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Two Towers Review: Moriarity from Aintitcoolnews.com
www.aintitcoolnews.com ^ | 12/18/2002 | Moriarity

Posted on 12/19/2002 7:29:30 AM PST by egarvue

MORIARTY Stands In The Shadow Of THE TWO TOWERS!!

Hey, everyone. "Moriarty" here with some Rumblings From The Lab.

Okay... let’s do the short version first.

Everything you’ve heard is true. Smeagol (it’s hard to call him Gollum once you see how tortured he is) is the single most persuasive CGI character in a film so far, due in large part to the exceptional performance by Andy Serkis. Helm’s Deep is a jaw-dropping sequence, one that would make Akira Kurosawa weep tears of joy, choreographed with an eye for epic imagery but also executed with an awareness of how well an intimate moment pays off in front of such a spectacle. Peter Jackson and his exceptional team of creative collaborators have not only created a worthy follow-up to FELLOWSHIP OF THE RING, they’ve also expanded Middle-Earth and given us new characters to love, new adventures to be enchanted by, and new lands to revisit. THE TWO TOWERS is more than just a sequel or a middle film in a trilogy; it’s a shining example of just how big we as filmmakers have been given permission to dream now.

Having said that, I’d like to get specific, so if you haven’t seen the film yet or don’t want to know what’s coming, here’s the point where you hit the “BACK” button on your browser. I’ll even give you some spoiler space, just in case...















Still here? Good. So you won’t mind if I lose my mind a little bit? Because, honestly, I don’t know any way to talk about this film without engaging in outragous hyperbole. I am so smitten with the cinematic legacy that Peter Jackson is creating that I find myself wanting to grab random strangers on the street and buy them tickets just so they can see for themselves. When I was a kid and films like STAR WARS and RAIDERS and CONAN and BLADE RUNNER and THE THING and JAWS and CLOSE ENCOUNTERS were coming out, I just assumed all films were supposed to be that good. I believed they would always be that good, all the time.

Little did I know...

This time around, there’s a special feeling that I get when I see each new chapter unfold of Peter Jackson’s triumphant trilogy of fantasy epics. This time around, I’m well aware of how special these moments are, how truly few and far between. And this time around, I plan to savor every beautiful, breathtaking frame as the gift that it is.

One of the ways that Peter Jackson demonstrates his almost absurd sense of control over the material is with pacing, something that can confound even the most gifted of filmmakers when working on an epic scale like this. See GANGS OF NEW YORK if you want the perfect example of that. And, no, don’t start crying to me about how there’s supposed to be some magic 20 minute longer cut of GANGS floating around that solves all the problems it has. Both versions of FELLOWSHIP, the theatrical and the extended edition, delivered as complete experiences. One simply fills the other out in different ways, and even if Jackson goes back next year to re-edit THE TWO TOWERS and puts in a half-hour or an hour or whatever, it won’t matter. He got it right already. He is a masterful storyteller, confident and always working to advance each of the multiple storylines he’s juggling even as he stops to bask in the particular wonders of this world.

The film’s opening is, in my opinion, just about as perfect as anyone could ask. First there’s that long shot as we move over the mountains, a reminder of how beautiful Middle-Earth can be, then the gradual introduction of familiar voices, and then that sudden, dizzying plunge right back into the events of the first film... it’s so much better than any cheesy “Last Week On LORD OF THE RINGS”-style montage would have been. It doesn’t distance us or remind us that this is only a film. Instead, it immerses us into the world right away, and by showing us more of the struggle between Gandalf and the Balrog, it reminds us just how high the stakes are. And then Frodo wakes up, and with a simple “It was just a dream,” we are shown the full toll these events have taken so far on these characters. It’s important that the first new scenes take place between Frodo and Sam. These two small, infinitely vulnerable creatures are, after all, literally carrying the fate of all Middle-Earth between them.

Their friendship, their support of one another, is all that allows the dawn of each new day, and the performance work by both these actors is note perfect. There’s an almost startling physical change in Elijah Wood, the effects of carrying The One Ring more and more pronounced now. The interplay between him and Sean Astin is both brotherly and also increasingly sad. It’s starting to dawn on Sam now that Frodo isn’t going to survive this journey. Somewhere along the way, Sam’s found himself on a death march, and it horrifies him.

These frustrations and fears are only exasperated by the introduction of the most arresting new character, Gollum. Yes, we caught glimpses of him in FELLOWSHIP, but they were wordless teases, as unrevealing as they were fascinating. This time around, we meet him face to face, and Jackson’s smart to get right to it. I’d be surprised if it’s more than ten minutes into the film before we see him up close. For fans of the books, this is a moment they’ve been waiting for their whole lives, and one of the miracles of the film is just how easily we accept him as real.

Are the CGI effects absolutely flawless? Nope. But that’s not the point, and anyone who belabors the fact isn’t fit to converse with because they just don’t get it. What makes Gollum such a landmark is the quality of performance work and character animation by Andy Serkis and the team of remarkable talents at WETA Digital led by the brilliant Randy Cook. Look into his eyes at any point in the film, whether he’s the main focus of a shot or not and you’ll see a soul. You’ll see real intelligence at work. Gollum thinks. Gollum feels. When he first attacks Sam and Frodo, he’s horrifying, but once they subdue him and Frodo has him immobilized under the point of Sting, he begins to cry. That’s the moment where he became real for me. The moment where he ascends to classic fantasy character status for me comes later, when we see him wrestle with the two sides of his nature, Gollum and Smeagol. It’s only after he’s reminded of the Smeagol side of himself by Frodo that he dares dream of a new life, a chance to live outside of the shadows once more, and this scene manages to be heartbreaking and funny and ominous all at once. There’s a similar moment in SPIDER-MAN with Willem Dafoe, but truth be told, it’s Gollum who gives the better performance, and if Serkis is nominated for awards this year, expect this to be the clip they show.

Gradually, we are reintroduced to each of the characters from the first film, and in each case, we meet them already embroiled in the action that was suggested by the first movie’s finish. Merry (Dominic Monaghan) and Pippin (Billy Boyd) are still in the clutches of a band of Uruk-Hai, and I love the way Jackson’s horror movie influences inform the design of much of this film. He can’t resist wallowing in the freakier side of Middle-Earth, nor would we want him to. There’s Uruk-Hai that look like blood sausages stuffed too full and ready to burst. There’s one loathesome thing that looks like Richard O’Brien in THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW that wants to eat the legs of the hobbits. Much more of Jackson’s identity seems to be creeping into the films as they progress, and to my eyes, it’s a good thing. Already, I’m being innundated with letters from purists who can’t tolerate the changes that Jackson has made, and they have their impassioned defenses of why each and every mistake ruins the films and renders them useless, but I just don’t believe it. Maybe it’s because I haven’t read the books since I was young. I retain fond memories of them, but I’m hardly a slave to the source material. What delights me is watching the way these stories unfold as films. I don’t rely on my prior knowledge of characters or relationships because I’m afraid it would continually pull me out of what I’m seeing. I have no idea what the details are of Merry and Pippin’s encounter with Treebeard in the book, and I don’t care. I was enchanted by the way they met him here and by the way Jackson and his co-writers (Fran Walsh, Philippa Boyens, and Stephen Sinclair) introduce us to the notion of the Ents, the shepherds of the trees, ancient beings that are totally alien.

I was equally taken with the way we find Aragorn (Viggo Mortensen), Legolas (Orlando Bloom), and Gimli (John Rhys-Davies, who also voices Treebeard) on the trail of Pippin and Merry, determined to rescue their friends. Aragorn’s skills as a Ranger come into play more in this film, and Legolas and his abilities are also key. Gimli’s role in this film could be described as comic relief, except Rhys-Davies gives the dwarf a dignity and a genuine sense of physical danger that keeps him from being so easily written off. The relationships between these three actors are etched in small moments, subtle details, but there are obvious bonds that have formed, and the cumulative effect is quite powerful.

Then there’s the story of Rohan, featuring a whole slew of new characters, and this is one of the film’s most imposing potential stumbling points. If there’s an opportunity in the film for Jackson to just plain confuse his audience, it’s here. We’re asked to soak up quite a bit of information all at once, and again... my reaction isn’t based on the books. I felt that we learned just enough about King Theoden (Bernard Hill), his disgusting private advisor Grima Wormtongue (Brad Dourif), his niece Eowyn (Miranda Otto in a role that is sure to launch her as a major name), and his loyal but frustrated nephew Eomer (Karl Urban, making the most of a small role). The torment of Theoden is evident in the way his skin hangs off of his slack and saddened face and the way his eyes barely focus on the world around him. Wormtongue pours poison into the King’s mind with each whisper, and it’s obvious that he’s leading Theoden astray, turning Rohan into an extension of the ever-spreading kingdom of Saruman (Christopher Lee) for reasons that are hinted at, but not made explicit up front. Would I like to know how Wormtongue slipped into this position of influence? Sure. I would love to see the gradual seduction of Theoden, the way Saruman slowly moved in and set up camp in the head of this once-beloved ruler, but that’s not the story we’re seeing here. Jackson picks up at a very particular moment, at a turning point, and what we’re given is just enough to understand why it’s so important when a resurrected Gandalf the White(played here with a sort of befuddled majesty by Ian McKellen) arrives in the court of Rohan, ready to do whatever it takes to restore Theoden to his former self.

Even without a lot of action in the first hour of the film, Jackson gives us enough memorable moments and unforgettable imagery to keep us rapt. The scene where Frodo collapses into the marshes filled with the dead is right out of Jackson’s worst zombie nightmares, a vision of real horror. The gates of Mordor, opened by twin trolls tethered to terrible machinery, are a remarkable image, imposing and forbidding, a mere hint of what we might see on the other side of those gates when RETURN OF THE KING finally rolls around. And when that first big action sequence finally arrives in the form of Orcs saddled on the backs of Wargs, it’s worth every moment of anticipation, delivering a visceral kick that will set your pulse racing.

From there on, the film begins to pick up a head of steam, even as we are treated to quiet moments of power between Elrond (Hugo Weaving) and his daughter Arwen (Liv Tyler), or between Elrond and Galadriel (Cate Blanchett) or between Aragorn and Eowyn or, in one melancholy half-dream, Aragorn and Arwen. Merry and Pippin gradually convince Treebeard that they’re not Orcs, peppering him with stories of the lush green of the Shire, their home. And during it all, the shadow of Isengard grows longer, driving the people of Rohan to the supposed safety of Helm’s Deep, a fortress that has always spared them from the worst fury of any storm in the past. This time, though, they’re cornered by an army unlike any I’ve ever seen on film, a rolling black wave of purest evil made up of 10,000 of Middle-Earth’s most heinous visions, and when they make their stand, joined only by a group of elves determined to honor an age-old alliance with men, it is convincingly hopeless. Jackson tightens the screws until we can barely breathe. He shows us children being suited up for war because there are not enough men of the right age to do the job. He gives Rohan enough of a personal face to make it count. We understand that this is one of the last places where free men are going to make a stand, and if they fall here, they may well vanish altogether. And it’s during the film’s final hour that I feel it really comes into its own as something special, something better than just a fantasy or just an action film or even just an epic. It’s here that I was forced to ask myself, “At what point does a historian become a prophet?” Tolkien wasn’t trying to see the future as he wrote his story, but here we are, fifty years after its first appearance, and it feels more timely than ever. In fact, it seems to me an act of nearly-divine coincidence that this film at this moment should be called THE TWO TOWERS, because seeing the way these characters make their stand for what they believe and what they love, and seeing how willing they are to sacrifice to protect not only their own lives, but the lives of others, I am both heartbroken and healed in equal measure. Some people have criticized Sam’s speech in Gondor, but I find myself incredibly moved by it, and I hope some part of this sentiment finds its way into the mainstream so that, as we contemplate stepping into the mouth of hell in the months or years ahead, we do so for the right reasons, and that we remember that there are some things worth fighting for, just as we must remember that there are some powers we might use that will destroy us just as easily as our enemies.

If there’s one character that feels underutilized this time around, it’s Faramir (David Wenham), who seems to get shortchanged a bit. He’s got a few nice moments, including one in which he places the life of Gollum into the hands of Frodo, forcing a choice which shall echo through the rest of the saga to come. Still, that’s a minor complaint, and I don’t know what I’d be willing to give up in order to make more room for Faramir. I am still dazzled, a full 24 hours after seeing it, as I think about the way Jackson intercuts between the events at Helm’s Deep, the events in Gondor, and the final stand of the Ents at Isengard. It’s all handled beautifully, and I couldn’t have predicted how much of an impact these images would have on me. The fell beasts, the oliphaunts, the Ent army in full attack... these are things I have never seen in a film before, and they are images I will never forget. Time and again, Jackson tops himself with some fresh flourish that seems to set an impossible standard, and there are at least ten or twelve sequences here that any other filmmaker would be happy to feature as the climax of any other film. Jackson’s overstuffed his film with magic, but it’s not like he’s showing off. Instead, it all feels organic, earned, and it all ends up working in service of the larger story being told.

And, in the end, it all comes back to a very personal tale as Sam and Frodo and their guide into Hell, Gollum, end up back on the road to Mordor, each with their own agenda, each with something very different on their minds. “The battle for Helm’s Deep is over,” Gandalf observes, “but the battle for Middle-Earth is just beginning.” If Jackson manages to pay off all the emotional and visceral crescendoes that he’s laid the groundwork for in this film with the final chapter of this saga next Christmas, then it’s safe to say he’s guaranteed himself a place in film history. He’s made me believe in the unlimited power of cinema and imagination again in a way I didn’t think was still possible, and he’s convinced me that it all comes down to passion. He believed he could do the impossible and bring these books to life, and he convinced a team of brilliant madment that he was right. Together, they’ve woven a tapestry of every possible emotion, creating something I look forward to wrapping myself in at every possible opportunity, a timeless classic, and a tease that will have me positively agoraphobic in the year to come. I’ll be hiding inside, careful to the point of phobia, determined that nothing prevent me from making it to next year, when we’ll see just how magnificent the conclusion to this symphonic cinematic masterwork can be.



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Here's Moriarity's review from www.aintitcoolnews.com. For those not familiar with the site, he's one of the best non-professional film reviewers out there. I respect his opinion about films MUCH more than Harry Knowles, who actually owns the site.
1 posted on 12/19/2002 7:29:31 AM PST by egarvue
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To: egarvue; ecurbh
Woah...sorry 'bout the huge font, that'll teach me to just cut and paste source html. Ecurbh, could you ping the Ring Ping List for this review?
2 posted on 12/19/2002 7:30:53 AM PST by egarvue
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To: egarvue
I saw the movie last night. It was great. It has been so long since I read the books that it really doesn't make much difference to me where Jackson changed the plot.
3 posted on 12/19/2002 7:33:37 AM PST by abner
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To: egarvue
Movies and movie reviews are a waste of screen space.
4 posted on 12/19/2002 7:33:57 AM PST by PolishProud
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To: egarvue
Pretty good review. I saw "The Two Towers" last night and thought that it was great other than for Faramir's role. In the book, Faramir is heroic and insightful in his handling of the Hobbits and the puzzle of the Ring. But, in the movie, he comes across as pretty much a total dick, if you'll please pardon the expression.
5 posted on 12/19/2002 7:38:55 AM PST by Chi-townChief
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To: egarvue
Well, tried to take my daughter and two of her friends to see the flick yesterday, but it was SOLD OUT!!!

Will try again today. Am going to purchase my tickets right now, in time for this afternoon.

6 posted on 12/19/2002 7:43:19 AM PST by Illbay
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To: PolishProud
Movies and movie reviews are a waste of screen space.

One might say the same about posting #4 in this thread. Go check it out yourself and see what I mean.

7 posted on 12/19/2002 7:49:47 AM PST by Hank Rearden
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To: Hank Rearden
Yeh. I tried to go see it last night with the wife.. sigh.. Both our movie theaters were COMPLETELY sold out! I bought two tickets for tonights showing. :)
8 posted on 12/19/2002 7:54:47 AM PST by Living_the_life_of_Dilbert
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To: egarvue
Saw the film yesterday (packed house for a 4:00 PM matinee) and completely agree with this ecstatic review.

One interesting moment was when a troup of humans in the service or Mordor were marching, all in black turbans with faces partially covered. One of my companions turned to me and said "Al Qaida".

Yes, this film and the trilogy definitely resonate.

9 posted on 12/19/2002 7:56:13 AM PST by katana
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To: Living_the_life_of_Dilbert
I'll wait for the crowds to die down to nothing. For me, the first movie last year was "walk/talk/fight, walk/talk/fight, walk/talk/fight". Rinse and repeat, endlessly.

In other words, kinda boring. Good special effects, though.

I expect I'll enjoy "About Schmidt" a lot more.

10 posted on 12/19/2002 8:06:35 AM PST by Hank Rearden
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To: egarvue
We saw it last night. On the whole, it was terrific. My son and I agreed that Faramir was played wrong. In the book he is noble, a true scion or throwback of the old royal line of the West, in contrast with his brother Boromir, whereas in the movie he as confused as his brother until he finally makes up his mind to do the right thing.

Also, I think one thing that shouldn't have been cut is the naming of the swords when they reliquish them at Theoden's hall, and the full naming of Aragorn at that time. This is an important symbolic part of Aragorn's growth from an unknown ranger to King of Gondor and the West.
11 posted on 12/19/2002 8:18:34 AM PST by Cicero
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To: PolishProud
Glad you took the time to let us know the folly of our ways.
12 posted on 12/19/2002 8:26:55 AM PST by SoDak
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To: Hank Rearden
>I expect I'll enjoy "About Schmidt" a lot more.

Schmidt is Hollywood's hate letter to middle America.

13 posted on 12/19/2002 8:29:02 AM PST by Dialup Llama
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To: PolishProud
You're probably the mature individual who's been at the keywords.
14 posted on 12/19/2002 8:34:00 AM PST by Lil'freeper
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To: ecurbh
Ping!
15 posted on 12/19/2002 8:34:32 AM PST by Lil'freeper
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To: egarvue
I thought that the movie was wonderfully done. It's been many years since I read the books, so I suppose that I don't hold Jackson to as high a standard in sticking to the books. This is by far, the best movie that I've seen in quite some time, and it makes me want to go back and re-read the books, all over again. Unfortunately, I just don't have the time, although I might have to make time to do it.

I will say that I'm mighty upset, even more that I was a year ago, for knowing that I'm going to have to wait another year to see the conclusion of the movie, and probably nearly two years for the extended edition DVDs to be released.

I can't believe how much the little bits and pieces (that add up to about 30 minutes) added to the flow and background of The Fellowship of the Ring. I've got the collector's edition, complete with the National Geographic special on Tolkein. What a work!

I was sort of worried when I heard that there was going to be a screen adaptation of TLORT, and believed that it would be on par with the work of Ralph Bakshi, which I felt was pretty disapointing. I couldn't have been more wrong. I've got to say that I believe that this trilogy will eventually become known as one of the great works of cinema, on a scale of Kurosawa, Coppola, Speilberg, Lucas, or Scorcesi.

Mark
16 posted on 12/19/2002 8:48:40 AM PST by MarkL
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To: MarkL
I've got to say that I believe that this trilogy will eventually become known as one of the great works of cinema, on a scale of Kurosawa, Coppola, Speilberg, Lucas, or Scorcesi.

And I would add a hearty second to this notion. The man has risen above and accomplished something I wouldn't have ever believed possible. He's filmed a fantasy movie with Passion, respect and understanding and made it come off as reality. Compare this with Dungeons & Dragons of not long ago. If Hollywood could deliver something like this instead of that Schlock from D&D, Fantasy would be a worthwhile film market. Jackson has made it as far as I'm concerned. The crown is already there. Return will be but the jewels in it.

17 posted on 12/19/2002 9:04:52 AM PST by Havoc
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To: egarvue
My son and I saw it last night. We both were rather disappointed with the first installment, a disappointment which has changed with greater viewing time of it, but we came out of the Two Towers simply awestruck. His comment, which I agree with was, "I wonder how he (the director) can top this?"
18 posted on 12/19/2002 9:43:53 AM PST by tal hajus
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To: katana
Saw the film yesterday (packed house for a 4:00 PM matinee) and completely agree with this ecstatic review.

My suburban-Philly movie theater was full in the 12:30pm showing and sold out on the 3:45 & 4pm showings when we came out yesterday.

19 posted on 12/19/2002 9:45:40 AM PST by SauronOfMordor
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To: MarkL
The biggest disappointment from the rumor-mill, was that, in theory, Return of the King will leave out "The scouring of the Shire" ending. One thing that struck me in the movie is that Jackson moved the spider episode from Two Towers to the next film. With the success of the first two films, I'm wondering if Jackson, instead of trying to cram everything into a 3-hour final film, is going to try to go back and make the last part into two films, and put the Scouring segment back in?
20 posted on 12/19/2002 9:50:55 AM PST by SauronOfMordor
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