THE HOBBIT (2012/2013): News, Rumors, Pics Till Release

I wonder where they will cut off each movie now. At what point do they meet Smaug? At what point will he die?
Good questions ... and that's what I'm most interested in. Will each film feel like a film? Or merely a link in a chain? I thought FOTR worked brilliantly as a solid film (with a distinct beginning, middle and end). I hope the Hobbit films are similar.

On the other hand, it might be better to not be spoiled.
I'll go on record and say that I'd rather be spoiled. If I had known that TTT would not include Shelob, I'd have been more satisfied with its ending the first time I saw it (and not felt like it was incomplete). Likewise, I'd rather not expect either of the first two Hobbit films to cover certain ground that is left for the next film.
 
It seems to me now that the first movie will end after Thorin and Company escape Mirkwood, and the second movie will be about arriving at Lake-town, investigating the Lonely Mountain, and the death of Smaug. Then the third will be about the aftermath of that and the Battle of Five Armies, along with Bilbo returning home.

Maybe they thought that Smaug and the battle would have been too much to cover in just one film. :shrug:
 
I still don't get people making fun of this. Look at the other current critically loved literary fantasy adaption, each book is broken own into ten hours (and they still leave a ton out of those books).

Some of the very best adaptions have been in long form, so I love the fact that we can see that for the Hobbit (though I do wish LOTR) could have been the material to be broken into long form. But that type of gamble was never, ever going to be possible (I mean just getting three long films approved was next to impossible, and then to get so much additional material released on top of that, was awesome).

All this anguish over a children's book.
 
It seems to me now that the first movie will end after Thorin and Company escape Mirkwood, and the second movie will be about arriving at Lake-town, investigating the Lonely Mountain, and the death of Smaug. Then the third will be about the aftermath of that and the Battle of Five Armies, along with Bilbo returning home.

Maybe they thought that Smaug and the battle would have been too much to cover in just one film. :shrug:
Don't forget, they'll need to fit in whatever went down at Dol Guldur at some point after Gandalf leaving Thorin's company and before his return at the Battle of Five Armies. I suspect that if they want to emphasise the LotR prequel angle (Sauron/Necromancer etc.) then they'll save most of that stuff for the third film. It would feel a bit odd tough having the dragon slain in the second film, but then I've always had a hard time trying to figure out where the best narrative break points might be.
 
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Wow, I havent been paying attention at all, I had no idea Lee Pace was in this thing. :bolian:

He looks like Chloe Sevigny. Well, if they need to cast Thranduil's sister...
 
Warner Brothers have released the official App. Normally, I don't bother with such things but there's a lot of new images in the App.

Edit: TORN has posted all of the new images so now you don't need to get the App.
 
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Just stepping back to the big picture for a second:

Back when I saw Fellowship of the Ring, I watched it with someone who had never read the books. He expressed surprise that they killed of Gandalf so early when it would have made sense to do it in the second movie after everyone had become truly acquainted with him. Not wanting to spoil the fact that he comes back, I pointed out that the books start with the Hobbit, so it really was the second movie.

I'm wondering if the movies are built so you can watch the Hobbit first. On the one hand, the basic narrative story is probably capable of supporting a viewing of the Hobbit first. On the other hand, they seem to be using a framing story which might make it more difficult. I wonder if they're approaching this to make the Hobbit accessible if you watch it first or with the assumption that you'll watch "An Unexpected Journey" fourth.
 
It's a separate story with some of the same characters in it. I don't think it has enough bearing on LoTR to make either dependent on the other.
 
Just stepping back to the big picture for a second:

Back when I saw Fellowship of the Ring, I watched it with someone who had never read the books. He expressed surprise that they killed of Gandalf so early when it would have made sense to do it in the second movie after everyone had become truly acquainted with him. Not wanting to spoil the fact that he comes back, I pointed out that the books start with the Hobbit, so it really was the second movie.

I'm wondering if the movies are built so you can watch the Hobbit first. On the one hand, the basic narrative story is probably capable of supporting a viewing of the Hobbit first. On the other hand, they seem to be using a framing story which might make it more difficult. I wonder if they're approaching this to make the Hobbit accessible if you watch it first or with the assumption that you'll watch "An Unexpected Journey" fourth.

We know that the framing story for An Unexpected Journey is inexplicably linked to and with The Fellowship of the Ring, which means that there are two logical places within that film and story where said framing story could take place: just prior to the 'Concerning Hobbits' prologue (which would make the Extended Cut of TFotR the 'definitive' version of the story) or after Bilbo and Frodo's reunion at Rivendell.

Although either placement for the framing story is logical, I believe that there were images released months ago which pointed directly at the former (with Elijah Wood and Ian Holm dressed in the costumes they are wearing at the beginning of Fellowship).

The question of whether or not it will be possible to view the Hobbit trilogy first will, I believe, ultimately be answered by exactly how Peter edits the framing story portion of An Unexpected Journey, although, if I had to make a guess right now, I would put money on the audience in fact being able to view the films chronologically, even if that isn't the direct intent. IOW, I don't think Peter will edit the framing story in a way that intentionally makes it impossible for the Hobbit trilogy to be viewed prior to the LotR Trilogy.
 
Although either placement for the framing story is logical, I believe that there were images released months ago which pointed directly at the former (with Elijah Wood and Ian Holm dressed in the costumes they are wearing at the beginning of Fellowship).

Also, the first shot of the trailer shows Bilbo and Frodo together in Hobbiton (and I think all the other shots of old Bilbo show him in Bag End).
 
^ That's where the glimpse I remembered came from; it was the trailer, not a still image.

As an addendum to what I said earlier, TORN unequivocally says that Jackson and Co. want the Hobbit films to lead directly into the LotR films, which further lessens the likelihood that the framing story will be edited in such a way as to prevent the chronological viewing of the two trilogies.

Does anybody have any comments/thoughts on the new 'break point' for An Unexpected Journey? I understand that the first film now breaks with the Company pinned down in Mirkwood by Wargs and fire. I personally think it's a neat place to break the film because it's a significant departure from the 'peaceful note' pattern that was used in all 3 of the LotR films, and because it could potentially 'set the table' for The Desolation of Smaug to also break on a cliffhanger, which I think would also be neat.
 
I'm pretty sure the shot of Bag End included the "no admittance except on party business" sign on the gate, plus Holm's vocal performance is clearly the "well preserved" Bilbo and not the rapidly ageing one from the end of RotK. I think it's safe to say the framing story takes place immediately before 'Fellowship' starts.

Oddly enough, it actually fits into the canon of the story better than one might expect. Remember that Tolkien re-wrote how Bilbo got the ring in later printings to bring things in-line with LotR and that he accounted for the discrepancy by saying that Bilbo (already under the ring's influence) lied about the exact circumstances. Only much later (just prior to LotR) did he admit the truth and amend the account in his book. Though if memory serves, it was Gandalf that got the truth out of him, not Frodo.
 
Does anybody have any comments/thoughts on the new 'break point' for An Unexpected Journey? I understand that the first film now breaks with the Company pinned down in Mirkwood by Wargs and fire. I personally think it's a neat place to break the film because it's a significant departure from the 'peaceful note' pattern that was used in all 3 of the LotR films, and because it could potentially 'set the table' for The Desolation of Smaug to also break on a cliffhanger, which I think would also be neat.
It seems pretty clear that that's where they'll end AUJ, but I don't think it will be a cliffhanger. I think the Eagles will show up and take them to safety, and the movie will end with a brief respite and a warning to Bilbo from Gandalf that the journey's far from over.

For a chapter-by-chapter breakdown of the three movies, I think it'll go something like this:

An Unexpected Journey
1. An Unexpected Party
2. Roast Mutton
3. A Short Rest
4. Over Hill and Under Hill
5. Riddles in the Dark
6. Out of the Frying Pan Into the Fire

The Desolation of Smaug
7. Queer Lodgings
8. Flies and Spiders
9. Barrels Out of Bond
10. A Warm Welcome
11. On the Doorstep
12. Inside Information
13. Not at Home
14. Fire and Water

There and Back Again
15. The Gathering of the Clouds
16. A Thief in the Night
17. The Clouds Burst
18. The Return Journey
19. The Last Stage
Of course, I'm sure there will be overlap. I doubt the movies will flow exactly as the book did. And then there will be the additions Jackson has lifted from the Appendices.
 
^ Quite the reasonable breakdown. Although, personally, I'd like to see Ch. 14 be the start of Film 3. The end of Ch. 14 feels too "final" to be a dramatic lead in to another film (making all of Film 3 seem like one of those "extra endings" that are often criticized in ROTK).

Rather, it'd make for one hell of an opening scene. Of course, shifting Ch. 14 to Book 3 would require something else to be the climactic finale to Film 2 - and I think the conclusion of the White Council's business at Dol Guldur would fit nicely.
 
^ Quite the reasonable breakdown. Although, personally, I'd like to see Ch. 14 be the start of Film 3. The end of Ch. 14 feels too "final" to be a dramatic lead in to another film (making all of Film 3 seem like one of those "extra endings" that are often criticized in ROTK).

Rather, it'd make for one hell of an opening scene. Of course, shifting Ch. 14 to Book 3 would require something else to be the climactic finale to Film 2 - and I think the conclusion of the White Council's business at Dol Guldur would fit nicely.
Ooo, good thinking. I was trying to figure out where the Dol Guldur part would go, because I thought it might make the third movie a little overcrowded. Your idea would work nicely, anyway, since Gandalf returns to Bilbo in chapter sixteen.
 
Yeah, I agree that would work. I hadn't thought about Gandalf's return. I had thought to put much of the Dol Guldur stuff in the third movie, but the second would make a lot more sense.

Oddly enough, it actually fits into the canon of the story better than one might expect. Remember that Tolkien re-wrote how Bilbo got the ring in later printings to bring things in-line with LotR and that he accounted for the discrepancy by saying that Bilbo (already under the ring's influence) lied about the exact circumstances. Only much later (just prior to LotR) did he admit the truth and amend the account in his book. Though if memory serves, it was Gandalf that got the truth out of him, not Frodo.

I was reading a little about this. I actually had completely forgotten that he didn't win the ring because of the riddles. I wonder, as a subtle lead-up to the LOTR, they have him explicitly lie and say that he won the ring because of the riddles (not just neglecting to tell them earlier on). For most people, it'll just be a sign of the corrupting influence of the ring. But it would also be a shout out to hard core Tolkien fans who actually read the prologue.

I also saw something called The Quest of Erebor. I could see this as a flashback scene between Thorin and Gandalf, perhaps at the beginning of the third movie, that explicitly connects Smaug to Sauron and explains why Bilbo was chosen.
 
Just stepping back to the big picture for a second:

Back when I saw Fellowship of the Ring, I watched it with someone who had never read the books. He expressed surprise that they killed of Gandalf so early when it would have made sense to do it in the second movie after everyone had become truly acquainted with him. Not wanting to spoil the fact that he comes back, I pointed out that the books start with the Hobbit, so it really was the second movie.

I'm wondering if the movies are built so you can watch the Hobbit first. On the one hand, the basic narrative story is probably capable of supporting a viewing of the Hobbit first. On the other hand, they seem to be using a framing story which might make it more difficult. I wonder if they're approaching this to make the Hobbit accessible if you watch it first or with the assumption that you'll watch "An Unexpected Journey" fourth.

The framing story aspect is interesting, I wonder how they are going to do it. Bilbo starts writing There and Back Again at the beginning of Lord of the Rings, and had finished it by the time Frodo arrived at Rivendell.
 
So we're just about three months away from the release of An Unexpected Journey (woot! :D), and I was just thinking about something. When I start up the grading/review thread for that movie, should I also start a new discussion/speculation thread for the sequels or just keep using this thread? Personally I don't see a need to start a brand new thread, but others might feel differently.
 
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