Marcus Telcontar
Dec 31st, 2001, 12:41:32 AM
I will be the first to admit, I rated TPM far too high after it came out. I think it had to do with some sort of mass hyteria and a need for TPM to be great. That's wrong. And now, TPM is now for me a good movie, not great and nor should it be. I guess I should have realised when I began to reach for the fast forward button for any scence of Portman in the beginning of the movie. And I was still in a theatre. Right now, I have not got the DVD and I dont think I will. I just dont think it's worth it.
Since then, I've been careful to wait for initial thoughts to cool off to judge. If I still think the movie lives up to a second or third viewing, then it rates. Like Shrek. What a classic and there are so many details you just dont see first or second time around. Still makes me laugh. And the way it skewers Disney....! And the exploding bird....!
Yeah, I love it. And the DVD rules.
So, I've seen LOTR:FOTR twice. What now?
I went into this viewing ready to pick it apart. Gun for any flaws. Try to dislike it, cause my initial OMG!!! must surely have been going to far.
I am forced to admit it was not wrong. FOTR is not a perfect movie, I can think of two places that things could have been done better, but you have to admit, has there been a movie with more spectaclar visuals, more mood or acting lately? Or captures an audience so utterly? Despite trying to be as critical as possible, FOTR just does what Citizen Kane does for me - I am forced to accept it is a great movie, one of the best. Certainly, nothing in the last five years gets close, although Sixth Sense was brilliant in itself.
Fellowship of The Ring is a movie to immerse yourself in, to wallow in. There are so mnay small ytouches to appreciate, like the acurate maps, the correct elvish speech, the writings are in the correct scripts.
Amazing that Jackson not only gives us a movie to do Lord Of The Rings justice, it is intself an incedible movie and well worth watching by itself. it captures the spirit of the book so well, it's amazing. Unlike TPM, this is going to age well, which is the test of any great movie. Will it still be great in 10 years time? I think it's going to be.
Still worth a 9.5 and still worth at least another two viewings.
P.S. The last theatre I was at had the bass cranked. The Balrog nearly makes you levitate
Since then, I've been careful to wait for initial thoughts to cool off to judge. If I still think the movie lives up to a second or third viewing, then it rates. Like Shrek. What a classic and there are so many details you just dont see first or second time around. Still makes me laugh. And the way it skewers Disney....! And the exploding bird....!
Yeah, I love it. And the DVD rules.
So, I've seen LOTR:FOTR twice. What now?
I went into this viewing ready to pick it apart. Gun for any flaws. Try to dislike it, cause my initial OMG!!! must surely have been going to far.
I am forced to admit it was not wrong. FOTR is not a perfect movie, I can think of two places that things could have been done better, but you have to admit, has there been a movie with more spectaclar visuals, more mood or acting lately? Or captures an audience so utterly? Despite trying to be as critical as possible, FOTR just does what Citizen Kane does for me - I am forced to accept it is a great movie, one of the best. Certainly, nothing in the last five years gets close, although Sixth Sense was brilliant in itself.
Fellowship of The Ring is a movie to immerse yourself in, to wallow in. There are so mnay small ytouches to appreciate, like the acurate maps, the correct elvish speech, the writings are in the correct scripts.
Amazing that Jackson not only gives us a movie to do Lord Of The Rings justice, it is intself an incedible movie and well worth watching by itself. it captures the spirit of the book so well, it's amazing. Unlike TPM, this is going to age well, which is the test of any great movie. Will it still be great in 10 years time? I think it's going to be.
Still worth a 9.5 and still worth at least another two viewings.
P.S. The last theatre I was at had the bass cranked. The Balrog nearly makes you levitate