Der Herr der Ringe (1978)

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Der Herr der Ringe: Directed by Ralph Bakshi. With Christopher Guard, William Squire, Michael Scholes, John Hurt. The Fellowship of the Ring embark on a journey to destroy the One Ring and end Sauron’s reign over Middle-earth.

“Ralph Bakshiu0026#39;s attempt at bringing J.R.R. Tolkienu0026#39;s epic tale to the screen years before Peter Jackson is a valiant effort that falls short for more reasons than the obvious. Many purists will no doubt complain about whatu0026#39;s been left out or the depictions of some characters. Others will say that the story ends abruptly and, since there was never a part two, it leaves the movie feeling incomplete. Still others will talk about the uneven mixture of traditional animation and rotoscoping. All of those are valid complaints but not major ones for me. Granted, I saw the Jackson films already so there was a certain degree of comparison that was inevitable, however unfair that may be. Iu0026#39;m certainly not going to slight the movie for not being able to compete with something made decades later with a budget over twenty times what this had (for the first movie of the trilogy alone). Iu0026#39;m also not going to nitpick what was left out or who didnu0026#39;t look like they should because the Jackson series gave fans a gazillion hours of footage of to cover almost every base. The animation is good for the era and I generally appreciate Bakshiu0026#39;s use of rotoscoping. The man was an artist, not an assembly-line animator like most at the time, and that should be praised.u003cbr/u003eu003cbr/u003eThe main problem I had with this is that it is not as emotionally involving as the Tolkien story demands. Itu0026#39;s a story that deserves a deeper treatment than what we have here. That came later with Jackson, thankfully, but the lack of emotional resonance in this version is a major flaw. I also wish the music score wasnu0026#39;t so unexciting and forgettable. Iu0026#39;ve read that Bakshi originally wanted to use Led Zeppelin music. At first that sounds like a terrible idea but I canu0026#39;t help but wonder if that would have been so weird that it actually worked. Overall, itu0026#39;s a mixed bag that drags some and never really pulls you in like it should. Bakshi respects the material enough to follow it as closely as he can with the restrictions he had. He also creates some fine atmosphere and fills the movie with so many interesting visuals that itu0026#39;s hard to dismiss it entirely.”

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