Search the web
Sign In
New User? Sign Up
ianmckellenclub · Ian McKellen Club - Gods, Monsters...and Mutants (and Wizards too!)
? Already a member? Sign in to Yahoo!

Yahoo! Groups Tips

Did you know...
Want to share photos of your group with the world? Add a group photo to Flickr.

Best of Y! Groups

   Check them out and nominate your group.
Having problems with message search? Fill out this form to ensure your group is one of the first to be migrated to the new message search system.

Messages

  Messages Help
Advanced
A ROTK:EE Review! *Spoilers*   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #4948 of 5427 |

*spoilers*
Anonymous writes: I don't know if I'm at the right address, but I've
recently seen the brand-new extended cut of The Return of the King,
in my professional capacity, and I thought I'd let know you know
about it. I had seen the theatrical version once in the theatre, and
two more times with my kids, and I must admit that the longer cut is
far superior, for it ties everything you could consider loose-ends,
it extends what you thought what great, and it adds awesome new
scenes. Many characters benefit from this extended cut, but Faramir,
Denethor, Eowyn and Merry really stand out.
After having watched the extended version, my favorite character
became Denethor. His new scenes gave him such depth that I couldn't
help but wonder why in the world they had to cut them. We learn more
about Denethor than about any other character, in my opinion, and
that's saying a lot. We learn new things about him not only from his
extended and new scenes, but from Faramir, which I thought was a
nice touch. Also, I must credit the actor who played Denethor for
the coolest line in the whole trilogy: In this extended cut, when he
learns that the first levels of the city are in flames and that the
men are deserting them, he says something like 'Why do the fools
fly? They should stand and burn, for burn they must.' Awesome. Oh,
and he has a heated exchange of words with his son that stand out
because it's very dramatic. It even reintroduces Sean Bean as
Borimir in a most unexpected way!

The House of Healing is back in as well, which is good, because it
allows you to breath a little between the two big battles of the
movie. Aragorn shows his healing skills, which allow us to realize
that he IS really fitted to be king, and not just a wannabe. This
new segment also has tender moments between Faramir and Eowyn while
they're recovering from their battle wounds, which serves a nice
conclusion for both characters and allow the actors who play them to
shine.

Of course you must have heard by now that Saruman has been
reinserted into the movie, but let me tell you, you're in for a
treat! The sequence is over five minutes in lenght but I would have
taken more...Saruman tries to rally Gandalf once again to his cause,
but Gandalf doesn't fall in the trap. Also, Gandalf finally gets the
chance to establish himself as the ruling wizard of Middle earth,
when he says something like 'I am not Gandalf the Grey whom you
betrayed, I am Gandalf the White and I cast you out of the order.'
From this point the sequence takes a dramatic turn and you're on the
edge of your seat until Saruman meets his fate. A sticky fate that
turns him to dust!

A new character is introduced in the extended version: the Mouth of
Sauron. He comes out of the black gate riding a huge black horse and
basically he speaks for his master (who is after all a huge flaming
eye!). The Mouth taunts the members of the fellowship and makes them
believe Frodo has died after endless torture. He has particularly
gruesome words for Aragorn.

What more can I say without dragging too long? The Paths of the Dead
become Indiana Jones-like with new perils and booby-traps, there is
a fight sequence with some pirates which was cool, because it shows
you how Aragorn was able to take over the whole fleet of ships that
bring him to Minas Tirith, Frodo and Sam's journey becomes so much
more dramatic and their trip across the burning lands of Mordor is
extended a lot, there is a whole lot more to learn about the
backstory of Minas Tirith, Aragorn confronts his archenemy Sauron in
the flaming palantir and Gandalf even faces a new challenge when the
mighty witch-king lands in front of him and confronts him (a
sequence you must see before you die, it's simply too cool).






Wed Oct 27, 2004 5:13 pm

psycho_neko_...
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email

Forward
Message #4948 of 5427 |
Expand Messages Author Sort by Date

*spoilers* Anonymous writes: I don't know if I'm at the right address, but I've recently seen the brand-new extended cut of The Return of the King, in my...
SHADOWKamen
psycho_neko_...
Offline Send Email
Oct 27, 2004
5:15 pm
Advanced

Copyright © 2009 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy - Terms of Service - Guidelines - Help