barsoomcore
Unattainable Ideal
No, it's not.KenM said:The main story is about a war.
No, it's not.KenM said:The main story is about a war.
Yes it is. So, nyah!barsoomcore said:No, it's not.
KenM said:The point of the Scorging was to show how the four hobbits had changed, and Peter Jackson did that with the scene in the Green dragon at end of RotK.
Filby said:I agree with your points, though. I see the Scouring of the Shire as integral to the story for the reasons you've discussed.
KenM said:I totally disagree. JRRT's writing style, for lack of a better word, sucks IMO. I can't get though fellowship, its so slow paced and he has the characters break out into song about something that has NOTHING to do with the plot. He goes on and on describing almost everything the characters see while traveling, but he does not describe major battles, plot points well. The main story is about a war, and IMO you need to describe the action as well as the setting equailly.
IMO Geroge RR Martin strikes the balance between plot, setting, character devolpment and action better.
The problem ACTUALLY being that the WRONG story points were made the climactic moments of the film. I agree, that if you make the destruction of the Ring the climactic moment of Return of the King, you have a problem. So don't make it the climactic moment. Make it the BIGGEST moment, but that's not the same thing.Umbran said:Whether they are integral to the story of the book is largely irrelevant. As moviemaking it would have been a horrible anticlimax. In a movie, the audience doesn't take to having too much stuff happen after the major climax, and doing so would make the movie end on a weak note, rather than a strong one.
Or it will suck hard and you'll have a gozillion fanboys on the interent criticizing your version.barsoomcore said:Put Helm's Deep at the middle of TT, put the destruction of the Ring at the middle of RotK. Wrap up the former with Shelob (or possibly the Paths of the Dead -- I bet that would work) and the latter with the Grey Havens (slightly less sappy, if possible). That'll fly.
And in the meantime, Sam and Frodo do virtually NOTHING during the third movie, until they get to Mt. Doom. Book 5 was the singularly worst part of the series, with the endless descriptions of hill, dale and gorse bush. It was the very epitome of everything that was wrong with Tolkien's work, IMHO.barsoomcore said:Put Helm's Deep at the middle of TT, put the destruction of the Ring at the middle of RotK. Wrap up the former with Shelob (or possibly the Paths of the Dead -- I bet that would work) and the latter with the Grey Havens (slightly less sappy, if possible). That'll fly.
WizarDru said:It seems to me it would break the narrative flow, just like it does in the books.