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It's over. Finally. And I think I'm glad, too. Waiting a year between
installments is bad enough, but enduring the three-hour rollercoaster rides
that make up the Lord of the Rings series is almost too much to bear.
They're too good. They're too emotional.
They're also too long. The Return of the King clocks in at nearly
three-and-a-half hours, which has got to be close to the point where
theaters would consider giving their patrons a brief intermission. You'd
certainly get one if King were a play, and at a play, you wouldn't be
guzzling one of those refreshing Thirsty-Two-ounce sodas, either. Those
loud bangs you hear during the fight for Minis Tirith may not be coming from
the Uruk-hai warriors as they beat their own chests. The sound just might
be your date's bladder giving way.
King is virtually the same film as The Two Towers, only with a resolution. A
really long resolution, especially if you have to tinkle. The quest of the
Fellowship officially ends right around the three-hour mark, but Hobbit-like
writer-director Peter Jackson spends another 20 minutes tying up various
loose ends (yet very much dismissing poor Eowyn and her big ol' crush on
Aragorn - she deserves more, considering her larger role in this
installment). I don't know if any of this stuff was in J.R.R. Tolkien's
book or not, but a 20-minute coda, let alone one viewed through yellow eyes,
is a little too much to take. I understand it may have been hard to let go
of the characters you've spent many years bringing to life, but you've got
to be a man and cut the cord. That said, I don't know what Jackson could
have possibly removed or altered, so I'll shut up about the running time
already.
The other major problem with King, other than the encroaching repetition of
journey and battle, is that, after the first two films, our expectations are
incalculably high for the third. When it's only as good, it almost feels a
little disappointing. In retrospect, of course, it isn't. King is still
one of the best action films ever made, and certainly ranks among the best
releases of 2003. It will garner many Oscar nominations and break box
office records. And best of all, there aren't any Ewoks, saving King from
the fate faced by other trilogy cappers.
King begins in the past, where a still normal-looking Smeagol (Andy Serkis)
and a buddy find The One Ring To Control Them All during a quiet afternoon
of fishing. Smeagol strangles his pal to get the ring from him, before King
shows a quick montage of the CG-character's gradual physical undoing. It's
a very cool opening, and it perfectly sets up the similar struggles Frodo
(Elijah Wood) and Sam (Sean Astin) will face on their trek to Mount Doom to
destroy the very same ring. Their journey is still lead by Smeagol, who
continues to have those bi-polar discussions with himself over how far he'll
go to recover his "precious."
Meanwhile, the rest of the Fellowship remains splintered into the same two
groups we saw in Towers, only with Merry (Dominic Monaghan) and Pippin
(Billy Boyd) separated from each other for a good portion of the film.
Honestly, I couldn't keep track of where Aragorn (Viggo Mortensen), Legolas
(Orlando Bloom) and Gimli (John Rhys-Davies) were, or where they were headed
most of the time. Usually it centered around battles, including one
involving Sam singing for the crazy Denethor that is the best action scene
set to a quiet song since Face/Off's fabulously beautiful "Somewhere Over
the Rainbow" slo-mo dove carnage.
3:26 - PG-13 for intense epic battle sequences and frightening images
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X-Language: en
X-RT-ReviewID: 1229420
X-RT-TitleID: 1127213
X-RT-SourceID: 595
X-RT-AuthorID: 1146
X-RT-RatingText: 9/10
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