12/19/2002 - Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
[Spoiler Warning: Plot and characters are discussed]
Like many other loyal followers of the Lord of the Rings fable,
I couldn't possibly wait any longer than opening day to see
how director Peter Jackson had brought the second part of the trilogy to life.
I had purchased my tickets weeks in advance, and had
foolishly expected to get a good seat by arriving
45 minutes before show time - with Bend, Oregon, being not exactly
a pulsating metropolis and all. Needless to say though, I grossly
underestimated the fervor of The True Followers of the
Ring, many of them cloaked in Frodo and Legolas costumes,
and ended up in the back of the line - and thus
also in the back row of the theater.
Nonetheless, expectations were sky high, the stakes even higher. Would the second
installment of the Tolkien trilogy be able to withstand the keen
glare of the public and the fans - after the movie critics in their usual
prodding sceptisism
had professed it more of a glorified action film than
a true-to-the-book sequel of the Hobbit tale?
I confess, even I am torn.
I thought Peter Jackson
had accomplished the impossible with his first epic
picture "The Fellowship of the Ring", bringing Middle
Earth to life oh so gloriously, while preserving the mysticism of the tale
and coaxing good, maybe even great performances out
of his enormous cast.
But with "The Two Towers" he faced the new challenge of
staying true to the storyline of the book, while at
the same time avoiding to alienate the movie-goes who
hadn't read the books and were expecting a much more
gentle and light-hearted film.
In truth though, "The Two Towers" is a dark tale - dreary
and hopeless, with gruesome monsters and incredible
violence. Jackson clearly tried to shine some rays
of light into that darkness by expanding on the tender, yet fated
love story between Aragorn (Viggo Mortensen looking
ruggedly beautiful) and Arwen (the simply stunning
Liv Tyler), and building in jokes every chance he got.
While Merry and Pippin provided much of the comic
relief in the first movie, this time it was the
Dwarf Gimli's turn to be the generator of laughs.
He's seen awkwardly trying to keep up running with
the vastly more athletic Legolas and Aragorn, stumbling
and grumbling along, or trying to peek over the
tall walls of Helm's Deep into the battlefield, but
simply being too short. His fierce and gruff personality is
turned into a joke and, unfortunately for Jackson,
it doesn't work - especially in the midst of hairraising battle. The lame dwarf-tossing joke from
the first movie is most unfavorably repeated again too.
Critics have commented that the character depths
of the members of the fellowship have turned out rather
shallow this time around. Yet they seem to have
forgotten that those characters have already been
established in the first movie, and much of the
screen time in the second movie rightfully had
to go to introducing new figures such as Gollum,
Treebeard, and the people of Rohan and Gondor. There is only
so much you can do in the time allotted - and the
movie is already almost 3 hours long.
Admirably, Jackson's decision to create most of the
new characters via CGI has paid off.
The creature Gollum, though entirely computer-generated
(yet with a real actor as a stand-in),
is so surprisingly convincing and utterly unforgettable
as no real-life actor could have been.
The animation for Treebeard and the Ents is
equally superb, as are the fearsome Isengard wolves who carry the
Uruk-Hai in their first assault on the people of Rohan.
Surprisingly too, Frodo's subtle succumbing to the
evil force of the Ring and his transformation from
the gentle, happy Hobbit youngster into a tense and
at times vicious Frodo is masterfully done. After
looking wide-eyed for most of the "Fellowship" movie,
Elijah Wood shows for the first time a spark of real talent,
leaving you questioning no more why he was cast
for the role in the first place.
Aragorn clearly emerges as the definitive hero and central
figure of the "Two Towers", and despite all the
fancy sword play and almost super-human endurance
he displays, I particularly appreciated
that he preserved his integrity and loyalty towards
Arwen - despite the Rohan princess Eowyn (Miranda Otto)falling in
love with him. Their onscreen chemistry was weak anyhow,
so that was probably all for the better.
Remarkably, upon entering the screen for the first time,
Legolas (Orlando Bloom) drew loud squeaks of excitement from the
female teenagers in the audience - I guess cementing
poor Orlando's status as a new heartthrob. Beyond the pretty
long hair and demonstrating amazing skill with the
bow (and yes, even briefly on a snow/surf/skate board of some
sorts), his character was pretty much on an even
keel with the first movie though.
And I would have definitely liked to see Shadowfax,
Gandalf's horse, portrayed as the powerful and
mystic creature it is described as in the book, but I guess
trying to inflict special effects on that horse
could have gone awfully wrong.
New Zealand, being almost a stand-alone character
in itself, dazzles again with enormous sweeping
vistas and breathtaking beauty, and the movie will no doubt
crank the wheel of tourism in that country quite
a bit.
So all in all, the movie should be a smashing success,
and it certainly broke new ground by showing that
a sequel can be equally as ambitious as the original.
It stayed true to the book as much as it could (although
I really could have done without the dumb jokes - but
then again I'm hoping they'll get thrown out in
the Director's Cut DVD), and the (granted lengthy)
portrayal of the epic battle scene at Helm's
Deep was no doubt an unparralleled accomplishment
in movie making.
And yet I left the theater with the nagging
feeling that what I had just seen wasn't doing the
second book quite the justice the "Fellowship" movie had
done to the first. Maybe it was that my expectations
were higher. Maybe I was numbed too much already,
and despite all the grandios special effects,
"The Two Towers" were only able to satisfy and
amaze, rather than rattle my world.
Or maybe,
just maybe, it was due to the dissapointing fact,
that the movie left off at a point where the
book never would have - excluding Frodo's most
harrowing adventure and greatly diminishing the
role of the actual quest in the context of the
movie in favor of lavish battle scenes.
Knowing that I'll have to wait for the continuation
for a whole year is despite all almost unbearable.

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