I very much agree with Paradigm and Draugluin and am going to throw in another voice of support for the movies. It's very easy to have a crack at them and they're by no means perfect but I think that PJ did far more good than bad; he reframed the story of the Hobbit that we all know and love through a lens far more akin to LOTR.
There's a lot I disagree with in the thread and a lot I agree with but I'm going to pick up on some of, IMO, the more important points,
Moj wrote:
We could have used some more character development for the dwarves. Some of them don't even have any lines, for crying out loud.
Dikey wrote:
The Dwarves
Oh boy. Do you realize that some of them don't even have lines? Nori doesn't say a word, Bombur has ONE WORD in three movies. I am a LOTR fan. But if I weren't I would have never cared about them. Why should anyone bother to learn their names?
Draugluin wrote:
The overall story is exactly the same as Tolkien, and the fact that very few of the dwarves had any personality is VERY in keeping with Tolkien. The only ones in the book who had personalities were Thorin, Balin and MAYBE Dori and Bombur, but the latter 2 were only because they were given specific physical characteristics, namely strength and fatness.
I completely agree with Draugluin on this, people are very quick to complain about the lack of characterisation in the films but the simple fact is the characterisation in the films is vastly, VASTLY, better than in the books. The dwarves in the books are a bunch of indentikit cowards, constantly getting captured and sending Bilbo into danger rather than going themselves. PJ transforms them into a Heroic Company right from the off (look at the difference in how the Troll-shaws scene plays out in the films compared to the book), allowing you to get behind them and making them far more likeable. I would defy most people to say anything distinctive about any of the dwarves in the book beyond Thorin. I think most people would say Fili and Kili are the young ones, Balin the old one and Bombur the fat one. That's it. Hardly great character development. There is literally nothing to distinguish the others in the book, in the films I would say that Thorin, Fili, Kili, Balin, Dwlain and Bofur all get pretty well drawn and the rest of them can at least be distinguished by their appearance. As for the comment about them not having lines, it's only Bombur that doesn't speak in the films (although just wait for the extend edition!) and I'm pretty sure that there are several of the company that don't have a single line in the book. Could some of the dwarves use a bit more screen time instead of Leggy, Tauriel, Alfrid etc.? Yes, of course, but they are still much better developed than the books.
Elladan & Elrohir wrote:
With the Hobbit films though, PJ openly mocks the books (and Tolkien) Elladan & Elrohir
Respectfully I have to disagree with this, I think all the behind-the-scenes docs show that these films were made with the same kind of love and enthusiasm that the LOTR ones were and I certainly don't don't see a single point where you could say that the books or Tolkien were mocked. Could you give some examples? I'd be curious to know which parts you mean.
Elladan & Elrohir wrote:
When the Return of the King finished, people just sat in their seats in the cinema and where dumbfounded. With the Battle of the Five Armies, people just got up or sat on texting on their phones.Elladan & Elrohir
Again, I have to disagree, I saw BOTFA 5 times at the cinema and each time it ended I sat through the credits with a deeply melancholy but deeply satisfied smile on my face. That was also my experience of of the people I went with and much of the crowd, I certainly didn't notice any particularly negative reactions. Billy Boyd's The Last Goodbye was absolutely perfect and I thought TBOTFA brought the trilogy to a wonderful close as well as immediately making me want to go and watch Fellowship again.
Goldman25 wrote:
The side-story with the White Council doesn't really have an ending - Galadriel, Elrond and Saruman show up, Sauron runs away, and Saruman tells them to leave Sauron to him. There needed to be one more scene, showing Saruman catching Sauron, and being corrupted. Maybe have him finding the palantir and it corrupting him?
I liked that they didn't show his corruption, they've made no secret of the fact that they were positioning the Hobbit so that, in years to come, new viewers will watch the films in chronological order rather than the order they were filmed. Not showing Saruman's corruption will make Fellowship all the more powerful; when Gandalf goes to see Saruman you will now know who he is and know that he's a good guy, his betrayal should have more weight. If you knew that he had been corrupted then all of the tension and surprise of that scene would be lost. That said, I do think he'll find the Palantir in the extended edition, there have been various clues dropped about and I'm 99% certain that the statue in the middle of the courtyard is holding a petrified Palantir. I think in an extended Dol Guldur sequence we'll see Saruman find it and that will set up him having a Palantir without giving away that he's going to be a traitor.
So yeah, all in all I think there's a lot to love in these films and people are far too quick to criticise the bad instead of praising the good.They're obviously not perfect, I loved AUJ because it felt like Fellowship to me, it felt very real, very physical and tonally spot-on, in contrast, BOTFA felt too dependent on CGI. I loved the scenes in Dale with the laketowners against the orcs because everything was real, there was a real set, you could see that the orcs were guys in suits and there was a very visceral, Amon-Hen feel to the whole thing. it's far easier to accept the odd shot of a CGI troll when everything else around it is real and it this sequence felt very similar to the battles in TTT and ROTK.
By contrast, the battle on the plain in front of Erebor just doesn't look real, there are multiple close-up shots that just seem to be ranks upon ranks of CGI elves, dwarves and orcs fighting each other. Everything looks a little too shiny and it doesn't feel real, those sequences really didn't work for me and I found it particularly hard to differenciate between the shiny silver dwarves and the shiny silver orcs. I just watched the behind the scenes features on the BOTFA DVD and there's a great little sequence where a whole bunch of dwarves are scrapping with a whole bunch or suited up orcs with severed heads on their backs. I haven't seen the film since the DVD release but I don't recall these guys appearing anywhere in the battle and it would be a shame if they were dropped in favour of all CGI versions, maybe they were deemed to gruesome and will make a reappearance in the extended edition.
Ultimately, I think there's tons to love in the trilogy and I'm thoroughly glad they made it, we've had another 3 years of SBG development with a new ruleset, a huge, gorgeous range of new models and we've had another 3 Christmases in Middle-Earth. I will be very sad next Christmas when there's no new movie and am very grateful to PJ and all the cast and crew for making another 3 Middle-Earth films that I love, that just aren't quite as good as the first 3 Middle-Earht films I love