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read more DetailsAs the triumphant start of a trilogy, The Lord in the Rings: The Fellowship in the Ring leaves you begging for more. By necessity, Peter Jackson's ambitious epic compresses J.R.R. Tolkien's classic The Lord in the Rings, but this robust adaptation maintains reverent allegiance to Tolkien's creation, instantly qualifying together in the greatest fantasy films ever made. At 178 minutes, it's long enough to establish the myriad inhabitants of Middle-earth, the legendary Rings of Power, along with the fellowship of hobbits, elves, dwarves, and humans--led by the wizard Gandalf (Ian McKellen) along with the brave hobbit Frodo (Elijah Wood)--who must battle terrifying forces of evil on the perilous journey to destroy the One Ring inside land of Mordor. Superbly paced, the film is both epic and intimate, offering astonishing special effects and production design while emphasizing the emotional intensity of Frodo's adventure, and ends on a perfect note of heroic loyalty and rich anticipation.
After the breaking from the Fellowship, Frodo and Sam journey to Mordor using the creature Gollum as his or her guide in Both Towers. Meanwhile, Aragorn (Viggo Mortensen), Legolas (Orlando Bloom), and Gimli (John Rhys-Davies) join inside the defense from the people of Rohan, who will be the first target within the eradication in the race of Men with the renegade wizard Saruman (Christopher Lee) along with the dark lord Sauron. Fantastic creatures, astounding visual effects, and a climactic battle in the fortress of Helm's Deep make the Two Towers a worthy successor to The Fellowship in the Ring, grander in scale but retaining the story's emotional intimacy.
With The Return of the King, the maximum fantasy epic in film history draws to a grand and glorious conclusion. The trilogy could never fully satisfy those who remain exclusively loyal to Tolkien's expansive literature, but like a showcase for physical and technical craftsmanship it really is unsurpassed in pure scale and ambition, setting milestone after cinematic milestone as Frodo and Sam continue their mission to Mordor to eliminate the soul-corrupting One Ring. Even though the heir towards the kingdom of Men, Aragorn, endures the huge battle at Minas Tirith with the allegiance of Legolas, Gimli, and Gandalf, Frodo and Sam must survive the schizoid deceptions of Gollum, who remains utterly convincing as being a hybrid of performance (by Andy Serkis) and subtly nuanced computer animation. Jackson and cowriters Fran Walsh and Philippa Boyens have much ground to cover; that they do so with intense pacing and epic sweep is impressive enough, but by investing greater depth and consequence inside the actions of fellow hobbits Merry (Dominic Monaghan) and Pippin (Billy Boyd), they ensure that The Return from the King maintains the trilogy's focus on intimate fellowship and remains faithful to Tolkien's overall vision. By ending the LOTR trilogy with noble integrity and faith in the power of imaginative storytelling, The Return of the King, like its predecessors, will stand as an adventure to the ages. --Jeff Shannon and David Horiuchi
Our Review in the Extended Edition on DVD (Dec. 14, 2004):
The extended editions of Peter Jackson's The Lord with the Rings present the best trilogy in film history inside the most ambitious begins DVD history. In bringing J.R.R. Tolkien's nearly unfilmable work to the screen, Jackson benefited from extraordinary special effects, evocative New Zealand locales, and an exceptionally well-chosen cast, most of most from his or her own adaptation with co-writers Fran Walsh and Philippa Boyens, preserving Tolkien's vision and often his very words, but in addition making logical changes to accommodate the medium of film. While purists were unsatisfied with these changes and about characters and scenes left out from the films, the almost two additional hours of fabric within the extended editions (about 11 hours total) help appease them by delving more deeply into Tolkien's music, the characters, and loose ends that enrich the story, like a conclusion of the Faramir-Denethor relationship, and the appearance with the Mouth of Sauron on the gates of Mordor. In addition, the extended editions offer more bridge material between the films, further confirming that the trilogy is really one long film presented in three pieces (which is the reason why oahu is the greatest trilogy ever--there's no weak link). The scene of Galadriel's gifts on the Fellowship added to the first film proves significant in the course in the story, while the brand new Faramir scene at the end from the second film helps set in the third along with the new Saruman scene with the beginning from the third film helps conclude the plot with the second.
To top everything off, the extended editions offer four discs per film: two to the longer movie, plus four commentary tracks and stupendous DTS 6.1 ES sound; and a couple for your bonus material, which covers just about from script creation to special effects. The argument was that fans would need both versions for the reason that bonus material is completely different, though the features on the theatrical releases are really vastly inferior that the only real reason a fan would want them will be should they wanted to watch the shorter versions they saw in theaters (the last of which, The Return in the King, merely won 11 Oscars). The LOTR extended editions without exception have set the DVD standard by providing a richer film experience that pulls the 3 films together and further embraces Tolkien's world, a reference-quality home entertainment experience, and generous, intelligent, and engrossing bonus features. --David Horiuchi
Versions of Lord in the Rings: The Movie Trilogy on Blu-ray and DVD
Original Theatrical Edition
Platinum Series Special Extended Edition
Original Theatrical and Extended Limited Edition
Original Theatrical Edition [Blu-ray]
Extended Edition [Blu-ray]
Release Date May 25, 2004 Dec. 14, 2004 Aug. 29, 2006 Apr. 16, 2010 TBA
Format/Disc # Three DVDs 12 DVDs Six DVDs Three Blu-ray Discs, Three DVDs, Three Digital Copies 15 Discs Total: Films are on Blu-ray, with Special Features on DVDs
Digital Copies No No No Yes, on three discs (expired Apr. 4, 2011)
Yes, online (expires Jun. 26, 2012)
Extra footage None 30 minutes included with Return from the King; 43 minutes added to the Two Towers; 50 minutes included with Return with the King For the three films: Both the theatrical and extended edition one disc None Same as extended-edition DVD
Commentaries None Commentary by Peter Jackson, Fran Walsh, and Philippa Boyens; Commentary from the design team; Commentary through the production/post-production team; Commentary through the cast, including Elijah Wood, Ian McKellen, Sean Astin, Andy Serkis, John Rhys-Davies, Orlando Bloom, Christopher Lee, and Miranda Otto None None Same commentaries as extended-edition DVD
Documentaries Fellowship of the Ring: "Welcome to Middle-earth," "The Quest for your Ring," "A Passage to Middle-earth"; The 2 Towers: "On the Set: The Lord in the Rings: the Two Towers"; "Return to Middle- earth"Return with the King: Three documentaries: "The Quest Fulfilled: A Director's Vision," "A Filmmaker's Journey: Making The Return of The King," "National Geographic Special: Beyond the Movie" "From Book to Vision," "From Vision to Reality," "The Journey Continues...," Documentaries on J.R.R. Tolkein, "From Book to Script" documentaries, "Designing and Building Middle-earth," "Home of the Horse Lords," "Gollum," "Filming 'The Two Towers,'" "Visual Effects," "Editorial: Refining the Story," "Music and Sound," "The Battle for Helm's Deep is Over..."; "Filming The Return from the King," "Weta Digital," "Post-Production: Journey's End," "The Passing of an Age," "Cameron Duncan: The Inspiration for 'Into the West'" Three behind-the-scenes documentaries by Costa Botes, the filmmaker director Peter Jackson personally hired Same as theatrical-edition DVD Same as extended-edition DVD, plus Costa Botes documentaries from your Original Theatrical & Extended Limited Edition
Featurettes Fellowship with the Ring: 15 featurettes originally made for lordoftherings.net; Both Towers: Eight featurettes originally created for lordoftherings.net; Return with the King: Six featurettes None None Same as theatrical-edition DVD None
Other Features Exclusive 10-minute behind-the-scenes previews of The 2 Towers and The Fellowship from the Ring; Enya "May It Be" music video; An inside look on the Special Extended DVD Edition of The Lord from the Rings Trilogy; Preview of Electronic Arts' video games; DVD-ROM features: Exclusive online content; Emiliana Torrini "Gollum Song" music video; "The Long and Short of It," a short film by Sean Astin; "The Lord of The Rings" Trilogy Supertrailer Design Galleries; "Middle-earth Atlas: Tracing the Journeys from the Fellowship" interactive map; "New Zealand as Middle-earth" interactive map w/on-location footage; production photos; "The Mumakil Battle" demonstration / multi-angle interactive feature; "DFK6498" short film, "Strike Zone" short film, DVD-ROM use of exclusive online features None Same as theatrical-edition DVD Same as extended edition DVDs; see above for complete special features
The Quest Is Over: All three extended versions in dazzling 1080p and DTS HD-MA 5.1 Audio. Deluxe set includes over 26 Hours of spellbinding behind-the- moviemaking material, like the Rare Costa Botes documentaries, on 15 discs.
The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship in the Ring Extended Edition: With the help of the courageous fellowship of friends and allies, Frodo embarks on the perilous mission to eliminate the legendary One Ring.
The Lord from the Rings: the Two Towers Extended Edition: In the middle chapter of the historic movie trilogy, the Fellowship is broken but its quest to destroy the One Ring continues.
The Lord from the Rings: The Return in the King Extended Edition: The final battle for Middle-earth begins. Frodo and Sam, led by Gollum, continue their dangerous mission toward the fires of Mount Doom so as to eliminate the One Ring.
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