![]() Nor will I be responsible for his fate - Doh! I can not guarantee his safety - understood. (This post was edited by Misto on Oct 10 2012, 12:28pm) No need to do it again only a few seconds later. Okay, so he once ran into the chandelier that's about okay and somewhat funny. I always wonder what drugs they were on.Īlso I'm not into the bumping into the ceiling stuff Gandalf does at bag end. When Frodo wakes up towards the end of ROTK just does my head in. Because of them, the I personally think ROTK SEE is rather inferior to the theatrical version. I really hate seeing most of these scenes. Aragorn dropping his Evenstar pendant, breaking it. The whole attack on the pirates bit (also because it's redundant and spoils the outcome of the Pelennor battle) And, the makers must have been aware of their cheesiness, by cutting them out of the theatrical version and even leaving just the good parts of them in the ROTK SEE advertizing trailer. I have some really cheesy moments from ROTK SEE. Want Hobbit Movie News? Hobbit Headlines of the Week! But when they get it wrong, I have to cover my eyes. ![]() With both these directors, when they get it right, they make magic. Sometimes, Peter Jackson's style reminds me of James Cameron. Thankfully, the scenes I find moving and beautiful far outweigh the cheese for me. And the 'laughing' moment when Gandalf first arrives and Frodo leaps into the cart in FOTR I find pretty dreadful too.Ĭlosely followed by the "I made some stew" scene in TTT. Three hundred lives of men I walked this earth, and now I have no time. It was not handled well, to say the least. Often times the comedy was quite cheesy as well. I thought ROTK got cheesy with Frodo and Sam's interactions at the end. This was a bit too close to "real" for me so it doesn't work as well for me, I guess! Other "seeming" moments like this (Galadriel's temptation, Frodo in the wraith-world), are done with effects that give the impression that it's more of an altered state kind of thing going on, and not that some wizard just expanded, physically to twice his size. I know what they were going for, and it is in the book, but having Gandalf "seem" like he grew big and powerful in Bag End is the kind of thing that's better read on a page than actually shown on screen. Gandalf getting all big and bad in Bag End. That sounded awfully misplaced, like if when Pippin was knocked out by the Palantír someone shouted "give him an aspirin!" "nervous system" is too "modern" a term for a world like Third Age Middle-earth. Gimli's "He was twitching because he's got (For the record, I went out of town a few days, and missed some classes, and did not get to see all of the EE. It was so funny, but totally out of place. There was a part where Bilbo is greeting the party guests, and a woman with 12 kids shows up, and, well here is how the dialogue went. I saw the first 30 minutes of the EE of Fellowship of the Ring. ![]() Last summer, I took a class on The Lord of the Rings, and the teacher showed us the Extended Editions. How cheesy, tv-like is that? Who would ever need such a title - also, it's the only such time-and-place title in the whole trilogy! Objectively speaking what moments in the LOTR trilogy would you call cheesy? I mean, cheap, out of line, unfitting the gorgeous rest? And as for the LOTR trilogy, I love it DESPITE its cheesy moments, knowing they're there. Though I personally think it is rather inferior compared to his "Braindead" and "Meet the Feebles" movies. Okay, we all love PJ and his LOTR trilogy. Tolkien Topics: Movie Discussion: The Lord of the Rings: The One Ring Forums: Tolkien Topics: Movie Discussion: The Lord of the Rings: Cheesy moments on LOTR ![]()
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