The Lord Of The Rings: The Return Of The King – Cinema

Dan Owen reviews

The Lord Of The Rings:
The Return of the King‘This Christmas The Journey Ends’Viewed at Odeon, Lincoln Wharf
Cover

  • Cert:
  • Running time: 200 minutes
  • Year: 2003
  • Released: 17th December 2003
  • Widescreen Ratio: 2.35:1
  • Sound: DTS-ES/Dolby EX 6.1/SDDS
    Director:

      Peter Jackson

    (Bad Taste, Meet The Feebles, Braindead, Heavenly Creatures, The Frighteners, The Lord of the Rings Trilogy)

Producers:

    Peter Jackson, Michael Lynne, Mark Ordesky, Barrie M. Osborne, Rick Porras,Jamie Selkirk, Robert Shaye, Fran Walsh, Bob Weinstein & Harvey Weinstein

Screenplay:

    Peter Jackson, Fran Walsh & Phillipa Boyens

(based on the novel by J.R.R Tolkien)

Cinematographer:

    Andrew Lesnie

Music Score:

    Howard Shore

Cast:

    Frodo Baggins: Elijah Wood
    Sam Gamgee: Sean Astin
    Gandalph: Ian McKellen
    Aragorn: Viggo Mortensen
    Merry: Dominic Monaghan
    Pippin: Billy Boyd
    Gimli/Treebeard, voice: John Rhys-Davies
    Legolas: Orlando Bloom
    Gollum/Smeagol: Andy Serkis
    Arwen: Liv Tyler
    Éowyn: Mirando Otto
    King Théoden: Bernard Hill
    Denethor: John Noble
    Faramir: David Wenham
    Elrond: Hugo Weaving
    Éomér: Karl Urban
    Galadriel: Cate Blanchett
    Bilbo Baggins: Ian Holm
    Deagol: Thomas Robins

And so the journey comes to an end.

After five years of production, andthree blockbuster movies, Peter Jackson’s acclaimed trilogy of J.R.RTolkien’s novels finally comes to a close. The Return Of The King, after aprologue explaining the downfall of Gollum, picks up exactly where The TwoTowers climaxed. Frodo and Sam are being shepherded by the treacherousGollum towards Mordor to destroy the One Ring, wizard Gandalph and the restof the Fellowship prepare to meet the full-force of Sauron’s armies at thehuman city of Minus Tirith, and Aragorn must accept his destiny as heir tothe throne of Gondor…

Third acts are always difficult in screenplays, and even more so fortrilogies. While Fellowship had the unenviable task of explaining Tolkien’scomplicated Middle Earth, it was by far the most accessible movie due to itslinear plot. The Two Towers successfully added complication and additionalcharacters, but despite its fabulous finale at Helm’s Deep, it wasoccasionally quite maudlin. The Return Of The King has to pull together allthe plot-threads and weave them into a cohesive and entertaining lastchapter. Unlike other movie franchises, the prospects of a sequel to theevents of the movie are zero. The success of Jackson’s trilogy rests quiteheavily on Return Of The King – and what a burden that must be.

Of course, J.R.R Tolkien’s books are the inspiration and guidelines forJackson’s movies – so Tolkien himself has to share some of any blame. Butthankfully the successful literary trilogy has been perfectly realized oncelluloid. Jackson has altered the ending quite drastically – making it farless apocryphal than Tolkien’s, while the Two Towers sequence involvingShelob the giant spider has been mixed into the events of the final filminstead. But these changes, and others, do not detract from an expertlyhandled piece of filmmaking.



Again, the cast provide audiences with truly memorably characters – now asolid part of movie legend. Unfortunately, some of the characters remainlittle more than background amusement (Legolas and Gimli, yet again), butothers really do grow into something more substantial (Merry and Pippin’sadventures in battle, and Sam’s heroism, primarily). Liv Tyler‘s Arwencontinues to be forced into a rather limp romance with Aragorn (a subplotshoved into the trilogy by Jackson for feminine audience appeal), and otherpotentially fascinating characters spend much of the movie with little todo. Miranda Otto‘s Éowyn is such a neglected character, who as compensationhas a heroic sequence with the Nazgul-riding Witchking that goes some way toappeasement, but highlights how more interesting she could have been with amore immersive back-story.

WETA’s special-effects continue to be a source of much admiration. Theyreally do have a realism and vitality to them that other effects studiossomehow haven’t managed to capture with the same level of success. From CGIlandscapes, rampaging beasts, giant trolls, swooping Nazguls, and theremarkably realistic Gollum, the studio has become the zenith for digitalintegration. Rarely does a visual effect detract from the story, orneedlessly appear, with only a few shots badly composited and distracting toaudiences. For the most part the sheer scale and breath-taking panorama’sare beguiling and enchanting to behold.

Likewise, Howard Shore‘s score is magnificent and must now rank amongst oneof the most beautifully composed music scores ever created for cinema – atruly wonderful collection of emotive and enthralling melodies. Elsewherethe technical brilliance of the production design, costumes and make-up arewithout doubt. The Return Of The King effectively provides audiences witheverything that made the previous two movies so fantastic – good acting, aninvolving plot, stunning effects, rousing music, and brilliant design.



But there are problems, undoubtedly. While the film’s pacing is exceptional(it feels like the shortest film, while actually being the longest!) thefinale does drag on for too long – with the credits taking an eternity tomaterialize. Purists may also bemoan the movie’s happier ending, at oddswith the downbeat and more sobering novel. Also, while the battle at MinusTirith is a technical marvel, it somehow lacks the atmosphere of the Helm’sDeep siege from The Two Towers. It was also quite frustrating thatChristopher Lee‘s Saruman doesn’t even feature in the movie – which robs thetrilogy of a satisfying conclusion for his character (who was practicallythe lead villain in the previous films!) Of course, the inevitable DVDextended edition should remedy some of these complaints…

On balance, The Return Of The King marks a grand end to what has been aremarkable filmmaking event of recent years. It’s epic, visually stunning,character-driven and occasionally quite emotional. It will be veryinteresting to see how writer-director Peter Jackson’s career progressesfrom here – will Rings hang around his neck like George Lucas’ Star Wars? Orunlike Lucas, will Jackson break free of his phenomenon and create many moreworks of genius? Next up from the Kiwi director is a remake of King Kong -the film that inspired his filmmaking career. On a personal level, successwith this Kong could be even more important than simply creating thegreatest film trilogy ever made…


DIRECTION
SCREENPLAY
PERFORMANCES
SPECIAL FX
SOUND/MUSIC



OVERALL

And with hindsight (and with relation to each other) my scores for each film:

The Fellowship Of The Ring
The Two Towers
The Return Of The King

Trilogy Overall
Review copyright © Dan Owen, 2004.E-mail Dan Owen

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