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Duane 3NE 2NR wrote: I didnt expect as much time to be spent on the council at Rivendell but I realise that Jackson is building the story more for the cohesion into LOTR than there was in the actual Hobbit book.
Mr. Go Slow wrote:Seriously, the 1st hour is a bunch of dwarves singing in a room? Did we watch the same movie?
...
The Hobbit in all fairness seems geared towards 5 year old's, whom I could easily envision embracing that movie. Not for me at all ...
I havent seen Skyfall or Dark Knight RisesMr. Go Slow wrote:Duane 3NE 2NR wrote:LOL seriously?Mr. Go Slow wrote:Saw it last night ... Worst POS I've seen all year.
Seriously, the 1st hour is a bunch of dwarves singing in a room? Did we watch the same movie?
Not recommended, not worth the money.
that's like complaining that that Transformers was about a bunch of big talking robots that keep fighting and changing into vehicles.
The Hobbit book had ALOT more songs and singing than that.
Well Thank God I missed that ... Sorry was not my idea of fun and big talking robots that keep fighting and changing into vehicles is as least appealing to my destructive nature ...
The Hobbit in all fairness seems geared towards 5 year old's, whom I could easily envision embracing that movie. Not for me at all ...
If you like Game of Thrones, Misfits, Homeland (all comparable *arguably* due to being epic series of their own accord) You will probably hate The Hobbit like I did.
Opinions are like arseholes ... Well all have one.
I should mention I also hated the last Batman movie and Skyfall ... Both rubbish.
tolkienlibrary.com wrote:"The Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien
The best book to get introduced to Middle-earth is The Hobbit, an easy and lighthearted fantasy story, which Tolkien wrote first, without having much back-story and historical details in mind. In fact it was a story he told to his children as a bedtime story; and only because of Tolkien's children pointing out mistakes, Tolkien decided to write down the tale in the early 1930s. It was eventually published because he lent it to to some people outside of the family, including C.S. Lewis,"
"The Lord of the Ring by J.R.R. Tolkien
The Lord of the Rings is the natural sequel of The Hobbit and completes this story. However in this book it is clear that Tolkien's mind was already on the vast mythologies and history behind this tale and this shines through the complete book. It can be argued that Tolkien only wrote this book because of the demand for more 'hobbit tales' and that he actually longed to write The Silmarillion. The tone of this book is different and is much less a children story than The Hobbit."
MG Man wrote:Lol easy to spot the folks who never read the book
nemisis wrote:@ rookie did you read LOTR btw and if you did before or after you saw the movie?
MG Man wrote:If you read the book, then you would have known not to bother seeing it
Mr. Go Slow wrote:. . .I'm sorry but I think I'm missing something. Shouldn't the film stand on it's own?. . .
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