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Peter Jackson, JRR Tolkien, Celebrity Death Match.

วันศุกร์ที่ 13 สิงหาคม พ.ศ. 2553 § 0


Image : http://www.flickr.com


Treebeard Moves!

Soon after its publication, JRR Tolkien's Lord of the Rings outgrew its popular fiction status. Lord of the Rings is a cultural event. With the motion picture, similar in genius, the meaning is further extricated from its origin. This phenomenon is hardly novel, but in respect to the profound cultural and philosophical significance of Lord of the Rings it is terribly useful to compare the movie with the book.

Of course from book to screen there is a revision. Deletions are especially obvious, but what is done to the overall meaning is less obvious. Also, in the change from literary to motion picture there are stylistic imprints.

The most significance difference is that not only did Tolkien take more time to construct the story, he also took more time within the story.

JRR Tolkien originated the work over decades, drawing it within a written tradition while favoring Anglo-Saxon and including invented languages. Peter Jackson's movie involves a huge amount of things. Innumerable items, such as buttons, were made to two different scales to accommodate the shift in scale from human to hobbits. Converse to the quotidian is the use of satellites to coordinate all the elements working in different parts of the globe. As film is a kind of language, the innovations in special effects can be likened to Tolkien's invention of language.
But apart from those differences in form, we think most of "Why did that get put aside?" "Why was that added?" and then "Why keep that?".

Those questions conceal the most important revision of all: Jackson's portrayal on a smaller landscape, in a smaller scale in time.

Watching the DVD's, there are many contractions in space from the point of view of the characters. Frodo's view from Emyn Muil and Gandalfs view from Minas Tirith are not correct in proportion and proximity to Tolkien's map, but perhaps spatially accurate in respect to Jackon's requisite contraction of time and space. Overall, the space of middle earth seems contracted when it is compared to the landscapes and distances in Tolkien. These contractions in space automatically contract the story in time.

Tolkien scope of time is abnormally wide. Saving the world and global transformations are all cosmic events, but there is also a more humble, human scale in comparison with the motion picture as well.

Perhaps the first clue to this occurs at the beginning, in the discovery of the ring of power is in the hands of a Shire folk. Gandalf arrives, confirms that this hobbit does indeed possess the ring of power, and then this is put aside for weeks. In the movie they hustle out of the Shire. Is it just armchair, professorial pace here?

Tolkien goes on with interruptions not seeming essential to the plot. Or are they? The story's time is near half a year. In the movies the transitions in time seem unremarkable.

Chase scenes and fights and romantic chases: movie time is popular, and it is by it own nature set, for the most part, in real time. It seems merely customary to delete scenes that delay the action in order to streamline or tighten the story dramatically.

Maggot, Bombadil, The Scouring of the Shire: deleted. But not just for the streamlining, but for the nature of the storytelling, do we lose the starting and stopping and starting again, of a story within a story. These deletions eventually weaken in sequence the progression of the movies.

In that starting and stopping is a kind of charm, induced by a more comfortable use of time. At first glance, we develop care about the characters before the main event. It makes us identify strongly with the hobbits. But more important is the idea that is not so obvious, creating heterogeneous time.

Heterogenous time means a variety of different times, past, present, future, beginnings, middles and ends, stories within stories, backstory, fate, destiny, foreshadowing. This puts emphasis on character, or the character driven story.

This kind of time is very different in the movies. Not just that the movie must be shorter and in removing elements meanings change. Though there are a number of storytelling techniques within film narrative; flashbacks and 'flashforwards', dreams, parallel storylines, exposition with voice-over, repetitions, even fade outs and dissolves...the underlying aesthetic power of motion pictures is that the 'now' is overpowering.

The heterogenous time of disconnected or circumstantially connected events has been simulated in Jim Jarmusch's Stranger Than Paradise by the inclusion of black frames, simulating a kind of ambiguity to where in time and space each successive scene is, but such a technique would not be applicable to the Fellowship of the Ring.

Heterogenous time, in this case a kind of stumbling from event to event, is necessary to create an overall feeling of the time of innocence. Such is the world of the Shire, despite Sackville-Baggins's, and a ring of power stashed in a wooden chest. Such a world is necessary to contrast with the burden of contemplating one's destiny and the cosmos. Thus we feel a hobbit as something in our own experience, going from carelessness of Arcadia to the release of the Grey Havens.

Motion picture techniques with time: introductions, flashbacks, narratives within narratives, are too useful to not use frequently and liberally. This could be confused with heterogeneous time, but it is not. Such techniques, being used here and there for purposes of expediency, do not emphasize a contrast, or create larger scales of transitions from one kind of time to another, as occurs in the trilogy. In Tolkien's narrative, heterogeneous time changes into a quest that unravels into multiple storylines, whose threads then converge at the Crack of Doom. There is a compression of tense.
The Grey Havens is not equal in poignancy between book and DVD. Jackson sought to include the world weary tone that ends Tokien's Lord of the Rings, but somehow, as the grinding pace of the Return of the King is ending there is more relief than a reluctance to let go.

Apart from the "necessary" deletions, weakening of the grip of the story can be attributed to Peter Jackson's film style: his camera work is kinetic. It jumps, hovers, jiggles, leans, kants. It follows arrow-flights. It makes the impression of being hasty. It undermines the overall tone of seriousness, but it does add a value of greater intimacy.

The camera moves more than most other directors. It is essential to have a distinctive style as a director. Directing a film is a negotiated form of authority: others contribute much and a director is pressured to show vision. It is part of the economics, for a signature style, if successful, will encourage audiences to buy tickets again!

Jackson's signature tendency is more controlled in Lord of the Rings, yet harkens to his hasty pace in a plethora of camera angles and in such gags as following the paths of arrows.
Perhaps the weakest shots are the sweeping aerial landscapes: they occur too fast and are felt as secondary. The sense of Middle Earth as a place is impossible to duplicate, not just because Tolkien put stories within stories, but also because Tolkien describes nature and landscape with a particular genius.

Jackson's style can feel artificial, sometimes self- conscious. Moving the camera about excessively brings attention to the effort. Though...there is masterly sensitivity to the story and character as the cameras is used. It moves more than average, but just right for the scenes.
Even though this kind of camera style detracts from the grandeur and seriousness of an epic spectacle, the mastery creates greater intimacy: our own view through our eyes is similar in dynamism. So it adds a personal touch that is lacking in the gap between film and fiction. Fiction talks to you, whispers in your ear, while film is presented to you on a screen somewhat distant. Jackson's style goes one step in closing this gap.

Jackson has other idiosyncrasies. He will go for a gag; the dwarf tossing and excessive hobbit antics, for instance. Of course, Hobbits as not-spectacular-people enables comic charm. These are cheap shots, akin to the vaudeville sequence at Kong's perch, with Ann Darrow attempting to amuse the great beast (Kong disapproves), but it also provides the audience with a sense that this is only a movie. There is a director who is to provide entertainment, not slavish imitation of a great author.

JRR Tolkien makes self-conscious references as well. However, his are really incidental, too subtle to really add to the structure of the narrative. The Lord of the Rings is 'written' by the characters. This is related after the adventures are over. Jackson dramatizes this, but its even more irrelevant in that the movie one sees is not made by the characters in the movie!

Such frames within frames is a self-conscious device, actually bringing the author closer by putting a person between themselves and the audience.

This is not an important element of Tolkien's work, but it in is Jackson's, as a cumulative effect of a distinctive, hasty camera style and a nod to the audience.

Tolkien makes uses his idiosyncrasies as well. For example there is the delay in the narrative with Farmer Maggot. These starts and stops tactically encapsulate the sense of a boy's adventure in tone, a tone which is to be destroyed, but strategically they contribute to the effect of heterogeneous time.

Like Farmer Maggot, Tom Bombadil serves the reader as reminder that this is just another story. Yet his peculiarities go beyond the boys adventure story to something more cosmic. This is the peak, or strongest event in the development of the heterogeneous time.

Why does Tolkien have Bombadil in the story? Bombadil is immune to the ring, and this would seem to undermine the risk. But Bombadil serves as subtle foreshadowing, as well as a sense of a local haven just around the corner. It is amusing to think that Doctor Tolkien is whispering 'this is not going to hurt very much at all', meaning, this is going to hurt, be prepared, but don't be frightened, it is just a fairy story.

Jackson hastiness, naturally in the transition from book to screen and by Art in his camera style, undermines the final movie. The Return of the King, has a clunky, rushing feeling.

The material suffers because each of these sequences; Pelannor Fields and Black Gate, Shelob, the Orc tower and the Crack of Doom, feel like a regular thirty minutes apiece, again and again.
There is feeling that it is not an organic shape, but a mechanism. What is lacking?

That we do not have the same time stretching as in Tolkien's undermines this sequence of events in the movie. Wherein, in Tolkien's Lord of the Rings, the battle after battle does not seem interminable, but to be picking up the unraveled threads of the story's multiple plots and spinning them into a final thread. This is the narrative payoff of having heterogeneous time earlier in the story.

Fran, Peter and Phillipa's revision takes us away from the serious tone of the literary Epic (although Jackson's dominant style takes us away from Epic to intimacy in a large way) while connecting the story to a wider tradition of fairy tales.

In fitting the earlier audience into a tradition, Tolkien takes us away from fairy tale, with Goblins and Elves and Dwarves, into Epic.

Clearly, one important thread is the story of rival people's, with a siege of a great city, all over a most precious thing, like the Iliad. And both stories charts a vast territory filled with monstrous beings, all in hope of returning home, like the Odyssey.

The comparisons go deeper, but the idea is in picking out where in our collective imagination the two works rest, for the film and the book make us experience a incredible and similar story through different medias.

This comparison is forced, but when considering the movie, the force goes too far. Why?
The epic is literary, poetic in fact. While Tolkien synthesized fairy and epic, his concern went more to geopolitics, war and to devastated personalities. Included are dynastic successions and a simulation of history...something we enjoy about Epic for history is an epic.

But, to some degree he marginalized an important Fairy theme. This theme is terribly personal for Tolkien, inspired as he was by the story of the love between elf and man. Lord of the Rings does not develop that story at all. It is a brief appendix.

But this theme is the greatest revision of the story by Jackson, Fran and Phillipa. It changes the tone and characterization of Aragorn and Arwen.

And it is the great success of the film. It is more effective as story between the love of Elf and Man, which is a more pleasingly intimate enchantment. It redeems the movie in that it is not just a narrowing of the material for the convenience of the format, but enlarges the story into, and in a way, closer to its origins.

The story harkens back to earlier times, seeking to bolster the difficulty film will have in doing so; again, it is motion picture's nature to be immediate.

Gollum debating himself could not be as dramatic as a literary moment, and also punctuates the originality of the filmmakers. But it is an incident to the overall plot.

While the love story between Elf and Man is a great liberty taken by the filmmakers, Tolkien's greatest theme, the collusion of psychological and environmental devastation, is dropped. This is one reason why the aerial scenery falls so flat. We expect an epic landscape, but this kind of landscape is perhaps Tolkien's greatest effect. Tolkien's epic landscape excels in comparison to all of literature. It is perhaps unequalled, but that is another essay.

Most of all, this detracts from the characterization of Treebeard. That Treebeard moves is great drama in the books. In the film, it is expected, and not nearly so significant. It is not because our imaginations create a better Treebeard that can be simulated. It is because the long descriptive passages about Nature converge on the meaning of Treebeard's existence. Ents move only in regard to global events.

The meaning of Treebeard is further degraded in showing the destruction of Isengard as a spectacle of rampaging Ents. Jackson knew that the audience would demand to see such a spectacle.

But Tolkien did not dramatize the event. Tolkien is not inclined to dramatize mayhem,
but more important to the overall structure of Tolkien's Lord of the Rings, dramatizing, or making a spectacle of the destruction of Isengard would celebrate the destruction of Saruman, ruining the delicate tone of a fallen, yet possibly redeemable hero.

The storyline of Saruman is directly connected as anti-thesis to the long intimate passages describing Nature. This is the most important cultural effect, lacking in the movie. One could say it is impossible to film, but it can be voiced.

If one were quick to dispute, the origination of an entire industry of epic fantasy is certainly a phenomenon. But this is not as far reaching as the global turning of industry to greater environmentally responsible. JRR Tolkien's story of the devastation of human personality is inextricably linked with environmental degradation. Tolkien's voice is at the forefront of this global issue.

Monuments? It is too neat to say that Jackson's innovations in special effects, enabling and excelling in the visualizing of Lord of the Rings in three dimensions, balances with Tolkien's own invention and care to tradition. But in way, it does.

These two works, Jackson's being the sub-sub creation, are works to which Art History will refer. For in both cases the mighty scale of conception and the excellence in execution are rarely equaled.

Lord of the Rings will be produced again. In departing from Jackson's Lord of the Rings, there should be a more faithful use of tense. Perhaps six movies, for whatever length of time needed (the standard two to three hours in length is diminishing as a convention) following the value of preservation and the tone sadness in the books with greater fidelity.
It may not be so entertaining as Jackson's. However, what is Entertainment changes quite profoundly from generation to generation.

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read more “Peter Jackson, JRR Tolkien, Celebrity Death Match.”

Peter Jackson, JRR Torutorukin, celebrity death match

วันจันทร์ที่ 3 พฤษภาคม พ.ศ. 2553 § 0

Treebeard Go!

Immediately after the announcement, Tolkien's Lord of the ring over the growth of a popular novel in her state. The main cultural event of the ring. In the film, like genius, is extracted from another source makes sense. This behavior is that the deep cultural and philosophical significance of the ring and little stories "to compare this movie with is very useful.

Book a course screenUpdated. The overall significance to what is clearly removed in particular, the following is clear. The film changes from the literature are printed with style.

The most important difference is not to make a long story Tolkien, he also took more time in the story.

JRR Torutorukin from work for decades, are included in the invention set 描画Naru Saxon language was written in the tradition. PeterJackson's movie involves a huge amount of things. Innumerable items, such as buttons, were made to two different scales to accommodate the shift in scale from human to hobbits. Converse to the quotidian is the use of satellites to coordinate all the elements working in different parts of the globe. As film is a kind of language, the innovations in special effects can be likened to Tolkien's invention of language.
But apart from those differences in form, we think most of "Why did that Get a clean up? "" What was added? "And," why keep it? ".

These questions covered the most important correction: small view small photos of Jackson's time.

DVD watching is the root area from the perspective of many characters. Muyal Muil Minasutirisu view from Frodo Gandalfs view from a bad map closely related to Tolkien, probably related to Jackon exact requirementsReduce the space and time. Overall, the agreement is in the middle of the land area was compared with the distance between the Tolkien landscape. Predict the time these stories will automatically shrink the space.

The scope is exceptional range of Tolkien's time. However, more modest global transform space can save all the world events, human scale compared to film.

Perhaps the first hint of the early developmentShire is due to people power ring detection. Gandalf, the hobbits will surely arrive, make sure that it holds the power ring couple of weeks I'm away. They speed up the road movie. Chair, however, the rate professor here?

Tolkien is not essential to the plot will continue to failure. Or are they? Almost a year and a half hours of the story. Cross in a casual movie.

Battle of CheisushinRomantic pursuit: popular film at this point, on its own, while most natural setting, the truth. This action is better or just delay the convention scene, but to enhance the dramatic story removed.

The Gott, Bumbchil, scouring the Shire: Removed. But not only efficiency, the nature of each story, and we start losing, stop and start again in the narrative story. Removing these sequences reduce endprogression of the movies.

In that starting and stopping is a kind of charm, induced by a more comfortable use of time. At first glance, we develop care about the characters before the main event. It makes us identify strongly with the hobbits. But more important is the idea that is not so obvious, creating heterogeneous time.

Heterogenous time means a variety of different times, past, present, future, beginnings, middles and ends, stories within stories, backstory, fate, Fate, right. This emphasis on characters, story and character driven.

This is a very different kind of movie this time. In addition, the film had to be changed to remove the element of meaning to short. In the story the story of the movies, few techniques are: stage of dreams and flashbacks, parallel plot, narration, exposition, again, is also out and disappear and dissolve the power ... the art of movies basic"Now" is great.

Where there was a black frame Jemuzujamusshu simulated by the inclusion of more ambiguous kind of paradise is connected to the simulated events in some circumstances of time cutting and disparate strangers, each scene of the line time and space, this technique is applied may not be fellowship of the ring.

Different time, in this case, the event time event, it is to create a general sense of the time requiredInnocence. Sac - Baggins, the ring of power, but hidden in a wooden box, this is the Shire world. Burden is to contrast the fate of the universe considering what the world needs this. So we like what we experience Hobbit, feel free to go from the negligence of Arcadia Gurehebunsu.

When motion picture technology: Introduction, flashback, the story in his article, is not often convenient to useGenerous. It can be confused with the different time, it will not. Such technology is used here and there, is not the purpose of convenience, to create large scale of the transition from one species to another time or to highlight the conflict, a trilogy. Tolkien's story, it is the convergence theme, a plot of multiple fractures of fate, will change the time for solving different. It is also tension and compression.
Gray is no equivalent setEdge between book and DVD. Jackson, world weary voice Tokien ring, and end in some way, be requested to take the easy way and Return of the King erosion rate.

Delete "required, as well as weaken the hold of the story Sutairupitajakuson movie: The exercise can be attributed to his camera work. His float, jump, lean shake, kants the . This is a flight of arrows, it seems to be the nextHasty. This is because the general tone of serious damage, it adds great value intimacy.

The camera moves more than other directors. Director of a unique style that it is important. Negotiating authority is a kind of directing a movie: many others have contributed, to see the director's vision is pressed. If successful, we recommend that you buy a ticket back to the audience, it is part of the economy, and signature style is!

Jackson's signing is a tendencycontrolled in Lord of the Rings, yet harkens to his hasty pace in a plethora of camera angles and in such gags as following the paths of arrows.
Perhaps the weakest shots are the sweeping aerial landscapes: they occur too fast and are felt as secondary. The sense of Middle Earth as a place is impossible to duplicate, not just because Tolkien put stories within stories, but also because Tolkien describes nature and landscape with a particular genius.

Jackson's style can feel Artificial, sometimes self-awareness. Excessive interest in efforts to move the camera. ... That will be used as sensitive to the character of the story and the camera no skill. It moved just for the scene than the average.
To create a more intimate and spectacular play from serious damage control this type of luxury and style of the camera: how to dynamically show like our eyes our way. So, add a personal touchthat is lacking in the gap between film and fiction. Fiction talks to you, whispers in your ear, while film is presented to you on a screen somewhat distant. Jackson's style goes one step in closing this gap.

Jackson has other idiosyncrasies. He will go for a gag; the dwarf tossing and excessive hobbit antics, for instance. Of course, Hobbits as not-spectacular-people enables comic charm. These are cheap shots, akin to the vaudeville sequence at Kong's perch, with Ann Darrow Large animals (Book Hong Kong) Mashi You and fun, offers the audience that also means only that film it. Yes, those that are directed by a great writer is to provide entertainment not imitate slaves.

JRR Torutorukin presented is familiar. But they are also associated with him is really friendly really add to the narrative structure. Lord of the Rings, "" is written in numbers. This is about the adventures since the end. Jacksondramatizes this, but its even more irrelevant in that the movie one sees is not made by the characters in the movie!

Such frames within frames is a self-conscious device, actually bringing the author closer by putting a person between themselves and the audience.

This is not an important element of Tolkien's work, but it in is Jackson's, as a cumulative effect of a distinctive, hasty camera style and a nod to the audience.

Tolkien makes uses his idiosyncrasies as well. For For example, a farmer Gottosutori delay. They will start the boy voice, when you stop to summarize the sense of sound tactics destroyed adventure, they will contribute to a strategic foreign real-time effects.

Like farmers Gott, help the reader just as it's another story reminiscent Tomubonbadiru. But something more space exceeded the story of his adventures of the boy's unique. This record is a powerful development and eventsof the heterogeneous time.

Why does Tolkien have Bombadil in the story? Bombadil is immune to the ring, and this would seem to undermine the risk. But Bombadil serves as subtle foreshadowing, as well as a sense of a local haven just around the corner. It is amusing to think that Doctor Tolkien is whispering 'this is not going to hurt very much at all', meaning, this is going to hurt, be prepared, but don't be frightened, it is just a fairy story.

Jackson hastiness, naturally in Transition to school and his artistic style of the camera screen, film ultimate ruin. Return of the King is hard to feel rushed there.

All material, suffer for these sequences. Burakkugetofirudo Pelannor is Shelob, the crack of doom Oak Tower is like every 30 minutes normally, feels again and again.
I do not have mechanisms to organic forms that do not mind. What is missing?

Not increased to the same time that weTolkien's sequence of events, film damage. It is Tolkien's Lord of the Rings, The Battle of infinite after the fight that turned much of the plot line of the final story unwind the thread does not seem to be picking up. This is a different story with the story long before the graft.

Jackson's epic literary style rule we take a serious tone from a distance (though we Firippapita update takes Franaway from Epic to intimacy in a large way) while connecting the story to a wider tradition of fairy tales.

In fitting the earlier audience into a tradition, Tolkien takes us away from fairy tale, with Goblins and Elves and Dwarves, into Epic.

Clearly, one important thread is the story of rival people's, with a siege of a great city, all over a most precious thing, like the Iliad. And both stories charts a vast territory filled with monstrous beings, all in hope of Home, return to Odyssey.

Comparisons are deep, the idea of moving the work of the other two, the book and the movie is the choice of imagination and a group of us that is like using the media more and experiences from them to us.

This comparison is forced, when the movie is considered excessive. Why?
AFI effect literature, poetry. The synthesis of Tolkien's epic fairy, his interest in war, or the geopoliticalto devastated personalities. Included are dynastic successions and a simulation of history...something we enjoy about Epic for history is an epic.

But, to some degree he marginalized an important Fairy theme. This theme is terribly personal for Tolkien, inspired as he was by the story of the love between elf and man. Lord of the Rings does not develop that story at all. It is a brief appendix.

But this theme is the greatest revision of the story by Jackson, Fran And Philippa. This change Aachagoachne Arwen tone and characteristics.

And the great success of the film. Elf and human than that, magic is more intimate, effective love story between a cozy. He rise of the story, in a sense, only for the convenience of reducing substances that form near the origin does not reimburse the movie.

The back story once before, to enhance the film reminds us of the difficultyIt should be: Again, you just move the image of this nature.

Gollum is the moment might not be dramatic literature, to discuss their own stress the originality of the film. However, it is the entire plot.

The love story between a human and elf, holiday movies, Tolkien, psychological, while taking the most important issue of environmental destruction conspiracy, he refused. One reason for this is the view, air dropsflat. We expect an epic landscape, but this kind of landscape is perhaps Tolkien's greatest effect. Tolkien's epic landscape excels in comparison to all of literature. It is perhaps unequalled, but that is another essay.

Most of all, this detracts from the characterization of Treebeard. That Treebeard moves is great drama in the books. In the film, it is expected, and not nearly so significant. It is not because our imaginations create a better Treebeard that can be simulated. It is because the long descriptive passages about Nature converge on the meaning of Treebeard's existence. Ents move only in regard to global events.

The meaning of Treebeard is further degraded in showing the destruction of Isengard as a spectacle of rampaging Ents. Jackson knew that the audience would demand to see such a spectacle.

But Tolkien did not dramatize the event. Tolkien is not inclined to dramatize mayhem,
but more important to the overall structure of Tolkien's Lord of the Rings, dramatizing, or making a spectacle of the destruction of Isengard would celebrate the destruction of Saruman, ruining the delicate tone of a fallen, yet possibly redeemable hero.

The storyline of Saruman is directly connected as anti-thesis to the long intimate passages describing Nature. This is the most important cultural effect, lacking in the movie. One could say it is impossible to film, but it can be voiced.

If one were quick to dispute, the The origin of the entire fantasy industry, the phenomenon is no doubt. But it was more environmentally responsible is not far-reaching global industry. The story of the human personality JRR closely linked environmental degradation and destruction of Tolkien. Global issues at the forefront of Tolkien's voice.

Monument? He is also able to properly say, great innovation in Jackson's special effectsvisualizing of Lord of the Rings in three dimensions, balances with Tolkien's own invention and care to tradition. But in way, it does.

These two works, Jackson's being the sub-sub creation, are works to which Art History will refer. For in both cases the mighty scale of conception and the excellence in execution are rarely equaled.

Lord of the Rings will be produced again. In departing from Jackson's Lord of the Rings, there should be a more faithful use of tense. Perhaps six Movies, saving the time required after a nervous tone of the book from loyalty (a decrease in standard 2-hour long meeting 3).
It can be funny about Jackson. However generation changes from a very deep and entertainment for generations.

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read more “Peter Jackson, JRR Torutorukin, celebrity death match”

Peter Jackson, JRR Tolkien, Celebrity Death Match

วันอาทิตย์ที่ 2 พฤษภาคม พ.ศ. 2553 § 0


Image : http://www.flickr.com


Treebeard Moves!

Soon after its publication, JRR Tolkien's Lord of the Rings outgrew its popular fiction status. Lord of the Rings is a cultural event. With the motion picture, similar in genius, the meaning is further extricated from its origin. This phenomenon is hardly novel, but in respect to the profound cultural and philosophical significance of Lord of the Rings it is terribly useful to compare the movie with the book.

Of course from book to screen there is a revision. Deletions are especially obvious, but what is done to the overall meaning is less obvious. Also, in the change from literary to motion picture there are stylistic imprints.

The most significance difference is that not only did Tolkien take more time to construct the story, he also took more time within the story.

JRR Tolkien originated the work over decades, drawing it within a written tradition while favoring Anglo-Saxon and including invented languages. Peter Jackson's movie involves a huge amount of things. Innumerable items, such as buttons, were made to two different scales to accommodate the shift in scale from human to hobbits. Converse to the quotidian is the use of satellites to coordinate all the elements working in different parts of the globe. As film is a kind of language, the innovations in special effects can be likened to Tolkien's invention of language.
But apart from those differences in form, we think most of "Why did that get put aside?" "Why was that added?" and then "Why keep that?".

Those questions conceal the most important revision of all: Jackson's portrayal on a smaller landscape, in a smaller scale in time.

Watching the DVD's, there are many contractions in space from the point of view of the characters. Frodo's view from Emyn Muil and Gandalfs view from Minas Tirith are not correct in proportion and proximity to Tolkien's map, but perhaps spatially accurate in respect to Jackon's requisite contraction of time and space. Overall, the space of middle earth seems contracted when it is compared to the landscapes and distances in Tolkien. These contractions in space automatically contract the story in time.

Tolkien scope of time is abnormally wide. Saving the world and global transformations are all cosmic events, but there is also a more humble, human scale in comparison with the motion picture as well.

Perhaps the first clue to this occurs at the beginning, in the discovery of the ring of power is in the hands of a Shire folk. Gandalf arrives, confirms that this hobbit does indeed possess the ring of power, and then this is put aside for weeks. In the movie they hustle out of the Shire. Is it just armchair, professorial pace here?

Tolkien goes on with interruptions not seeming essential to the plot. Or are they? The story's time is near half a year. In the movies the transitions in time seem unremarkable.

Chase scenes and fights and romantic chases: movie time is popular, and it is by it own nature set, for the most part, in real time. It seems merely customary to delete scenes that delay the action in order to streamline or tighten the story dramatically.

Maggot, Bombadil, The Scouring of the Shire: deleted. But not just for the streamlining, but for the nature of the storytelling, do we lose the starting and stopping and starting again, of a story within a story. These deletions eventually weaken in sequence the progression of the movies.

In that starting and stopping is a kind of charm, induced by a more comfortable use of time. At first glance, we develop care about the characters before the main event. It makes us identify strongly with the hobbits. But more important is the idea that is not so obvious, creating heterogeneous time.

Heterogenous time means a variety of different times, past, present, future, beginnings, middles and ends, stories within stories, backstory, fate, destiny, foreshadowing. This puts emphasis on character, or the character driven story.

This kind of time is very different in the movies. Not just that the movie must be shorter and in removing elements meanings change. Though there are a number of storytelling techniques within film narrative; flashbacks and 'flashforwards', dreams, parallel storylines, exposition with voice-over, repetitions, even fade outs and dissolves...the underlying aesthetic power of motion pictures is that the 'now' is overpowering.

The heterogenous time of disconnected or circumstantially connected events has been simulated in Jim Jarmusch's Stranger Than Paradise by the inclusion of black frames, simulating a kind of ambiguity to where in time and space each successive scene is, but such a technique would not be applicable to the Fellowship of the Ring.

Heterogenous time, in this case a kind of stumbling from event to event, is necessary to create an overall feeling of the time of innocence. Such is the world of the Shire, despite Sackville-Baggins's, and a ring of power stashed in a wooden chest. Such a world is necessary to contrast with the burden of contemplating one's destiny and the cosmos. Thus we feel a hobbit as something in our own experience, going from carelessness of Arcadia to the release of the Grey Havens.

Motion picture techniques with time: introductions, flashbacks, narratives within narratives, are too useful to not use frequently and liberally. This could be confused with heterogeneous time, but it is not. Such techniques, being used here and there for purposes of expediency, do not emphasize a contrast, or create larger scales of transitions from one kind of time to another, as occurs in the trilogy. In Tolkien's narrative, heterogeneous time changes into a quest that unravels into multiple storylines, whose threads then converge at the Crack of Doom. There is a compression of tense.
The Grey Havens is not equal in poignancy between book and DVD. Jackson sought to include the world weary tone that ends Tokien's Lord of the Rings, but somehow, as the grinding pace of the Return of the King is ending there is more relief than a reluctance to let go.

Apart from the "necessary" deletions, weakening of the grip of the story can be attributed to Peter Jackson's film style: his camera work is kinetic. It jumps, hovers, jiggles, leans, kants. It follows arrow-flights. It makes the impression of being hasty. It undermines the overall tone of seriousness, but it does add a value of greater intimacy.

The camera moves more than most other directors. It is essential to have a distinctive style as a director. Directing a film is a negotiated form of authority: others contribute much and a director is pressured to show vision. It is part of the economics, for a signature style, if successful, will encourage audiences to buy tickets again!

Jackson's signature tendency is more controlled in Lord of the Rings, yet harkens to his hasty pace in a plethora of camera angles and in such gags as following the paths of arrows.
Perhaps the weakest shots are the sweeping aerial landscapes: they occur too fast and are felt as secondary. The sense of Middle Earth as a place is impossible to duplicate, not just because Tolkien put stories within stories, but also because Tolkien describes nature and landscape with a particular genius.

Jackson's style can feel artificial, sometimes self- conscious. Moving the camera about excessively brings attention to the effort. Though...there is masterly sensitivity to the story and character as the cameras is used. It moves more than average, but just right for the scenes.
Even though this kind of camera style detracts from the grandeur and seriousness of an epic spectacle, the mastery creates greater intimacy: our own view through our eyes is similar in dynamism. So it adds a personal touch that is lacking in the gap between film and fiction. Fiction talks to you, whispers in your ear, while film is presented to you on a screen somewhat distant. Jackson's style goes one step in closing this gap.

Jackson has other idiosyncrasies. He will go for a gag; the dwarf tossing and excessive hobbit antics, for instance. Of course, Hobbits as not-spectacular-people enables comic charm. These are cheap shots, akin to the vaudeville sequence at Kong's perch, with Ann Darrow attempting to amuse the great beast (Kong disapproves), but it also provides the audience with a sense that this is only a movie. There is a director who is to provide entertainment, not slavish imitation of a great author.

JRR Tolkien makes self-conscious references as well. However, his are really incidental, too subtle to really add to the structure of the narrative. The Lord of the Rings is 'written' by the characters. This is related after the adventures are over. Jackson dramatizes this, but its even more irrelevant in that the movie one sees is not made by the characters in the movie!

Such frames within frames is a self-conscious device, actually bringing the author closer by putting a person between themselves and the audience.

This is not an important element of Tolkien's work, but it in is Jackson's, as a cumulative effect of a distinctive, hasty camera style and a nod to the audience.

Tolkien makes uses his idiosyncrasies as well. For example there is the delay in the narrative with Farmer Maggot. These starts and stops tactically encapsulate the sense of a boy's adventure in tone, a tone which is to be destroyed, but strategically they contribute to the effect of heterogeneous time.

Like Farmer Maggot, Tom Bombadil serves the reader as reminder that this is just another story. Yet his peculiarities go beyond the boys adventure story to something more cosmic. This is the peak, or strongest event in the development of the heterogeneous time.

Why does Tolkien have Bombadil in the story? Bombadil is immune to the ring, and this would seem to undermine the risk. But Bombadil serves as subtle foreshadowing, as well as a sense of a local haven just around the corner. It is amusing to think that Doctor Tolkien is whispering 'this is not going to hurt very much at all', meaning, this is going to hurt, be prepared, but don't be frightened, it is just a fairy story.

Jackson hastiness, naturally in the transition from book to screen and by Art in his camera style, undermines the final movie. The Return of the King, has a clunky, rushing feeling.

The material suffers because each of these sequences; Pelannor Fields and Black Gate, Shelob, the Orc tower and the Crack of Doom, feel like a regular thirty minutes apiece, again and again.
There is feeling that it is not an organic shape, but a mechanism. What is lacking?

That we do not have the same time stretching as in Tolkien's undermines this sequence of events in the movie. Wherein, in Tolkien's Lord of the Rings, the battle after battle does not seem interminable, but to be picking up the unraveled threads of the story's multiple plots and spinning them into a final thread. This is the narrative payoff of having heterogeneous time earlier in the story.

Fran, Peter and Phillipa's revision takes us away from the serious tone of the literary Epic (although Jackson's dominant style takes us away from Epic to intimacy in a large way) while connecting the story to a wider tradition of fairy tales.

In fitting the earlier audience into a tradition, Tolkien takes us away from fairy tale, with Goblins and Elves and Dwarves, into Epic.

Clearly, one important thread is the story of rival people's, with a siege of a great city, all over a most precious thing, like the Iliad. And both stories charts a vast territory filled with monstrous beings, all in hope of returning home, like the Odyssey.

The comparisons go deeper, but the idea is in picking out where in our collective imagination the two works rest, for the film and the book make us experience a incredible and similar story through different medias.

This comparison is forced, but when considering the movie, the force goes too far. Why?
The epic is literary, poetic in fact. While Tolkien synthesized fairy and epic, his concern went more to geopolitics, war and to devastated personalities. Included are dynastic successions and a simulation of history...something we enjoy about Epic for history is an epic.

But, to some degree he marginalized an important Fairy theme. This theme is terribly personal for Tolkien, inspired as he was by the story of the love between elf and man. Lord of the Rings does not develop that story at all. It is a brief appendix.

But this theme is the greatest revision of the story by Jackson, Fran and Phillipa. It changes the tone and characterization of Aragorn and Arwen.

And it is the great success of the film. It is more effective as story between the love of Elf and Man, which is a more pleasingly intimate enchantment. It redeems the movie in that it is not just a narrowing of the material for the convenience of the format, but enlarges the story into, and in a way, closer to its origins.

The story harkens back to earlier times, seeking to bolster the difficulty film will have in doing so; again, it is motion picture's nature to be immediate.

Gollum debating himself could not be as dramatic as a literary moment, and also punctuates the originality of the filmmakers. But it is an incident to the overall plot.

While the love story between Elf and Man is a great liberty taken by the filmmakers, Tolkien's greatest theme, the collusion of psychological and environmental devastation, is dropped. This is one reason why the aerial scenery falls so flat. We expect an epic landscape, but this kind of landscape is perhaps Tolkien's greatest effect. Tolkien's epic landscape excels in comparison to all of literature. It is perhaps unequalled, but that is another essay.

Most of all, this detracts from the characterization of Treebeard. That Treebeard moves is great drama in the books. In the film, it is expected, and not nearly so significant. It is not because our imaginations create a better Treebeard that can be simulated. It is because the long descriptive passages about Nature converge on the meaning of Treebeard's existence. Ents move only in regard to global events.

The meaning of Treebeard is further degraded in showing the destruction of Isengard as a spectacle of rampaging Ents. Jackson knew that the audience would demand to see such a spectacle.

But Tolkien did not dramatize the event. Tolkien is not inclined to dramatize mayhem,
but more important to the overall structure of Tolkien's Lord of the Rings, dramatizing, or making a spectacle of the destruction of Isengard would celebrate the destruction of Saruman, ruining the delicate tone of a fallen, yet possibly redeemable hero.

The storyline of Saruman is directly connected as anti-thesis to the long intimate passages describing Nature. This is the most important cultural effect, lacking in the movie. One could say it is impossible to film, but it can be voiced.

If one were quick to dispute, the origination of an entire industry of epic fantasy is certainly a phenomenon. But this is not as far reaching as the global turning of industry to greater environmentally responsible. JRR Tolkien's story of the devastation of human personality is inextricably linked with environmental degradation. Tolkien's voice is at the forefront of this global issue.

Monuments? It is too neat to say that Jackson's innovations in special effects, enabling and excelling in the visualizing of Lord of the Rings in three dimensions, balances with Tolkien's own invention and care to tradition. But in way, it does.

These two works, Jackson's being the sub-sub creation, are works to which Art History will refer. For in both cases the mighty scale of conception and the excellence in execution are rarely equaled.

Lord of the Rings will be produced again. In departing from Jackson's Lord of the Rings, there should be a more faithful use of tense. Perhaps six movies, for whatever length of time needed (the standard two to three hours in length is diminishing as a convention) following the value of preservation and the tone sadness in the books with greater fidelity.
It may not be so entertaining as Jackson's. However, what is Entertainment changes quite profoundly from generation to generation.

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