aren't out of place at all in this franchise.
Bilbo was wearing the ring, but it came off for reasons that can be a light spoiler so I'll leave it out. He was alone like in the book and Smaug didn't care for him one bit as well. Also Smaug delivered a few lines directly from the book. One that sticks out is: "My teeth are swords, my claws spears, and my wings a hurricane!"Primus1985 said:Is this scene like the book? Its been since 10+ years since I read The Hobbit, but from what I remember wasnt Bilbo wearing the ring and invisible when he was talking to Smaug, and also alone for some reason? That and Smaug really didnt much care that Bilbo was there, he wasnt a threat.guise709 said:I really dug Luke Evans as the Bard great casting choice and Laketown looked great overall. My favorite location visually so far. Smaug was a knockout. The scene with him talking with Bilbo was the best part of the movie in my opinion.
I don't think I would ever recommend anyone to watch The Hobbit before LotR...not because it's bad or anything, but purely because it makes more sense to watch LotR first and THEN the prequel to fill-out the story. The bulk of the story & entertainment lies in LotR, it's far bigger in scope with a far bigger "world" if you get what I mean. It's also a series of movies that can completely stand on their own. The Hobbit is more of a side-story, full of LotR references and characters we wouldn't really feel fully-invested in if it WASN'T for LotR lol.Disthron said:I think the real test for these movies will come years after they have been finished. If people recommend that you start the Tolkien series with The Hobbit, then it will have succeeded. If they say, skip the Hobbit and go straight to LotR, then it's probably a failure.
Also, I wonder if it's even possible to hint at things in the Hobbit movies that are paid off in LotR. I think other properties have tried but I can't think of an instance where it was very successful.
You are correct, I wouldn't recommend people watch the Star Wars prequels before watching the original Star Wars trilogy. But that is because they fail as prequels. However, I WOULD, and have, recommended that people watch "Spartacus: Gods of the Arena" before they watch "Blood and Sand" because that show DOSE succeed as a prequel to the Spartacus show.Yuuki said:I don't think I would ever recommend anyone to watch The Hobbit before LotR...not because it's bad or anything, but purely because it makes more sense to watch LotR first and THEN the prequel to fill-out the story. The bulk of the story & entertainment lies in LotR, it's far bigger in scope with a far bigger "world" if you get what I mean. It's also a series of movies that can completely stand on their own. The Hobbit is more of a side-story, full of LotR references and characters we wouldn't really feel fully-invested in if it WASN'T for LotR lol.Disthron said:I think the real test for these movies will come years after they have been finished. If people recommend that you start the Tolkien series with The Hobbit, then it will have succeeded. If they say, skip the Hobbit and go straight to LotR, then it's probably a failure.
Also, I wonder if it's even possible to hint at things in the Hobbit movies that are paid off in LotR. I think other properties have tried but I can't think of an instance where it was very successful.
This is probably a terrible example, but you wouldn't recommend anyone to watch the Star Wars prequels before the originals would you![]()