Billy and Dom should remake all of the Road to... Movies that Bing Crosby and Bob Hope did.
HELL YES!!!
I've been thinking for a while that the two of them should do a comedy together.
'Lies My Parents Told Me'
Frodo: Please, what does it always mean, this... this "Aragorn"? Elrond: That's his name. Aragorn, son of Arathorn. Aragorn: I like "Strider." Elrond: We named the *dog* "Strider".
A discussion of Lord of the Rings - The Return of the King. If you're a pervy hobbit fancier, this is the place for you.
Billy and Dom should remake all of the Road to... Movies that Bing Crosby and Bob Hope did.
HELL YES!!!
I've been thinking for a while that the two of them should do a comedy together.
We're off on the road to Isengard
Old Treebeard will carry us there.
The Ents are goin', why they're goin', how can we be sure?
We'll lay you eight to five that they'll show Saruman the door.
PLEASE LET THIS BE TRUE:
An employee of the Odeon theater chain in the U.K. has posted a message on a Lord of the Rings website disclosing that the chain has been notified that the three extended versions of the Rings films will be distributed to theaters in October, ahead of their DVD release in December. Another employee of a theater in Denmark said that his managers received a message from the films' distributors noting that the three extended versions will be shipped to "a select number of cinemas" in Denmark in "mid-October."
And let it be applicable here.
t hyperventilating
They wouldn't NOT do it here... right?
I think the question to ask is could they make dumptrucks full of money doing it. I'm pretty sure they could.
Someone at New Line is probably looking at the spreadsheets and thinking "Well, the DVD release will make lots of money, but damn, I wish we were going to get that nice Christmas present of a new theatrical release this year--wait ..."
I'm on record as hoping they'd make an annual Christmas tradition of running the entire trilogy of extended editions theatrically. Wouldn't that be a fun annual tradition?
There's some precedent. Gone With The Wind was re-released multiple times, which was highly unusual for a film back then. But it just kept making tons of money, so every five years or so they'd put it back into release.
I think that the GwtW re-releases were unusual for non-children's films, but Disney made a mint on re-releases. Of course, successful films stayed in the theaters for much longer pre-video than they do now; IIRC, Sound of Music was in first release for over two years.
I think that would be an excellent Christmas tradition.
They should film that....and, y'know, show it every Christmas.
Um.