Tag Archives: the hobbit

5 Reasons To See “The Hobbit: Desolation Of Smaug”

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Last year the powers behind the wildly successful “Lord Of The Rings” trilogy decided to return to the well and release “The Hobbit: An Unexpected…

5 Reasons To See “The Hobbit: Desolation Of Smaug”

“South Park” Goes IN on Kanye & Kim! [VIDEO]

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Last night (December 11), was the season finale of South Park, and the long-running Comedy Central cartoon went IN on one of their favorite targets…

“South Park” Goes IN on Kanye & Kim! [VIDEO]

‘Friday Night Lights’ Star Hits The Prison Rodeo In Kings Of Leon’s New Video

‘Beautiful War’ is a nouveau Western replete with tears. By Brenna Ehrlich

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‘Friday Night Lights’ Star Hits The Prison Rodeo In Kings Of Leon’s New Video

Five Things You May Not Know About ‘Lord Of The Rings’ Author Tolkien

With a biopic in the works, here are the things you should know about the hobbit creator. By Kevin P. Sullivan

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Five Things You May Not Know About ‘Lord Of The Rings’ Author Tolkien

The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug Poster Arrives!

Hey, remember  The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey? You know, that movie that earned over a million dollars last year? Well, there are still two more of those yet to come out! The first poster for the second installment,  The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug has dropped. Take a look: The poster previews the dark forest — Mirkwood — that Bilbo and the Dwarves must traverse as they continue their journey. The film stars Martin Freeman, Ian McKellen,  Evangeline Lilly , Benedict Cumberbatch, Luke Evans, Christopher Lee, Hugo Weaving, Richard Armitage, Cate Blanchett, Elijah Wood, Lee Pace, Aidan Turner, Billy Connolly, and Andy Serkis. Peter Jackson directs the film, which he shot at the same time as  An Unexpected Journey . The Desolation of Smaug premieres December 13.

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The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug Poster Arrives!

WATCH: The ‘Willow’ Blu-Ray Trailer Dares You Not To Say ‘Hobbit’

An often overlooked 80s classic is getting a slick HD makeover on the occasion of its 25 th birthday: the George Lucas -produced and Ron Howard -directed fantasy film Willow comes to Blu-Ray on March 13. First released in 1988, Willow follows the adventures of a farmer ( Warwick Davis  of Harry Potter and Leprechaun   fame in the title role) from a humble village of little people who finds himself pursued by entire armies as he protects a magical baby from a tyrannical witch. There’s a roguish swordsman, a rebellious princess, even an evil knight who dresses in black armor. Basically, it’s Star Wars meets the book of Exodus meets (duh) Lord of the Rings . Which is fine, especially since it was at the time the closest we thought we might ever get to anything remotely Tolkien-esque on the big screen*. Of course, 13 years after Willow ‘s release we actually got that live-action LOTR , which is probably why the new trailer for the Willow Blu-ray really, really, no really, seriously wants you to think The Hobbit while you watch. In fact, the tagline ‘from smallest beginnings…’ shamelessly apes The Hobbit ‘s “from small beginnings” to the point that you wonder if the original title was ‘Age Of Hobbits’.  Here’s a look: Despite a rather underwhelming ending and TV movie-level direction (sorry, Ron, but it’s true), Willow was a wonderful bit of cheesy 1980s fantasy at least worthy of a double feature with Krull . True, Willow lacks a “hey, wait, he’s in this??!” appearance by Liam Neeson ,  but it does have a pre-fat Elvis period Val Kilmer , Davis in one of his rare chances to act without first being covered under piles of latex and makeup, and plenty of magic and swordfighting in finest late-80s green screen style. If the trailer is anything to go on, the Blu-Ray version is going to look kind of great. So, OK LucasFilm, if blatantly trying to fool people into making a Peter Jackson -Lucas connection helps sell copies, I’m in. Just don’t release Howard the Duck as the spiritual predecessor to Meet the Feebles , okay? * Excalibur doesn’t count and you know it. Ross Lincoln is a LA-based freelance writer from Oklahoma with an unhealthy obsession with comics, movies, video games, ancient history, Gore Vidal, and wine.  Follow Ross A. Lincoln on Twitter. Follow Movieline on Twitter.  

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WATCH: The ‘Willow’ Blu-Ray Trailer Dares You Not To Say ‘Hobbit’

The Science of High Frame Rates, Or: Why ‘The Hobbit’ Looks Bad At 48 FPS

The hero of Jean-Luc Godard’s Le Petit Soldat declared “The cinema is truth, 24 times per second,” as The Guardian’s Peter Bradshaw noted while pondering frame rates and cinematic standards last year. Peter Jackson insists that it’s closer to 48 frames per second , as demonstrated by the groundbreaking new frame rate he utilized for this weekend’s The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey . But do scientific theories about the way our brains perceive images and reality — truth unfolding onscreen, in front of our eyes — support Jackson’s brave new vision for cinema, or undermine it? There is a great gulf between the cinematic look of 24 fps, the traditional rate at which film images are presented in succession to simulate moving images on a screen, and 48 fps. The latter packs more visual information into each second of film, for better and worse . Jackson and his fellow HFR enthusiasts (including James Cameron and Douglas Trumbull ) argue that 48 fps and even higher frame rates result in greater clarity and a closer approximation to real life.  They also contend it reduces motion blur, thus improving the look of 3-D images. But scientists and researchers in the field of consciousness perception say that the human brain perceives reality at a rate somewhere between 24 fps and 48 fps — 40 conscious moments per second , to be more exact — and exceeding the limit of the brain’s speed of cognition beyond the sweet spot that connotes realism is where Jackson & Co. get into trouble. Movieline spoke with filmmaker James Kerwin , who lectured on the subject of the science of film perception and consciousness at the University of Arizona’s Center for Consciousness Studies . (His presentation included an analysis of the work of Dr. Stuart Hameroff and British cosmologist/philosopher Roger Penrose, and their quantum theory of consciousness.) According to Kerwin, there really is a simple scientific answer for why  The Hobbit ’s 48 fps presentation plays so poorly with some viewers — and it’s not something we’ll get used to over time. HOW OUR BRAINS PERCEIVE REALITY James Kerwin: “Studies seem to show that most humans see about 66 frames per second — that’s how we see reality through our eyes, and our brains. So you would think that 48 frames per second is sufficiently below that — that it would look very different from reality. But what people aren’t taking into account is the fact that although we see 66 frames per second, neuroscientists and consciousness researchers are starting to realize that we’re only consciously aware of 40 moments per second.” “Dr. Hameroff’s theory has to do with the synchrony of the gamma waves in the brain — it’s called gamma synchrony — the brain wave cycle of 40 hertz. There’s a very strong theory that that is why we perceive 40 moments per second, but regardless of the reason,  most researchers agree we perceive 40 conscious moments per second. In other words: our eyes see more than that but we’re only aware of 40. So if a frame rate hits or exceeds 40 fps, it looks to us like reality. Whereas if it’s significantly below that, like 24 fps or even 30 fps, there’s a separation, there’s a difference — and we know immediately that what we’re watching is not real.” HIGH FRAME RATES AND THE UNCANNY VALLEY “You’ve got guys like Cameron and Jackson saying, let’s make it more real because the more realistic, the better; the higher the definition, the more 3-D, the more this, the more that. They’re not taking into account what’s called The Uncanny Valley in psychology. The Uncanny Valley says that, statistically, if you map out a consumer’s reaction to something they’re seeing, if they’re seeing something artificial and it starts to approach something looking real, they begin to inherently psychologically reject it.” “Not every person perceives the Uncanny Valley, however. There are some people that just do not reject things that look too real, although the vast majority of people do experience that phenomenon. So you’re going to get some individuals who see it and go, This looks great! The problem is anecdotes are not evidence. You have to look at the public as a whole, and I think that’s what Jackson and Cameron are not doing.” FORWARD-MOVING HFR VS. TRADITIONAL FILM CONVENTIONS “There are all sorts of conventions in film that are not found in reality. People talk to each other in ways that they don’t in reality. Things are lit in ways that they’re not lit in reality. The make-up, the hair, the props, everything is fake. If you stand on a film set and you watch the actors performing, you don’t for a second think that it’s real. There are acting conventions that we have chosen to accept.” “One thing a lot of people are saying about The Hobbit in 48 is that the acting is bad — well, the acting’s not bad, they’re simply acting with cinematic conventions but it’s such a high frame rate that the motion looks too real and you can see through the artifice of the acting.” THE NECESSARY SUSPENSION OF DISBELIEF — WHICH 48 FPS LACKS “It’s psychological: we need suspension of disbelief, and suspension of disbelief comes from the lower frame rate. The lower frame rate allows our brains to say, Okay — I’m not perceiving 40 conscious moments per second anymore; I’m only perceiving 24, or 30, and therefore this is not real and I can accept the artificial conventions of the acting and the lighting and the props. It’s an inherent part of the way our brain perceives things. Twenty-four or 30 frames per second is an inherent part of the cinematic experience. It’s the way we accept cinema. It’s the way we suspend our disbelief.” “Those high frame rates are great for reality television, and we accept them because we know these things are real. We’re always going to associate high frame rates with something that’s not acted, and our brains are always going to associate low frame rates with something that is not. It’s not a learned behavior; [Some say] you watch it long enough and you won’t associate it with cheap soap operas anymore. That’s nonsense. The science does not say that. It’s not learned behavior. It’s an inherent part of the way our brains see things.” James Kerwin is currently in development on an adaptation of R.U.R. Find more about him at his website , and head here to read further on Dr. Stuart Hameroff’s consciousness studies. Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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The Science of High Frame Rates, Or: Why ‘The Hobbit’ Looks Bad At 48 FPS

Movie (non)Nudity Report: The Hobbit, Save the Date

If it were up to us, every movie that hit theaters would be chock full of female flesh. But until that glorious day arrives, we are stuck with another non-nude week in the cinema. The wide release this week is the mega-budgeted fantasy flick The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey , but don’t look there for any unexpected skin. A little bit sexier is new release Save the Date (2012), featuring tempting brunettes Lizzy Caplan and Alison Brie as sisters grappling with commitment. Sadly, there’s no need to mark this movie down on your calendar, because the closest they get to nude is Lizzy in her skivvies at the 8-minute mark. More after the jump!

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Movie (non)Nudity Report: The Hobbit, Save the Date

And Now For A ‘Hobbit’ Musical Interlude: The Dwarves Sing

Why yes, there are musical numbers in The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey , which hurtles into theaters this week. Alas, none of them are eligible for the Oscars’ Best Song category, though I’d love to see Richard Armitage, AKA Thorin Oakenshield, face off against Katy Perry and Adele on that Academy Awards stage. Listen to Thorin and his not-so-merry band of dwarves prepare for peril with a solemn ditty in a clip from The Hobbit . Verdict : It’s no “Bilbo Baggins,” but then again, what is? [via TheOneRing.net ]

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And Now For A ‘Hobbit’ Musical Interlude: The Dwarves Sing

‘The Hobbit’ At 48 FPS: A High Frame Rate Fiasco?

The biggest question surrounding Peter Jackson ‘s Lord of the Rings prequel The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey , has nothing to do with its strength of story, its Oscar chances, or whether or not Tolkien fans will embrace yet another uber-ambitious adaptation of their beloved fantasy world, but rather: How does it look? Specifically, how will Jackson’s 48 frames-per-second gamble play after months of talk and one particularly disastrous Cinema Con debut ? I’ll tell you this: The grumblings and rumblings after my screening of The Hobbit – in bold, daring, frustrating 48 frames-per-second 3-D – were decidedly not raves. And that’s a very bad sign for Jackson & Co. One colleague couldn’t believe how poor the 48 fps presentation looked, insisting – or hoping, more like it – that something must have been wrong with the projection. Jackson’s big, game-changing crusade for a frame rate that would part the heavens and open humankind’s hearts and minds and brains to a new way of watching film couldn’t possibly look so unpleasant. Could it? I was curious if, back in April when The Hobbit ‘s 48 fps preview bombed at Cinema Con, the journalists and industry folk who recoiled from the hyper-clarity of the picture onscreen were just overreacting to Jackson’s new cinematic order. “After a minute or two of adjusting,” wrote The New York Daily News’ Ethan Sacks in his embargo-skirting first review , “the higher resolution is eye-popping, similar to discovering HD television for the first time.” HD TV did look rather freaky at first, I’ll give him that, and there’s a shared quality of too much visual information that The Hobbit ‘s 48 fps shares with high-def television. But it didn’t take a few minutes of adjusting to get used to it; even two hours and 40 minutes later my brain was rejecting the look of it. It felt like watching daytime soaps in HD, terrible BBC broadcasts, or Faerie Tale Theater circa 1985, only in amazingly sharp clarity and with hobbits. Part of the problem is there’s too much detail in every frame that the magical filter of cinema that makes most 24 fps film so pleasing to the eye is gone; every prop on a set too clear, and even a performance by someone like the very fine Ian McKellen looks embarrassingly, unnaturally theatrical. Moving images, especially walking Hobbits and dwarves – not as much the CG creatures, for what it’s worth – flit at odd speeds that just never look right. With the exception of a handful of scenes, mostly enhanced by CG vs. shot on interior sets, the 48 fps had me imagining how gorgeous everything might look in 24fps. Those who’ve seen it in 24fps seem much happier with the visual presentation, even if 3-D feels superfluous. As Bilbo made his way along his adventure through Middle Earth, the look of The Hobbit and the accelerated barrage of information prompted a flurry of other films and shows to pop into mind, none of them flattering comparisons. Here, in no particular order, are some of them: Fraggle Rock Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood of Make-Believe Shining Time Station Star Trek colony planets The opening POV shot of Dinosaurs (On the plus side, The Hobbit also inspired me to Google “Galadriel-Gandalf fan fiction,” which I guarantee will be a thing after The Hobbit comes out.) As early reviews continue to hit the web, it appears that I’m not in the minority on the frame rate issue. 48 fps may be D.O.A. even before The Hobbit opens in wide release on December 14. Maybe that’s a good thing; save your dollars and see it in regular ol’ 24 fps. The future may well be 48, but it hasn’t arrived yet. READ MORE: ‘The Hobbit’ 3-D Early Review: Back Again, But Not Quite There ‘Hobbit’ First Review: 48 FPS Is ‘Eye-Popping,’ But Watch Out For The Jar Jar Binks Of ‘LOTR’ The Hobbit 48 FPS Preview Divides Audiences at CinemaCon Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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‘The Hobbit’ At 48 FPS: A High Frame Rate Fiasco?