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It was like watching a much worse, wanna be LOTR. I hated it, even though I liked the first one.
Quote from: fireninja on December 19, 2008, 08:50:17 PMIt was like watching a much worse, wanna be LOTR. I hated it, even though I liked the first one. So it was worse than eragon?
Quote from: TheKarazyvicePresidentRR on December 19, 2008, 11:17:23 PMQuote from: fireninja on December 19, 2008, 08:50:17 PMIt was like watching a much worse, wanna be LOTR. I hated it, even though I liked the first one. So it was worse than eragon?That......is impossible
I was talking about the movie
What upset me about it was that I enjoyed the first one, and the first one was pretty accurate to the book... and so they set a pretty high bar for themselves. When they failed, and added scenes that didnt even exist (overnight raid, anyone?), that upset me.
But like I said, I liked it as a cinematic experience.
Out of curiosity, would you pay to see it again in the movie theatre?
The only movies I've payed to see more than once were Cloverfield and The Dark Knight.
Quote from: Lamborghini_diablo on December 21, 2008, 01:02:57 PMThe only movies I've payed to see more than once were Cloverfield and The Dark Knight.Aladdin seven times, The Incredibles three times. That's about it.
I was VERY upset at the movie. I know that movies will always be different from the books. More action is usually needed. What I do NOT like is when they mess with characters.There seems to be this concept in today's film industry that we as a culture cannot understand or feel alongside highly ethical/righteous characters. Characters who we can look up to and try to emulate in our books are downgraded in their movie incarnations so the audience can understand/grow alongside them.They did it to Faramir in LOTR, they did it to High King Peter in the Caspian film. Both characters were made less good in the films. In the books, both Faramir and Peter did what was right because they knew it was right, regardless of the consequences. In the films, they struggled and even made wrong decisions (which changed the storyline drastically). I do not like this. Part of the reason I enjoyed these books is because of these strong characters whom I could attempt to emulate. Changing these characters, changes the stories, and makes them less powerful stories.