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Things We Saw Today: The Desolation of Swag

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Spotted by Tumblr user horrorshowmania. I’m pretty sure this would just be Thranduil grooming his eyebrows for three hours. (Tor.com)

  • Fans of The Dark Crystal might not know that the version directors Jim Henson and Frank Oz originally wanted to release was quite different from the final cut. It had no voice overs or inner monologues, for example, and most of the Skeksis’ dialogue wasn’t in English. It took fan Christopher Orgeron years, but he’s assembled that director’s cut and put it on YouTube. Geekosystem has the whole one hour, 39-minute-long video.
  • This article on the rash of parents naming their kids after TV show characters includes an interesting tidbit: This year saw the registration of the UK’s first ever baby Sansa. All hail the Queen! (A.V. Club)

My, what a lovely Frozen statue. Except no. This is a cake. By Laura Miller; Cartoon Brew has making-of pics.

  • Sorry, fans of the BBC’s Ripper Street: Your show’s not getting a third season. (Variety)
  • Regina King (Ray, Southland, 24) and Melanie Merkosky (Continuum) have joined the cast of Guillermo del Toro‘s vampire horror series The Strain. (Deadline)

Art student Mary has drawn rather spiffy anthropomorphized versions of the eight planets in our solar system (plus Pluto). Uranus, Neptune, and li’l P are above; you can see the rest on her Tumblr. (via Neatorama)

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Peter Jackson Says Smaug Fans Will Not Walk Away from Desolation Disappointed

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There’s one thing we all know about modern monster movies, and that is that you can never really know whether they’re going to let you get a good look at the monster. Are they going to tease it in the trailers and then reveal it early on? Or just keep teasing you with it the whole movie? Are you going to get one quick reveal before it slides back into the shadows, or will you actually be able to appreciate the design work that went into it without pausing the film?

The way Peter Jackson is talking about Smaug these days, it sounds like we’ll be getting a nice eyefull of Smaug the Terrible this weekend.

The director talked about the challenge that he, Fran Walsh, and Philippa Boyens had in bringing Smaug to the big screen. How to make the most famous fairy tale dragon seem properly impressive when so many cinematic dragons have come before him? They immediately rejected the idea of making him something other than the classic four-legged, winged serpent, “That would be a silly thing to do. He’s a dragon and he has to have a classical kind of dragon feel to him… I thought, ‘What is it about a dragon that would surprise people? What is that people wouldn’t be expecting?’”

From what he tells Entertainment Weekly, it seems that the answer they found was to make him a character with real personality, not just a stomping, fire-breathing monster, and, well, to make him very, very large. Jackson calls him the “‘Hannibal Lecter’ of the dragon world,” for the mind games he plays with Bilbo.

We  took the approach that Smaug is a paranoid psychopath. He has a lust for gold, but it’s a lust that he can’t explain. He’s not like a normal person who wants wealth for all the trappings of fast cars and yachts. Smaug doesn’t have any of that, the poor guy. For 200 years, he’s been there on this pile of gold waiting for someone to come, just sitting there doing crossword puzzles and catching up on Breaking Bad seasons on Netflix. He hasn’t got much else to do.

I’m going to assume that Smaug’s got some kind of projector set up, otherwise that’s a lot of time spent squinting at a screen the size of your own nostril.

(via Entertainment Weekly.)

Fili and Kili Talk About Pronunciation, Barrels, Desolation of Smaug

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Aidan Turner and Dean O’Gorman play two members of Middle Earth’s only all-dwarf boy band, Kili and Fili (respectively). Turner received the brunt of the teasing from other actors for being the dwarf who had to put on the least prosthetic makeup (just a bit to pad out the end of his nose). The two actors talk to Steve Weintraub of Collider about Desolation of Smaug. So who’s going to the midnight showing tonight?

(via Collider.)

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The Cast of The Hobbit Attempt To Dramatically Read The Ballad of Bilbo Baggins

Benedict Cumberbatch Explains How He & Peter Jackson Made Dragon Porn

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“It was motion capture, so I did roll around a bit on the carpet. He’s talking about the dragon porn that happened a little bit later, in the sort of third installment of our work together…they built the platform in the main soundstage at the post-production facility down in Wellington and it was great. It was sort of above [the floor] so I had this kind of thing of superiority. They built a wooden platform on stilts and they had this hard board that they’d padded with some foam and mats and stuff and on top of that they put this sheepskin. It was literally like ‘Baum chicka baum baum,’ me up on my Smaug-y platform. I was like, ‘This is cool, I can slink around like a porn star dragon.’”Benedict Cumberbatch speaking with L.A. Times’ Heroes Complex about his time working on The Hobbit.

Porn star dragon. This man, I swear…

He went on to add, “Apparently Peter’s saying that I took my shirt off and rolled around, and well, no, I didn’t. I just made one comment which he’s imagined in his head into some kind of porn thing.” Sure, blame Peter Jackson, Cumbersmaug.

(image via Tolkienerd)

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Wish She Could Be Part of Your World: On Tauriel-hate and Original Material

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It’s a poorly-kept secret that we here at TMS are firmly on the side of Tauriel, the original female elf character in The Hobbit franchise whose mere existence created waves of discussion across the Internet. But some do not share in our enthusiasm. In fact, if you took a look around the fan ‘net in the months preceding The Desolation of Smaug’s release, there has been a distinctly anti-Tauriel sentiment in the air. Hiding behind a desire to preserve the sanctity of the source material, many commentators objected to her addition on purist grounds. Other became concerned about her rumored involvement in a love subplot with Legolas and/or Kíli, further indicated by a secondary trailer for the feature in which King Thranduil appears to caution her against pursuing relations with his son. But now we have surer footing from which to look at Tauriel, warrior, love interest, healer, and forum discussion whipping-girl. The actual film containing her appearance has emerged, and with it, a host of questions, concerns, and a fair bit of mud that this reviewer is willing to sling back.

From the comments on some of our articles with Tauriel in them alone, you’d think she’d killed the fan community puppy. But to those who questioned how Peter Jackson would dare to throw an original character into the mix, I call sexism. Where were these objectors, I wonder, during the middle stretch of The Two Towers, when Aragorn was given up as dead by the other characters for several scenes, or Faramir did not immediately reject the Ring? Or in The Return of the King, when Elrond says that Arwen is dying? Or a hundred other places big and small, where Jackson and company have done, basically, whatever they feel like with the so-called sacred source material? Plot creation and narrative re-assignment of parts has served us both for good and for ill in the past, so perhaps it’s the idea of wholesale character spawning that got so many feathers ruffled.

Character invention seems like a violation of the prime directives of adaptation to many, and not without reason. The only problem with this objection is…Jackson’s already created original characters, and done it approximately twelve times over. The all-important dwarves who make up the company of Bilbo’s unexpected journey are named in the book, but with the exception of their leader Thorin Oakenshield and a few mentioned here and there as the “youngest,” the “fattest,” the one with the keenest eyes, which instruments a handful of them played, and the colors of their cloaks, are entirely indistinguishable from one another. Because having thirteen near-identical men onscreen for nine hours doesn’t work cinematically, the Weta Workshop crew have outdone themselves fabricating a distinct look, purpose, and personality for each dwarf. Ori, for example, is based on actor Adam Brown’s audition video… for the role of Bilbo. This is, in its most essential sense, character creation, from writing to costuming choices. So what’s the difference between these nearly new conceptions and an original elf? I can think of one big one.

The idea of an original female character brought with it an entire new category of issues for fans, which say as much about how we expect female characters to be treated in media as it does about our own prejudices. Chief among these concerns seemed to be that Tauriel would be shunted into the role of love interest, with her participation in any action sequences serving as a consolation prize for those of us who would ask for more. (I am happy to note that Tauriel is an excellent fighter, whose abilities in battle are never up for question, due to her gender, or otherwise.) This is a common enough problem for the lone female character in a cast exclusively composed of men, and one it seemed likely to have happened. But, though Tauriel is technically involved in a love triangle with Legolas and young dwarf Kili, it seems to be one that, thankfully, she has little intention in participating in. Careful observers will notice that she refers to Legolas as “friend” in Elvish, even when trying to convince him to go against his father’s wishes, treating him more as a comrade-at-arms than a potential mate. This could well be attributed to her place as a “lowly Silvan elf”, a social position that would prevent a relationship with a king’s son. Yet, though Thranduil makes Legolas’ apparent desires known to the audience, there is near to nothing said on the subject of what Tauriel desires.

What we do know, largely from her interactions with Kili, as well as her words to Legolas when following the Orcs to Laketown, is that Tauriel is a character who sees the larger picture. Though raised and participating actively in the closed, suspicious society of the Mirkwood elves, she longs for news of the outside. She also understands that there are things larger than the safety of Mirkwood’s borders at play, and urges her friend to help her in a fight that concerns them, though it would seem not to at first glance. This closed existence also explains her interest in Kili, who shows a willingness to talk to her about Dwarvish customs and his own life. (I, personally, could have done without that ‘down his pants’ exchange, but that’s perhaps a matter of taste.) Whether this interest is anything approaching romantic in nature is a subject to be resolved by the final film in the trilogy. What it is, however, is a trait consistent with Tauriel’s characterization that does not feel superfluous, or out of place.

It helps that Evangeline Lilly herself was against there being a love triangle, so much so that it was the sole condition of her accepting the role. As she states in this interview for Yahoo!Movies, there was no trace of a triangle during principle photography. Rather, it was a substantial part of reshoots in 2012, as something that the studio felt needed to be included. What that boardroom discussion looked like is something we can only speculate on, but Lilly does her best to play down the subplot in favor of kicking Orc ass.

Despite misgivings about falling into step with a common trope of female characters, Jackson’s instinct to include Tauriel in The Hobbit is coming from the right place. As Lilly said in another interview, it is unacceptable these days to send young girls into a theater for nine hours of entertainment without a single female on the screen. Howl that she is forgetting Galadriel, but her point is well taken. The two serve very different roles in the trilogy, and, without Tauriel, there really would be a lone woman, absent for all of The Desolation of Smaug save a single shot, and one who has not participated in combat in a series heavy with action. Tauriel’s inclusion is a concession to modern taste, and is the correct response for a filmmaker/screenwriter to have when confronted with a female-scarce source. She’s not perfect, but then, she is one character, and, as we so often discuss on TMS, one character cannot be everything we need her to be. It’s time to drop the hate, and look at Tauriel for what she is; a solid step towards better representation in an area long absent of the presence of women. I can only hope that this impulse, going forward, continues to serve both the audience and the character well.

Music Takes Center Stage In One Last Desolation of Smaug Production Diary [VIDEO]

Did You Forget That Stephen Colbert Had a Smaug Cameo? Here It Is

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We’ve known that King Nerd Stephen Colbert managed to bag a cameo in one of The Hobbit movies for quite a while now, but I completely forgot to keep an eye out for him when I went to see it. If you’re like me, you might appreciate these screenshots put together by ScreenSlam.

(via Jezebel.)

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Things We Saw Today: Marzipan Smaug

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“Atop a treasure of golden sprinkles and rich chocolate souffle, according to CaracalFeathers. Makes it incredibly hard not to steal from him. 

Here’s a page from Boom! Studios’ Bravest Warriors 2014 Annual featuring Kate Leth’s Catbug piece. Check out an interview with Leth and the other creators, and see more pages, at Comic Book Resources. Brb, overwhelmed with cuteness.

  • RIP James Avery, the actor who played Uncle Phil on The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air and voiced Shredder in the TMNT cartoon, among others. (via Screenrant)
  • Man Wins a Guinness World Record for Largest Video Game Collection with 10,607 Games (via LaughingSquid)

In case you missed us posting this on Twitter and Facebook on New Year’s Eve, here’s your first official look at Marvel’s Guardians of the Galaxy.

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This Tauriel Cosplay Makes Me Want To Cosplay Tauriel Even More

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Fan reaction to Tauriel, the newly created elf for Peter Jackson’s The Hobbit films, was mixed. But can we all agree on how cool she looked? As a natural redhead who’s been debating cutting her waist-length hair, seeing Desolation of Smaug made me second guess myself. Purely for cosplay reasons. And then came this. Cosplayer AngelaBermudez on DeviantArt put together a really great Tauriel replica that actually looks comfortable to wear. I’m all about that.

(via Fashionably Geek, photo by Andres Herrera)

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How The Desolation of Smaug Should Have Ended Is All About the Cameos [VIDEO]

Things We Saw Today: A Cute Captain Marvel Dress

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A quick, improvised project by Contagious Costuming. We salute you. (via Fashionably Geek

  • Pussy Riot Is Headed To Brooklyn! (via The Frisky)
  • In case you were wondering, Stan Lee will not have a cameo in Guardians of the Galaxy. He said, “This is the one group that I didn’t create. I’m not even sure who they all are.” Burn. That’s ok, neither does most of the audience who will probably be going to see it. (via Entertainment Weekly)
  • In other Marvel news, we’re going to get a new Captain America: The Winter Soldier trailer during the Super Bowl. (via ComicBookMovie)

Do you think he breathes letters? Created by Victoria of VMCreations. (via Laughing Squid)

  • Michelle Forbes (of Star Trek: The Next Generation & Battlestar Galactica) will be guest-starring on Orphan Black this season! (via io9)
  • Laura Sneddon has released a brief statement in response to Alan Moore’s latest interview, which called into question her journalistic ethics.
  • The Kickstarter for Little Maia and the Coral City describes itself as, “A children’s picture book about a young girl who finds herself in a magical undersea town filled with enchanted creatures.”

Poor Chief O’Brien gets the comic strip treatment from Jon Adams. (via io9)

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Making Beautiful Music With The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug

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It may not be a top priority for most movie-goers but the score of a film has always been an important part of movies for me. Not to mention how great they are to listen to after the fact. Take a look at this feature SoundWorks Collection did with the crew at Park Road Post Studios for their work on the latest installment of Peter Jackson’s The Hobbit.

(via Laughing Squid)

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This Genderswap Cosplay Of The Hobbit Cast Is Hair And Back Again

The Hobbit’s Evangeline Lilly Is Being Courted For A Lead Role In Marvel’s Ant-Man

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Well, good morning to you too, Marvel! 

Actually, this news broke last night but I’m sure many of you are waking up to it today. The Hollywood Reporter says Lost and The Hobbit: Desolation of Smaug star, Evangeline Lilly is in talks for the lead opposite Paul Rudd in Ant-Man. And no, they have yet to divulge the name of that particular lead.

THR writes, “It is unclear who Lilly would play but it is not intended to be a one-off appearance.”

Lilly’s big break of course was on ABC’s Lost but since that series wrapped, she’s been particular about her roles, only having starred in Real Steel and Peter Jackson’s Hobbit films as the newly created Tauriel. She was also really, really, excited to play that role so it gives me hope for whoever this character is in Ant-Man if she agrees to it.

Of course the first thought is Lilly might be in talks for Janet van Dyne (aka The Wasp). But things aren’t certain, especially after Michael Douglas was added to the cast as Hank Pym. At that time names like Rashida Jones and Bryce Dallas Howard were also floating around for the spot opposite Paul Rudd’s Scott Lang. Variety cites sources as saying she could be Pym’s daughter.

Meanwhile, Disney CEO Bob Iger went on record to say Captain America: The Winter Soldier would  “set critical events in motion” for The Avengers sequel and that we might see some trickle down into ABC’s Agents of SHIELD.

(via /Film)

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The Hobbit‘s Philippa Boyens Explains Cliffhangers and Dwarven Character Development

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Philippa Boyens, co-writer on all of The Lord of the Rings Movies shares some details on the cliffhanger at the end of The Desolation of Smaug, and on why she and co-writers Peter Jackson and Fran Walsh decided to break the cardinal rules of adventuring and split the party.

Even if you’ve read The Hobbit the ending of Desolation feels a little abrupt. You know what’s coming, after all, and it’s going to be pretty glorious. Well, gloriously destructive. The ending is a bit of a tease. Boyens thought the ending made perfect sense.

It felt so natural that I got a shock when the audience got a shock! If you can imagine what transpires next and what’s coming, it’s quite a huge chunk of storytelling. Not only that, but you enter into the tone of the third film, which is very definitely – as is the book, by the way – moving towards the world of Middle-earth as it becomes in Lord Of The Rings. Some dark stuff goes on.

One of the other seemingly odd changes made from The Hobbit flies in the face of all the lessons we learned from Dungeons and Dragons: don’t split the party. Dwarf characters Bifur, Bofur, Fili and Kili were left behind in Laketown while the rest of Thorin’s company headed off for the Lonely Mountain. Boyens explained that this was a deliberate choice in order to give the destruction of Laketown the proper emotional impact on the audience.

We made that decision [so we would] experience the attack on Lake-town through the eyes of people we’ve come a long way with. We wanted some of the dwarves to understand what happened in that firestorm, that holocaust that rains down upon Lake-town. Bofur comes more into his own in the third film. A rift begins to open up. And I can’t say much more without going into spoilers for film three, but it’s primarily because we needed him to be there when the dragon attacks.

Speaking of film three, a mere nine months away as the post production team flies, Boyens said that it is still in the process of being edited, but that she’s particularly looking forward to seeing Richard Armitage‘s performance as Thorin spirals into gold madness.

(via Empire Online.)

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Peter Jackson’s Third Hobbit Film Officially Has A New Name

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Oh dammit! Just the other day we had a report on how recent trademark applications meant Peter Jackson’s last film in The Hobbit series might be getting a title other than the previously announced, The Hobbit: There and Back Again. Now we’ve got confirmation from the horse’s mouth. ” ‘There and Back Again’ felt like the right name for the second of a two film telling of the quest to reclaim Erebor, when Bilbo’s arrival there, and departure, were both contained within the second film. But with three movies, it suddenly felt misplaced—after all, Bilbo has already arrived ‘there’ in the ‘Desolation of Smaug,’ “ Jackson explained on his Facebook page. Yadda, yadda, yadda, the new title for the third film is The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies. Ok, I guess that makes sense. Though for J.R.R. Tolkien fans disappointed about the change, Jackson mentioned There and Back Again would find a home on future box sets considering it “encompasses Bilbo’s entire adventure.”

Thoughts on the change?

(via io9)

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Ian McKellen Continues to Be the Best, Shows up Unannounced to Midnight Hobbit Screening - And you missed it? Fool of a Took!

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We already know that, in his spare time, Ian McKellen likes to run around New York taking ridiculous pictures with his BFF Patrick Stewart. So what, did we all just expect him to sit around at home while the The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug opened last weekend? Of course he was going to crash some theater’s midnight screening.

(via io9, featured image via Justin Sewell)

Meanwhile in related links

X-Men: Days of Future Past & The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug Are Getting Extended Editions - Never enough angst and sadness.

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THE HOBBIT: THE DESOLATION OF SMAUGLook at those intense glares. Now look at them for a while longer in recently announced extended editions of both X-Men: Days of Future Past and The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug.

First up, Days of Future Past, which we already knew a bunch had been cut from. The Hollywood Reporter writes:

News of the extended cut first surfaced last month when executive producer Lauren Shuler Donner told a fan via Twitter that an extended cut of the movie would be released “later this year,” containing the excised subplot centering around Anna Paquin’s character Rogue that Singer had teased might appear on the home release.

Fox’s EVP of Marketing Communications, James Finn, confirmed that such an extended edition would be released—but not until 2015—on Twitter this weekend, also noting that the version of the movie contained in the upcoming Digital HD/Blu-ray release would instead be the theatrical cut. When asked for more details about the extended cut, he simply teased “Soon.”

THR says the film will be released on Digital HD September 23 and on Blu-ray October 14. Thankfully, we have a few more details on The Desolation of Smaug extended edition Blu-ray, available November 4. Or, at the very least, something to look at.

SmaugExtended1

SmaugExtended2

Yahoo! writes:

While Peter Jackson’s second Hobbit installment clocked in at a lengthy 161 minutes, the filmmaker always leaves behind enough cutting room floor material to warrant extended editions of his Middle-earth journeys. In this version, he adds a whole 25 minutes of never-seen-before suspense; so we know how Hobbit fans will be spending 186 minutes of Nov. 4, not including the nine hours of new special features.

And here’s their exclusive clip:

(via /Film)

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Funko Awakens Smaug as a Super-Sized Hobbit Pop! - "I AM THE KING ON YOUR SHELF!"

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