That is one of the flaw in the hobbit movie imho, in the book they tease the dwarves and sing silly songs and are generally very lighthearted. In the movie they are almost dour in comparison to the dwarves. But the hobbit was much more of a childrens book that the lord of the rings.
I guess its different when you grow up with it. I always felt it gave it a certain fairy tale feel that while not directly called for by the text, made my young brain fall in love with it all the more. Like the whole concept of uglycute and baby yoda or whatever his name is.
it feels very true to JRRs inspiration from finnish, the style has the same vibe as traditional art up here where you’re not sure if something is a rock or a troll and everything feels vaguely unsettling.
That is one of the flaw in the hobbit movie imho, in the book they tease the dwarves and sing silly songs and are generally very lighthearted. In the movie they are almost dour in comparison to the dwarves. But the hobbit was much more of a childrens book that the lord of the rings.
… Those were wood elves, Elrond as a high elf acted markedly different in that exact same book.
Yeah I guess. But these lighthearted wood elves don’t appear in either film series. Maybe in the upcoming reboot (jk)
The only film adaption of the Hobbit I acknowledge is the Rankin Bass version and they were merry af in that one.
Sorry, that art style gives me the heebie-jeebies
I guess its different when you grow up with it. I always felt it gave it a certain fairy tale feel that while not directly called for by the text, made my young brain fall in love with it all the more. Like the whole concept of uglycute and baby yoda or whatever his name is.
it feels very true to JRRs inspiration from finnish, the style has the same vibe as traditional art up here where you’re not sure if something is a rock or a troll and everything feels vaguely unsettling.
Ok that is a lovely description. Can you suggest some Finnish folk tales I could read tonight?
I had no idea anyone has watched those movies close enough to bother comparing it to the book.
E. I guess I’m wrong and the Hobbit trilogy is a movie people study… for some reason.