Updated LOTR Nitpicker's Guide 223
The LOTR Nitpicker writes "A list of deviations to be found when comparing the text of The Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien and the translation of those texts to film as undertaken by Peter Jackson, et.al. updated to include deviations from the recently released extended edition DVD of The Return of the King. This story originally appeared on Slashdot back in January."
...and you thought... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:...and you thought... (Score:2)
I'm watching ROTK extended DVD now... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I'm watching ROTK extended DVD now... (Score:2)
Nitpicking indeed (Score:5, Insightful)
Whats wrong with just watching the film, and enjoying it...?
(Post not intentionally flame-bait and yes, I DO count myself as a fan).
Re:Nitpicking indeed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Nitpicking indeed (Score:2)
Actually, I don't think that the director injected enough of his own ideas. He should have strayed farther from the books. And it would have been nice to see a director with more talent than money instead of vice-versa.
Re:Nitpicking indeed (Score:2)
and however you put it, the saruman deathscene in rotk:ee just sucks. it's not a wonder that they cut it off...
Re:Nitpicking indeed (Score:2)
It is a movie for crying out loud.. Movies are never or at least almost never identical to a book. If you have a problem with that, don't watch movies based on books you have read.
Re:Nitpicking indeed (Score:2)
Personally I think this is a valid point.
Movies and books are completely and utterly different media. What works on one often won't work on the other. I don't know LoTR enough to comment, but I've seen other adaptations (like Harry Potter) where although I don't like the changes I simply accept that leaving them as-was woul
Re:Nitpicking indeed (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Nitpicking indeed (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Nitpicking indeed (Score:2)
(I'm just kidding. I love the Appendices, but there is a lot of material there.)
The irony of it all (Score:5, Funny)
How many nits should a non-nitpicker pick, if a non-nitpicker picked nits?
Re:The irony of it all (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Nitpicking indeed (Score:2)
When I first saw Fellowship, I took a great delight in picking out all the differences between the books and the films, and either annoying non-LotR fans with trivial knowledge (just a little) or discussing said differences with other LotR fans. It's fun, when you've read the books enough to know these little details, to see what was left out and what was kept in. I personally wouldn't have gone to the trou
Re:Nitpicking indeed (Score:2)
I often feel that way when Slashdot posts a story about an interesting tech and several people go for an easy karma score by bringing up cliched points about privacy, people being stupid, or that it costs too much even though prices ALWAYS drop.
Re:Nitpicking indeed (Score:5, Insightful)
Anyways, its an _adaptation_, i.e. someone else's interpretation of the work. No one said they were making LotR: The Book: The Movie. Just like how the Superman movies and new books are retellings of a common story. This is not J.R.R. Tolkien's LotR. This is Peter Jackson's LotR. Its not WRONG because that's how he decided to tell it. With a story as powerful and as epic as the trilogy, it can stand to have multiple points of view.
Did you really want to see 50 characters that have two lines and never come back? Did you really want a musical? Did you really want them to chill out for a whole movie at the council of Rivendell?
Also, as a final point, you should think about how many people were exposed to the work through the movies, and then decided to read the books afterwards. If anything, the books delve into a much richer setting, and the reader gets a lot more out of the books after seeing the movie. If they were the exact same, there would be no reason to read the books, and THAT would be a true tradgedy.
How to get a story submitted on slashdot (Score:4, Funny)
Re:How to get a story submitted on slashdot (Score:2)
Oh come on! It is a slow day. And this is an update because the nitpick-list in the old story is updated to nitpick the new extended edition.
And I love to use the <I>-tag.
And the biggest deviation of all... (Score:5, Funny)
"Pirannha to Scurfy".. Similar situation (Score:3, Interesting)
The inaccuracies are obvious when you read some books (especially books written with decades between them , read in a week or so). For example, I did pickup on the color differences of the lasers in the Dune series written by the son of Brian Herbert... (ie purple to orange) or the Bastardization of Holtzmann as a person (read Dune encyclopedia).
Slow news day, eh ?.My nitpicks (Score:5, Interesting)
2) This isn't The Return Of The King, it's "Half Of The Two Towers And The Return Of The King". They could have cut out most of the extraneous scenes from the TTT (like the Arwen ones) and kept stuff from TTT in TTT. Then they could use the Extended Release of ROTK to include the Scouring of the Shire. I realize the reason for not including it in the theatrical release (audience would get tired of a second battle etc.), but come on, the DVD release doesn't have those problems (after all, it's the fans who are gobbling up these Extended Editions).
That said, I welcome the new scenes. I always wanted to see the part where Aragorn calls up Sauron with the Palantir, and gives him the finger.
Re:Fireballs are cool, but not enough T&A! (Score:2)
Re:My nitpicks (Score:2)
Well, in three movies, totaling over nine hours run-time, Gandalf shines a light a few times, knocks an arrow and an axe out of the air with his staff, breaks Saruman's staff... and spends the rest of the time stabbing Orcs and beating the living crap out of the Steward of Gondor. I think it's safe to say he didn'
Re:My nitpicks (Score:2)
Re:My nitpicks (Score:2)
While we're on the subject of the appendices, it mentions in one of the documentaries that Tolkien, of course, didn't intercut between
Contrary to popular belief... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Contrary to popular belief... (Score:2)
He's lucky... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:He's lucky... (Score:2)
That makes a lot of sense!
A Christmas Wish... (Score:5, Funny)
After nearly spending half an eon watching the extended versions of LOTRs and comparing the text of our beloved JRR Tolkein to each and every sound and syllable of the movies, I am writing you in hopes that you deliver to me this very Christmas the following gifts:
1. A life
2. Liv Tyler
3. Liv Tyler naked
4. The Extended version of Dune on DVD
5. The Dune books
Sincerely,
The LOTR Nitpicker
Re:A Christmas Wish... (Score:2)
After all you seem to have moved on to Dune...
Re: (Score:2)
Re:A Christmas Wish... (Score:2)
How come he gets two?!
(Can I have two Miranda Ottos?)
Re:A Christmas Wish... (Score:2)
As far as I'm concerned, it's "The Dune book," because all the sequels shouldn't exist.
I'm still hoping for gift 1., though...
Re:A Christmas Wish... (Score:2)
The nerve! (Score:2)
Can I just have the easy gift - naked Liv Tyler and skip the other hard stuff?
to nitpick the nitpicky... (Score:4, Informative)
1. Expanding Arwen's role
2. Changing Faramir's storyline
3. Frodo sending Sam home
4. Saruman's destruction of the Shire
Of these, I sort of agree with #2, and that didn't bother me as much as the Elves showing up at Helm's Deep- that was just SO WRONG. In the introduction of Jackson's FOTR, the narrator refers to the LAST ALLIANCE of elves... not the PENULTIMATE alliance, or NEXT-TO-THE-LAST alliance! Grrr.
And I TOTALLY disagree with #4. Jackson already had, like, SIX endings in ROTK. What works so well in the book would just be *torture* on the screen, as much as I'd like to have seen it.
Re:to nitpick the nitpicky... (Score:2)
And Jackon had FIVE endings in ROTK, not six:
1. Frodo awakens (after rescue from Mt. Doom), everyone's glad
2. Arwen and Aragorn marry
3. Hobbits return to the Shire (Sam & Rosie, happy times, etc.)
4. Frodo & Bilbo sail away
5. Sam goes back home to his family
Oh, and Happy Holidays.
Re:to nitpick the nitpicky... (Score:2)
Re:to nitpick the nitpicky... (Score:2)
Along with 2 and 3 from the above, I consider it the worst deviation from the book. It has all sorts of side effects - for example it leaves Galadriel with no gift to give to Aragorn.
The effects of this permiate and distort all 3 of the movies.
The elves at Helm's Deep are annoying, but hardly anywhere nearly as bad as 2, 3 and business of the sword.
I did see it... (Score:4, Insightful)
The multitude of endings would have worked great on DVD, but it was pure torture in the theater, at least for me and several of my friends.
Re:to nitpick the nitpicky... (Score:2)
I think the big directorial mistake Jackson made was in so many slow fades-to-black so close together. After such a huge build-up, the movie needed to maintain a bit more momentum than I did. I think all the moments that Jackson put in the ending deserved to be there, but some editing to ma
Re:to nitpick the nitpicky... (Score:2)
I hate nitpicking (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:I hate nitpicking (Score:2)
Mr. Lucas is that you?
STOP BELIEVING HOLLYWOOD'S BULLSHIT! (Score:5, Insightful)
NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Really not!
He rewrote the screen adaptation many times, never finding a balance between his genius and the hollywood lowest-common-denominator dogma, and wrote one last draft that he believed was the best compromise.
He then died, and the studio REWROTE the script, AGAIN, probably to re-insert the stupid changes he fought against.
Do NOT let yourself be fooled when the vultures say he would have liked it. It is their contractual obligation to bullshit us and hype the project as much as they can. When they say it's going to be good, ask yourself: Is it in their financial best interest to lie to us about the quality of the product? Does this person stand to make MILLIONS from those lil' white lies?
Look at the EarthSea thing that happened recently, the producers made a comment that the author really wanted to say what their bastard monstrosity says, forgetting that she's alive and able to tell the world otherwise. She was able to defend herself and her original works from the slander it was subjected to, but Asimov can't, Adams can't, Roddenberry can't...
Look at the hype for Will Smith'S I, Robot! The fresh prince was actually saying in interviews that is was very faithfull to the spirit of Asimov's robot stories, and then he explains "everyone on earth trusts the robots, but my character is the only one that suspects the truth: they are up to no good", followed by rampaging hordes of killbots. That is the OPPOSITE of Asimov's stories! Only the USRobots people trusted their creation, the mundane people of earth didn't trust 'em one bit! They had laws forcing them to be manually operated, and to not be within a certain distance of schools, etc! And not only that, but the whole "robots are not to be trusted and will turn on their masters" is exactly the precise sort of stories that Asimov did NOT write. He made up the 3 laws to get away from that frankenstein crap, dammit!
Enjoying a movie for what it is is fine, really. But you can do it without the delusion that they are faithfull to the spirit of the original when they are virtually raping the author's corpse.
Here's a tip: If you hear of a movie being made that is based on a book, and you haven't yet read that book, wait until you've seen the movie, then read the book. The book is always better, so this way you get to like the movie, then love the book. If you read the book first, you like the book, then hate the movie.
Movie, like. Then: Book, love.
The other way only leads to disapointment.
Do you really believe Adapation started there? (Score:2)
Do you really believe adapation started with Hollywood?
Throughout history, Adaptation has been used to attempt to retell a story to a new audience using a new medium. The Iliad was an adaptation of an orally transmitted poem, parts of which were adapted (and heavily changed!) by Tragedians such as Euripides, parts of which were heavily changed in re-adaptation to epic by later poets (e.g., Vergil), parts of which were heavily changed with translators adaptations.
Even in the stage, Plautu
Re:Do you really believe Adapation started there? (Score:2)
Do you really believe adapation started with Hollywood?
Serious question: Are you always this pedantic, or are you stupid enough to infer from my post that I believed that adaptations started (or ended) with hollywood?
Asimov didn't have hundreds of evil killbots, but modern audiences don't want to watch actors talk about pedantic philosophy for three hours. That doesn't make the base of it any less Asimov's original story. It's an adaptation to the screen.
Go back and read what said,
Re:Do you really believe Adapation started there? (Score:2)
I, Robot certainly *was* an Adaptation, a retelling of an Asimov story on the screen. That doesn't mean it was *good*. But it's an adaptation.
There's no guarrentee or neccessity of faith to the original author. Either the director thought that the adaptation he made was worthy of film for artistic merit, or felt that he read something into the Asimov stories that wasn't explicit on paper, or the point of taking
I said STOP the bullshit, not "ignorantly defend" (Score:2)
There's no guarrentee or neccessity of faith to the original author. Either the director thought that the adaptation he made was worthy of film for artistic merit, or felt that he read something into the Asimov stories that wasn't explicit on paper, or the point of taking the Asimov stories and putting them on the screen wass that they'll make money when sold to a ne
Re:Do you really believe Adapation started there? (Score:3, Insightful)
That said, Hollywood does rip the heart out off good stories in order to fit within formulae all the time. I'm getting a good look at this first-hand, as I see my friend's first screenplay change under pressure from the studio he's working with; much that was interesting, challenging, and thought-provoking being replaced with formulaic tropes and reassuri
Re:Do you really believe Adapation started there? (Score:2)
The original point of the post was to show exactly that what your friend has been going through has been happening for thousands of years. Read a few plays of Plautus, they're essentially built around stock characters and stock scenes with a few rather simple plots, or Watch an American sitcom, it's exactly the same way.
It's sort of sad. But it's the way mainstream drama h
Re:STOP BELIEVING HOLLYWOOD'S BULLSHIT! (Score:2)
I see you are repeating the crap.
READ THE DAMN TITLE OF MY POST, moron.
Re:I hate nitpicking (Score:2)
Some people just have fun with minutiae and little details. I agree with you that prose and film are completely different, and
Re:I hate nitpicking (Score:2)
Re:I hate nitpicking (Score:2, Informative)
Re:I hate nitpicking (Score:2)
If a book comes before a movie - it is the ultimate truth of how to tell a story (and vice versa). The plot in LOTR is a common one - strong bad guys defeated by underdog good guys through war, cunning, and luck. However, it is the details of the story which are all important. LOTR plot is very similar to Star Wars, but would it still be Tolkein's LOTR if Jackson gave Frodo a light saber? It glows blue like Sting
Dupe (Score:2)
Ah, so now they just say its "updated". Least they admit its a dupe, and admitting you have a problem is the first step to recovery!
Update (Score:2)
Now includes comparison of the extra special edition DVD footage, which wasn't there to be nitpicked a year ago.
Of course! I get it now! (Score:2)
Re:Of course! I get it now! (Score:2)
Hey, don't complain! You knew it was coming, you should have waited a few more months to read it instead of rushing off to get the non-extended version that came out first.
Re:Of course! I get it now! (Score:2)
bad changes (Score:2)
Numbers in Armies? (Score:2)
I emailed Weta asking if they stuck to Tolkien's numbers, but I got a generic reply saying how the film was made with Massive.
Re:Numbers in Armies? (Score:2)
Re:Numbers in Armies? (Score:2)
Extra Special Super Extended DVD (Score:3, Informative)
Said tongue in cheek since I'm buying all the LOTR DVD's...
Here's a nice map for fans...
http://www.aloha.net/~shaug/pix/lotr/middle-earth
--
Peace
Re:Why? (Score:2)
Yep.
Basic rule of thumb on Jackson's versions: what they took out for time pressure generally was sensible, what they kept was done well, what they added, changed or amplified stunk. Unfortunately the last category covers much of the actual script so as a story the result is a wash out, but it still looks great if you turn the sound off.
TWW
Re:Why? (Score:2)
No "begone foul dwimmerlaik?" What! And this line "I am No Man", that's from the Odessey for criminy sakes. Not LoTR.
Re:Why? (Score:2)
Re:Why? (Score:2)
As an English major you should realize that Tolkein's work redacts not just mythology, but much of literature including a heavy influence by Shakespeare.
You also seem to miss the point that LoTR is held in high esteem simply because it has outpaced all other efforts in this genre. There is nothing out there that comes close in scope or imagination. Perfect? What work of man is? You can always find some flaw. But is the
Re:Why? (Score:2)
Acting, cinematography, screenplay, direction? These do not exist in books. There really is no significant way to compare the two.
Re:Why? (Score:2)
Almost every fantasy story since has been a rewrite of Tolkien's work...
I find his use of lengthy appendices and created languages fatuous and self-congratulatory.
Re:Why? (Score:4, Informative)
No, Arwen's original relationship with Aragorn was important and symbolic of the risks and meaning of the whole story but the version of it put on by Jackson was shit from start to end. It made no sense, was boring and intrusive and involved mangling Elrond's character to the point where one had to wonder if Jackson had ever actually read any of Elrond's parts in the books. "I've waited thousands of years to see Sauron overthrown...Fuck it, I'm SO depressed - I'm off. Sorry about all that giving you false hope and all, but hey: so sue me!" Utter crap.
Arwen's part constantly undermined the other characters (not just Elrond but Aragorn and Frodo suffered from this tedious sub-plot) and the plot itself. It was a total mess and the current vogue for saying "ah, well it was all in Appendix A, you know" doesn't wash: Tolkien's version was in the appendix and was a powerful and moving final end to the saga, not a load of Hollywood clap-trap.
Sorry, but failing to grasp this fundamental point is to fail to understand a primary motive for most human beings: the protection of our loved ones.
Just as you fail to see the point of Aragorn's story: he's not "most human beings", he has a destiny that presses him beyond the normally small circle of friends and family and encompasses his nation and people too. "Duty" is the key word here. His personal love affair is important enough to be placed into the appendix but is a side-show in his saga.
the books are hardly perfect
True.
poorly written
False.
I have a degree in English
Oh, that must have been hard.
Given the wealth of world mythology, of which Tolkien's work is part redaction and part recreation, I'll take the mythology myself.
That's a fair point, but I personally find that the original myths do not speak to me either clearly - due to the masses of various translations of various levels of ability - nor as a British person, whose own mythos was largely destroyed by the Roman and Christian invasions. The Ring of the Neibeling (spelling guess) is a great story but very, very German. LotR is much more about where I come from, and I like that about it.
I find his use of lengthy appendices and created languages fatuous and self-congratulatory.
Tell your fucking story, Tolkien - don't make us hunt around for it.
He did: the appendices were not at all required reading to follow the story (that's why things like Arwen ended up there: they add to it without being required). As to the language thing: the language came first and the stories later, so it would have been a different book with less depth the other way around; just look at the masses of Tolkien-wannabes that followed with huge volumes of shallow crap. Also, Tolkien was a linguist, not a professional writer, so you're attacking him for using his personal area of expertise in writing his first major book. That seems petty and self-indulgent to me.
There certainly has been a log of oh-hum stuff since Tolkien but LotRs was pretty unique when it came out. There's not much Tolkien can do about what followed him, is there?
TWW
Re:Why? (Score:2)
That's fair enough but every change Jackson made made things worse, not better. A quick example: the nazgul could have been made more impressive in the movie; instead they were reduced to figures of fun (highly inflamable figures of fun). If Frodo had really shown a Nazgul the ring then the game would have been over within the hour.
I agree that LotR could actually be improved but it would take someone with talent, not
Re:Why? (Score:2)
It does, and a lot of Scandinavian culture can be found in Britain, but the framing of that and the mingling of it with other threads such as the Woses and Rohan makes for something much more of the rolling Downs than of the fjords.
TWW
Re:Why? (Score:2)
Yeah, tell me what I don't know. My oblique reference to the hoard was just shorthand for your list. And yes, I have read extensively the many works in old and middle English. But hey, you seem a little more feverish on the subject - so maybe you know or care more about it all than I do.
Let me ask you this: W
Re:Why? (Score:2)
Maybe because of thousands of Orc archers? And what happens if you miss the lava? Better swoop in and pick that baby back up.
I don't come to works of fiction with the idea that I should have to scrutinize or learn invented languages and read appendices and so on - that's just
Re:Why? (Score:2)
Man, you're either just a big fucking troll or a big fucking whiner. Where are you getting this crap from? You don't have to even glance in the direction of the appendices to understand what's going on in the book, nor do you have to know a lick of any of the invented languages.
Re:I would like to make the following statement (Score:5, Interesting)
Nitpicking about adaptation changes is pointless (though the author does somehow acknowledge it is). I cannot imagine anyone making (a) better "Lord of the Rings movie(s)".
Peter Jackson did it, along with an extraordinary film crew, so let's all praise them for it and enjoy these fantastic movies.
Re:I would like to make the following statement (Score:5, Insightful)
However...characterisations, plot development and pacing, and dialogue to a large extent are typical hollywood fare, losing alot of the subtley and nuance of the novels.
I couldn't understand why my parents and sister didn't enjoy the movies...they felt it was all noise and action, and a 'typical fantasy hackneyed plot'. I was incredulous, until I rewatched the movies while conciously ignoring what I knew from the novels...and then I realised they were right -- it WAS just another noisy, loud, action-packed, paper-thin plot turned into big-budget spectacle. All the subtley of the novels were not translated to screen. This is particularly apparent in ROTK which moves from action sequence to action sequence for 3+ hours...
I don't blame Jackson too much. At 12+ hours it already is perhaps the longest trilogy filmed by Hollywood. And yet there's so much lost in the film translation... I suspect only an extended 30-60 episode TV series, not worrying about ratings or demographics, could give the novels justice. And the chances of that happening are negligible.
Appreciate the movies for what Jackson contributed to LOTR lore, but recongise its still a minor effort in comparison to the brilliance of the source material.
Re:I would like to make the following statement (Score:3, Interesting)
OMG you can't POSSIBLY be complaining that they didn't keep the "realistically as slow as walking from one country to another on short hobbit legs" pacing of the books!
I think about 40% of the books were dedicated to describing how long it takes to walk from the Shire to Mordor!
Something happens, followed by 20 pages of description of walking, then they see Gollum a bit, 12 pages of walking, etc.
All
Re:I would like to make the following statement (Score:2)
Of course not. To do that, you would have needed one movie just to introduce us to hobbits.
He had to cut a lot of things, and they are still much longer movies than most. I read a lot more books than I watch movies, and when I do see a movie where I've already read the book, I expect to be disapointed.
With LOTR's, I was pleasantly surprised. Jackson did a great job. Sure, there were changes, there were parts left out, and I would have do
Re:I would like to make the following statement (Score:2)
It doesn't suck if your attention span is greater than that of a gnat.
Re:I would like to make the following statement (Score:2)
Have you read the book? I doubt it, because it is so much inferior to the original material in every possible way that it has become the top example for horrible adaptations. The book is as rich and deep as the movie is badly paced, acted and has bad SFX (compare to Blade Runner for instance, released two years earlier).
An utterly forgettable movie; ABC; average banal crap. Unlike the 'suck'y Dune, in 20 years I don't expect anyone to remember this fil
Re:I would like to make the following statement (Score:2)
Disagree. While I found the first two to be a little flat, the third is easily my least favorite Harry Potter movie despite being one of my favorites of the book. The look was fine but all of the reasons why a character behaved in a particular way were left on the cut
Re:I would like to make the following statement (Score:2)
I am still hoping for a new adaptation that would be as rewarding as Peter Jackson's Lo
Re:I would like to make the following statement (Score:2, Interesting)
FTFA:
I enjoyed the movies. I enjoyed reading this list. There's no need to start telling people to "get a life".
Because, frankly, I don't care that you (or the six billion plus you speak for) don't care. I liked it.
Re:I would like to make the following statement (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I would like to make the following statement (Score:2)
I didn't miss the Tam
Re:I would like to make the following statement (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:I would like to make the following statement (Score:2)
Re:I would like to make the following statement (Score:2)
Re:I would like to make the following statement (Score:3, Interesting)
The deviations are not tiny nor pointless. I indeed agree there are a lot of worse cases around, but for true and purist Tolkien fans the differences between the book and the movie are important issues.
If you don't like just stop trolling and flaming around... stay quiet.
Not just not new, the nature of the game (Score:3, Insightful)
The very process of encoding a story into words alters it. The job of the writer is to try and tell you what happened. Good writers bring you closer to all the truths of the story(as there are many).
Movies and books function differently. They have different constraints, and rules about pacing. You can far more easily lay a book down, and continue it later, than you can a movie. Thus, movies generally have to be watched in one s
Re:This is nothing new (Score:3, Interesting)
The problem with Jackson's LotR is that, yes, while there are numerous occasions where some minor detail gets changed for dramatic purposes, there are several points where a character does the exact opposite of what they did in the books. Examples: Faramir trying to take Frodo and the Ring back to Gondor (in the movie) versus immediately realizing that the ring is unvarnished evil that must be destroyed (in the book). Treebeard and
Re:Flesh is denser than lava? (Score:3, Informative)
Gollum didn't sink, he melted...but it certain looks like sinking.
Re:Really people.... (Score:2)