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The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug (2013, dir. Peter Jackson): PJ gets his mojo back, largely

The_Hobbit_-_The_Desolation_of_Smaug_theatrical_posterPeter Jackson gets his mojo back (largely) for the 2nd Hobbit installment – skips all the long sequences of dwarves singing a cappella while doing the dishes, getting straight into the action and fantastic new locales, requiring craploads of both programmers and carpenters. Some cool action set pieces imaginatively leap off the book’s pages, like dwarves in barrels. Acteur du jour Benedict Cumberbatch snarls away as “the CGI bad guy” (Necromancer/Sauron and Smaug). Plus expert foreshadowing of the central conflicts which we can be sure Jackson will dramatize to the max in the 3rd movie (*spoiler alert* the moral showdown between Bilbo and Thorin and the Battle of the Five Armies).

To pad out the 300 page children’s novel into 9 hours of feature film, Jackson has to add in quite a bit of backstory (like Gandalf and Radagast’s adventures) and some new characters (such as Evangeline “Lost” Lilly’s evoking if-Katniss-Everdeen-were-an-elf), but one can overlook all that for the spectacle … after all, retconning a chaste Elven-Dwarven love triangle is a mostly harmless creative exercise vs. some of the more legendary Hollywood executive pronouncements that were apparently flung around the first trilogy (e.g. Weinstein: “You have to kill one of the hobbits. I don’t care which one.”)

 
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Posted by on December 21, 2013 in Film Reviews, Passive Media

 

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The Hunger Games: Catching Fire (2013, dir. Francis Lawrence): a quality follow-up for fans of the first film

220px-Catching-Fire_posterFor fans of the first film, a quality follow-up, but doesn’t quite reach the hallowed circle of sequels that were better than episode 1 (Empire Strikes Back, Wrath of Khan, etc.) Somehow, the stakes felt a bit lower and less dramatic, and the plot is entirely predictable to anyone who’s read a lot of sci fi/ dystopian future lit – though Jennifer Lawrence does a creditable acting job (as ever). Entertaining, well-crafted, slightly-deeper-than-typical action fare, though still not good enough to make me want to read the books 🙂

 
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Posted by on December 2, 2013 in Film Reviews, Passive Media

 

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