They attempted to animate a very corruscated graphic style which, in my opnion, tries to evoke Arthur Rackham- who never illustrated Tolkien to my knowledge but rather did THE RING OF THE NIBELUNG. Some of the Chromal and rendering choices are quite beautiful and endearing and I think another noticeable influence is that of PAUL COCKER JR (who was rather famous in MAD magazine) who was a brilliant designer of Trolls and Goblins and monsters.
The "feline" Smaug is, at lest original and has personality and Cocker's Gollum is sad and amphibian in a vaguely Lovecraftian way...
Trying to retain the fairy tale tone, the narrative follows a tight travelogue of incidents that seem to connect much more loosely than the book into the Battle of the 5 armies but that dramatically don't seem to build upon one another (the Rankin Bass animated feature reminds me, in an odd way of THE BLUES BROTHERS- a band of travellers on a quest pissing off random sorts of people until they all come together at the end to demand restitution) and that notably omits one of my favorite characters: Beorn.
On an odd, personal note- I find ALL the Dwarves disturbing and creepy in their design- which for me, as a kid, was a plus!!
Greetings
GDT
Guillermo on the Rankin Bass Hobbit
Guillermo on the Rankin Bass Hobbit
Guillermo just posted his thoughts on the merits of the RB Hobbit over on TORN. I thought it might be worth starting a separate thread to discuss the only previous attempt at filming The Hobbit. Guillermo has some good points to launch the discussion!
The Vinyamars on Stage! This time at Bag End
I second that. Practical constraints and/or lack of imagination mean most portrayals of dwarves are just burly guys made to look short (or actual genetic dwarves). R-B were more creative, giving them long noses and tall, narrow heads (and male-pattern baldness). And both Nori and Ori wore a scarves tied around their mouths bandit-style, giving them an extra creepy vibe.On an odd, personal note- I find ALL the Dwarves disturbing and creepy in their design- which for me, as a kid, was a plus!!
Click me for pictures
Their animated hobbit was my first exposure to Tolkien, and to this day the above is still what I see in my head when I think about dwarves.
Creepy or no, I think it would be cool if they did something to make them look at least a little non-human. Even TV scifi series at least give their alien species forehead prosthetics.
"So what makes your race different from humans, Thorin Oakenshield?"
"Well, you see....we're short".
Just need to watch out for that uncanny chasm.
"So what makes your race different from humans, Thorin Oakenshield?"
"Well, you see....we're short".
Just need to watch out for that uncanny chasm.
But is there any indication that Dwarves should look alien compared to humans?
The Elf King made me Legolas was clearly adopted.
The Elf King made me Legolas was clearly adopted.
"What a place! What a situation! What kind of man would put a known criminal in charge of a major branch of government? Apart from, say, the average voter."
Terry Pratchett, Going Postal
Terry Pratchett, Going Postal
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I suppose it comes down to whether one feels one should assume the different races appear identical except where explicitly stated otherwise. I think it would be more interesting if there were subtle physical differences between the races. Nothing too major, otherwise we'd have to wonder why Tolkien never mentioned it, but just little things that might not come across in writing.Frelga wrote:But is there any indication that Dwarves should look alien compared to humans?
The Elf King made me Legolas was clearly adopted.
I do think "shorter and stockier than humans (and the women have beards)" is about the extent of their canonical description, though.
And by all means Guillermo, stay far away from RB's wood elves.
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Elsewhere, it has been noted that Frodo and friends are puzzled as to the nature of Tom Bombadil, who is bearded, taller than a Hobbit, and shorter than a Man -- but they never wonder if he is a Dwarf. So apparently for Tolkien there was some other difference.Dave_LF wrote:I suppose it comes down to whether one feels one should assume the different races appear identical except where explicitly stated otherwise. I think it would be more interesting if there were subtle physical differences between the races. Nothing too major, otherwise we'd have to wonder why Tolkien never mentioned it, but just little things that might not come across in writing.
I do think "shorter and stockier than humans (and the women have beards)" is about the extent of their canonical description, though.