The Arkenstone
Smaug: "I am almost tempted to let you |
take it." Bilbo remembers Smaug's words. |
The politics of Thorin reclaiming his
heritage dovetail with
Saruman's dismissal of Gandalf's fears, Thranduil's cynical isolationism, and
Bard's ancestry as well as, on the bad guy side, the Master's greed and
Lake-Town's police state, Azog's desire for revenge and the
Necromancer's call to the Nine. That is, there is a consistent issue
(implied in the book and used directly by Jackson) of determining how the social order should function. Who is in charge? Why? How? For what reason? What will
be the outcome?
"A Thief in the Night"
The decision that Bilbo makes regarding the
Arkenstone receives equal weight in movie and book. However, I wish the movie had
spent more time on Bilbo's actual departure from the Mountain.
Bilbo scaling the wall. |
Too little "show," however, and it seems like characters just magically transported themselves from, say, Maine to New York. (Driving never takes as long as it should on shows like Bones.) House
famously had its doctors walk around hospital corridors as they spouted off dialog: they're moving from points A to B and moving the plot forward!
Tolkien was very aware of distances and never makes
mistakes in terms of how long a journey would actually take. In fact, during a recent rereading of The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings, I noted how scrupulously he maintains points on the compass (without being overly and tediously committed to the equivalent of railway times tables). He details
exactly how Bilbo gets away from the Mountain and how he is taken in by
Elvish guards.
He then produces one of my favorite moments in the trilogy--and another of those moments that highlight Freeman's everyman ability to respond in very human ways to dramatic moments.
After all, that particular scene is occupied by McKellen, Pace, and Evans effortlessly acting at the top of their game. And here is the amazing Martin Freeman, saying, "Er, yeees."
I
suppose by shortening how long it takes Bilbo to get to the tent, Jackson was leaving more time for the battle scenes and...he
didn't need to. I find those scenes mostly tedious.
To be continued...
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