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Just saw the Hobbit

And it made me want to play Lotro again, specifically a sword and staff loremaster

 

Best MMO experiences : EQ(PvE), DAoC(PvP), WoW(total package) LOTRO (worldfeel) GW2 (Artstyle and animations and worlddesign) SWTOR (Story immersion) TSW (story) ESO (character advancement)

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Comments

  • grimalgrimal Member UncommonPosts: 2,935
    Originally posted by Lord.Bachus

    And it made me want to play Lotro again, specifically a sword and staff loremaster

     

    Interesting.

    Is it as bloated as a lot of the critics are complaining? (the movie, not the game..lol)

  • Po_ggPo_gg Member EpicPosts: 5,749
    Originally posted by Lord.Bachus

    And it made me want to play Lotro again, specifically a sword and staff loremaster

     

    Strange... you saw the protagonist hobbit burglar (ok, with a bunch of dwarves, a few elves and a wizard with a staff and Glamdring), and yet you don't wanna play a hobbit burglar, you'd pick an LM. Despite Gandalf specifically said: do not take him for some conjurer of cheap tricks :)

  • Sevenstar61Sevenstar61 Member UncommonPosts: 1,686
    I got ticket to see Hobbit on Friday. I don't think though it will make me want to go back and play LOTRO... I might though undust my LOTR extended DVDs and watch them again :)


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  • PsalmsPsalms Member UncommonPosts: 137

    I really hope they were careful with this movie.

    This book was so integral to me as a kid. It kindled my interest to read so much so that I cant attribute my current reading voracity to anything other than that furry footed Bilbo Baggins.

  • ThelowThelow Member Posts: 149
    Originally posted by Lord.Bachus

    And it made me want to play Lotro again, specifically a sword and staff loremaster

     

    Same happened to me. Tho I dont want to play specifically loremaster

  • strangiato2112strangiato2112 Member CommonPosts: 1,538
    Originally posted by grimal
    Originally posted by Lord.Bachus

    And it made me want to play Lotro again, specifically a sword and staff loremaster

     

    Interesting.

    Is it as bloated as a lot of the critics are complaining? (the movie, not the game..lol)

    Its funny, I hear everyone criticizing Jackson for making it three movies, saying it was a cash grab.

    I dont see it as a cash grab at all.  He just loves filming this shit.  Self-indulgent?  Yes.  Greedy?  Not in the least.

     

    I havent seen it yet but from reading reviews it seems that the start is very, very slow.  The dinner scene takes forever apparently.  Once they set out on the road it picks up though.

  • KanylKanyl Member UncommonPosts: 252
    Haha same here! As soon as I got home from the cinema, I launched LotRO and my love to it went from 30-80%! I even bought the trilogy on BlueRay and can't do anything, beside listening to the music from the movie and thinking about the Lord of the Ring universe....kinda sick, but I am more happy than ever! :)
  • FoomerangFoomerang Member UncommonPosts: 5,628


    Originally posted by strangiato2112
    Originally posted by grimal Originally posted by Lord.Bachus And it made me want to play Lotro again, specifically a sword and staff loremaster  
    Interesting. Is it as bloated as a lot of the critics are complaining? (the movie, not the game..lol)
    Its funny, I hear everyone criticizing Jackson for making it three movies, saying it was a cash grab.

    I dont see it as a cash grab at all.  He just loves filming this shit.  Self-indulgent?  Yes.  Greedy?  Not in the least.

     

    I havent seen it yet but from reading reviews it seems that the start is very, very slow.  The dinner scene takes forever apparently.  Once they set out on the road it picks up though.


    Yeah its a slow start and its a long ass movie. Bit damn if its not the most immersive and visually stunning movie ive ever seen. The 3d makes every other 3d movie look like a gimmick. It is straight up epic movie magic

  • Sevenstar61Sevenstar61 Member UncommonPosts: 1,686

    I saw the movie today. It was fun and it was pretty much very tue to the book. I was impressed. This is Tolkien book lover dream come true. It's sort of slow pace but if you love the book, you will love it. Music is mostly re-made from LOTR so it's awesome. Thorin is great :) - very good pick. I got lucky LOL because the projector crashed while watching previews and we had 10 minutes break... they gave us passes for this inconvenience, so I think I am going to see Hobbit one more time after holidays :)

     

    The dinner scene is one of the best, simply hilarious, I was LOL... poor Bilbo :)


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  • oakthornnoakthornn Member UncommonPosts: 863
    I saw the movie, ABSOLUTELY LOVED IT, and now I got that itch to play LOTRO again. :P  

    Rallithon Oakthornn
    (Retired Heirophant of the 60th season)

  • DasterdlyDasterdly Member Posts: 30

    Good but not great.  If you are going into this expecting a true visual representation of the book, you will be dissappointed.  There are way to many scenes and characters that will make you ask yourself if you are mis-remembering stuff.  Let me assure you that no, you are not.  Jackson has taken a TON of liberties with this production.  There are odd filler sequences, some extended silliness that was unneccessarry, and oddly represented characters that at times feel out of place.  I wont get into spoilers or discuss specifics as I do not want to ruin someone else's experience however. 

    I agree with an earlier assesment that the films are over indulgent.  Cash grab?  I dunno...  but certainly over indulging Jackson's ego.  That said, it is well worth the price of admission.  The film is available in something like 6 different formats from IMAX, to 3D, to High Frame Rate, to standard, etc.  I watched the standard format after reading so many negative reviews on the high frame rate offering and I felt it was a perfect format for me.

    Cinematically, it is Jackson's Middle Earth.  It is lush and beautiful.. the camera work is excellent, and the whole production is vibrant. Despite this, I felt it lacked the epic feeling of the LotR trilogy.  While I do not want to go so far as to say my childhood has been sulied I can admit that this film did not pull me in the way I expected it too, the way LotR did. 

  • zyklonianzyklonian Member UncommonPosts: 51
    there was a GW2 add during the previews at my local theater.  makes me wondewr why turbine/WB did not capitalize on it
  • zyklonianzyklonian Member UncommonPosts: 51
    Originally posted by Dasterdly

    Good but not great.  If you are going into this expecting a true visual representation of the book, you will be dissappointed.  There are way to many scenes and characters that will make you ask yourself if you are mis-remembering stuff.  Let me assure you that no, you are not.  Jackson has taken a TON of liberties with this production.  There are odd filler sequences, some extended silliness that was unneccessarry, and oddly represented characters that at times feel out of place.  I wont get into spoilers or discuss specifics as I do not want to ruin someone else's experience however. 

    I agree with an earlier assesment that the films are over indulgent.  Cash grab?  I dunno...  but certainly over indulging Jackson's ego.  That said, it is well worth the price of admission.  The film is available in something like 6 different formats from IMAX, to 3D, to High Frame Rate, to standard, etc.  I watched the standard format after reading so many negative reviews on the high frame rate offering and I felt it was a perfect format for me.

    Cinematically, it is Jackson's Middle Earth.  It is lush and beautiful.. the camera work is excellent, and the whole production is vibrant. Despite this, I felt it lacked the epic feeling of the LotR trilogy.  While I do not want to go so far as to say my childhood has been sulied I can admit that this film did not pull me in the way I expected it too, the way LotR did. 

    tolkien wrote the hobbit for his kids so it was never intended to be as serious as lotr

  • TheLizardbonesTheLizardbones Member CommonPosts: 10,910

    I found a couple elements to be so obviously meant to be tied into some sort of merchandising, that I could not focus on the movie for thinking about those individual elements. I was jarring to say the least.

    I know people who have been waiting for the movie for twenty years, and that was not the movie they were waiting for.

    I can not remember winning or losing a single debate on the internet.

  • BossalinieBossalinie Member UncommonPosts: 724
    Originally posted by zyklonian
    Originally posted by Dasterdly

    Good but not great.  If you are going into this expecting a true visual representation of the book, you will be dissappointed.  There are way to many scenes and characters that will make you ask yourself if you are mis-remembering stuff.  Let me assure you that no, you are not.  Jackson has taken a TON of liberties with this production.  There are odd filler sequences, some extended silliness that was unneccessarry, and oddly represented characters that at times feel out of place.  I wont get into spoilers or discuss specifics as I do not want to ruin someone else's experience however. 

    I agree with an earlier assesment that the films are over indulgent.  Cash grab?  I dunno...  but certainly over indulging Jackson's ego.  That said, it is well worth the price of admission.  The film is available in something like 6 different formats from IMAX, to 3D, to High Frame Rate, to standard, etc.  I watched the standard format after reading so many negative reviews on the high frame rate offering and I felt it was a perfect format for me.

    Cinematically, it is Jackson's Middle Earth.  It is lush and beautiful.. the camera work is excellent, and the whole production is vibrant. Despite this, I felt it lacked the epic feeling of the LotR trilogy.  While I do not want to go so far as to say my childhood has been sulied I can admit that this film did not pull me in the way I expected it too, the way LotR did. 

    tolkien wrote the hobbit for his kids so it was never intended to be as serious as lotr

    Reminds me of another director who made trilogy for his kids...

  • AlcuinAlcuin Member UncommonPosts: 331

    Jackson took artistic liscense a bit too far for my taste.  

    The movie was good, but I would have liked to see more acurate representations of some major scenes.  Good representation of the world.

    A lot of background material was brought to life.   What was sacrificed was the dwarves' individuality.  Not that they had much anyway, but...

    I have the same feeling that I had when LOTR was made into a movie.  It's like when your favorite underground band has a major radio hit and suddenly there are all these new fans around telling you how great the band is.   It's hard to convey that you've known it all along.  It's not a bad thing.  it's just the way it is. 

     

    There was a group of us who read the book because we were fantasy fans- or even moreso- this was the book that made us fantasy fans. 

    It's what got me playing D & D. 

    It turned me from a kid who hated reading into an avid reader.   

    The fact that this site exists can be attributed to the book, I think.

    So cheers to a bygone era and brace yourselves for the further commercialization of Middle Earth. 

    It's not a bad thing.  it's just the way it is.

     

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  • IkedaIkeda Member RarePosts: 2,751

    Here are my pro's and cons:

    Con's: 

    3 hrs was a bit long.

    There are simply too many dwarves.  Not his fault.  Each dwarf, luckily, had a different style about them but minus Thorin, Kili, Bofur, and Bombur I couldn't tell you who was who.

    Rivendell was an unnecessary.  Not really in the book (see Pro below)

    Azoz was an interesting liberty taken.  But once again, it's not really true to the book.  (see Pro below)

    The FREAKIN King of the Eagles didn't talk again!  GRRRRRRRR

    Some of the visuals in 3D were a let down.  The CGI almost took away from where the originals had some REALLY good makeup.  I think if they'd have shot the makeup, it'd look fake so they went more heavy CG but some of the distinctiveness of the creatures in LOTR was lost.

    That misty mountains song being played over and over and over and over and over and over.  Did they not see the running LOTR jokes with the LOTR version of the song playing constantly?

    Pro's:

    I was constantly on the edge watching.  Just when it'd lag, it'd pick back up.

    Witch-King of Angmar.  AWESOME.  (didn't care for Radgast... little too far out there for me)  They needed to explain the big missing gap of Gandalf.  Hard to do in the movie without visual justifications. (i.e. White Council)

    Azoz was hinted to in an appendix (if I recall).  Him being part of the hunting party tracking the dwarves makes more sense in the storyline than in the book.

    The trolls were hilarious.  Moreso than the grunting snarling ones we saw in LOTR.

    The riddle game was incredibly well done.

    Smaug.... nice tease.  I like.

    Some important background.  Anyone else notice we saw Dwarf women?!?!  Success!! They do exist :-)

     

    Finally, next movie we should be seeing Tom Bombadill and Beorn.  Unless they cut them.  That would displease me, especially since they felt the need to add that elven female.

     

  • MarirranyaMarirranya Member Posts: 154

    i wasnt able to watch it last saturday uwaaah~

     

    and i was really looking forward to it too boo =3=

     

    hopefullly after work sometime this week i can sneak it in my sched heh :3

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  • AlBQuirkyAlBQuirky Member EpicPosts: 7,432

    I am skeptical before seeing this. The trilogy covered 3 books, all of them twice as large as The Hobbit. 9+ hours of viewing time. The Hobbit will be 9+ hours long all by itself. That sounds like a lot of filler to me. A LOT. And I am expecting them to leave something out while adding in things that weren't there.

    It seems to be the way of "books to screens" these days. All in the name artistic license.

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  • SuperXero89SuperXero89 Member UncommonPosts: 2,551

    If Turbine's Middle Earth was anywhere near as grand in scale as Peter Jackson's, I'd love ot return to LotRO.

     

     

  • oakthornnoakthornn Member UncommonPosts: 863

    When I first heard the Hobbit was going to be made into a trilogy, I was excited. The LOTR movies left too much stuff out from the books.. Anyway, before seeing the movie, I "KNEW" Jackson would add quite a bit of filler material, especially to explain Gandulf's disappearance to take care of "some necro" problem.. If Jackson did just one movie, I know it would have been rushed and I don't believe it would have been an epic experience. Well, I personally feel the Hobbit was the best middle earth movie, period. And I've watched the Trilogy 69 times!

    It had everything an epic beginning to a trilogy "fantasy" movie should have..  Those of you who read the book 10 times and desperately wanted every scene to be exactly like you imagined it in the book and were butthurt, you really need to chill. The book wasn't that great compared to LOTR.. If Jackson did just one movie based entirely on the book, it would have been a PG rated movie and not have been as epic as the LOTR trilogy..

    I'm happy we finally got to see the brown Wizard, enjoyed visiting Rivendale and seeing Galadriel, Elrond, Saramaun, etc. I know that wasn't in the book but it definitely was a nice adding touch to the movie...

    If all of you just went to see the movie without ever reading The Hobbit, I'm sure your rants and negative comments would be slim to none... 

    That's what I did. I said to myself, at least 30% of the movie will be added fillers so here's what I'm going to do.. I'm gonna pretend I never read the Hobbit, and this version of the Hobbit is just a medieval fantasy movie I hope to enjoy.. And as a medieval fantasy movie, I can honestly say it's the greatest cinematic experience I've ever seen, period.. It had it all, nothing awesome was left out, and if the Hobbit was a trilogy novel, and this was the first book, I'd anxiously pick up the 2nd book like a ninja and begin reading it immediately! That's how good it was..

    Rallithon Oakthornn
    (Retired Heirophant of the 60th season)

  • azzamasinazzamasin Member UncommonPosts: 3,105
    Originally posted by grimal
    Originally posted by Lord.Bachus

    And it made me want to play Lotro again, specifically a sword and staff loremaster

     

    Interesting.

    Is it as bloated as a lot of the critics are complaining? (the movie, not the game..lol)

    Never ever listen to critics.

     

    The movie was a modern master piece in ever sense of the word.  Pete Jackson is a demi-god when it comes to making fantasy movies.

    Sandbox means open world, non-linear gaming PERIOD!

    Subscription Gaming, especially MMO gaming is a Cash grab bigger then the most P2W cash shop!

    Bring Back Exploration and lengthy progression times. RPG's have always been about the Journey not the destination!!!

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  • TheLizardbonesTheLizardbones Member CommonPosts: 10,910


    Originally posted by azzamasin

    Originally posted by grimal

    Originally posted by Lord.Bachus And it made me want to play Lotro again, specifically a sword and staff loremaster  
    Interesting. Is it as bloated as a lot of the critics are complaining? (the movie, not the game..lol)
    Never ever listen to critics.

     

    The movie was a modern master piece in ever sense of the word.  Pete Jackson is a demi-god when it comes to making fantasy movies.



    The movie contains extra stuff, both from the appendixes in the Lord of the Rings, and from Jackson's imagination. The appendixes are fine, Jackson's imagination is not. Even rearranging the events from the story, to end up in the same spot was OK, but the stuff Jackson added was very obviously done for a video game tie-in or to make action figures.

    The story ends up being unfocused and yes, a little too full of information. I wouldn't have used the word, 'bloated', but it fits.

    ** edit **
    If you've never read the book, then the movie probably won't seem bloated, and the extra elements that Jackson added may not seem like bloat.

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  • AutemOxAutemOx Member Posts: 1,704

    I agree that Peter Jackson's heart is in the right place as far as making it three movies.  Otherwise they wouldn't be so long individually, for instance.  Also just watching extra features and listening to him go on about it you can tell he loves it.  I don't like everything he has done with the IP but thats ok, the things I dislike I can understand from a movie making perspective.

    It is true that the hobbit is bloated with side stories, etc.  It's great!  It is sort of like reading a book.  I would have enjoyed it being a non-episodic tv series, ala heroes or lost.  But I suppose production quality is better this way and there are less compromises as a movie triology.  For instance, the sword of truth series was made into a tv show and it came out horrible where as it could have made some good movies.

    So that is where I am coming from; I could sit and watch shit going on in middle earth for days on end and be happy.  I love the immersion...  It is different from, but reminds me of when I once casually read the books.  I love fantasy books.

    That being said, there was one problem I had with the hobbit, and that was the character of radagast.  Much like harry potter destroyed the soul of dumbledores character by making him a grumy old man instead of quirky and kind, the hobbit movie has taken radagast and turned him into something really strange.  They sort of made him the jar jar binks of the movie, mostly there for kids entertainment.  I was sad to see this because although he was barely in the books I remember liking him a lot, or at least the -idea- of him.  Maybe he was a weirdo in the books too and I chose to ignore it... I dunno.

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  • Entris38Entris38 Member UncommonPosts: 401
    I felt Jackson did an amazing job with the first movie, there were some inaccuracies, and he did fill in some of the back story. I am glad they touched on the backstory of the necro, for it was barely mentioned in the book(only at the end, in explaining Gandalf's mysterious disappearance). I hope they expand on the necro story, I am not sure if  in Christophers writings, if it was covered or not. Christopher apparently had many side stories/fillers....though I have never read any of them.
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