The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003)

by Sassy 26 Replies latest social entertainment

  • luna
    luna

    SOOO am going to see this. Midnight showing tues night, hopefully. If not, then for sure after work on Wednesday. I flippen LOVE these movies.

    And yes, Aragorn is HOT HOT HOT....

    Plus, I love Eowyn's role. That would be SO much fun to play...especially in this coming movie. (yes, i've read the books)

    Luna

  • Lady Lee
    Lady Lee

    Anxiously waiting here in Canada for the film to come out.

    After I saw part I I was so ticked off. I didn't realize it was a movie in parts. Hubby kept laughing at me because I was so angry. I wanted MORE and I didn't want to wait 2 years for it.

    So I went home and read the book. I had tried to read it before but couldn't get into it. But after... I think I read the whole thing in a week.

    More More More soon soon soon

    We already decided we will wait for the boxed set before buying the DVD

    Um I just switched to DVD in Oct.

  • Sassy
    Sassy

    your hooked just like everyone else..

    well I just found out it is over three hours!!!! Boy am I going to be tired the next day!!!

    http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=529&ncid=529&e=6&u=/ap/20031211/ap_en_mo/film_review_lord_of_the_rings_4

    AP: Final 'Rings' Has Many Endings AP
    Thu Dec 11, 2:56 PM ET
    Add Entertainment - AP to My Yahoo!

    By DAVID GERMAIN, AP Movie Writer

    With "The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King," Peter Jackson ( news ) delivers a decent ending to his fantasy trilogy ? actually, about 12 endings. Unable to settle on a finale among the many farewells and epilogues in J.R.R. Tolkien's text, director Jackson decided to use them all.

    The result is an endless parade of false endings that will give you a great lower back workout as you rise from your theater seat thinking things are finally over, then settle back in for the next prolonged addendum.

    This is the main flaw to an otherwise rousing, action-packed closing chapter that began with 2001's "The Fellowship of the Ring" and continued with last year's "The Two Towers." The nine-hour theatrical epic (more like 11 hours once the extended home-video version of all three flicks are out) winds up petering out in anticlimactic torpor.

    Jackson does scale back greatly on the aftermath of the final good-against-evil battle, yet he preserves the main events to keep die-hard Tolkien fans happy.

    So viewers are treated in some detail to such comparatively passive sequences as the survivors' return home; the ascension of human warrior Aragorn (Viggo Mortensen ( news )) to the throne and his wedding to Elf hottie Arwen (Liv Tyler ( news )); the mystical fate of runty Hobbits Frodo (Elijah Wood ( news )) and Bilbo (Ian Holm ( news )), woolly wizard Gandalf (Ian McKellen ( news )) and Elf top dogs Galadriel (Cate Blanchett ( news )) and Elrond (Hugo Weaving ( news )); and the domestic bliss of Frodo's Man Friday, Sam (Sean Astin ( news )).

    That baggage makes "Return of the King" the longest of the trilogy by far, clocking in at 3 hours, 20 minutes.

    There's far too much cool-down time for casual viewers but probably not enough to satisfy the hard-core Tolkien legions. So why not put Blanchett back in voice-over mode, let her narrate a Reader's Digest condensed montage of Jackson's interminable ending, and save the elongated conclusion for the extended home-video cut?

    The movie opens with a flashback explaining how Smeagol (Andy Serkis) came to possess his "precious," the nasty ring of ultimate evil, and the first dark deeds that began transforming him into wizened computer-crafted fiend Gollum.

    Then the action picks up where "Two Towers" left off, with Gollum plotting to regain his precious as Frodo and Sam trek toward Mount Doom, where they must destroy the ring to keep dark lord Sauron from enslaving Middle-earth.

    Meantime, Aragorn, Gandalf and the gang square off against Sauron's plug-ugly minions.

    If you're looking for bigger and better battles than the first two chapters, "Return of the King" comes through. Jackson and his New Zealand crew, which filmed all three movies simultaneously, pile computer-generated props, sets and creatures as high as a Nazgul's eye to create the colossal combat scenes.

    Bat-faced orcs ride gargantuan elephants into battle against humans on horseback. The adversaries engage in a very cool catapult duel that brings mountains of broken castle stone down on the warriors. Aragorn and pals Legolas the Elf (Orlando Bloom ( news )) and Gimli the Dwarf (John Rhys-Davies ( news )) charge into the fray at the head of a ghastly ghost army.

    Frodo's battle with a giant spider ? an encounter Tolkien placed at the end of "Two Towers" but which Jackson transplants to "Return of the King" ? is one of the creepiest computer-animated sequences ever produced.

    Like "Two Towers," "Return of the King" is more a bruising action movie than "Fellowship of the Ring," the best of the trilogy on the strength of the intimate interplay among its misfit heroes.

    Hobbits Merry (Dominic Monaghan ( news )) and Pippin (Billy Boyd ( news )) again play larger roles, but much of the original fellowship members are relegated to prancing in larger-than-life mode. Secondary characters step up to provide the final film's most intriguing interpersonal drama.

    Faramir (David Wenham ( news )), brother of the slain Boromir (Sean Bean ( news )), vainly struggles to gain the respect of his contemptible father, Denethor (John Noble). (If you have the chance, first watch the extended version of "The Two Towers," which includes an engaging flashback that adds texture to Faramir and Boromir's relationship with dear old dad).

    While Tyler's Arwen and Blanchett's Galadriel again are mere window-dressing, Miranda Otto ( news )'s Eowyn soars to provide the most forceful female presence in the entire trilogy and arguably the strongest single moment in "Return of the King."

    Christopher Lee ( news )'s evil wizard Saruman unfortunately is absent, though no doubt he'll be back in the extended home-video version. Though the trilogy's done, Tolkien fans still can look forward to that precious longer cut next fall.

    "The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King," a New Line release, is rated PG-13 for intense epic battle sequences and frightening images. Running time: 200 minutes. Three stars out of four.

  • NeonMadman
    NeonMadman

    I have a long-standing tradition, probably 20 years or so, of meeting with some friends on Xmas day for Chinese food and a movie. This goes back to when all of us were JW's - none of us are now. I'll be driving to Massachusetts on Dec. 25 to continue the tradition, and the movie of choice this year will be LOTR-ROTK.

  • Doubtfully Yours
    Doubtfully Yours

    Hi y'all!

    I'm checking out this moving over the weekend too! With or without hubby, and I already told him so. He changed the topic when I mentioned it.

    I've liked the 2 previous ones. Hope I like this one too!

    DY

  • Descender
    Descender

    I look at rottentomatoes.com to see how the newest upcoming movies rate, and so far, The Return of the King is pulling in 100% good reviews. That will probably change a bit over the upcoming weeks, but the other two LoTR movies got 94% and 98% good reviews. That's quite a feat for any movie, including independent and art films, to get that high of reviews.

    This one is going to be a must see. It's one of those movies that if I were still a young JW, I would have been praying for Armagedon to be delayed at least long enough for me to see this cool film. Anyone else ever do that?

  • Doubtfully Yours
    Doubtfully Yours

    Just checked and the movie won't be out 'til the 17th, so I guess it'll be next week I'll get to see it.

    DY

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