Whoa. This is just too weird.
Celtavian and I are in total agreement.
Well, not on the notion that he knows more Tolkien than thalmin.
I'm interested in people's responses to Eowyn's face-off against the Witch-King. This was the great disappointment of the film for me. Everything else was great (the effects shots look like effects shots, but okay, they were a million times better than any effects shots I've ever seen, so I'll let that go) -- or if it wasn't, I'm assuming it will be addressed in the EE.
But I thought Eowyn's big scene was sold immeasurably short. The staging of it gave no real drama to the scene, her cutting the head off the beast happened nearly off-screen and at a distance, and her big moment was just lost.
Here's how it plays out in the book:
Theoden goes down, Eowyn's mount, Eowyn and Merry go down. Merry roots around in the ground while Eowyn stands up and tells the Witch-King she's going to keep him from Theoden. The exact words are:
"Begone, foul dwimmerlaik!"
Which is possibly the best line ever given to any character at any time in any work of human creativity. But I acknowledge that is my own idiosyncrasy.
W-K tells Eowyn if she wants to be a fool he's happy to oblige her, and says that no living man may hinder him.
Eowyn laughs.
SHE LAUGHS. In the midst of all this death and carnage, a woman laughs.
She throws off her helmet and says, "But no living man am I!" And introduces herself and her parentage in that charming way characters in Tolkien have (and I miss that, too: "I am Aragorn son of Arathorn. Here is the Sword That Was Broken and is Forged Again. Will you aid me or thwart me? Choose swiftly!") and squares off.
And the W-K studies her, momentarily at a loss.
WHAT A MOMENT!
AND THEN, she falls, and it's MERRY who holds Theoden in his last moments. Then Eomer comes up finds his king dead and his sister (who he thought safely at home) apparently dead, and that's where the Rohirrim scream
DEATH ("DEATH they cried with one voice loud and terrible") and make their final charge.
Okay, I accept that we couldn't have TWO charges of the Rohirrim. I'll even hope for Eomer finding the gang in the EE. But Eowyn's moment never happened.
And the movie is less than what it could have been for me.
That said, I'm seeing it again this weekend and intend to see it at least twice more after that. I'm sure. It's cinematic history. We'll tell our grandchildren about seeing these movies in the theatre for the first time.
And just think: we are (most of us, anyway) the last generation that ever grew up reading those books with no expectation of ever seeing them on the big screen. From now on, everyone who comes to these books will know that there's a movie version out there.