Are you talking about the first film or the third film?
Dude, Aragorn can't control himself because uh, he's not real, fictional like you mentioned. And what the hell dude? Catering to the teenagers? You're overthinking it. I think that's the first time I ever heard someone say that.
You needed to establish the Narsil is in fact broken but he has a sword in its stead. You can't have a ranger without a sword. Why would he have a broken sword with him. In fact it helps Aragorn's story of not wanting to accept his destiny. Him distancing himself form the sword makes it better.
The point I am making is that Aragorn's character was modified to be less chivalric, less honourable, less "old fashioned"; more emotional, more angsty and more generic. In the book, he persuades The Hobbits to fall in with him, rather than forcing himself on them. That is because he chooses to respect people weaker than himself. He carries the shards of Narsil because he would not carry any other sword, or entrust Narsil to anyone else. He initially refused to surrender it to the Rohirrim outside Theoden's hall, and wouldn't let the guardsmen handle it. It was a fundemental represtentation of his destiny. He would rather have no working sword than a replacement. (I am confused where you found the rule that the Dunedain had to carry swords, anyway. If he had to have a weapon, he could have been given a cudgel or axe as medieval travellers used to carry. Anything but a spare sword).
I understand why Jackson et al did this. It makes Aragorn a more modern and flawed character, easier for the less sophisticated members of the audience to understand (and no, I don't include you in that). My point is just that they should have been braver, and treat the character on his own terms. Ditto Sam's relationship to Frodo as a social unequal- that didn't need to be glossed over.
Hmm, budget maybe? I think they had more important things to spend the money on rather than make them floating. And it's not that terrifying when you see a floating head with no physical presence in the film. And the only time you can see their physical presence is in the ring world.
I don't accept that the production was short of money. Many special effects and sequences were ramped up for visual appeal (hence Gandalf's combat with the Balrog at the start of TTT). In any case, the Ringwraiths could be made to be scary. Ralph Bakshi's Nazgul are more frightening than Jackson's, because they are more otherwordly and disturbing. I just feel that Jackson, though a great director, always thinks that more is more. Sometimes, a dab of subtlety would go a lot further.
Like I said, it helps introduce Aowen and their relationship easier and faster. Instead of mashing everything up to get introductions in. The Rivendell sequence was hard enough for them to write. When Frodo is struck by the sword, he is getting progressivley weaker. And all of a sudden he's riding a horse and outrunning more skilled riders? It wasn't a girl powered moment. And it actually gives Awoen something to do other than just sit there and questioning her father about what she should do. You've established that they trust eachother already, and are in love, while getting to everything else you need to tell later. It's a good starting point.
The point was that Frodo was put on an elven horse, which sped him to safety. He defied the Black Riders by himself, though. It's a shame Frodo was robbed of that moment. Jackson's Frodo doesn't seem to have the stones of Tolkien's.
Again, I know why Arwen's role was expanded in this direction. I just wish Jackson had the courage not to have done it.
Yes, I have read the book, although not for a while. But that doesn't matter, I'm talking what makes it cinematic. What won't work for film. And don't leave out that they probably did discuss it but agreed it would seem foolish.
I haven't read the book for over a decade, but I read it at a formative age where I remembered is well. It is important to recall the source matter, because it helps you to see exactly how its elements could work on film.
You don't understand. It IS about pacing. Findign the right tension until it becomes redundant. Moria is forboding as it is. You can't spend too long in it when they've already spent alot of time in it. This is one of the liberties you have to take when making a film. Things have to be moved and tightened. And no I'm not "Stupid" I loved Alien and especially its pacing. That is gradual. Moria is only one sequence. And they've already journeyed through the mines with Gandalf warning them about the evils that lurk.
Of course it is about pacing- that was uneven. In the original, it is unclear whether or not the party are in danger until they are attacked. But the tension builds. The response to Pippin's stone is just the distant tapping of a hammer. It chills the blood. In the movie, the party walk into the remains of a massacre, Orlando squeels "goblins", and they all draw weapons. It is certain from that point that there will be some fighting. The tension of the rest of the sequence is therefore flattened.
Now, I am not saying that it necessarily needed to be longer. I do think that the order and weight of events should have been shifted, though, to build the atmosphere.
No, you're just thinking what they took out and not what they left in as a whole. These fillms have to most expository detail anyone can ask for. More than what they could of gotten. And please, stop thinking to people as the so called "stupid" audiences. It's about appealing to everyone and not just to the hardcore fans who will pick it apart anyway. They've done it to the best of their abilities.
Many audiences are stupid- that's not Jackson's fault, but it isn't my fault for saying so. It isn't their fault either. All I am saying is that, great though they are, Jackson's LOTR movies could have been a bit less patronising in their desire to keep us entertained in every single frame.
I don't think anyone could really argue with that.