Bakshi, Ralph | Tom Allen

TOM ALLEN

The Lord of the Rings has been made almost exclusively for Tolkien devotees. In adapting the long, unwieldy saga, the filmmakers have settled for The Song of Bernadette axiom: "To those who believe, no explanation is necessary; to those who do not believe, no explanation is possible." When I saw the film, the audience cheered each introduction of the books' stars as if it were the opening night of Gone with the Wind. They were celebrating their own fond literary memories, not the characters materializing on screen. Yet their reaction seems to have been anticipated in the special care given such favorites as the Uriah Heepish Gollum, the Sancho Panchoesque Samwise, and the highly theatrical Gandalf the Wizard; and the audience seemed not to mind the strategy of speeding over the highlights of the book's dense plotting.

I have no idea whether The Lord of the Rings will be intelligible to the uninitiated. The film never gets...

[The entire page is 631 words long]

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