ExileOnDaytonStreet
Drunkard
Re: Who has seen the Hobbit?
Does your argument have any more depth to it than "these are things that are different from the source material"?
That might seem like I'm patronizing you, but given your history of arguments made in treads here, I'm asking it seriously.
The only point I'm seeing you make here is (a) Lord of the Rings had changes from the book, and (b) The Hobbit has changes from the book, so (c) therefore everyone who doesn't like the changes in one should not like the changes in the other.
From reading your posts, I honestly don't think you've grasped the idea that people are complaining about what the changes are to The Hobbit and how they impact the tone and characterization of the story... which the rest of us are aware is different from complaining about changes being made period.
I'll concede that the LotR trilogy had some problems with dumb action cliches that hurt some of the changes/additions (ones that jump out to me: the collapsing stairs in Fellowship, the people-think-Aragorn-died-but-we-all-know-he-didn't fakeout in Towers and the Frodo tries to wrestle the ring back from Gollum/"Grab my hand! reach!" cliche in Mt Doom in Return), but they didn't dominate the story or fundamentally change characters the way that they do in The Hobbit, where (for example) Bilbo is already a super action hero before they even meet the Spiders (in the book, Bilbo's journey from tagalong to secret hero of the operation is a major arc, and that journey is highly minimized in the films thus far).
See what I did there? I cited examples and backed up my reasoning. Give it a shot someday.
Does your argument have any more depth to it than "these are things that are different from the source material"?
That might seem like I'm patronizing you, but given your history of arguments made in treads here, I'm asking it seriously.
The only point I'm seeing you make here is (a) Lord of the Rings had changes from the book, and (b) The Hobbit has changes from the book, so (c) therefore everyone who doesn't like the changes in one should not like the changes in the other.
From reading your posts, I honestly don't think you've grasped the idea that people are complaining about what the changes are to The Hobbit and how they impact the tone and characterization of the story... which the rest of us are aware is different from complaining about changes being made period.
I'll concede that the LotR trilogy had some problems with dumb action cliches that hurt some of the changes/additions (ones that jump out to me: the collapsing stairs in Fellowship, the people-think-Aragorn-died-but-we-all-know-he-didn't fakeout in Towers and the Frodo tries to wrestle the ring back from Gollum/"Grab my hand! reach!" cliche in Mt Doom in Return), but they didn't dominate the story or fundamentally change characters the way that they do in The Hobbit, where (for example) Bilbo is already a super action hero before they even meet the Spiders (in the book, Bilbo's journey from tagalong to secret hero of the operation is a major arc, and that journey is highly minimized in the films thus far).
See what I did there? I cited examples and backed up my reasoning. Give it a shot someday.
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