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#1162 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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When it hit theaters a year ago, I was one who pointed out that the Dol Guldur scenes had some very obvious seams, such that much of it looked like a reshoot to replace finding Thrain with more Azog, to appease audience feedback from AUJ. If I have the time I might even go digging for the post where I said just that. I think the EE version is just both scenes amalgamated together. |
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#1164 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Pete, you picked the wrong hour to cut down to a half hour. It should have been the last one, not the first. My longer version is: Cutting Thrain was wrong, those scenes tie the whole movie together (actually, both films, not just DoS). That he and his editors couldn't see that, makes them look like idiots. It's as dumb as cutting Saruman from the beginning of RotK. His extended editions are always a painful reminder of his fondness for cutting out large swaths of Tolkien to make room for the awful writing of Boyens. Last edited by mjbethancourt; 11-17-2014 at 02:07 AM. |
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Thanks given by: | 2awesome4apossum (11-17-2014) |
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#1165 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Thanks given by: | 2awesome4apossum (11-17-2014), The Edge (11-16-2014) |
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#1166 | |||
Active Member
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#1167 |
Blu-ray.com Reviewer
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To be fair to Peter Jackson, the studio doesn't have an interest in releasing the films to the full length of what he films so some creative decisions have to be made about what should be cut for the theatrical releases. Also, Jackson has to balance the workload of everyone involved in post-production to make sure they have enough time to meet the deadlines they set for themselves. Some of the technical effects take so much time and money to do that they have to make cuts before the theatrical releases so that it can actually be finished in time.
I'm sure someone will come back to say something about "then why do the Extended Editions in the same year?" but the extended versions are done as another side project, not as something that replaces the amount of work that goes into the theatrical versions. |
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#1168 | |
Senior Member
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#1169 |
Banned
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However, exposition does not = having a story. The two are not the same thing at all.
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#1170 | |
Power Member
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I don't buy that he didn't have enough time excuse and only put in what he could finish. Especially since this set of movies don't nearly have the pressure/scrutiny on them from a studio standpoint as LOTR did. Remember he was a horror/indie filmmaker back in 1998 when New Line said will give you 300 million for a trilogy. They had a lot riding on that back then, not exactly house hold names particularly when initial casting/filming began. |
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#1171 | |
Blu-ray.com Reviewer
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#1172 | |
Active Member
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[EDIT] Never mind. The last pickups were done back mid-2013. Last edited by 2awesome4apossum; 11-17-2014 at 05:12 AM. |
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#1174 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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#1175 |
Blu-ray Archduke
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I learned from buying the Lord of the Rings twice (TC & EE) that I would just wait for The Hobbit to release in EE form. I haven't seen the TC of the 1st 2 movies as I waited for inevitable EEs & ill do the same with Battle of the 5 armies. With the LotR I enjoyed the EE more then the TC.
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Thanks given by: | Adam_WM (11-17-2014), HeavyHitter (11-18-2014) |
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#1176 | |
Banned
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#1177 | ||
Blu-ray Emperor
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So for me it's not so much about deliberately cynical 'this would be good for the EE' type of decisions, it's Jackson knowing that he couldn't give the material the treatment it needs within the confines of the theatrical running time and/or release window. FOTR was a special case because (as I think I've said before) Jackson and co. were hellbent on making it the best film it could possibly be because it was the first one; if it failed, the whole thing could go down the gurgler. There was enough material there to cover the main points without belabouring them and the movie didn't have too much reshot material shunted in either. I think that always upsets the balance of the post-production process which is why the theatrical versions of Two Towers and ROTK didn't reach the same heights as FOTR (not that their EE's are perfect either). |
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Thanks given by: | Adam_WM (11-17-2014) |
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#1178 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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If he needed to cut out 25 minutes for a Cinematic Cut, he should have cut out that silly and against-established-character 5 minute time waste where they can't find a frickin keyhole and turn around and go home, all of that physics-defying nonsense inside Erebor with the molten gold, and take the rest out of excessive runtime at Laketown.
Even following his logic of taking things out altogether rather than leaving in a bad truncated version, how then does he explain Beorn? What he left in the Cinematic Cut makes him a laughable scene with a useless character; without what was restored in the EE, Beorn would have been better cut from the film entirely. Likewise with the opening scene, what is even the point of that without tying it in to the search for Thrain and the Dwarf Ring, other than an excuse to sqeeze in a cameo of a character he left out of LotR, Bill Ferny? No, regardless of what they say publicly, I'm pretty sure their protocol has always been that if it's a choice between cutting Tolkien's writing and cutting Boyens' writing, they always choose to cut Tolkien, because if the EE scenes consisted mostly of restoring footage of Boyens' writing, nobody would buy it. They always hold back the "Tolkien" version of the movie for the EE, 'cause they know Tolkien fans are rabid enough to buy another disc even if it had just 5 minutes of added Tolkien scenes. |
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#1179 |
Blu-ray Grand Duke
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Or they cut out the Tolkien stuff in favor of Boyens because they know that most moviegoers have no idea which is which and therefore just prefer the simplest version of the story on the screen. Most audiences have no idea what the story should be (whatever that means), so they're content with whatever Jackson, Boyens and co. cook up for them. For the LOTR TCs, I thought the balance they struck was perfect, but like I've said earlier, the DoS EE is probably the first and only where pretty much all the added material is substantial and not useless fluff.
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#1180 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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1.) They hold back Tolkien material for the EE, because the EE is mostly for Tolkien fans. 2.) They've made some pretty peculiar choices. 3.) Boyens is not a good writer. If they need to take adaptive liberties, I think they should get a better writer. At any rate, there's no way they could move copies of a marked-up EE if all the added scenes were Boyens adaptation scenes, because her writing doesn't have a committed fan following like Tolkien does. Sabe? Last edited by mjbethancourt; 11-17-2014 at 06:34 PM. |
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