The sooner everyone forgets the Hobbit movies the better for anyone.. what they did with this after the awesome Rings movies was a travesty and unworthy of Tolkien and the brilliant universe he created.
I disagree. Jackson managed to do something with
The Hobbit trilogy that Tolkien tried and failed to do -- to tell the story of
The Hobbit in the style of
The Lord of the Rings. After the publication of
The Lord of the Rings, Tolkien began yet another rewrite of
The Hobbit (which he had tinkered with ever since its original publication), this time in the narrative mode of
The Lord of the Rings, and he completed two chapters. What stalled him was the moon phases; he wasn't as careful with the phases of the moon in
The Hobbit as he was in
The Lord of the Rings. Also, I think he realized that the charm of
The Hobbit was getting lost. I've read the two chapters, and at best I can say, "they're okay."
Jackson, having established a visual style for Middle-Earth in his ]i]Lord of the Rings[/i] films, used that visual style with
The Hobbit. If Jackson's
Hobbit doesn't feel like the whimsical children's story of the book, it's because Jackson's
Lord of the Rings films aren't a whimsical children's story.
Personally, I feel that Jackson succeeded in telling the story of
The Hobbit in the style of
The Lord of the Rings. The films are not perfect by any means; Bilbo's character arc is resolved at the end of the first film,
The Battle of the Five Armies ends with an hour's worth of video game boss fights. I'm glad these films exist, and I enjoy them. (The Extended Editions, watched together, flow better.) Jackson's
Hobbit trilogy is anything but a travesty.