Product details
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What's New?
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If you want to completely immerse yourself in Peter Jackson's marvelous and massive achievement, only the extended edition will do. |
How Are the Bonus Features?
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One DVD Set to Rule Them All
Peter Jackson's trilogy has set the standard for fantasy films by adapting the Holy Grail of fantasy stories with a combination of fidelity to the original source and his own vision, supplemented by outstanding writing, near-perfect casting, glorious special effects, and evocative New Zealand locales. The extended editions without exception have set the standard for the DVD medium by providing a richer film experience that pulls the three films together and further embraces Tolkien's world, a reference-quality home theater experience, and generous, intelligent, and engrossing bonus features. --David Horiuchi
Disc 3: Introduction from Peter Jackson "J.R.R. Tolkien: The Legacy of Middle-Earth" Documentary "From Book To Script - Forging The Final Chapter" Documentary Abandoned Concept: Aragorn battles Sauron "Designing Middle-Earth" Documentary "Big-atures" Documentary "Weta Workshop" Documentary "Costume Design" Documentary "The Peoples of Middle-Earth" galleries with audio "The Realms Of Middle-Earth" galleries with audio "Miniatures" galleries with audio "Home Of The Horse Lords" Documentary "Middle-Earth Atlas: Tracing the Journeys of the Fellowship" interactive map "New Zealand As Middle-Earth" interactive map with on-location footage
Disc 4: Introduction from Elijah Wood, Sean Astin, Billy Boyd, Dominic Monaghan "Cameras In Middle-Earth" Documentary Production photos: a gallery of 69 images "Weta Digital" Documentary "The Mumakil Battle" interactive feature "Editorial: Completing The Trilogy" Documentary "Music For Middle-Earth" Documentary "The Soundscapes Of Middle-Earth" Documentary "The End Of All Things" Documentary "The Passing Of An Age" Documentary "Cameron Duncan: The Inspiration For Into the West" Documentary "DFK6498" short film "Strike Zone" short film
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
17 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Bests the theatrical release,
By
This review is from: The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (Extended Edition) [DVD] (DVD)
The Theatrical release suffered through being long but disjointed, with fractured and at times jarring story-telling.The restored scenes in this extended cut make for a more satisfying and coherent narrative, and bring us closer to Tolkien's original work. Stand out extra scenes are: Saruman's last stand; a conflation of the original, but a great scene, faithful to the themes and spirit of the scene in the book. This gives the closure the Saruman story deserved. Aragon draws the eye of Sauron: this serves to partly explain Denethor's madness, but not as specifically as the book does. The Mouth of Sauron: A truly revolting and effective creation. As for the documentary features, there's a wonderful, inspiring documentary on Tolkien and the book, intelligent and illuminating.
28 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
1 year on ... we have our proper conclusion ...,
By
This review is from: The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (Extended Edition) [DVD] (DVD)
A year after the final theatrical version surfaced in the cinema, the Lord Of The Rings trilogy comes to its FULL conclusion with the release of the Extended Edition of Return Of The King. A couple of things for fans of the books to hear. Even at 4 hours running time, the Scouring Of The Shire doesn't make it into the film ... in fact the entire film from the closing scenes of Mount Doom onwards remain as they were in the cinema.. Also push aside those 'too many endings' scoffs, the story was never meant to conclude with the climax of the big battle. Delve into the appendix of Return Of The King and you find that the Fellowship's lives are documented right up to their deaths or parting from the realm of Middle Earth. The War Of The Ring was but a very small part in the history of the world and it was fitting to see in conclude back where the story began. What a conclusion this series had too! The Two Towers saw a siege with 10,000 attackers throw themselves upon Helms Deep, Return Of The King sees 600,000 attackers in the crucial battle of the world. So many stories intertwine, with Aragorn eventually facing his destiny as the King Of Gondor, Gandalf preparing the city of Minas Tirith for the oncoming assault against the wishes of the deranged steward Dethanor, and most importantly Frodo, Sam and Gollum's final stretch to Mount Doom to destroy the Ring. Of most interest with this DVD is whats 'new'. The best additions is the inclusion of Frodo and Sam's trek across Mordor, the section where they end up caught up in a battalion of marching orcs while in disguise makes a welcome addition from the book, as does the true ending of Sauruman (which frankly had an atrocious ending in theatrical version, merely dismissing him as 'having no power' anymore without Christopher Lee even making it on screen). A few treats for those who know what was missing. Then comes what can only be described as dodgy additions, for the first time ever. The extended scenes with the Army Of The Dead look very nice but completely ruin that air of suspense for when Aragorn finally turns up for the Battle Of Pelanor Plains. This time round you know EXACTLY who is on that boat pulling into the port near Minas Tirith. Rather than the joyous switch from 'Oh no! Its MORE bad guys! Wait a sec ... its ARAGORN!', you know that! the battle is already going to swing in the favour of good when they turn up. Also there is a suspicious scene between Gandalf and the Witch King Of Angmar which detracts from illusion of Gandalf being an all powerful wizard. A needless deviation from how that particular scene pans out in the book. These are minor niggles from someone who loves the book, nothing can touch the book as far as I am concerned. You get to know the characters so much better and you get all those little gems which they had to cut out of the movie or alter to make the story tell well in a screenplay aspect. However, I don't think anyone else could have made as good a translation from book to film as Peter Jackson. This is one of the best series of all time, Fellowship Of The Ring still nicks it as my fave of the three movies if I was pushed to choose. You can't really detract from what he has achieved with this film, Tolkien himself gave the film rights away for practically nothing, deeming the book impossible to translate to film. Since this is the Extended Edition DVD, this is the Extended Review. Once again the 2 DVDs of documentaries are an absolute joy. None of your usual dodgy tacked on DVD documentaries with 'deep voiced US geezer' commentary, these are superb. Cast, crew and Tolkien buffs all contribute, genuine fascinating footage to watch and such a variety and wealth of subjects to talk about. Every aspect of the movie creation is documented, right up to the final scenes of filming (bizarrely, these took place a few weeks after ROTK picked up their 11 Oscars ... nothing like an Oscar for an unfinished film!). A history of Tolkien and his inspirations, the discarded concept (thank god!) of the Aragorn vs Sauron final sword fight, the creation of the sets, costumes and the ongoing evolutionary process of the script design and editing. If you've bought these extended editions and not taken the documentaries out to have a look out, start this immediately! Hit t! hat 'Play All' button. They will enrich your viewing pleasure the next time you watch the film, and leave you thinking how lucky they all were to work on such a film when you hear their love from it and the tales from their time on it. Heres to Peter Jackson taking on making The Simarillion into a series!
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
And so it ends....,
By
This review is from: The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (Extended Edition) [DVD] (DVD)
Well, boys and girls, this is it: the last Lord of the Rings DVD... unless they decide to milk the saga for all it's worth a la George Lucas. Like the theatrical version this extended cut doesn't quite live up to expectations - not because this is a 'bad' movie, but because our expectations were pushed into the stratosphere by The Fellowship and The Two Towers. The extra 50mins of footage are a rather mixed bag, with most of the additional scenes falling rather flat. There are, though, some notable exceptions - the demise of Saruman should never have been cut from the theatrical version, and the Mouth of Sauron is great fun. By and large though Jackson made the right decisions in the cutting room.But while the extended cut of the movie itself is overlong and rather ponderous, the special features are superb. There are numerous excellent documentaries that cover visual effects, sound, music, etc. There are also films covering pre-production and production, the latter including many tearful moments as the members of the cast each film their final scenes. These documentaries really convey that the Lord of the Rings trilogy are not merely movies - they are a true cinematic 'event'. A multitude of talented people poured their heart and soul into these films over a period of six years in some cases, and in so doing created an epic saga that will be talked about for years to come. Those of us who were able to watch these movies in the cinema on their initial release were truly privileged.
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