I'm shocked. Shocked! Well, not that shocked. [/Fry]In response, the usual suspects who have never touched a woman's breast are calling it "woke trash".
I'm shocked. Shocked! Well, not that shocked. [/Fry]In response, the usual suspects who have never touched a woman's breast are calling it "woke trash".
Given it's a standalone film, I'm not worried about it making huge loads of money to guarantee a sequel.So projected to take in a mere 7 million for it's opening weekend. But given it is was only created to allow New Line to keep the LOTR movie rights I guess it doesn't really matter since it's served its purpose.
So projected to take in a mere 7 million for it's opening weekend. But given it is was only created to allow New Line to keep the LOTR movie rights I guess it doesn't really matter since it's served its purpose.
They'll make their profit licensing it out to the various pay and streaming services. They're probably just expecting to cover production and marketing costs with the theatrical release (and it allows them to put it in Oscar contention, which is just more free marketing down the line.)I had planned to go this week, while I'm still off work, but the local theater is only showing the German dub. After I heard in reviews that they rushed production, which is not ideal in live action but absolutely terrible in animation, I have also dampened my hopes on the quality.
But financially, it will probably be fine, considering it only had a $ 30 million budget.
Let's keep the nastiness out of the discussions, please. There are reviews of the film without the name-calling and the like, some who approve and others that don't.Matt from Nerd of the Rings has seen it and loved it. In response, the usual suspects who have never touched a woman's breast are calling it "woke trash".
I was actually referring to the comment section of Matt's review, but I got you. I understand completely.Let's keep the nastiness out of the discussions, please. There are reviews of the film without the name-calling and the like, some who approve and others that don't.
My original plan was to see it in the theater yesterday with some friends, but real life intervened and we have rescheduled for next weekend.I didn't realize it was a theatrical release, I assume it will end up on streaming at some point.
I haven't even watched the B5 animated film yet.
This is my dream for animated films in the Rankin-Bass style adapting Fellowship and Two Towers -- low production budget, brief theatrical release (because that's what the New Line rights cover), and streaming/home release is where they'll live.They'll make their profit licensing it out to the various pay and streaming services. They're probably just expecting to cover production and marketing costs with the theatrical release (and it allows them to put it in Oscar contention, which is just more free marketing down the line.)
No worries.I was actually referring to the comment section of Matt's review, but I got you. I understand completely.
I remember when the studio that owned the Wheel Of Time rights made like a 22min cheap ass pilot just to keep the rights and it worked out for them. Filmed it in like 2 weeks, aired it once on FX at like 3:30AM.RT score been slipping the past couple of days, down to 59%. In good company with Battle of the Five Armies.
The way the promotion intercut footage from the LOTR trilogy reminded me of The Marvels blatant attempt at dangling memberberries just before its release ('member Tony Stark? 'member Thanos?).
I don't know whether this film appeals more to book fans than the likes of me that hasn't read the novels but loves the film trilogy.
Not the most encouraging motivation for making a film.
Jackson was completely unenthused on the red carpet when interviewed by local reporters. After The Hobbit trilogy (which he had no intention of helming until the last minute and from all accounts, was a shitty experience for him), I think the wisest course of action would've been to steer clear of the LOTR "franchise" altogether, IMO. Christ, he doesn't need the money.
This falls squarely into "catch on streaming if it pops up and I'm bored on the weekend" territory. From the reviews I've gleaned though, it sounds like there might be enough to satisfy the more invested Tolkien faithful.
This is my dream for animated films in the Rankin-Bass style adapting Fellowship and Two Towers -- low production budget, brief theatrical release (because that's what the New Line rights cover), and streaming/home release is where they'll live.
Oh, I have seen the Bakshi film. Several times. I have all three animated films on DVD. I'd love to see an animated film that completes Bakshi's story, too!Have you ever seen the Ralph Bakshi animated version of LOTR? It covers Fellowship and TTT up to the battle of Helm's Deep. It's not Rankin-Bass like the Hobbit, but it is arguably better (except for the Rankin-Bass Hobbit musical score, which is one of the all time greats.)
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