Shelob'sAppetite wrote:axordil wrote:AND he does so immediately after some of the worst forced dialogue in the film, where Gandalf describes the other wizards, specifically singling out Radagast! Has there been, in the past decade, a bit of script-writing this bad? If so, I haven't seen it.
While the scripts have never been my favorite aspect of the movies, I don't think that's a fair statement.
Gandalf mentioned Radagast before the trolls, which leads into the Rhosgobel sequence--that's a pretty standard transition. The Rhosgobel and Troll sequences separate the reference and Radagast showing up, so it's separated by between twenty and thirty minutes of film. Calling that immediate is a bit of a stretch.
Even in story terms, since there's no clear establishment that Rhosgobel takes place in real time relative to the dwarves approaching the trolls--no "meanwhile in the south of Mirkwood"--one can assume (if one knows the distances and is so inclined) that the Rhosgobel scene took place, say, a couple of weeks before. If one is clueless about the scale, the timing matters less. Either way, it's not an issue.
Its not so much the timing, as it is the implausibility of Radagast just popping up in the middle of the company. THAT reduces scale big time. Sorry, but it was sloppy and ham-handed. The question leading to Gandalf's answer about the other wizards, which then cuts to Radagast, and then later leads to his arrival by bunny express, is an indication of how horribly forced the Radagast-Dol Guldur-White Council storyline is. It's a tiresome contrivance, and puts Bilbo and Thorin on a back-burner. IMO, it is the worst decision Peter Jackson has made thus far in his half-baked Middle Earth endeavors.
*shrugs* They're Istari. Radagast was looking for Gandalf. If one really wants to find another one, and the second doesn't mind being found, it's no longer a chance meeting in Middle-earth.
As far as the transition goes, it simply didn't feel forced to me. Pretty standard setup, really. If you're going to bring an as-yet-unintroduced character in for whatever reason, it makes more sense to do it amid some context. Asking a wizard about wizards doesn't strike me as an offensive way to do it. I mean, the pivot went something like this:
(after being asked to do something about the rain)
G: If you want someone to mess with the weather, you need another wizard.
B: So how many wizards are there exactly?
I do not see the problem there. It's not a quantum leap in logic. It allows Gandalf to remind the audience of Saruman, to make an in-joke about not having rights to Unfinished Tales ("I've forgotten their names"), and sets up Bilbo's crack at Gandalf's expense...and slides into Rhosgobel.
There's clunky writing in the flim to be sure, but that transition isn't it.