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The Two Towers Inferno
The latest big screen installment of the Lord of the Rings trilogy
could be your last movie of 2002, or your first of 2003; but you're
going to see it. Right?
CAPSULE:
The middle third of the adaptation of the great epic fantasy comes
surprisingly close to being a satisfying adaptation. What may be
just about the best fantasy film ever made continues the story of
J. R. R. Tolkien's THE LORD OF THE RINGS. Intelligent and visually
beautiful, Peter Jackson's THE LORD OF THE RINGS trilogy is an instant
classic.

In a year with several sequels and series
films being released, the one for which the public has the greatest
expectation is Peter Jackson's adaptation of the middle book of
the LORD OF THE RINGS, and with good reason. One reservation on
the recommendation of the film: it is not recommended that anyone
see the second section of this film who has not first seen the first
section and is not familiar with the story.
Peter Jackson has no time to bring newcomers up to speed even in
a three-hour chapter. Instead, opportunities abound to see the first
section via cable, home video, and convention showings. All this
is perhaps a recognition that seeing the second section without
knowledge of the content of the first section is not a good idea.
In the second section of the film as the story continues, the Fellowship
has split into three groups. Frodo (Elijah Wood) and Sam Gamgee
(Sean Astin) are continuing to Mount Doom in their effort to destroy
the ring. Frodo is troubled by dreams of the death of Gandalf (Ian
McKellen).
The man Aragorn (Viggo Mortensen), the elf Legolas (Orlando Bloom),
and the dwarf Gimli (John Rhys-Davies) search for their captured
friends, Pippin (Billy Boyd) and Merry (Dominic Monaghan). Pippin
and Merry in the meantime are attempting to free themselves and
return to the Shire.
These quests will involve the group in a coming war between the
kingdom of Rohan, ruled by Theoden (Bernard Hill) and the Fellowship's
archenemy, the wizard Saruman (Christopher Lee). Saruman wants to
destroy all the kingdoms of men in Middle Earth. The centerpiece
of this film is the intricately detailed dramatization of the Battle
of Helm's Deep, the climax of this section.
The story line, like the Fellowship itself, has split into three
pieces and in sort of the ultimate road picture, follows the travels
and experiences of the three groups. A major new character has been
added, though we did see him from a distance in the previous film.
This is the dangerous figure Gollum (almost fully digital but with
a voice by Andy Serkis). Gollum is rumored to have been a hobbit
once, but had acquired and then lost the Ring. Gollum's temporary
possession of the Ring has left him shriveled, emaciated, and schizophrenic.
His face now looks like something out of a Japanese ghost story,
which may well be an intentional resemblance. But above all the
possession of the Ring has left Gollum with an unquenchable desire
to once again possess the Ring.
The script has some variations from the book that do not completely
make sense. Grima Wormtongue (Brad Dourif) seems to have been planted
in Helm's Deep to be a false adviser to Theoden, but in the film
version that seems totally redundant since Theoden is already possessed
by Saruman.
If time is moving uniformly in the multiple story lines, Pippin
and Merry spend what must be a very long time, most of the film,
in a tree. Some of the writing is just bad ideas. "The battle
for Helm's Deep is over. The battle for Middle Earth is about to
begin!" is a near-direct borrowing from Winston Churchill.
Legolas sledding down stone stairs on a shield is a bit of unnecessary
silliness. But the nice touches seem to outnumber the bad ones.
The visualizations have some problems, but generally are quite
good. There are moments when it is obvious the viewer is seeing
CGI animation. Somehow it looks 95% natural, but there is some nuance
of natural movement that the animators are not getting.
Some scenes the animation looks a little jerky. While the animation
in scenes of battle is as breathtaking as the New Zealand scenery,
there are moments when it tips its hand. The animation of Gollum
is wonderful and one almost accepts him as a real character. But
somehow I was bothered by the voice. It did not quite fit the lips.
It felt more like foreign film dubbing than like a live actor speaking.
But there is a real character in Gollum and I doubt people will
find him as grating as Jar-Jar Binks. Speaking of the scenery, it
becomes a real character of the film. Howard Shore's music, while
it does not strike me as creative as in the first film, still creates
the mood with little reuse of music from the first film.
The cast remains excellent, though I cannot say that Elijah Wood
does a lot for me as Frodo. Perhaps he does not convey enough emotion.
Bernard Hill is a good solid addition to the story. He may be best
remembered as the Captain in TITANIC.
There is something of a distraction having John Rhys-Davis's voice
come from two different characters, Gimli and the new Treebeard.
Liv Tyler and Cate Blanchett appear almost exclusively as wispy
and exaggerated visions the ideal of elegance and beauty.
They are made to seem too mythic while Brad Dourif (of ONE FLEW
OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST and RAGTIME) does not seem mythic enough.
Ian McKellen, always welcome, is back in a slightly different role.
Rarely has film been used so effectively to make a fantasy live
on the screen. I will not rate the middle third of THE LORD OF THE
RINGS but I rate the first two parts of THE LORD OF THE RINGS a
full score of 10 on the 0 to 10 scale and a +4 on the -4 to +4 scale.
Mark R. Leeper
Copyright 2002 Mark R. Leeper
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OTHER CONTENT - January 2003
Brian Aldiss: the Master of Glacial Helliconia Brian Aldiss, one of Britain's greatest authors, interviewed. He holds forth on why he was glad Michael Moorcock appeared in the sixties, why his Helliconia trilogy is just about a change in the weather, and the terrible unwisdom of terraforming Mars. (AUTHOR INTERVIEWS)
Hunt
vs Hunt
SFF author Walter Hunt interviewed by SFF author Stephen Hunt. Crikes, that's
a whole lot of Hunt-ing going on for Christmas. The author of the crackingly
good military SF epic The Dark Wing tells us how the idea of an implacable alien
enemy that won't make peace with us, with a religion that teaches that humanity
shouldn't exist, comes disturbingly close to home given the events of the past
year.
(AUTHOR INTERVIEWS)
Offworld report: December 2003 This month's offworld roundup features the shock hack of David Langford's Ansible magazine, an interview with author David Zindell, the sudden death of the TV series Firefly, while Roger MacBride Allen remembers author Charles Sheffield. (NEWS)
The Two Towers Inferno
The latest big screen installment of the Lord of the Rings trilogy could be
your last movie of 2002, or your first of 2003; but you're going to see it.
Right?
(FILM REVIEWS)
Solaris An alien planet gives George Clooney a perfect facsimile of the wife he lost on earth in SOLARIS. The philosophical film has some engaging ideas, but viewers expecting romantic sci-fi will probably be disappointed and perhaps even bored. This is dense, introspective, and intelligent science fiction as distinguished from entertainment. (FILM REVIEWS)
Star Trek: Nemesis As the "Star Trek" series seems slowly to lose steam, Mark finds the movie contains one late - uncharacteristic - burst of life and energy, a science-fictional examination of the nature-nurture question. Picard and Data each meet physically identical copies of their former selves and each must deal with the similarities and differences. The question faced is, what makes a person who he is? (FILM REVIEWS)
James Bond Is An Alien
It's true, Uncle Geoff, our esteemed editor has definitive proof. The British
secret service's most deadly human weapon turns out not to be so human after
all.
(ARTICLES)
Peanut Butter & Magic Just in time for Christmas, a short fantasy story from the oft-enchanted pen of Elizabeth Burton. (FICTION)
Here comes the 'Egg' man With four Hugos and a Chesley, Bob Eggleton is one of the most renowned SF and fantasy artists in the world. And he has a really amazing haircut too! (ARTIST INTERVIEWS)
Star Trek Enterprise: The Seventh T'Pol asks Archer along on a classified mission which threatens to reveal an incident she has long hidden from herself. (TV REVIEWS)
Star Trek Enterprise: The Communicator When Lieutenant Reed loses his communicator on a landing mission, he and Archer return to retrieve it before it contaminates that planet's culture. (TV REVIEWS)
Star Trek Enterprise: Singularity Radiation from a nearby black hole affects the Trek crew's behaviour in some unexpected ways. (TV REVIEWS)
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