<BLOCKQUOTE>quote:<HR> It all seemed too packaged - Aragorn's Kingship (and the cliched speech he gave upon accepting it), Sam's wedding, Bilbo's and Frodo's last journey. It felt as if the ending was being fed to us, that Peter Jackson was trying to break down Professor Tolkien's ending into easily digestible soundbytes that forced us to believe that everything had been wrapped up ship-shape. For me, at least, it did not convey the sad, operatic aura that clung like a dreary fog to the end of The Lord of the Rings books, and this for me was a tragedy because Peter Jackson brought across the feeling of Tolkien's novel so well in most other places, and this was the one place I had hoped he would succeed the most.<HR></BLOCKQUOTE><BR>Not that I agree with the above, but the EE will surely fix some or all of this for you. It was a just a matter of what he could fit in. As much as Jackson says he would make the cinematice versions of the films as long as he wanted, I'm sure he realised that to do anything over 3 1/2 hours at the cinema would be madness. This is the ONLY problem I have with the film i.e. the ending was too rushed. That is why the EE versions are the definitive versions of the movies, and I bet Jackson will admit to this once he's got the Best Film/Director Oscars in his hands.
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