Dr Grant wrote:
He was talking about not worrying about what the book fans (a relatively small portion of the audience) think when making changes to the source text to improve the story and he is quite, quite right.
We must respectfully disagree. With the Lord of the Rings, PJ at least tried to appease many of the original book fans (although he lost many). With the Hobbit, he hasn't been so loving. The book fans may be a "small" minority, but they are the most loyal and devoted to Middle-earth. All we asked for is that he stuck to the spirit of Middle-earth, and stayed in line with Tolkien's writings (including the material outside the Hobbit). His changes within this frame are improvements, but his own changes that have nothing to do with Tolkien are nonsense. It's the books that give these stories their power. If some of the fans only like the films because of PJ and his style and additions, then there are hundreds of modern movies just like that that are much better made.
Dr Grant wrote:
Legolas absolutely should have been there, if Tolkien and written the Hobbit after The Lord of the Rings then Legolas would have been in it. I have no issue with Leggy in Mirkwood (I would've had more issue if he wasn't there to be honest) and the barrel escape scene was a great action set-piece. All that said, I could have done without him going to Laketown, it would have been cool to see the 4 dwarves fight off the orcs rather than being saved by elves. I also would have been fine with him then turning up at TBOTFA (makes sense again) but I do wish he'd had a smaller role in the climx, he should have been scrapping with Thranduil in Dale and I would have much rather seen Fili, Kili, Dain or Beorn kill Bolg.
I said before that the good that PJ's done to the story is often overlooked in favour of the perceived bad. This is true of the wider story as a whole. Paradigm wrote a great post about how the presence of Azog improves the story but the Arkenstone thread is also hugely improved in the films. Make no mistake about it, the story in the book does not make sense. In the book, Thorin and Gandalf are heading to the mountain with 12 dwarves to 'get their treasure back', they need a burglar for this for reasons that are never explained in the slightest. Their plan is to sneak though the secret door and then what? Kill Smaug? Take the treasure back piece by piece? It's never explained and it's a stupid, stupid plan.
In the films this is fixed entirely, the plan is to go to the mountain, steal the Arkenstone (hence why they need a burglar who won't smell like dwarf) and then leave the mountain. They will then unite the armies of the dwarves, march on Erebor in force and attempt to retake it. It makes SO much more sense than the book and is an absolutely brilliant piece of adaptation on the film maker's part.
Whatever issues you might have with elves and CGI and everything else, I can't believe that anyone could argue that the story, motivations and character development have not been VASTLY improved in the films..
We have already said above that we agree with many of PJ's changes that follow Tolkien's works. Legolas at Mirkwood, The White Council, making the Arkenstone more important to the Quest, giving the Dwarves a better plan against Smaug, all these are great improvements! It's PJ's own unnecessary changes that are outside of and contradict Tolkien's Middle-earth and story that we are complaining about.
Dr Grant wrote:
Again I have to utterly disagree, I don't get this feeling at all from either the films or the behind the scenes material. The simple fact is that PJ and Co HAD to make bigger changes to The Hobbit to make it work for film. However much we all love the book, a 100% faithful live-action adaptation of the Hobbit would have been a horrible, horrible mess.
A 100% faithful adaptation may indeed have been boring, which was why PJ's idea to delve into the Appendices was good. Tolkien would have wished it. The idea was to give us the bigger picture that Tolkien had for the Hobbit after he wrote the Lord of the Rings. PJ's bigger changes though have nothing to do with Tolkien, and in our opinion make an even more horrible mess!
Dr Grant wrote:
If these are the best examples of your claims above then they're doing little to persuade me. The dwarves weren't marginalised (relative to the book), Saruman simply accuses Radagast of eating mushrooms, we never see it. And even if Raddy did eat mushrooms, Hobbits eat mushrooms in the movies, does this mean PJ was making a joke of the books then? Oh, no, because the books make it very clear that mushrooms are a staple of the Middle-Earth diet. Yes Kili falls in love with Tauriel, but then Gimli falls in love with Galadriel.
And even if you think that these things are 'making a joke' of the book and 'don't belong in Tolkien's Middle-Earth' are you sure? This is the Middle-Earth in which the trolls talking purse catchess Bilbo and in which Beorn's dogs walk in on their hind legs and lay the table…is the film trilogy really more absurd than either of those things?!?!
Once again, Radagast is "portrayed" as a drug addicted hippy, even if the mushrooms are not the direct cause. This was not how the wise wizards were imagined by Tolkien. Also, we meant the whole Tauriel-Kili relationship. This kind of love plot smacks too much of politically-correct multi-racialism etc. and has no place in Middle-earth.
There is a wide deference between a talking purse and walking animals and PJ's additions. These things are classic fairytale paraphernalia, and are not like the popish, ridiculous, and politically correct additions of PJ's. There is a very different "spirit" between these additions. Tolkien's were made before he took on the more serious saga like tone of the Lord of the Rings. The Hobbit was written as a children's story. PJ tries to keep this saga style from the Lord of the Rings but also combine it with downright modern movie elements and his own crazy ideas of what Middle-earth is like. The result are films that seem like they are making fun of what Tolkien intended (even for the children's tone of The Hobbit). If PJ wanted to stick to the more innocent attitude of the children's story, then why skip out the walking farm animals and talking purse and instead add things for the modern popcorn munchers? There are worlds of difference between intelligent talking crows, farm animals that serve their master, a talking purse, and a stretched love relationship that follows the recipe for modern Hollywood, together with manga-styled ridiculous action, and a guy that runs around with pecuniary breasts. There's a big difference between Trolls talking in a Cockney accent, (which has a fairytale charm about it) and dwarves using vulgar British slang (which has nothing Tolkien about it). Sorry, but the Hobbit films fail both as an epic saga and a children's story, never mind as Tolkien's stories!
Dr Grant wrote:
This isn't true, the battle wasn't refilled, Arwen was just digitally erased.
We must have heard PJ wrong on the Documentaries. We do think we remember him having to re -film some scenes though. Nevertheless, couldn't PJ at least digitally remove his nonsense in the Hobbit films?
Dr Grant wrote:
But this is absolutely true of the dwarves in the film too! You can't have it both ways! You can't say "the dwarves in the films didn't get enough screen time and character development" and then say "In the book they were just a collective of dwarves who were still main characters". It's exactly the same in the films and the book, there is a large group of 12 dwarves following Thorin around as a collective and we don't get to know most of them particularly well. However, we get to know them ALL far FAR better in the films than we do in the book.
Forgive us if we have not been clear in explaining what we mean. We are not contradicting ourselves when we say that the dwarves are a collective of silent clones in the book and then complain of lack of screen time and character development in the films. PJ's job was to take the Hobbit and expand and deepen it (within the limitations of Tolkien's writings) for the big screen. PJ chose to expand the dwarves' individual characters, which was an awesome idea! When you expand a story however, you need to do so proportionally. You cannot overly expand characters like Legolas (who have no real part to play in the Hobbit) and not also majorly expand on The Company. In proportion to the part they play in the book, the dwarves are marginalized in the films! Their individual roles are most definitely better than in the book (vastly better!), but they are no longer as important as they should be. Rather keep them clones but don't replace them by other characters!
We are not trying to persuade you or force you to agree with us. We are just mentioning the things that we personally disliked! We respect and understand your opinion. Please forgive us if we ever sound like we are forcing you to our view of Middle-earth, or that our way is the only way to interpret Tolkien intentions. We may be forced to sound like that to explain ourselves plainly in these arguments, but its not our intention. Tolkien is so popular because so many different people have come to love his world in different ways.
Elladan & Elrohir