Shaun Watson reviews�
Internet Movie Database |
First things first: I HAVE NOT READ �THE LORD OF THE RINGS.� There. With that said, let�s move on�
What? You wanna know why I feel I should write this review when I haven�t even read the book? Hm. Easy answer: �cuz I can & some people like going to movies made from books so�s they can visualize the book or use it as a substitute for not reading. I fall into the category of the latter. Got it? Done.
And we�re off:
The intro itself is fucking awesome in its job to set up the movie. Talks about
the 19 rings forged by Sauron (not the pterodactyl man from X-Men; pronounced
SOUR-on not SOAR-on but who cares) and given to the beings of Middle Earth (called
�Midgard� from here on) and the 20th ring he made for himself to control the
other 19. Hell, the intro alone could�ve surpassed the movie in my opinion.
came out looking extra D-Bo* and proved he ain�t just looks by knocking 10 guys
away at once. So awesome. A reflection of human nature at the hands of Isildur
(fucking ass) makes for a good discussion about how humans suck.
Moving on to present day, the story takes us to MunchkinLand, home of the little people obviously modeled on stereotypical ideas of the Irish. The resident ice cream man/wizard in disguise Gandalf (Sir Ian McKellen, Apt Pupil) shows up & chills out with his fave folk. This draws a parallel to Edith Hamilton�s comment in Mythology about Zeus going away at times to hang with his favorite people, the Ethiopians. That�s a tangent ne�er explored in English class.
So Gandalf hangs to see his ol� buddy Bilbo(Ian Holm, Brazil) at his 111th birthday and is disappointed when he disappears in front of the whole village. He finds out that Bilbo�s been using a ring to do crazy things & leaves to find out what the inscription on the ring meant. He comes back & proceeds to tell Bilbo�s nephew Frodo (Elijah Wood, Forever Young) about the ring. It�s not just any ring; it�s the ONE Ring.
Side note: the One Ring is the fucking Devil. It whispers your name so sweetly and it vibrated and wants you to wear it; c�mon it is a ring�but it�s the scariest thing in the movie ever. It�s not the scariest ring, though�
Meanwhile, Gandalf tells Frodo to take the ring away from MunchkinLand & meet him at a bar in the city; He�s got business to take care of. Sauron knows where to find the ring through torturing Gollum (a former Munchkin tainted by the One Ring) and sends the scary RingWraiths. No face, just a cloak and a sword astride a black horse. Reminds me of Frank Frazetta�s painting, �Death Dealer�. They chase Frodo and his friends Sam(Sean Astin, Rudy) and two other Munchkins called Merry and Pippin. The foursome barely escape and, long story short, they end up at Rivendell, home of the Elves and last refuge of 20th Century Art Noveau. There they meet Gandalf & ask why he wasn�t at the city. Easy for Gandalf to answer: he was getting his ass handed to him by his mentor Saruman the White (Christopher Lee, Star Wars Episode II: Attack of the Clones) whom he thought was good but wasn�t and recently escaped his clutches in Isengard Tower to join the rest of the crew.
Anyways, there�s more people at Rivendell for a meeting to find out what�s going on & what should be done with the One Ring. The Humans say �Keep it & use it against Dark Lord Sauron�, the Elves say �Toss it into Mount Doom to destroy it� and the Dwarves say �We won�t do what either of you kooks say; give it to us & we�ll handle it our way!� Frodo agrees with the Elves and puts it upon himself to go to Mt. Doom and destroy the One Ring. Gandalf suggests to the Elf King Elmdor (Hugo Weaving, The Matrix) that he needs an escort. Thus the Fellowship of the Ring is formed, consisting of Gandalf, the four Munchkins and these noble RPG archetypes:
Side note: I recall a friend of mine talking about how the music of Orcs and assorted types of rap, bass and hip-hop are similar. Funny thing is that Orcs look like pig people in many incarnations. Also, Orcs seem to be the dark-skinned bad guys in many fantasy stories, if not the only thing standing between the light-skinned Anglo good guys and peace in their cherished lands. I wonder if the underlying message in fantasy sterotypes is that the darkness manifests itself as such through dark skin (Orcs for Black, Easterlings for Arabs, etc.) and must be destroyed accordingly without discussions of peace due to the fact that they�re too evil, too stupid, ugly mud people with pig noses or heathens (from what I understand, a blend of them all) in order to achieve peace without harming your like-skinned brethren. I wonder�Nah! Couldn�t be! Moving on to the story�
Death Dealer by Frank Frazetta
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CHOICE CUTS:
I like this movie a lot. It�s damned goody. Aragorn has this way of rollin that
says, �You get one chance to cut me. You fuck up; you die.� Legolas made his debut
as the MAN here. He can do you with the bow (he�s an archer) by stabbing you in
the eye with an arrow and shooting you & your friend with it, then do melee duty
with two short swords. Don�t sleep on the wizard Gandalf�s sword skills. He will
rough you up. Gimli, short as he is, is always ready to dig in somebody & I like
that. Arwen�s a rider for sure, and having water magic doesn�t hurt at all. Despite
his shortcomings, I have to clap it up for Boromir. He took three arrows the size
of broomsticks in his body and still kicked ass. A tanker to the last, he was.
The duel between the Uruk-Hai leader (the action figure had the name �Lurtz�)
and Aragorn was nice. You felt every swordclash and strike by boot and fist. AND
they played dirty. Yeah.
Since this is a sword-and-sorcery flick about the book that is the bible defining the base parameters of the genre, it gets no less than 5 out of 5 HAPPY.
Check out my new review: �The Lord of the Rings: the Two Towers�!