Lord Hurin wrote:
General Elessar wrote:
I think you'll find most devoted Tolkien fans agree with. I'll admit PJ did a good job, but it could of been much better if the films had agreed with the books more.
I consider myself a "devoted Tolkien fan" and I've read most of his Middle-earth related works. I still think PJ did an excellent job.
Could the films' story have been more true to the books? Absolutely, but perhaps not without losing some of their appeal to Joe Public.
Could the props, costumes and weapons have been more true to the books? Sure, but 99% of the stuff was accurate and all of it was beautiful. A lot of Tolkienites harp on the few gaffes. Aragorn, Boromir and Faramir were said not to have beards, Gondorian soldiers wore plate armour, Cirdan didn't have a beard. Those were little nagging things at the back of my mind, but I didn't let them ruin the films for me as some other people allowed.
Elves at Helm's Deep; did I like it? Not really. I don't think there was enough time in the films to go into the entire history of the Elven race and why they were not meddling in the affairs of Middle-earth anymore. Certainly not enough time to make it understandable to an average movie-goer.
The thing we can't forget about those movies or these upcoming ones is that they have to appeal to a broad range of people, otherwise they'll fall flat. Each of the LoTR films and each of The Hobbit ones could easily be in the 4-5 hour range if the books were followed exactly. Heavy voiceovers and narration would be required and millions more dollars would need to be spent. In the end, no one wants to sit in a cinema for 5 hours. Enough people complained about the "slowness" of
Fellowship.
In general, I agree with all that. However, I'll give a few examples about what I meant about not following the book.
Frodo dismissing Sam before entering Shelob's Lair was wrong. Frodo would never have done that, and even if he had Sam was too loyal to Frodo to abandon him.
Faramir was portrayed in the films as, well, weak. In the books he figures out for himself that Frodo had the Ring, but in the films he tortures Gollum into telling him. Also, in the book he turns back to rescue his men during the retreat from Osgiliath; this doesn't happen in the films.
In the films, right from the start, Denethor is crazy. In the books he doesn't really go crazy at all, he just falls victim to his pride.