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BlackFox
Half-elven
Apr 30 2015, 8:25pm
Post #1 of 17
(2039 views)
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"Because the world is a stupid, stupid place" or "When directors shoot movies back-to-back, who wins?"
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The Guardian's Luke Holland has written a short article on "Hollywood's obsession with stockpile film-making", which, among other films, touches upon The Hobbit movies.
Peter Jackson's problems only began when he tried to repeat his commendable feat with The Hobbit. Like flabby grey cakes, they succumbed to the same pratfalls as The Matrix and Pirates: enough narrative plot-points for one film, spread out like service stations across the featureless motorways of several. The Hobbit films, to date, have grossed over $2.9bn. Because the world is a stupid, stupid place. What do you think? Who "won" with The Hobbit?
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Aragorn the Elfstone
Tol Eressea
Apr 30 2015, 8:38pm
Post #2 of 17
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As much as I hate the world "elitism", it kind of applies here. PJ makes films for the joy of making them, and for us - the audience. People will disagree about the manner of the adaptation (3 film structure included), but there is nothing that justifies calling those who went to see the films and enjoyed them (or didn't) "stupid". The author kind of needs to get over himself (and his opinions).
"The danger with any movie that does as well as this one does is that the amount of money it's making and the number of awards that it's got becomes almost more important than the movie itself in people's minds. I look at that as, in a sense, being very much like the Ring, and its effect on people. You know, you can kind of forget what we were doing, if you get too wrapped up in that." - Viggo Mortensen
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Shagrat
Gondor
Apr 30 2015, 8:57pm
Post #3 of 17
(1893 views)
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The world is indeed a stupid, stupid place
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Hence why this no-mark is writing bile for The Guardian
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Avandel
Half-elven
Apr 30 2015, 9:17pm
Post #4 of 17
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Too true. And for this Mr. Holland - that's SIR Peter to you, thanks so much.
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Bracegirdle
Valinor
Apr 30 2015, 11:14pm
Post #5 of 17
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$2.9 Billion WINS! NEENER, Neener, neener! "LIFE IS HARD. IT'S EVEN HARDER WHEN YOUR A STUPID REPORTER!" -John Wayne (Sorta)
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QuackingTroll
Valinor
May 1 2015, 11:16am
Post #8 of 17
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"All of this bodes fairly poorly for Avengers" except...
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Except for the point you made about The Lord of the Rings winning a billion Oscars and the fact that all of these examples were huge box office successes. But you rather hastily conveyed those points hoping no-one would see them because they didn't support your ridiculous theory. This journalist is using every trick in the book to write a biased and opinionated article with no valid argument or reliable evidence. This is a non-article. I guess it was a slow news day so they had to make something up. I really hate these types of articles, they're getting much too popular because they serve as click-bait for the publisher. But they're starting to drown out the real news. The world is a stupid, stupid place.
(This post was edited by QuackingTroll on May 1 2015, 11:18am)
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dormouse
Half-elven
May 1 2015, 1:15pm
Post #9 of 17
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Easy! We did!
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BlackFox
Half-elven
May 1 2015, 2:50pm
Post #10 of 17
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I was waiting for someone to say that!
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I'm with you, dormouse. I can't say how glad I am to have been able to share in on this wonderful experience.
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oliphaunt
Lorien
May 1 2015, 3:36pm
Post #11 of 17
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If there were 9 movies each 9 hours long I'd still want more!
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Bombadil
Half-elven
May 1 2015, 3:48pm
Post #12 of 17
(1514 views)
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TRY sitting though a Marathon..?
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One WEEK before, AUJ came out ONE theater did a EE LOTR MARATHON... started @ 11 AM {with 20 minute breaks} Bom left @ Midnight, just after Aragorn said "You bow to no one" to the four Hobbits... SSOoo if bom had STAYED to the Final Credits? IT would have been about 1:30 am... SAME w/ a Marathon of The Hobbit, but they started earlier.. SSOoo.. Bomby got to see BOT5A..about 4 days before the REST of the USA release. THAT was cool, since PJ came on Screen, just before BOT5A to congratulate us on getting "First Views" The Theater only had about 20 people in it...SSOoo..it seemed pretty Personal.
www.charlie-art.biz "What Your Mind can conceive... charlie can achieve"
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BlackFox
Half-elven
May 1 2015, 4:24pm
Post #13 of 17
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BTW, welcome to TORn!
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Elarie
Grey Havens
May 1 2015, 11:40pm
Post #14 of 17
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"Someone made a movie that I didn't like, therefore everybody else who liked it is stupid." Nothing new here.
__________________ Gold is the strife of kinsmen, and fire of the flood-tide, and the path of the serpent. (Old Icelandic Fe rune poem)
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Bumblingidiot
Rohan
May 3 2015, 3:24pm
Post #15 of 17
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Bear in mind that The Guardian, which used to be a proper paper, has an online presence dedicated to clickbait; they don't always bother to employ proper, quality journalists for their online stuff - presumably to save money; also because the more idiotic their articles are, the more clicks and comments they get. What I'd like to know is who was the idiot that decided that there is a particular set formula for adapting a book into film. The Bible is about a thousand pages - a fairly big book, like LOTR. The New Testament is a small part of it - less than 300 pages I think, and contains several accounts of the same events. So, according to the film critic geniuses out there, we should get a maximum of three films out of the whole Bible and one out of the NT itself. A quick check reveals Exodus: Gods and Kings - based on a single section from the Bible Jesus of Nazareth, King of Kings, The Greatest Story Ever Told - versions of the small, New Testament section of the book The last temptation of Christ - a small portion of the small NT part The Ten Commandments - a few verses from the OT The Nativity - a tiny part of the NT story Samson and Delilah - a few lines in the OT The Passion of the Christ - another small section of the NT part of the book Noah - a few verses in the book. The Big Fisherman - the bits in the NT concerning Peter Salome - a tiny part of the OT story made into an 'epic' Sodom and Gomorrah - a few lines in the Bible?? Slave of Dreams - based on a small part of the story of Joseph The Book of Esther - based on a tiny section in the Bible King David - another small bit of the Bible Abraham - ditto Jacob - ditto David and Bathsheba - ditto Young Abraham - not even the whole of Abraham's story this time! Lot in Sodom - at least this one's a short film - based on a tiny part of the book The Bible - In the Beginning - which covers the first part of Genesis Then we have films like Sleepy Hollow - an entire long narrative based on a shortish poem, not to mention the reams of superhero films based on comics with hardly any writing in them at all. The 'Three films out of one book' complaint really is pretty daft - certainly in the context of film history. Many films cover the events of a single day; others condense a hundred years into a couple of hours. The Hobbit covers a year's events, but also introduces a new world an culture to the audience and flashes back to the distant past on occasion. There are plenty of narrative points for three films - even without PJ's inventions.
"Oh dear, oh dear, oh dear."
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Elarie
Grey Havens
May 3 2015, 5:46pm
Post #16 of 17
(1258 views)
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I completely agree that the "page counting formula" idea that keeps re-appearing in people's complaints makes no sense. It's what's in the book that matters, combined with the vision of the director and the scriptwriters. The possibilities and variations are endless, and it's all part of the creativity of the art of moviemaking.
__________________ Gold is the strife of kinsmen, and fire of the flood-tide, and the path of the serpent. (Old Icelandic Fe rune poem)
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