I just finished watching a really well-done fan edit of An Unexpected Journey. The editor's stated goal was not to make a purist cut like so many fan editors are doing, but to keep to most of the same basic plot Peter Jackson used in his films, but trimming a lot of the excess that bogged things down. He mixed in scenes from the theatrical and extended editions, reordered a couple of scenes here and there to make things flow better (this was mostly done in Rivendell), and cut out a lot of the fat. The EE ran 182 minutes, and his cut was around 140 minutes. There were a couple of cuts he made that I wouldn't have, but overall the pacing is vastly improved.
Peter Jackson reused a lot of music from LOTR while leaving a good chunk of Howard Shore's original score for AUJ on the cutting room floor, and the editor went in and removed the LOTR music where appropriate, replacing it with the music Shore composed for the specific scenes. The worst offender of the LOTR music, IMO, is when the Nazgûl theme blared over the dramatic moment when Thorin charged down the burning tree to confront Azog. The editor replaced that with Shore's original composition and it works so much better.
The editor went above and beyond to remove a lot of the "prequely" feeling of the movie, suggesting that it should work as a movie that can be watched prior to LOTR (a view that I agree with), cutting out a lot of callbacks to LOTR that wouldn't make much sense if you're watching The Hobbit first. He removed Frodo from the prologue, and spliced in some of Bilbo's dialogue from FOTR to cover up the "My dear Frodo..." parts. He also deemphasized the One Ring, cutting out the ominous close-up on it as it fell from Gollum's pocket (for example), since at this point in the story all a first-time viewer would know is it's just a magic ring that makes you invisible.
It's honestly one of the best fan edits I've ever seen, and I actually really liked AUJ. The editor hasn't done The Desolation of Smaug yet, but hopefully he's working on it.
Peter Jackson reused a lot of music from LOTR while leaving a good chunk of Howard Shore's original score for AUJ on the cutting room floor, and the editor went in and removed the LOTR music where appropriate, replacing it with the music Shore composed for the specific scenes. The worst offender of the LOTR music, IMO, is when the Nazgûl theme blared over the dramatic moment when Thorin charged down the burning tree to confront Azog. The editor replaced that with Shore's original composition and it works so much better.
The editor went above and beyond to remove a lot of the "prequely" feeling of the movie, suggesting that it should work as a movie that can be watched prior to LOTR (a view that I agree with), cutting out a lot of callbacks to LOTR that wouldn't make much sense if you're watching The Hobbit first. He removed Frodo from the prologue, and spliced in some of Bilbo's dialogue from FOTR to cover up the "My dear Frodo..." parts. He also deemphasized the One Ring, cutting out the ominous close-up on it as it fell from Gollum's pocket (for example), since at this point in the story all a first-time viewer would know is it's just a magic ring that makes you invisible.
It's honestly one of the best fan edits I've ever seen, and I actually really liked AUJ. The editor hasn't done The Desolation of Smaug yet, but hopefully he's working on it.