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#621 |
Blu-ray Ninja
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#622 |
Senior Member
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A while back when they first announced the artwork some of us were annoyed that it had a greenish/blue border, looks like BoTFA has been given that color scheme for it's soundtrack which gives me hope we'll be seeing that beautiful purple color scheme that was used on the Smaug soundtrack for the BoTFA EE!
http://www.theonering.net/torwp/2014...on-soundtrack/ |
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#624 |
Blu-ray Champion
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#625 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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I've gotta say that I really like the Laketown stuff and always have. It's only natural that as the company travels further afield they end up encroaching on the world of men and the political machinations therein, just like Two Towers. It's very interesting in terms of visuals too because there's been nothing like it in the prior movies, and they decided to really have fun with the humour of it which is what's played up in the EE. I loved the "bollocks" line, I was still chuckling away to myself 5 minutes later.
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Thanks given by: | Aragorn the Elfstone (10-23-2014), Kryptonic (10-23-2014) |
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#626 |
Blu-ray Prince
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When you make the leader of Laketown a disgusting and over-the-top obvious buffoon -- who likes to eat animal testicles, no less -- it has the effect of suggesting the people of Laketown are even worse -- they must be absolute morons for allowing a disgusting, drunk, mendacious slob to act as their leader and their controlling authority.
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#628 |
Blu-ray Baron
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Middle-earth (movie-verse especially) villains tend to be completely unsubtle. That's been the case with all the ones before this (Sauron, Saruman, Gríma, Gollum, the Nazgul, Orcs, and so on), so I'm not about to start taking issue with the Master and Alfrid. It just comes with the territory of being this mythological fantasy where good and evil exist and everything is very black and white I think. It's part of the charm and adds to the fun.
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#629 | |
Blu-ray Prince
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EDIT Never mind...just found it. A bit of a thief after all. This is from a Tolkien wiki page... "When the Dwarves arrived, the Master of Laketown greeted them generously, but only to keep public spirits up. After the destruction of Laketown and the slaying of the dragon by Bard, the townspeople denounced the Master as a coward and called for Bard's ascension as King. The Master, who was an adroit politician, shifted blame for Laketown's destruction to Thorin and the Dwarves, who had roused the dragon in the first place. This succeeded in turning the townspeople's ire towards the Dwarves. Bard took the lead in rebuilding the remains of the town and gathering supplies for the coming winter, but was careful to act in the Master's name, so as not to usurp the latter's authority. After the Battle of Five Armies, Bard became King of Dale, but gave a generous portion of his share of the Lonely Mountain's treasure (received from Dain II Ironfoot) to the Master, for the re-building of Laketown. Unfortunately, the Master succumbed to greed and fled Laketown with most of the gold, and later died of starvation in the wastes, after being deserted by his companions." Last edited by Ernest Rister; 10-23-2014 at 03:56 PM. |
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#630 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Jackson did what he's done throughout his time in Middle-earth: he's taken a few minor characters and/or events and dramatically played up their significance for the film version. In the book, the Master is actually portrayed as a greedy political type, albeit with none of the, ah, embellishments seen in the film. So the germ of that satirical idea was always there, and Jackson turned it up to 11 like always.
Don't forget, Bard's role has also been increased so it was only natural that an antagonist would also be needed, and the oleaginous Master fits the bill perfectly IMO. And IMO there's a slightly more whimsical tone to the Hobbit movies than the LOTR flicks, so the OTT baddies like the Goblin King and the Master and the giant talking dragon don't seem out of place to me. |
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Thanks given by: | Kryptonic (10-23-2014) |
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#631 | |
Blu-ray Champion
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IMO. |
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#632 | |
Senior Member
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This movie out of all of them (including LOTR films) I've had the most problems with enjoying. It's a lot more PJ than Tolkien for sure, and a lot of it feels more like a 3-D theme park ride you would go on at Universal Studios than an actual film. It's almost like PJ got burnt out after 15-16 years of doing this and to entertain himself he's just doing whatever he wants and throwing the book out the window he held so closely over those years. It's like choking at the end of a marathon or losing that no-hitter in the 8th inning. I've been a cheerleader for these films for a very long time and this is the first film I've gotten negative about. It's hard for me to admit. So yeah, really hoping this EE works out for me. |
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Thanks given by: | frogmort (10-24-2014) |
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#635 | |
Blu-ray Emperor
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So we got the doe-eyed lovey-dovey stuff between Tauriel and Kili to act as filler, and because Jackson seemingly wanted to deliver more of a 'theme park ride' he stripped the theatrical version down to its bones, delivering the shortest Middle-earth movie yet. The EE basically puts some meat on them bones without destroying that which makes the movie such an arse-kicking ride, and it really balances out the pacing in the second half of the film which was one of the few things that really niggled me about the theatrical cut (like how quickly the dwarves get up the mountain once they leave Laketown, which now has an extension of its own and is intercut with more of that additional Dol Goldur goodness). |
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#636 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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Thanks given by: | GC Riot (10-24-2014) |
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#637 |
Blu-ray Emperor
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Again, I agree. They breeze past Dale and I thought we might get a closer look at it in the EE, but no such luck. Still, it would be a superfluous addition because we saw the city get destroyed in the AUJ prologue and the dwarves remember it anyway so it wouldn't really serve the story of this particular film, although I suppose it'd put the wind up Bilbo when he gets a look at the destruction that the dragon has wrought. But seeing as films two and three are stretched fairly thin as it is, I guess Jackson wanted to keep his powder dry, so to speak, and to keep the reveal of Smaug's desolation for the third movie.
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#639 |
Power Member
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I've been watching movies for over 50 years and I must admit that, until the discussion a couple of pages ago, I had never heard of the Wilhelm scream. Googled it, found a 3 minute clip of examples from a bunch of movies, and I'm still laughing. Seriously, people get upset by this? Really? It's just a 2 second in-joke that has been around nearly as long as I have. It's a joke, a nod to a past time, a salute....how is this a problem? Movies are entertainment, allow yourselves to be entertained. I don't watch movies to look for problems, and it seems many people do. I've read the discussions about color (green tint, oh my god), plot holes, etc, and to me it seems sad that folks get so badly bent out of shape about these things. I'd rather enjoy movies than work so hard to pick them apart. It's easier on the brain and better for the spirit.
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Thanks given by: | JackKnightStarman (10-24-2014) |
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#640 | |
Banned
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i now find it very distracting and it takes me out of th emovie every time i now hear it. What is worse are the imatation wilhelm screams. |
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