Depression. Joy. What can I say about it. It seems that it is a natural consequence of having a good time for two days in a row. Does that make sense? In the previous two days I hung out with friends and saw a few movies. I saw The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug and I saw Star Trek, the one that came out seven months ago. Seeing movies in May does not happen for me due to work, but Winter is a good time. Unfortunately, I watched it with someone who can't shut up and not give away the plot for other people.
The Hobbit was a good movie. Criticisms first, because there were only a few, actually two. One was the encounter with Beorn. I always pictured his character being broad shouldered with a earthy personality, magnanimous and hearty. Tall but seeming short due to his broadness, basically a bear of a man. I felt that more time could have been spent with his character and less time with the character of the second criticism.
Smaug. When he was shown in the first movie he was seen as snippets and pieces, his entire being could not fit on the entire screen. There was dread and there was mystery, most of all there was anticipation. When Bilbo first stepped in the hall of the Dwarves, there was a biting anticipation, where is Smaug; very well done. Also well done was the revelation of Smaug, it was done slowly, with care, with a feeling of dread and awe. His massive body obscured was revealed inches by inches. It's intellect revealed in a quick conversation with Bilbo where he determines where he comes from and by what route with very little information and then, and then Peter Jackson decides that people want to see more of the dragon and more of the CGI technology.
The result of this added fifteen minutes of computer gymnastics is that the cunning Smaug was turned into a Buffon, easily outwitted by a bunch of dwarves and his grace and power are eliminated as he is turned into a clown who tumbles ineffectually. I am a big fan of dragons, but I understand that this is not the book and it is a different story, however treating Smaug poorly makes his defeat and death a lesser event.
How I would have changed the end, I would have cut the last scene in half, gone more with the original, because sometimes the original is actually better. In the book, Smaug is enraged at the invasion of his home and fills the tunnels where Blibo fled with fire, I might have added special effects where its fire melts the stonework. Smaug then exits the mountain and searches for the secret entrance that the party used and then the dragon tears the mountain down bury the dwarves. The movie would end there for the good guys and for those that do not know differently, Bilbo and the Dwarves are dead, Smaug is seen ghosting over Dale heading to Laketown, the first time he is in complete view, but in the distance.
Anyways, I know that more than a few of you who saw the movie liked it all, but really the statue made of molten gold . . . Peter, you jumped the shark on that one.
The elves, the fight scenes, Gandalf's confrontation with the Necromancer, the Spiders and everything else were great, awesome. The addition of female characters, female elves was the best. Radagast with his sleigh pulled by bunnies. There is so much awesomeness in the movie, but I seem to discolour it with a beef about the last ten minutes.
Star Trek 2. I liked it a whole lot, but there are complaints, however because there are no books it is not like I can complain about how it deviated from any better plot. I can complain about how really great SciFi movies have huge budgets, but not enough money to vet the plot with a real scientist! No really, I am an amateur scientist, I am a active skeptic and the glaring science stupidities that the writers commit really gets my gal. I mean no-one thinks it is odd that a ship without propulsion is orbiting the moon one second utterly motionless so they can show a truly fantastic scene flying between two ships but then a moment after the action ends the sip is crashing into the Earth, 200K km away?
But I digress, because it was an epic film with much lauding of the previous set of movies and awesome line stealing from classic Trek, which was good because there was a lot in the film that would appeal to Trekkies new and old.
But Cold Fusion Bomb, really?
Anyways writing seems to have snapped me out of my funk, which is what I was hoping that it would do. I should be due for a huge depression next week, because later this week I will be heading to Big Smoke to visit people and that should eat up all my good mood.