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Showing posts with label The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey. Show all posts

Sunday, 16 December 2012

FilmBah Watches: The Hobbit An Unexpected Journey


The Lord of the Rings trilogy can be said to be one of the most defining cinematic event in the lifetime of some audiences. It was the Star Wars for a generation and for something that has such a place in the hearts, it is not hard to see how nostalgia could be mistaken for anticipation with the arrival of The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey.

Almost a decade since the conclusion of the trilogy with Return of the King, Peter Jackson has followed the path of George Lucas to bring back fantasy fans back to Middle Earth with a prequel by adapting the child-friendly The Hobbit, to remind us of the glorious yesteryear when fantasy movies was awakening to a new golden age.

And to glorious yesteryear, The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey takes us through again.

As the first in the two-part-later-turned-trilogy adaptation of The Hobbit by Tolkien, An Unexpected Journey begins on the 110th birthday of Bilbo Baggins as we saw in The Fellowship of the Ring, just moments before Frodo runs off for the memorable opening scene about the punctuality of wizards. Instead of making a passing mention about the book that Bilbo was writing in The Fellowship, it becomes the framing device that takes us 60 years back in time when a younger Bilbo Baggins meets a wandering Gandalf on a fine morning.

This leads to the introduction of the exiled dwarves of Erebor and their prince Thorin Oakenshield, who have lost their mountain home in a brilliant exposition of gold, fire and betrayal. According to the portents, it is time for the dwarves to reclaim their kingdom from Smaug the dragon, and Gandalf has advised them to bring along the home-loving and reluctant halfling if they were to complete their quest.

From then on, it's almost like we've been given a tour back to the wonderful fantasy world of Middle Earth, its lore, the landscapes and the mildly tuned scores of Howard Shore that we have made synonymous with The Shire, the elves and the long road ahead. The focus on the dwarves bring new material to the fray, but waves of nostalgia would surely wash over those who meet old friends like Saruman the White, Galadriel, Lord Elrond, hacked orcs, and of course, Gollum, even though they are shown with different sides. However, such reminders does seem overladen at times, for instance when you begin recognising landscapes where pinnacle events would take place in the Lord of the Rings trilogy, which feels that we are taken more of a trip down the memory lane, than developing us to embrace The Hobbit trilogy.

Yeah, I missed you too, even though you totally deserved to melt in the fires of Mt. Doom for pulling an Evander Hollyfield on Frodo

In terms of the narrative, it does feel that Peter Jackson is intending to pad out a trilogy but I have no knowledge about the appendix material of the original novel to see if they were added as new scenes in An Unexpected Journey after Jackson decided to add a third film in the midst of production. Certain scenes read as though they only took several pages to get over with, but Jackson is fully intent of translating them into dozens of minutes of footage to drag out An Unexpected Journey to end 15 minutes short to a magical 3 hours. Still, it is not something that would have an effect on the experience in the theater; only a concern on whether we would be shortchanged by the time There And Back Again is released.

However, An Unexpected Journey is not just a window to look back at old times, but a door for new ways on how viewers would watch a movie again. I'm happy to report that my personal experience with the HFR (48fps) was eye-opening and dispelled my hidden fears that it would be a gimmick no less. The smoothness and clarity may have been distracting at first, but I soon adapted to the fluidity of the camera movements that give a more livid presence to the events that were unfolding. I will even add that the HFR was actually a boon to the 3D and this is probably the ointment to sooth the forced strain on the eyes as the 3D projection seem to blend well into the background by the added sharpness and clarity from the higher framerate. This is a possible winning combination that will make me be more inclined to 3D screenings and a point filmmakers will have to consider, if exhibitors needed a legitimate justification for the added ticket prices.

Thank god none of them were like Boromir.

It's hard to say anything bad about An Unexpected Journey to give an impression that it was not a flawless masterpiece, so I will attribute the negative side of this guilt trip to this one kid who was in the viewing when I was watching it with a couple of schoolmates who were with me when the first trilogy was first released in cinemas back in 2001...

FUCK YOU, KID! Not only you could not appreciate the fantasy tropes from your loud and incessant questions (You seriously thought the dwarves were a nightmare when they left Bag End?), you punctured the epic moment when Gandalf saves the dwarves from the goblins with your reaction by loudly saying 'd4 H3ll?' when everyone was in silent awe.

The Hell? Really, kid? Gandalf saves the dwarves and that's all you thought? The same Gandalf who saved The Fellowship from the fiery wrath of The Balrog in the Mines of Moria with his most quoted phrase? Seriously?

Oh, that's right. Maybe you weren't even BORN yet. So that's why you thought it was unawesome. You should rue the day you were born because all you have for the most defining movie event in your childhood now is a saga about an emo bitch who never listens to her parents, gets fucked by a vampire who belongs to a whole species that doesn't have the balls for a final showdown because they shat glittering bricks from a vision by a girl.

'D4 h3ll' indeed. I pity your childhood.

Thursday, 13 December 2012

Coming to Cinemas (13/12/2012)

Just like the release week of Skyfall, this week sees only two movies that would be hitting Malaysian screens this Thursday; one a highly anticipated Hollywood blockbuster and the other a local production taking their turn for the compulsory screening.

While you can say it's a quiet week of releases in Malaysia, cinemas are sure to be jammed pack from Thursday through the weekend and getting tickets to see one of them is going to be an adventure in itself for sure...

Let's look at this week's releases.

The Golden Couple (金童玉女)

Director: Ah Niu
Cast: Mike He, Fiona Xie
Running Time: 1 Hour 37 Minutes
Language:: Mandarin
Classification: U
Synopsis: "The Golden Couple" is a story set in a city where a young brilliant advertising executive earns big bucks for his work, owning multiple credit cards and leads a lavish lifestyle. But due to poor financial management, his life soon turns into a debt-ridden nightmare. 

Trailer Impression: Ah Niu's The Golden Couple was set to be released a couple months ago, but due to uncommitted distributors the movie had to be pushed back to this 'auspicious' date. Auspicious to be completely ignored, more like. Still, to Ah Niu's credit I would still give his second directional debut a chance; one reason for this is because I take Ah Niu to be a better filmmaker than Namewee that deserves support from his fellow countrymen. As for the trailer, it seems to revolve around a similar issue he had been in in The Wedding Diary, but seem to have more serious (but still comedic) consequences like Jack Neo's Money No Enough. This one still deserves a look in my book, though most likely when it comes out on DVD, or I don't get a ticket for The Hobbit. Sorry, bud.

The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey

Director: Peter Jackson
Cast: Martin Freeman, Ian McKellen, Richard Armitage, Graham McTavish, Ken Stott, Aidan Turner, Dean O'Gorman, Mark Hadlow, Jed Brophy, Adam Brown, John Callen, Peter Hambleton, Andy Serkis
Running Time: 2 Hours 49 Minutes
Language:: English
Classification: P13
Synopsis: The first of the three-part epic fantasy film directed-produced by Peter Jackson based on J. R. R. Tolkien's fantasy novel of the same name follows the journey of title character Bilbo Baggins, who is swept into an epic quest to reclaim the lost Dwarf Kingdom of Erebor from the fearsome dragon Smaug. Approached out of the blue by the wizard Gandalf the Grey, Bilbo finds himself joining a company of thirteen dwarves led by the legendary warrior, Thorin Oakenshield. Their journey will take them through treacherous lands swarming with Goblins and Orcs, deadly Wargs and Giant Spiders, Shapeshifters and Sorcerers. Although their goal lies to the East and the wastelands of the Lonely Mountain, first they must escape the goblin tunnels, where Bilbo meets the creature Gollum. Alone with Gollum on the shores of an underground lake, Bilbo not only discovers surprising depths of guile and courage, he also gains possession of Gollum's "precious" ring that holds unexpected and useful qualities...

Trailer Impression: What's more to say? We've all been waiting for this to arrive and the time is now. Probably the only concern this time around compared to the previous trilogy is the new HFR (High Frame Rate), which is only being shown in limited theaters in KL (only from TGV). I'm planning to watch it in HFR and decided to skip the IMAX version with the 9-minute clip from Star Trek Into Darkness (partly because I'm not paying extra just to watch Star Trek). So hopefully, I would have something to say about the experience.
FilmBah's Pick of the Week: Do I really have to say? While it's pretty obvious that you should go see The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey in whatever format that suits you (IMAX or 3D HFR), but I won't discount Ah Niu's The Golden Couple. Like I said, it's more of an unfortunate set of circumstances that led its release to be next to The Hobbit, but it doesn't mean that Ah Niu's films are unappealing. I would recommend it to Chinese moviegoers who can't get a ticket for The Hobbit.

Releases according to CinemaOnline.