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#11183 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
May 2007
Indianapolis
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#11184 |
Blu-ray Duke
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Been reading the book every year since I was 8 years old and I am now 43. I can say that there are so major differences in characters behaviors from the book to the movies and alteration in certain aspect of how the story goes along.
That being said, I don't have major problems with it. The book is the book and the movie is the movie for me and are two different things. |
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#11185 |
Blu-ray Samurai
May 2007
Indianapolis
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For me the "payoff" with Eowyn (and Merry) was ridiculous if Gandalf couldn't deal with the WK. Gandalf the White is weaker than a Rohan woman and a hobbit. And even though Gandalf the White drove away several Ringwraiths, when saving Faramir (it was in the movie) he couldn't deal with one of them later. And even though he kicked the backside of a BALROG, he couldn't deal with the WK. Simply silly.
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#11186 |
Blu-ray Samurai
May 2007
Indianapolis
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Not only that, but Faramir and his men were cruel and abusive to Gollum. That left a bad taste in my mind.
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#11187 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I still can't think any actor that would have been superior to Ian McKellen as Gandalf, Christopher Lee as Saruman, Cate Blanchett as Galadriel, Andy Serkis as Gollum, Brad Dourif as Wormtongue, Sean Astin as Sam, Miranda Otto as Eowyn, Karl Urban as Eomer, or Bernard Hill as Theoden. Also, the dialog was excellent for these actors. Then you have Viggo, Elijah Wood, John Rhys Davies, Sean Bean and others who were more than adequate to handle their roles but assigned "good-but-less-than-stellar scripts". Then, we get to the "questionable roles". Without getting into too much detail (e.g. John Noble - a great actor, but was Denethor actually a raving lunatic?), I will just say that I feel bad for David Wenham. He is an excellent actor, and I think he did all he could for the role assigned to him; unfortunately, the screenwriters assassinated Faramir's character - which was extremely important to the story. He and his men, of course, were Tolkien's portrayal of ideal "good men", and along with Aragorn's Rangers the last of the incorruptible Numenoreans. In effect, they took the best that Middle-earth had to offer and completely turned it around. The equivalent action in the world of Disney would be to turn Cinderella into her evil step-mother. How Jackson, and especially Boyens, a self-proclaimed read-the-book-every-year-fan, missed the boat on this one is beyond my reasoning. Of all the scenes added in the EE's, I find the scenes of Faramir's men beating Gollum the most objectionable. "The devil's in the details" as the saying goes, and details such as this prevent these very good movies from becoming great movies. |
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#11188 |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Fair point. I wasn't thinking about Faramir. Nor am I trying to convince anybody I'm right about a matter of taste. Nor am I accepting the changes blindly. I just don't see it as a matter of acceptance or rejection of smaller details when I like the overall package that is the films. When I watch them I don't think to myself, I really wish they'd made Faramir truer to the book, I just go with it.
But I will say, not that anybody needs an explanation from me, that in a streamlined version of the tale where you don't have the time to elucidate a character's motivations, making Faramir subject to the ring's evil makes sense. Otherwise, the argument becomes, "Well, why don't they just give it to him to get rid of?" since in the book he clearly attests he would never use this thing. Last edited by happydood; 12-19-2011 at 03:28 PM. |
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#11189 |
Banned
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In one of the Appendices, the whole deal of Faramir's moral change was addressed in detail. Phillipa Boyens said that all of them (herself, Jackson, & Walsh) felt that keeping Faramir's role identical to the book would have stripped the One Ring of its power. They even added Sam's line in Osgiliath as a nod to the book: "By all rights, we shouldn't even be here, but we are." They seeming felt that the Ring had to be capable of corrupting everyone to an extent, regardless of intent. Such a notion isn't entirely against Tolkien either, since Frodo ultimately falls to its influence at Mount Doom. Also, my opinion is that this could have been one reason why Tom Bombadil was removed, since (for no apparent reason) the Ring did not affect him.
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#11190 | |
Banned
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#11191 | |
Banned
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#11192 | |
Power Member
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Again, when translating a book to film, there are many consideration, so it's almost never the same as the book, especially one with the scope of LOTR. |
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#11193 | ||
Banned
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#11194 |
Blu-ray Samurai
May 2007
Indianapolis
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#11195 |
Banned
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Yes, it did. Sam clearly hesitated to return the Ring to Frodo, and his expression makes it clear that it wasn't just from worrying about his friend. Galadriel never had it in her possession, either, but she went psycho when Frodo offered it to her. Gandalf refused the Ring, knowing what it would do, and while Bilbo surrendered it on his own, he was clearly affected, too.
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#11199 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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The point of the story and moral significance of the Ring being presented to each of these major characters can easily be extended to the modern "real" world; heads of organizations, politicians, and ultimately to we as the viewers (readers), as Tolkien often alluded to in his personal writings. The resulting question is, "What would you do when offered the temptation of Power?" |
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#11200 | ||
Blu-ray Champion
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![]() ![]() Don't get me wrong, I love the movies, and I realize that they can coexist with the books. The books are still the books, and always will be, and the movie is like an alternate reality to the books, which is fine, but I just don't buy that Faramir had to be portayed that way, or the story would've collapsed in on it's self. I think that they just changed it because they wanted to, and also to ratchet up the tension, which is what a lot of their changes seem to be intended to do. Last edited by frogmort; 12-19-2011 at 09:05 PM. |
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