Wired's LOTR III Tech Breakdown 419
rjjm writes "Interesting little logistics piece in Wired about the technology WETA used for for The Return of the King." Ya know, now that the Matrix hype vanished into nowhere, I'm glad the LotR hype is gearing up. I think this one will earn it.
technoglogy (Score:2, Funny)
Re:technoglogy (Score:5, Funny)
trixie technoglogy, we hates it...
Re:technoglogy (Score:3, Funny)
Vanished? (Score:4, Funny)
I don't think that it just vanished... it turned into something [boxofficereport.com].
Power at your fingertips (Score:3, Funny)
Then all I need is an AI to make up for my lack of skill...
Re:Power at your fingertips (Score:5, Funny)
The saddest thing is that we will need that much power just to run Windows2009 and Doom5
Re:Power at your fingertips (Score:5, Funny)
I think you meant: Windows 2009 Personal-and-Home-for-Middle-class-Income-Families Edition..... and Doom3.
earning it's hype (Score:5, Insightful)
Most likely ROTK will not live up to the hype until the extended edition comes out.
And I speak from the experience of two extended editions of the other two films that are both superior to the theatrical releases
Re: earning it's hype (Score:5, Interesting)
From the standpoint of the movies, the Saruman plot is finished, over, and done with. The seven minute scene you refer to is NOT important to the overall plot of the move: getting the ring to Mordor. You can argue all you want, but I remember hearing the same things when people complained about the removal of Tom from the Fellowship. But that hardly ruined the film.
While I agree that the extended editions are much, much better than the theatrical release, ROTK will still be a really damn good movie.
As Fran says in the TT extended edition DVD, this is one group of fants interpretation of the LotR. I never expected a blow by blow account of the retelling. Indeed, one of the scenes I missed (the one with Radagast) was never even brought up!
Put another way, if the books had never been written, and LotR had been simply a movie without a book, would that make a difference. Yes, it would. So rather than judge the movie for what they had to leave out, but rather, for what they put into the movie.
Re: earning it's hype (Score:5, Insightful)
Lord of the Rings is not like other books. The greatness of the book cannot be distilled into a simple plot of ring is found, ring journeys, ring is destroyed. The book is an epic tale with multiple plot lines, and MUST be taken in as an overall story. This book is the progenitor of the fantasy genre, and those of us who loved the book long before the movies were even on the drawing board recognize the overall importance of it in its entirety. If you consider getting the ring to Mordor to be the most important part of LotR, you just don't understand it at all.
Re: earning it's hype (Score:5, Insightful)
And no, it doesn't have to be taken in as an overall story. You don't have to have it all in there verbatim. You want that? Go read the book again. It doesn't have to be transcribed scene for scene, word for word, for the *point* of the story to be made.
The greatness of the book is shown in the craftsmanship of the props and sets and everything else on the screen.
Re: earning it's hype (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes, the real power of the books comes from the completeness of the world Tolkien created, and Peter Jackson has brought that world to life perfectly. Sure, i've had some doubts about the parts of the book that have been excised, and I've questioned a few of the character decisions, but throughout it all I've felt the movies have captured the look and feel of the books with deadly accuracy. An
Re: earning it's hype (Score:2)
The movies, IMO gets rid of that water, evaporating it away into the essence.
The story is much better for it.
Re: earning it's hype (Score:3, Funny)
Aw crap. Thanks for the spoiler.
-schussat
Re: earning it's hype (Score:3, Insightful)
I dont have any problems with the scenes he left out... I have a real problem with the ones he put in that dont have anything to do with the original story.
We dont want Aragorn doubting if he wants to be king or not.
We dont want any more Dwarf-tossing jokes
We dont want Faramir to be cruel and aloof.
We dont want any 10 minute long dreamy sequences of Liv Tyler... wait a sec. we DO want
Re: earning it's hype (Score:5, Insightful)
Look, here you have this Ring, this totally evil, corrupting, terrible power, and you go to great lengths to make sure the audience knows about it and that even hobbits can't resist its effects forever (Bilbo). Then along comes this Man, Faramir, brother of corruptible Boromir, whose weakness led to his own death even. Faramir says "Nah, fuck it, I wouldn't even pick it up if it were lying there on the ground"
You've just killed the Ring's power. It's impotent now. Here's this guy who can just shrug it off. He's nothing special, was just introduced. Is *everyone else* in Middle Earth so pants-pissing weak then?
I submit that the Faramir of the book is the flawed character. Surely with all that willpower he would have been greater than he was. Interesting to imagine what might have happened if Faramir *had* been allowed to go to the meeting instead of Boromir, though.
But as for dwarf-tossing, I agree. Toss it. =)
Re: earning it's hype (Score:5, Insightful)
That said, I agree that even with that, he should have been more tempted by the Ring, except after the changes made in the movies with the breaking of the Fellowship. Within the original context of the books, even Aragorn would have been tempted by the Ring to the point that he would eventually succumb, which is why the Fellowship had to be broken in secret. But in the movies, he established that men of pure heart could resist the Ring (temporarily, at least), so the original characterization of Farmir could have stood as is.
Re: earning it's hype (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: earning it's hype (Score:3, Informative)
So is Faramir. The House of Stewards was one of the noblest families of the South Kingdom of Gondor (which is why they were chosen to be the Stewards of the Kings)
Re: earning it's hype (Score:3, Insightful)
Boromir - succumbed early on to the will of the Ring. Led him to his death. He did redeem himself in the end, but he's still dead.
Denethor - I forget exactly why he's a right bastard (need to read the book again, I guess), but he's got some serious personality issues of his own that his Numenorean heritage wasn't able to help him with.
Faramir - same lineage, same bloodline, flesh and blood of the above, but somehow he's a saint who can do no wro
Re: earning it's hype (Score:5, Funny)
Re: earning it's hype (Score:4, Interesting)
If you watch the extended edition of Two Towers, it outlines the tragedy of both Boromir and Faramir very poignantly -- Denethor puts all his faith in Boromir, and shuns Faramir as a failure and a weakling. Faramir desperately wants to "prove his quality" to his father, but doesn't have the opportunity.
Then Boromir goes off and fails, and dies -- and no doubt we will see Denethor saying his lines "why couldn't it have been Faramir?" somewhere in Return of the King.
So now Faramir finds the Ring coming into his possession, and finally has a chance to finish what his brother has started, redeem himself in the eyes of his father, and perhaps save all Gondor and Middle-Earth while he's at it (so he thinks anyway).
No slight intended to the great Professor Tolkien, but I found this much more interesting as a plot than goody-two-shoes Faramir who sits the hobbits down, has a nice chat, and then lets them go. It paints both Boromir and Faramir as wonderfully tragic characters, where in the books I found Boromir a tad unsympathetic and Faramir a trifle dull.
Re: earning it's hype (Score:3, Insightful)
The main problem, I think, is that in a visual medium you have to be reminded physically of a threat as ephemeral as the Ring. In the book it's perfectly workable to say that the Ring is an evil influence and leave it at that; in a series of three-hour films, a general audience is going to need some kind of reminder that it's there. The Ring itself, the center
would have been greater than he was (Score:4, Interesting)
I once heard an interesting tweak on that, and perhaps more true than the original. "Power attracts the corruptible."
Perhaps Faramir really IS as pure as all that. Perhaps he never sought any greatness or position, only to do his best for his people. In that case, any station he has would be purely as a result of people under him pushing him up. Perhaps those of higher station yet were either born to it, or sought it, the latter implying that they are likely corruptible.
Re: earning it's hype (Score:3, Insightful)
Others in LoTR had no problem resisting the Ring. Bombadil. Aragorn. Elrond. Frodo only succumbed after carrying around for over a year under very difficult conditions.
It's just a matter of your quality.
Peter Jackson butchered Faramir and Fanghorn's character in the movie adaptation. Nonetheless, he did a far better job of it than anyone had a right to expect. Andy Serkis deserves an Oscar.
Re: earning it's hype (Score:2)
We dont want Aragorn doubting if he wants to be king or not.
We dont want any more Dwarf-tossing jokes
We dont want Faramir to be cruel and aloof.
I could have done without the Tony Hawk shield slide sceen. I personally felt like it was put in the movie for no better reason than an attempt to appeal to the kiddies. Stuff like that is like having a bucket of cold water dumped over your head. If you had been drawn into the movie, a sceen like that is a quick slap in the face - IMHO.
Re: earning it's hype (Score:3, Insightful)
Yep, and there's no such thing as giant talking tree people, evil magic rings or orcs. What's your point?
agreed [spoilers for the non-readers] (Score:3, Insightful)
By the time he returns up the river with the ships, flag of Gondor flying, he is the king. (goosebumps)
Re: earning it's hype (Score:2)
From the standpoint of the movies, this is true, because the movie is told from a different perspective than the book. The movie is told mainly by an anonymous narrator (but appears to switch from time to time to being told by Galadriel, oddly enough). In the book, the story is told by the Hobbits. This is wh
Re: earning it's hype (Score:2)
however saying beforehand that it will be a goddamn good movie is a bit much
so if you haven't heard anything e
Re: earning it's hype (Score:5, Insightful)
I love the books, I love the movies. but they've GOT to be two different stories. It's just not possible to tell the same story in both print and on screen, because the mediums are so completely different. Imagine The Matrix (the first one, the good one...) as a book. How could you possibly convey the slack-jawed wonder you felt the first time you saw the fight scene with Morpheus and Neo in the dojo with the written word? If it had been a book first, there would have been a lot more pontificating about the nature of reality, and a lot less action, and then when they made the movie, we'd all be here on
That said, the parent poster is right, that the Extended Editions are MUCH better than the theatrical releases. I felt a little disappointed last year after watching The Two Towers in the theatre. Just a few days before, I'd seen the FotR:EE DVD, and TTT just didn't compare. It seemed light on the story and the character development. It was still a good movie, but it didn't seem to hold up to the first one. Flash forward to last week. I bought the Two Towers: EE, and I've already watched it twice. AMAZING. Now, I think it's superior to the first one.
So, that makes me worry a bit for the third movie. I'm sure I'm going to see it in the theatre, think, "it was pretty good," until I get the EE next year, at which time I'll love it. That is, of course, assuming Peter Jackson doesn't completely destroy the ending of the series. First, I'll say that I'm not bashing PJ. I think he's done an amazing job, and it's awfully easy for people to sit on their asses and criticize, but the labor of love that was the making of these films must have required a level of dedication and sacrifice few would understand. However, PJ, PLEASE don't change the end. I don't want a happy hollywood ending. The ending of the books was absolutely fantastic, and there's no reason to change it. Let the world be changed. The elves, the wizards, the ring-bearers, SHOULD go to the West, and leave everyone else behind. It's supposed to be bittersweet. It's supposed to make you realize that when something that horrific happens, things just can't go back to the way they were, and it's not a "there and back again" adventure like the Hobbit.
Oh, and Gimli shouldn't be the comic relief.
The Grey Havens (Score:3, Informative)
The soundtrack titles have already been released and "The Grey Havens" is the last instrumental piece before the credit music. So we can exect the bittersweet sadness of the books ending. I do kind of hope they preserve the last scene of the book though:
[Sam] drew a deep breath. 'Well, I'm back,' he said.
Re:earning it's hype (Score:4, Insightful)
Now there's a corker of an idea! One normal length movie coming out every 6 months for 10 years. Then they can cover the entire book, with nothing at all left out.
It's not so far fetched, how long have we had to wait to get 6 Star Wars movies? And I can remember my mum saying how she used to look forward to the next book coming out, back when Tolkien was first writing them, it's worth waiting for.
Go to it Pete!
Will it really be good? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Will it really be good? (Score:2)
Agreed. The Two Towers was probably the most disappointing film I've seen in the last 10 years. After FotR, I had high hopes for TTT, only to see Peter Jackson make an ass of himself, and trash what had the promise to be an excellent trilogy. I'll go and see RotK, but I'm not expecting much. From the trailers at least, it looks like it won't be quite as dire as TTT. But I'm not ex
Re:Will it really be good? (Score:3, Funny)
So...I take it you didn't see Matrix Revolutions
Re:Will it really be good? (Score:2)
perhaps seeing TTT again might help?
Re:Will it really be good? (Score:2)
That'd be an understatement[1]. Try wholesale plot rewrites (no Huorns, Elven presence at The Hornburg, Aragorn's cliff/warg farce to get more Liv Tyler screen time). Add in wanton character assassination (Faramir, Gilmi and to an extent, Theoden, to name a few of the more obvious ones), and you have departures from the book that are completely unjustified, and for me, signficantly detract from the overall experience. No, they're not justi
Re:Will it really be good? (Score:2)
Re:Will it really be good? (Score:5, Insightful)
I for one enjoyed TTT ALOT. Sure, there were deviations from the book, but they were necessary to keep the story going. You cannot make the movie 1:1 identical with the book.
Re:Will it really be good? (Score:2)
Re:Will it really be good? (Score:3, Interesting)
Exactly. I thought the Harry Potter movies were just okay --- they might have been better if they were willing to sacrifice some of fidelity to the book for cinematic energy. There's a lot of plot in a full length novel, and squeezing it all in means squeezing something else out, often particular details that give character depth. The humor of the original books got lost in the movies, in my o
Re:Will it really be good? (Score:3, Interesting)
What the Harry Potter books have going for them is "profluence" ( the term John Gardner used to describe the quality of book that makes you unable to put it down, you just have to keep reading to find what happens next). A good plot can create profluence, but I think there's much more to it than that, good storytelling, empathetic characters, an
Re:Will it really be good? (Score:3, Insightful)
Book != film. Some things you can do in a book drop flaming turds on screen, and vice versa.
Re:Will it really be good? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Will it really be good? (Score:2)
Simply put, Saruman is not important to the plot of the movie: Getting the ring to mount doom. They could easily remove Saruman from the third movie, and it would still be a good theatrical release.
Fahrenheit Weight? (Score:2)
Is that like Pascal Length?
I'm dissapointed.. (Score:3, Insightful)
Not a tiny list of vital stats. (that didn't seem to impress me somehow)
Blogzine.net [blogzine.net]
Fortress of Insanity [homeunix.org]
Nitpick (Score:4, Funny)
Well that's specific
If it's farenhite, then that's quite cool. If it's celcius then holy crap that's hot.
If it's kelvin then I think we've found the new overclocking kings
Re:Nitpick (Score:5, Informative)
Temperature of equipment rooms: 76 degrees
Fahrenheit Weight of air conditioners needed to maintain that temperature: 1/2 ton
The Fahrenheit went there.
Re: (Score:2)
Put it on my WETA Charge! (Score:4, Funny)
10GB network.............. $378,000
35 IT staffers............ $140/hr
420 Visual f/x staffers... $9,800,000.28
Seeing Gollum bite Frodo's finger off with "Photorealism"... Priceless!
Any technology distinguishable from magic is not sufficiently advanced.
Re:Put it on my WETA Charge! (Score:2, Funny)
10GB network.............. $378,000
35 IT staffers............ $140/hr
40 Visual f/x staffers... $9,800,000.28
Wow, looks like they outsourced the IT to India.
Re:Put it on my WETA Charge! (Score:3, Funny)
I knew everyone that was going to die before the third Matrix movie and that didn't make it any worse than it already was. I don't think the knowldege of the demise of 1/793rd of Frodo will ruin this movie either.
LOTR 3 = eye candy (Score:2)
Re:LOTR 3 = eye candy (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:LOTR 3 = eye candy (Score:2, Insightful)
Yeah, because an article is written about how something is made == whatever is made will obviously suck.
Re:Tired of hearing that.... (Score:2)
The Mystery of Tom Bombadil Solved! (Score:4, Funny)
Tom Bombadil and the Witch-king of Angmar are the same person.
1. We never hear of Tom at all during the whole of the First Age. The Nine Rings aren't forged until the Second Age. QED.
2. You never see the two of them together.
3. In the first part of Fellowship of the Ring, the Nazgul are sent to the Shire to look for the wandering Baggins. Interestingly, Tom says to Frodo at the dinner-table: "...I was waiting for you. We heard news of you, and learned that you were wandering... But Tom had an errand there, that he dared not hinder" (Fellowship p.137 hardback, note the fear Tom has of his master, Sauron!).
4. In Tom's questioning of the Hobbits, JRRT notes that "there was a glint in his eyes when he heard of the Riders." (Fellowship p. 144) I think he was concerned that his double-life might have been noticed. Interestingly, Tom immediately changes the subject of conversation! Furthermore, the One Ring had no effect on Tom - which seems consistent with Tolkien's observations about how the Nazgul would have handled the same priceless object (Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien, #246): "They were... in no way deceived as to the real lordship of the Ring."
5. It's also interesting to note that Tom could see Frodo clearly while Frodo was wearing the Ring (Fellowship p. 144 hardback) - just as the Witch-king could see Frodo clearly while he was wearing the Ring at Weathertop! (Fellowship p. 208 hardback)
6. Perhaps most damning, however, is the incident with the Barrow-wights (Fellowship pp. 151-155), where Tom - with nothing more than a few simple words (p. 154) - commands the Barrow-wight to leave. And it does, without argument. Why would the Wight be so completely under Tom's control? Because in his alternate guise as the Witch-king of Angmar, Tom ordered the Wight to inhabit the barrow in the first place! Turning to Return of the King, Appendix A, p. 321, "evil spirits out of Angmar... entered into the deserted mounds and dwelt there." Obviously the Witch-king was reponsible for sending the wights there; just as obviously, the Witch-king (disguised as Tom) would be capable of ordering them to leave! (This is related to another passage, which has since been brought to my attention. On Fellowship page 158 hardback, Tom is guiding the Hobbits back towards the Road when he gazes towards the borders of Cardolan. "Tom said that it had once been the boundary of a kingdom, but a very long time ago. He seemed to remember something sad about it, and would not say much." Since Tom, as the Witch-king, was the one who destroyed the kingdom of Cardolan, it's little wonder that he wouldn't say much about his involvement. Perhaps his remembering "something sad" reveals some remorse at being the instrument of Cardolan's destruction...?)
...Yep: I think we have an airtight case here. :)
...It's worth noting that, after the Witch-king was dead, Gandalf said he was "going to have a long talk with Bombadil" (Return of the King, p. 275). Curiously, he never tells anyone about the meeting later... and he's right there at the Grey Havens at the end of the book, undelayed it seems by long conversation. I think we can therefore theorize that Gandalf made it to the Old Forest, but that Tom (once the so-called "Witch-king" had died) was nowhere to be found!
...Of course, all this brings up the curiosity of motive. What would make the Witch-King of Angmar sport such a double identity? I suppose that the Witch-king, once of proud Numenorean ancestry, felt trapped by the guise of evil which Sauron had tricked him into, and in the fullness of time forged this alternate identity for himself so that he could occasionally feel happy, helpful, noble, and more at one with himself and his lineage. The situation is perhaps analagous to a crossdresser who, feeling trapped in a man's body, would occasionally assume the identity of a woman. It therefore makes sense that the Witch-king's other identity would be so peculiarly enigmatic, and perhaps sheds light on JRRT's observation
Re:The Mystery of Tom Bombadil Solved! (Score:5, Interesting)
Actually, well, no. No they're not.
I suspect this is a clever troll, but I'll bite anyways. IHBT, IHL, IWHAND.
1. There's a lot of stuff you don't "hear" about in the First Age. Big deal.
2. You never see Galadriel and the Nazgul together either. So what?
3. The 'there' in Tom's comment was in reference to the pond from whence he retrieved the water lilies for Goldberry. In furtherance of this, according to the timeline, the Nazgul were not yet aware that Frodo had left the Shire at the time he met Bombadil.
4. Just because they knew who the real ring owner was intended to be does not mean they would not have been effected by it.
5. All the Nazgul could see him. Glorfindel could see him. Big deal. Does that make Glorfindel the Witch-King, or Tom Bombadil?
6. Now this is just getting silly. Any number of denizens of Arda could probably have done the same thing.
None of your points prove much of anything, except that the Nazgul and Bombadil were not in the same place at the same tim in LOTR.
A stronger case could be made, I think, that Bombadil was actually a subdued manifestation of Iluvitar (or one of the Valar). In Tolkien's world good and evil are rigidly defined (as they are in all mythologies) and I find it hard to believe that he would intend something this preposterous, when in no other case do you see a being that is both extremely evil and extremely benevolent in LOTR.
Anyhow.. IHBT.
[Serious] Re:The Mystery of Tom Bombadil Solved! (Score:2)
After I read the Simarillion, I always thought he was Illuvutar (sp?): i.e., Eru, the main god. Since he was supposedly there before *everythng*, including the Valar and morgoth.
Now that I'm older I like the more clever theory that Tom Bombadil is THE READER. I.e., only the reader can have read the Simarillion, and be "present" throughout the whole history of time.
I don't like the theories that he's
Re:The Mystery of Tom Bombadil Solved! (Score:2, Informative)
Karma whoring is bad! (Score:3, Informative)
Those kids... they think their internet is better then mine
Lots of Raw film (Score:5, Insightful)
I can't remember the amounts but around the time #1 came out they talked about the fact that in a normal picture they shoot about twice or three times more material and then cut it down to what you see.
I LOTR they shot about ten times as much. That is for every minute of finished movie they've shot 10 minutes of film.
So sure there is a lot of CGI going on, but there is still plenty of old fashioned moviemaking involved.
But off course with gollum and a giant orc army (what 100.000 orcs?) they have to rely on CGI.
What about the CPU's? (Score:2)
weta liquid: still not released iinto open source? (Score:3, Interesting)
it's been quite a while ago, and i still don't find it anywhere. did they lie?
LOTR vs. Matrix Hype. (Score:4, Insightful)
The hype surronding the LOTR: ROTK is a different Hype than that of the Matrix. Everyone has read LOTR many times over and everyone knows that Peter Jackson just has to follow the storyline of the book and people will be generally happy. Your comparison to the Matrix hype was not a good one.
The Hype surrounding The Matrix was that of unknowing. The story was in a form that this was a first time for everyone. I have to admit I was one of the few that thourghly enjoyed all three episodes and admired them for there story and cinematics. For lord of the rings I already know the story is good, I am just here for the cinematics.
Why so long? (Score:2)
That's quite a bit of time for 1600 separate computers, isn't it? Anyone know what resolution it is all rendered to?
To whomever is writing these headlines (Score:4, Funny)
When drafting your headlines, please consider that some of the older residents around here have high blood pressure and a low tolerance for extreme panic.
When I read the headline "Wired's LOTR III Tech Breakdown", my first thought was "Aw, crap! ROTK has been delayed because their servers crashed! ARRRRRRRRGH!"
Now I have to go to the restroom to clean up.
A better, LESS INFLAMMATORY headline would have been something like "Wired Breaks Down the Tech Behind ROTK".
My underwears (and my cardiologist) thank you for your consideration.
Saaarumaaan! (Score:3, Funny)
Nazgul: Describe Sauron for me. ...and he's tall...
Saruman: Well, he's dark...
Nazgul: And?
Saruman:
Nazgul: Does he look like a bitch?
Saruman: What?
*thud* *scream*
Nazgul: DOES HE LOOK LIKE A BITCH!?
Saruman: No!
Nazgul: Then why'd ya try to fuck him like a bitch?
A plea to the moderators (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't know how it's possible that they haven't yet learned this basic fact, as it's been discussed to complete death by everyone and their grandmother for the past 10-20 years.
Tolkein was not a holy saint. His work is not the Bible. In some places his story telling is actually subpar. Peter Jackson has(for the most part) done a truly excellent job of culling the important elements into a theatrical release that the public can enjoy. His idea of releasing a very different version on DVD for the book fans is sheer genius. He recognizes that you can't please everyone with one version. Why can't you? It's not a hard concept to grasp really.
And if you really have issues with the job Jackson has done, suggest someone else who would have done better. Peter is the perfect choice IMO, as he doesn't have the ego that big producers do, an ego that would have turned LOTR in "Spielberg's LOTR".
Re:A plea to the moderators (Score:3, Funny)
Thank goodness his work isn't the bible. Can you imagine every sentence or two starting with a little number? All the scenes in the beginning half would need to be more violent and include incest, rape, and mass murder. The second half would have no substance of a story, it would simply be some letters written to all the races of middle earth informing them that they all suck and everyone should love. The book would then end with a written-down
Re:A plea to the moderators (Score:4, Insightful)
I'd bet a wagon full of Southfarthing tabac that Peter Jackson sees the DVD releases as the "real" movies.
It would be a TON of effort and a big financial risk (based on extra revenue generated just from the difference in versions) to make the DVD releases like they are "just to please the book fans". Those extra scenes are not just spliced in. It seems fairly obvious he planned the entire production around the DVDs. I think he WOULD have released those versions to theaters if he hadn't been contractually obligated to give them movies that were under 3 hours each. The theater release versions are to please the pocketbooks of the theaters, because they can show more than 3 showings a day. I don't believe for a second, after reading and listing to interviews and commentary, that the theater releases are what he considers the "real" movies, or that he released shorter cut down versions of his dream production just to please the uninitiated or the attention-span challenged. He did it because that was the only way the theaters where going to show it at all. He had no choice.
5 years from now, the "extended" DVDs will be all that counts in anyone's book.
Re:A plea to the moderators (Score:3, Insightful)
And you are willfully refusing to consider that TTT is the middle part of what is essentially a 14 hour movie. It cannot truly be separated from the other two films. It has no true beginning, no true end. It simply *cannot* stand on its own against single-part films. Especially when you front-load the opposition like that.
As for Tolkien - he was not God with a typewriter.
Eh, I'd take Two Towers alongside those (Score:3, Interesting)
Blade Runner largely gets people cranked with its production values. The whole "Why am I here? Why is Rutger Hauer such a tragic figure?"
As a data center manager (here comes the math)... (Score:3, Informative)
A blade chassis full of dual PIII's [dell.com] similar to what they showed in the "render wall" photo will, in my experience, pull 300 to 600 watts of power depending on CPU load and configuration - the maximum power use is 850 W. At least a third of that is turned into heat.
This puts the minimum heat load at around ((1600 servers / 6 servers per chassis) * 150 watts average heat output) = approx. 40,000 watts.
While I've never heard of "farenheit weight" before, "tons refrigeration" is pretty common in the air conditioning world - 40,000 watts heat load = 136,500 BTU/hr = 10 tons of refrigeration (in UK units, 11 in US) [engnetglobal.com]. It's amazing how well that 1/2 ton air conditioner is operating!
Re:As a data center manager (here comes the math). (Score:3, Interesting)
Actually, essentially all of it is turned into heat in the room (except for the microscopic amount of power that gets sent out of the room as Ethernet pulses). Yep, technically 1 is "at least 1/3", but the second law of thermodynamics is too oft forgotten.
When I moved into my dorm room at Stanford, nearly 15 years ago, I was shocked to discover that the university imposed a surcharge per quarter for the power used by certain appliances -- e.g. if you brou
Specs? (Score:2, Insightful)
Are these people temps or do they have full-time jobs? Must be a real challenge to find that many people with experience in this sort of thing. I imagine they do alot of training? Anyone know?
> Servers in renderwall: 1,600 Processors (total): 3,200
Anyone know what these are? Dual Xeons? Do they take advantage of fast graphics hardware to speed up the rendering?
> Processors added 10 weeks before movie wrapped: 1,000
Making for a total of 4,200?
Wired & Slashdot (Score:2, Funny)
WIRED's "Render wall" pic (Score:3, Informative)
The article says "Meet the real star of Lord of the Rings - a 1,600-box server farm." but they dont' have a single picture of the actual boxes. If you want to see a brief glimpse at some of the renderfarm, you can see it at the beginning of the VFX section on disc 4 of the Two Towers extended edition.
I'm really curious if Wired thinks they actually rendered the movies using shelves of DLT tapes. Do they have 10 Gigabit Ethernet ports on them???
On that subject the stats seem to imply also that they have 10gigabit ethernet everywhere, which is a retarded waste of money if that were in fact the case. I imagine that interconnects between their core switches would be 10 gigabit ethernet, but anything beyond gig-E to each node would have a hard time being utilized.
-K
WETA Supercomputes! (Score:4, Informative)
Here ye, here ye! (Score:5, Insightful)
Personally, I don't have the bladder control for a fifteen hour movie. Yes, now you know the real reason for cutting the film to three hours (four for those in the comfort on their own homes). Bladder control. Simple really.
Or... (Score:2, Insightful)
Unless - LOTR - the Slashdot Edition (Score:5, Funny)
That sounds like a call for distributed computing and an LOTR rendering client on each PC. One million slashdot readers willing, we *will* render the Scouring of the Shire...
Re:Unless - LOTR - the Slashdot Edition (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Wow, average of 2 hours per frame (Score:3, Informative)
That must be "2 processor-hours". With 1400 CG shots and 240 frames per shot minimum, that is at least 336k frames, and 672k hours of rendering. They would have had to start rendering in 1926. If you assume processor-hours, though, it drops to a much more reasonable 210 hours of total rendering time.
Re:Synopsis (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Huh, you call that a spoiler? (Score:2, Funny)
That Tolkien dude sure had some sweet movie biz contacts. Harry Knowles eat your heart out.
Not this joke, AGAIN (Score:2)
Everyone--this joke is old and been done countless times before. It's like copying and pasting a +5 post from before and sticking it here just to trick you.
Re:LOTR Hype (Score:2, Interesting)
But somehow, despite the cuts and the departures from the books, the first two movies worked very well. So I'm going to keep my scepticism in check until I actually see the third.
Re:LOTR Hype (Score:2)
I wasn't. When I read that they are making a movie about LOTR, I cheered. 10 seconds after that I though "They movie is going to rule! Except the part with Tom Bombadil". Having Bombadil in the movie would have been worse than Jar Jar Binks x 10.
Re:LOTR Hype (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't know why people are so obsessed with it following the book perfectly. if you want what's in the book, then read the fucking book. I think the films are fantastic so far, but then I judge them by how much I enjoy watching them, not by how similar they are to something which has already existed for a very long time.
Re:LOTR Hype (Score:4, Insightful)
As a representative of the 95% of people who will see this movie that have not or will never read the books, who the hell are the Rangers of the North, what is the pass of the dead, and why are your firstly and secondly reasons that I will be dissapointed by this film?
Re:LOTR Hype (Score:3, Informative)
The Rangers of the North... are the remenants of the people of Gondor, from like, way back in the day. If you want to get really into it, they're a group of a more sturdy, higher class of Men, and their bloodlines run fairly pure back to before men even came to Middle Earth. So, like, they're described as tall, grim, dirty, good fighters, etc. And they live longer than regular men.
It's revealed that Aragorn (who is refered to as Strider) is the heir appearant to the throne of Gondor. Rem
Re:LOTR Hype (Score:2, Insightful)
</sarcasm>
He's not rewriting the book. If you want your Rangers, you can pick up the damn book...I can assure you that they'll still be in there. I'll let you in on a little secret... Movies based on books generally serve as COMPANIONS to the books, not replacements.
It's one person's interpretation of the story. He's under no obligation to stay completely true to the books. The man has done an incredible jo
Re:LOTR Hype (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Nothing New Here (Score:3, Informative)
If you'd seen the featurettes on The Two Towers, you'd know that they didn't start working on the CG for TTT until Spring following the release of The Fellowship of the Ring (including entirely redoing all the work they had already completed on Gollum). That being said, they probably didn't finish the CG work long ago, and Jackson will likely be tinkering with the editing until a week before release.
Re:Nothing New Here (Score:4, Informative)
"...Jackson will likely be tinkering with the editing until a week before release."
Close. He worked on it till the last minute, which was in the first week of November. There were in fact some final changes he wanted that didn't make it into the film. It had to shipped for transfers.
Re:Nothing New Here (Score:5, Informative)
Forced perspective with a moving camera depends on moving parts of the scenery in sync with the camera. The scene with Gandalf and Frodo at the table in Bag End is a good example of this - no post production tricks at all.
Also, tricks where you film one person on a blue-screen, record the camera moves, replay the same camera move somewhere else (possibly with a scale transform) and combine the images. The post-production combining is completely trivial, but the technique is enabled by being able to track exactly where the camera is during the shot and replaying the same moves later.