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Web Warlock
Coming Soon to The Other Side, The Netbook of Shadows: A Book of Spells for d20 Witches
"D&D doesn't teach children that monsters exist. Children already know that monsters are real.
D&D teaches them that monsters can be defeated."
- Unknown
, second, I hope not. In LotR I found the brief conversations in Elvish more than enough. I like to understand what people are saying, I am not into subtitles. On a more serious note, I don´t think Silmarillion would translate well onto the big screen, it is even more complex than LotR and much darker and it does not really have a central storyline. The Hobbit is almost a must be filmed, but as with the book, I don´t think I could enjoy it as much as I have LotR. I like the book, but after I had read LotR it definitely had to take a back seat. I´d miss Arwen, Eowyn and Aragorn too much. _____________________
I still see dead lesbian cliches
Arwen is also kinda drippy to me, and her Big Scene at the river confronting the Nine Black Riders in the FotR movie has always made me cringe, creative necessity or not. But that's just me.Quote:
I saw the extras on the RotK DVD, a bit of a let down compared to the other DVDs, but I loved the commentary by Christopher Lee. He basically says Sam is the true hero of the story, the ordinary guy.
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Web Warlock
Coming Soon to The Other Side, The Netbook of Shadows: A Book of Spells for d20 Witches
"D&D doesn't teach children that monsters exist. Children already know that monsters are real.
D&D teaches them that monsters can be defeated."
- Unknown
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Ringer Baggins of the Shire sends in this tidbit: I work for Odeon cinema chain in the UK, we recieved a letter on Tuesday 6th July explaining that during October the 3 extended editions of the Lord Of The Rings films will be shown on Sunday's. This means ROTK EE will be shown before it is available to buy on DVD!
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I still see dead lesbian cliches
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ROTK: EE
Oh, shit! Oh, shit! Oh, shit! Saruman's speech on top of Orthanc down to Gandalf and his companions! The Mouth of Sauron!!! Holy shit, the Mouth of Sauron... shot most with close ups of the grotesque, horrifying mouth... wet, slimy... with long, pointed teeth... as the dude reveals Frodo's mithril shirt to Aragorn... Aragorn's challenge to the Sauron via the Palantir gave me goosebumps... Aragorn healing Eowyn...
The footage shown was all of that and more. They brought a 4 minute preview which had most of that above and showed 3 full clips. One was Faramir and Eowyn's first tender moment in the houses of healing, where he consoles her saying that the darkness that weighs heavy on her heart will lift. They also showed a scene that I saw being filmed during the pick-ups last summer with Faramir talking to Pippin and we find out that the Gondor armor Pip has was Faramir's boyhood armor, though Faramir doesn't think it fits the hobbit quite right.
Pip says, "I'm not going to grow anymore, except sideways."
The other bit was an extended scene from the Paths of the Dead. In this cut Aragorn's "What say you!?!?" shout doesn't end there... The Dead don't accept and disappear... all of a sudden Legolas, Gimli and Aragorn are being showered with an avalanche of skulls. They fight against the growing tide and barely make it out of that chamber.
That's what they showed... more quick bits from the 4 minute preview include Eowyn getting beat-up upon by Gothmog, Denethor being more of a bastard to Faramir, Merry's pledge to Theoden, Grima getting smacked by Saruman... Gandalf being caught in a fireball from Saruman's staff... and the ending one... the coolest one... Gandalf being stopped by the Nazgul on the Fell Beast when riding up to save Faramir from burning to death... The ugly brute steadily approaches the wizard and taunts him... The then raises his sword to the sky and it erupts in flame. Gandalf is about to get F'ed in the A.
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Here's what I can remember from the LotR: RotK Extended Edition segment from Comic-Con:
First, no Peter Jackson (I know, not a surprise, but I was hoping). We had some lady hosting the panel, DVD producer (sorry, don't know the name), Producer Rick Porras, and actors Billy Boyd (Pippen) and David Wenham (Faramir). They showed a bit more than I thought: a four minute 'preview,' and then three short scenes.
From the preview I recognized (forgive me if names are a little off; It's been awhile since I've read the books):
*stuff from House of the Healing
* stuff from Gandalf vs. Saruman (Gandal confronts him to get info, and a fight breaks out: at least, Saruman shoots fire from atop the fallen 'tower')
* a flashback or something of Faramir, Boromir, and Denathor that explains (I think) all of that friction (how Denathor wants Boromir to get the ring for himself).
* a face-off between Gandolf and the Witch King
* extra battle stuff, and extra scenes of Sam and Frodo in disguise as Orcs
* Aragorn using the 'eye' to deceive Sauromon
I can't remember what else was in the trailer, but very cool stuff
For the scenes they showed:
1. A scene with Faramir courting Eowyn at the House of the Healing
2. A scene with Faramir and Pippin talking after Pippin changes into the 'knight' outfit. Faramir tells him that the outfit belonged to a boy who dreamed of fighting dragons instead of studying, unlike his brother. Pippin says "it was yours" and Faramir talks about Denathor's greater love of Boromir. Pippin then says something about how Denathor will love and appreciate his wisdom or something in time. It was a nice scene
3. Peter Jackson (via video; he was in pre-production for King Kong. It was funny, as he seemed genuinely bummed to miss Comic-Con...again... and said one of these days he'd make it out) introduced a scene that was added 'for fun.' It was an extended cut of Aragorn recruiting the Army of the Dead. After he offers them eternal rest for paying off the debt, the Dead back off, and disappear and tens of thousands of skulls poor out of the mountains in the cavern. Cool stuff.
The box will be blue. Here's the cool part:
There are FIFTY extra minutes. I know; my jaw hit the floor too when I heard that! I guess there were 300 FX shots to finish, and in March after Return of the Kings had racked up the Oscars, Peter Jackson wanted to shoot one more scene (a close up of the skulls from the above Army of the Dead scene). So the last shot filmed was done in March.
Anyway, that's the scoop. Cool stuff; too bad we have to wait until December, but I guess this'll make great Christmas gifts (as if anyone can wait that long to watch these discs).
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Oh, shit! Oh, shit! Oh, shit! Saruman's speech on top of Orthanc down to Gandalf and his companions! The Mouth of Sauron!!! Holy shit, the Mouth of Sauron... shot most with close ups of the grotesque, horrifying mouth... wet, slimy... with long, pointed teeth... as the dude reveals Frodo's mithril shirt to Aragorn... Aragorn's challenge to the Sauron via the Palantir gave me goosebumps... Aragorn healing Eowyn...
Also Saruman and the mouth of Sauron. Now I really can't wait for the extended edition.Quote:
1. A scene with Faramir courting Eowyn at the House of the Healing
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I still see dead lesbian cliches
Gollum's 2003 MTV award speech won.
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Do something totally irrational and let the enemy think himself to death. (Pyanfar Chanur)
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New Line has confirmed that the four-disc extended edition of Return of the King will arrive on the 14th December. The set will include around fifty-minutes of additional footage, including the highly anticipated confrontation with Saruman. Stacks of extra material will also be featured, including cast and crew audio commentaries and multiple behind the scenes documentaries and featurettes. The SRP will be around $39.99. Also arriving on the 14th will be a collector's giftset which includes the aforementioned four-disc extended edition, along with a Sideshow/Weta statue of Minas Tirith and a Howard Shore Creating the Lord of the Rings Symphony DVD. The retail price for this will be set at around $79.92.
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I still see dead lesbian cliches
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I still see dead lesbian cliches
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Some day historians will list billionaires of the 21st century: Bill Gates, Warren Buffett, Frodo Baggins.
Frodo Baggins?
Fifty years ago this month, the fantasy tale that became a worldwide phenomenon was launched when J.R.R. Tolkien's ``The Lord of the Rings'' was first published in the United States by Boston-based Houghton Mifflin.
Tolkien's tale of elves, dwarves and hobbits has not only proved to be one of the most popular books of all times but it has inspired one of Hollywood's biggest blockbusters, with the ripple effect surging through museums, home entertainment, collectibles and the music and toy industries.
And just think: In 1968, Tolkien sold the film rights for a mere $18,000.
Here are snapshots of the Middle-earth economy.
PUBLISHING: From 2000 to 2004, 25 million copies of various versions of the ``Rings'' trilogy and Tolkien's ``The Hobbit'' have been sold. Houghton Mifflin's Tolkien-related books generated $48 million in sales in 2001 and $54 million in 2002. Unlike most classic novels, it remains available in hardback editions. ``For a book that's 50 years old, it's unprecedented,'' said Houghton Mifflin projects director Clay Harper.
STILL MORE PUBLISHING: Interest in all things Rings has spawned a cottage industry of scholarly commentary and criticism, plus pop-culture books focusing on Peter Jackson's movies. Currently, Houghton Mifflin's Tolkien catalog features 106 titles. A search on ``Lord of the Rings'' on Amazon.com yields a whopping 91,388 hits.
AND FOR THE READER WHO HAS EVERYTHING: Houghton Mifflin has published a 50th anniversary edition printed as Tolkien envisioned it - as one hardbound, gilt-edge volume, with fold-out maps. The price: $100.
AT THE MOVIES: According to worldwideboxoffice.com, the three ``Rings'' movies together have grossed $2,914 million worldwide.
IN HOBBIT HOLES: The various DVD/video versions of the first two movies,``The Fellowship of the Ring'' and ``The Two Towers,'' generated an estimated $634 million in sales and about $70 million in rental revenue.``Fellowship'' has sold just less than 19 million copies and ``Tower'' 17.3 million. ``The Return of the King'' has sold about 12 million copies and its much anticipated extended DVD goes on sale Dec. 14.
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I still see dead lesbian cliches
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I still see dead lesbian cliches
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