Lotr two towers flag scene
Frodo and Sam watch the departure of the Wood Elves.
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A major extension in Fellowship occurs at the very beginning, with a longer version of the opening monologue/preamble, including more footage from Elendil’s assassination, and this flows directly into a scene involving Bilbo writing his stories down in the Red Book, which is a reference to other Tolkien works. So, for those following along, the Extended Version of Fellowship manages to freshen up and fill out some slight gaps in the theatrical version that, whilst not adding completely new sequences, add some depth to what we’ve already come to know. In fact, the director himself stated in an interview that he feels the story is just his own perspective on things, and that, were somebody else to make a version of Lord Of The Rings, no doubt it would be different tonally than his own. By adding in some extra footage that expands, elongates and essentially, fleshes out, the characters and motivations of established lore, you get a fuller, more profound, sense of what Tolkien and Jackson were trying to achieve.īear in mind, however, that Jackson’s take on Middle Earth should not be classed as definitive. It’s a fairly safe bet to say that the majority of fans of the films would consider the Extended Editions of each film an improvement on the original versions. In other words, what could possibly be done to improve the film? And would adding length and extra scenes to it create something better, or worse. many critics and fans considered the original theatrical version to be almost impossible to improve on, and saw the tampering with the film as “fixing” the Mona Lisa. New music had been written to accommodate the change in edit, as the new footage either lengthened, or changed completely, the original versions.
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Promoted as a re-imagining of the original film, the inserted material would not simply be a random collection of deleted scenes, but an utter re-editing of the material to correspond with the footage already used. Late in 2002, when the Theatrical DVD of Fellowship of the Rings was released, it contained a hint, a glimpse, of what would be known as the Extended Edition of the film, with multiple unused sequences inserted back into the film proper. We’re going to take a brief look, if we may, at the differences and editorial changes made for the Extended Editions, and how they change the structure and narrative flow of the Theatrical Versions.
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While Jackson claims that the original theatrical versions of the films are the intended versions, it’s fair to say that fan attention on his Extended Editions have been overwhelming to the point where they are now considered the canonical versions over what was originally shown in cinemas. New Line gave Jackson unprecedented carte-blanche to go back and insert unused footage back into his original cuts of all three films.
He envisioned a DVD to accompany the films that would give the viewer amazing backstage access to the creation of the three films, from opening scripting and history of the story, to the final film’s Wellington premiere in 2003, and it’s subsequent Oscar sweep, and eventually to the creation of the Extended Edition of the film, seeing his work bow out into history as one of the most celebrated film trilogies of all time. In the rush to capitalise on the success and history of the epic nature of the film trilogy, Peter Jackson, thankfully, had enough foresight to realise that this project would become one of the most amazing cinematic journeys ever captured on handycam.