Posts Tagged: The Ring


11
Feb 12

Why LOTR Sucks: So So Awful

Every time Peter Jackson changes the story to fit his vision of what the Lord of the Rings should be, it leads to unforeseen consequences down the line. When Sam was ordered away by Frodo (never happened in the book) I assumed he would just follow behind because that’s who Sam is. He is completely loyal to Frodo and would never abandon him. Sam knows that the ring is warping Frodo’s mind.

But Peter Jackson decides Sam isn’t all that loyal after all. Sam starts climbing down the steps, heading back to the Shire I suppose. Then he slips and falls, coming to a stop right next to the lembas bread that Gollum threw over the cliff. What a brilliant coincidence, Peter Jackson! I bet Tolkien wishes he had thought of it himself. I’m sure that one will haunt him for the rest of eternity.

Seeing the bread reminds him of what a twat Gollum is, and Sam turns around, probably out of a sense of revenge. Because, you know, he isn’t loyal.

The scene does afford us three more slow motion close ups of hobbits crying, so I count the whole episode as a push.

Minutes Watched: 3.2:16.30

Number of Montages: 17

Number of slow motion close-ups of people crying: 61

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7
Feb 12

Why LOTR Sucks: Raising The Stakes

In the industry, raising the stakes means you have to make sure your story matters. What’s at stake for the characters? Why will the audience be drawn into the action?

Peter Jackson has just raised the stakes for us, because, you know, Tolkien didn’t do enough. The fate of the world and the fall of man wasn’t going to cut it. Nor was the life of four hobbits.

Now we have to worry about Liv Tyler dying, because her fate is tied to the Ring as well. OMG Aragorn. Don’t let Liv Tyler die. I will h8 u 4ever!!!

Minutes Watched: 3.1:43.03

Number of Montages: 17

Number of slow motion close-ups of people crying: 55

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7
Feb 12

Why LOTR Sucks: One Dick To Rule Them All

Or is that one ring?

Lord Denethor is supposed to be a huge dick. He’s one of the biggest dicks in the whole series. But because Peter Jackson felt the need to turn everyone else into a dick, his impact is greatly lessened. He’s just one more dick in a long line of dicks, what with Elrond, Theoden, Faramir, and the expanded role for Saruman.

That is, as they say, far too many dicks.

Minutes Watched: 3.1:15.32

Number of Montages: 16

Number of slow motion close-ups of people crying: 53

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4
Feb 12

Why LOTR Sucks: Faramir To Frodo: Just Kidding

Sam gives a speech, with a montage in the background, and everyone cries (often in slow motion). Even Gollum. The speech is enough to make Faramir change his mind and let Frodo go. This is, of course, just after seeing Frodo try and give the ring to the black rider.

That has to be the saddest part about changing Faramir’s character. The exact moment when he would actually be justified in taking the ring from Frodo is the moment when he stops being a dick and lets them go on their merry way.

Minutes Watched: 2.3:24.45

Number of Montages: 13

Number of slow motion close-ups of people crying: 50

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2
Feb 12

Why LOTR Sucks: Faramir Is A Dick Too

I’ve figured out the pattern that Peter Jackson is following. He is taking all the heroic characters from Lord of the Rings and altering their personalities in one of several ways:

  • Turning them into comic relief (Gimli, Pippin, Merry, etc.)
  • Marginalizing them by having them cry, whine, or pine. (Frodo, Eowyn)
  • Making them into huge dicks (Elrond, Theoden, Galadriel)

The only characters spared this treatment are Gandalf, Aragorn, Bilbo, and to some extent Legolas (though he’s little more than eye candy and he’s kind of a dick at times too.)

The worst offense, by far, is what happens to Faramir. For no good reason whatsoever, Faramir goes from one of the novel’s greatest heroes to inexplicably dickish in The Two Towers. He tortures Gollum, decides to take the ring back to Gondor, and comes off as a bigger douche bag than his brother. No wonder his father hates him. I would too.

Making matters worse, we have some stupid explanation for why Frodo refuses to wear the ring when Faramir decides to take him to Gondor. He’s suddenly about to succumb to the ring’s power, so he can’t use the ring to escape. Yet he used the ring when Boromir was about to take it at the end of the first movie, and he will use the ring again in the third movie. But for this brief interlude, he must refuse for some reason, otherwise Peter Jackson’s added detour could never have happened.

Any fan of the books knows that changing Faramir’s character is sacrilegious. It totally goes against the spirit of the novels. Nor does the change serve any meaningful function in the movie.

Peter Jackson, I will never forgive you for this.

Minutes Watched: 2.2:29.24

Number of Montages: 10

Number of slow motion close-ups of people crying: 39

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30
Jan 12

Why LOTR Sucks: All Wrong

Sigh. This is going to be a long one. The last 20 minutes has been the worst yet. It’s like the first 40 minutes of Terminator 2, except the complete opposite of that. Let’s take a look one by one:

Legolas is Oblivious The same elf that can smell orcs kilometers away is caught off guard by a warg less than a hundred yards ahead of him and in plain sight. He only realizes there is an ambush coming after the warg rider attacks. And while we are on the subject, if this orc were a scout, why did he attack when no one knew he was there. He could have told the other orcs where the column was and they could have totally ambushed the Riders of Rohan.

Gimli Worthless Gimli is supposed to be a mighty warrior. In the movies, he is little more than comic relief. In this battle he falls off his horse, gets trapped under a warg, and must repeatedly be rescued by the other more capable warriors.

Impossible Action When Legolas jumps onto a running horse, it is physically impossible. You could not grab the reigns from the opposite side, go under the horse’s neck and vault onto its back from the other side. NO. He could have jumped onto the horse from the same side, and that would be a remarkable feat. Also, several times in this battle, people pause to notice details on the other side in order to come to the timely rescue of someone who can’t defend himself. Normally, this is to rescue Gimli.

The Orc Knows Aragorn Somehow, the orc knows that it was Aragorn whom he was fighting. Also, he fell off his Warg much further away from the cliff, but he’s lying maybe twenty yard from the edge. And while we are on the subject, there’s no way a warg would go running straight towards the cliff and fall over the edge. He could have easily veered in either direction.

Aragorn “Dies” This is the worst attempt at dramatic tension ever. No one seriously believes that Aragorn just died. If a main character dies, it is always definitive, or at the very end of the movie. If you don’t see him or her die, then he/she didn’t die. We KNOW that Aragorn is still alive. It’s so cheesy. Oh, everyone is crying because Aragorn is “dead.” (There were seven slow motion close-ups of people crying.) Boo hoo. Give me a break. Now is a good time to mention that NONE of this sequence is in the novels; this was all added. There was no reason to make us suffer through this fake death, except Peter Jackson wanted to torment us with a 20 minute cliche-ridden sequence that serves no purpose in the over all movie. This doesn’t drive the story in any way. It’s detracting from the story. Compare this to Gandalf’s fake death, which actually fooled us. Falling into the pits of Moria seemed definitive. That he survived was a miracle, but helps to show how truly powerful Gandalf really is, and it helped lead to the events that fractured the fellowship. The fellowship never would have broken up had Gandalf still been there. That was a sequence that was necessary for the plot, was true to the characters, and dramatic as hell. This sequence is the worst of the movie so far.

Aragorn Doesn’t Drown After falling over the cliff, the next time we see Aragorn is unconscious and floating face up in the river. BULLSHIT. He is still wearing his sword and armor. If the fall had knocked him unconscious, he would be dead. End of story.

More Liv Tyler We see a lot of Liv Tyler weeping, in slow motion of course, as Elrond acts like a huge dick and tells her to forget about him. It also seems that she somehow telepathically reaches out to Aragorn, so that he wakes up. Luckily, there is a horse waiting for him.

Montage As if all this wasn’t enough, we then get a long montage with a voice over from Galadriel in which she gives what amounts to a recap of the first half of the movies. This voice over is like the Spark Notes of the Lord of the Rings. There isn’t any new information, except for her to tell us that the only way this ends is with Frodo’s death. Um, what’s with the false prediction? What good does it do? In the books, everyone kind of knows without saying that Frodo will have to die to destroy the ring. But it’s not like it’s his destiny. There is still a naive, foolish hope that maybe he can make it back to the Shire and end his days in peace. Why definitively state that he will die? It’s so pointless.

There are even more minor complaints with this scene, but I’ll spare you my whining.

Minutes Watched: 2.2:13.34

Number of Montages: 10

Number of slow motion close-ups of people crying: 38

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27
Jan 12

Why LOTR Sucks: Gollum

I like Gollum. I mean I hate him, but I like how Peter Jackson portrays him on screen. He’s cowardly and vicious and craven and completely possessed by his desire for the ring. The computer generation is a bit dated, close to a decade after the fact, but at the time it was considered top notch (Especially when compared to some other visual effects from the movie, that weren’t so well done. Notice, every time a group of humans and hobbits are walking together, especially in the distance.)

We’re twelve minutes into the movie, and haven’t seen a single montage. It must be some kind of miracle.

Minutes Watched: 2.0:12.01

Number of Montages: 7

Number of slow motion close-ups of people crying: 29

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27
Jan 12

Why LOTR Sucks: A Note For Later

Boromir tries to take the ring, and Frodo puts it on to escape. I mention this now, because it becomes important later.

Minutes Watched: 3:01.25

Number of Montages: 7

Number of slow motion close-ups of people crying: 21

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26
Jan 12

Why LOTR Sucks: Ground Already Covered

Frodo spots Gollum following them in the mines, the perfect occasion to have a conversation about a topic that has already been discussed earlier. Now would have been the perfect time to introduce that Gollum once carried the ring. Or perhaps allowed a couple of glimpses of him first, tease the mystery, and then explain that Bilbo got the ring from him. It works for both readers of the book and people completely new to the story.

It’s far better than having a conversation about something that has already been shown.

Minutes Watched: 2:08.02

Number of Montages: 5

Number of slow motion close-ups of people crying: 5

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26
Jan 12

Why LOTR Sucks: Watching The Weather Channel

It’s extra frustrating to think about all the bad choices that were made with regards to the script, as illustrated by the latest sequence. It seems Peter Jackson leaves in what he should have left out, and changes things that didn’t need to be changed. He added to scenes here, one of Boromir picking up the ring after it mysteriously falls off Frodo’s neck and falls several yards in front of him. It establishes that Boromir is sorely tempted by the ring. Or should I say it reestablishes, because we already know that Boromir wants the ring. He said as much during the council.

Then we watch them climbing a mountain in the snow. A beautiful mountain to be sure, but the scene certainly lacks drama. We get to watch as Gandalf and Saruman have some kind of long distance wizard battle that involves lightening and avalanches and a lot of voice over narrative about why Gandalf is scared of Moria. Yeah, that’s the best way to introduce the idea.

Obviously the filmmakers wanted to emphasize that Gandalf is reluctant to go to Moria, but is this really the best way to do it? With a Saruman voice over? Why not cut straight to Moria, and explain somehow that it’s dangerous, but the only way. Well, I guess they were paying Christopher Lee either way, so might as well cram him into as many scenes as possible.

Worst of all, Gandalf lets Frodo decide their path. That’s what I would do, allow the least equipped person to make a life and death decision for the group when at least five other people are better able to do so.

Minutes Watched: 1:57.47

Number of Montages: 5

Number of slow motion close-ups of people crying: 4

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