I don't know if they're roots so much as all he could get away with at the time.
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Is there a pattern of that?
Like Frank said: King Kong, which was IMO self-indulgent and bloated. Some narratives are not well-served by lingering shots of carefully-crafted CGI. Or even action-packed sequences of carefully-crafted CGI, if they don't serve plot, character, or theme.
I'm a big LotR fan (books and movies), but there was some bloat even in the studio releases, and news of the 3-movie adaptation of The Hobbit made me nervous.
I'm going anyway, mind you. But I see Jackson as suffering a bit from what I like to call "Stephen King Syndrome" (or J.K. Rowling syndrome): the failure of the editorial process to serve the story rather than the storyteller. If everyone is going to buy the last Harry Potter book regardless of its content or flaws, there's no benefit to the publisher in doing anything but a most cursory proof-reading.
And if you're an author (or auteur) who's been given a free hand in anything you want to do for the last decade, you're unlikely to listen to any editorial comments noting that perhaps turning a relatively lightweight piece of children's adventure into a nine-hour epic isn't the best way to address the project.
That's my take, anyway. I'm still going, but I'm more wary of Jackson than I was in 2001.
Point at 'suela and nods in agreement.
Is the Raskin-Bass adaptation readily available? I remember seeing it when it originally aired.
Like Frank said
No, I mean a pattern of directors being reined in by doing a smaller post Oscar movie.
I don't even know what difference that would make. Jackson seems to like massive intricate movies where everyone's underwear is in character and the impact of their grandparents and grandchildren is equally conveyed. There is a point at which he had the leeway to do so--it seems to me like once he got budget and influence, he's gone wild.
I don't know what one small movie would have meant, or changed.
I imagine that he'll go OTT this time on something I really like, so I'll have a similar experience to LOTR, but more muted because more is being taken for granted on both sides, plus the question of what to include and exclude gets more complex when you're using other texts as well.
Is the Raskin-Bass adaptation readily available?
You can get it used on Amazon for about $23.
Sophia,
I think we are like spirits. I'm of the school that Scrappy Doo ruined Scooby forever. Sometimes Scooby-Doo had a decent balance between funny and investigation, but it got goofier over time and then fucking Scrappy.
I don't know what one small movie would have meant, or changed.
For me it would have indicated that he's capable of reining himself in. And that he had some practice with the kind of self-discipline that I think could only benefit a big production. Although just because one has self-discipline doesn't mean one always uses it.
That's all.
Although just because one has self-discipline doesn't mean one always uses it
That's pretty much where I am. He seems to give no indication that he's interested in small right now. Which is totally cool.
I rented the Rankin-Bass film from iTunes, and I'm watching it now. I didn't know this: [link]
The Hobbit was animated by Topcraft, a now-defunct Japanese animation studio whose animation team would go on to re-form as Studio Ghibli alongside Hayao Miyazaki.