Newcomers: Scorsese, with Nicole Byer and Lauren Lapkus - The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey (w/ Jon Braylock)
Episode Date: September 15, 2020Moving on from the acclaimed The Lord of the Rings trilogy and buckling in for an all new (and again, very long) adventure, Lauren and Nicole are joined by comedian/writer/actor Jon Braylock ...(Astronomy Club, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt) to begin The Hobbit prequel trilogy, starting with An Unexpected Journey.The three ponder how on earth Peter Jackson was able to stretch out a short children's book into the three-pronged behemoth the film adaptations became, while also learning that it was an absolute nightmare to create. We also learn about Lauren's early history with The Hobbit, where as a child she performed, as she describes, "as one of those three disgusting, naked things" in one of her first ever plays. Later on, we hear why Nicole thinks Sauron and Saruman should be called Carl and Gary instead. Hopelessly mixed emotions abound with this first installment of The Hobbit trilogy!Like the show? Rate Newcomers 5-Stars on Apple Podcasts and let us know what LOTR media you'd like the series to cover.Sources for this episode:Article on The Hobbit's production chaosTrivia from IMDbAdvertise on Newcomers via Gumball.fmSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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This is a HeadGum Original.
Far to the east, over ranges and rivers, lies a single, solitary peak.
The dwarves are determined to reclaim their homeland.
I like visitors as much as the next hobbit.
But I do like to know them before they come visiting.
Mr Baggins, at your service.
I'm surrounded by dwarves. What are they doing here?
They're quite a merry gathering.
So, this is the Hobbit.
You asked me to find the 14th member of this company, and I have chosen Mr Baggins.
Me? No, no, no.
Hobbits can pass unseen by most if they choose,
which gives us a distinct advantage.
We will seize this chance to take back Erebor!
Here, Mr. Bilbo!
Where are you off to?
I'm going on an adventure!
Mithrandir, why the halfling?
Why Bilbo Baggins?
Perhaps it is because I am afraid.
And it gives me courage.
So this is your purpose? To enter the mountain?
What of it?
There are some who would not deem it wise.
A dark power has found a way back into the world.
Why don't we have a game of riddles?
And if it loses, what then?
Well, if it loses, precious, then we lose it.
If Baggins loses, we lose it all.
Fair enough.
I will take each and every one of these dwarves over the mightiest army.
Loyalty.
Honor.
A willing heart.
I can ask no more than that.
Home is now behind you.
The world is ahead. Oh, boy. Wow.
This is Newcomers, and we've made it only to the fifth episode.
I'm Lauren Lapkus.
I'm sad.
I'm Nicole Byer.
And we've never seen Lord of the Rings, which is becoming less and less true as we go on.
This is the fifth episode of our new season.
We are working our way through the Lord of the Rings franchise for the first time with
the help of nerds, super fans, sometimes even people who've contributed to the movies.
And we started with the Lord of the Rings trilogy
that came out throughout the 2000s,
but now we're watching all of the Hobbit movies
and we're going to be revisiting fan fiction,
checking out the spinoffs, animated versions,
and more and more.
Yeah, and if you want to follow along
or you just don't like life,
you can watch The Hobbit, An Unexpected Journey.
You can rent it on Amazon Prime for $2.99 or stream it on HBO Max and or Hulu.
This is the first of three movies.
Oh, my God.
And so now we're starting.
Yeah, we're starting the trilogy.
And today we are discussing the first installment of Peter Jackson's trilogy.
And we're giving.
Okay, so, Nicole, you clearly hated this, right?
I mean, just right off the bat.
Yes, this was really horrific.
It was just a lot.
I have like a hot take for you.
What is that hot take?
I liked this.
This is wild, Lauren. Whoa. Wait, let's just introduce our guests because we have to talk about how and why you liked it. So today we're
joined by John Braylock. John is an actor, a comedian, a writer, a producer. He's been in
Broad City, Astronomy Club, Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, How to Be Single, he co-hosts a podcast, Black Men Can't Jump in Hollywood.
Welcome, John!
Hey!
Oh my god, hi John.
Thank you.
Wow.
Wait, Lauren, da fuck?
Yeah.
Okay, so.
You blew me away, I'm not gonna lie.
That's, I can't, I truly can't believe it.
I like this movie as well, but I don't believe that you like it.
Yeah, yeah.
See, that's even interesting that you like it
and yet it's still weird to hear me say I like it I I liked it and I think I mean I'm putting that
of course in the context of hating the other ones pretty much except for like five minutes here and
there I I actually thought this one was like really kind of fun and I thought it was cute and
I liked that it was kind of funny and I
thought that it had like a sort of fairy tale energy that I could really follow and I was like
really clear on what was happening the whole time I thought the fight sequence was like um actually
pretty fun and like unexpected um yeah I don't know I truly I watched it in two installments I
watched it last night and today and I, which,
so I didn't love it enough that I was like,
let's keep going last night.
It wasn't like it was that fun.
But when I had to put it on again today,
I was like,
all right.
Like I wasn't pissed.
Do you know what I mean?
So.
Yeah.
I was full blown.
So upset to have to continue the movie this,
this afternoon.
I started it last night.
My fault late.
I started at about 11 and then by one, I was like, I must go to sleep.
I am sleepy.
Yeah. The run times two hours and 48 minutes.
I mean, we're not around these people.
It's kind of criminal.
I mean, let's be like, let's just be real about it up front.
So I don't know if you guys probably know this, right?
But The Hobbit is based off a children's book.
It was written first.
Tell us everything.
I didn't know it was a children's book.
Okay.
So this is the thing about that.
This is the thing that makes it so weird is that The Hobbit.
Yes, it was.
It was 100% a children's book in the same realm as like C.S.
Lewis's Chronicles of Narnia, right?
Okay.
It's made for children.
Like that was the target audience when it was written, you know?
And then Tolkien, he decided to, or I guess was always going to perhaps maybe,
make like an adult version of the universe like the middle earth universe and he did
that with lord of the rings but those books came out i think they were published something like
you know 15 if not 20 years after the hobbit and then he rewrote the hobbit to match up and like
link up more directly with lord of the rings. So there's like new stuff in the book
that wasn't in like the first version
that none of us would have read
because it came out like 1937.
That's so wild that these people are like,
all right, I wrote it.
Guess what?
You bought it.
It's not done.
Here's the remix.
It's like, it's crazy because Star Wars,
he keeps or kept tinkering with it and you got these like
other scenes that people didn't like and then it's wild that he wrote the hobbit for children
and was like the adults needed to all right here's a new hobbit why do you think they made the
the lord of the rings trilogy first like was that just more beloved well it's just a much more substantial book uh
or series of books like it is for it is both for adults and children right like or at least
families and it's it's much more rich like it's i think it's better i mean it's hard it's hard
to call one or the other better just because they're, they're for two different audiences. It's like, it's like comparing the kid one.
Yeah.
You like the kid one.
Yeah.
Which is why I initially was like,
I was like,
Oh,
maybe they'll like the Hobbit because it is.
I know you guys like we're stupid.
Return of the return.
We're two dummies.
I like,
I know you like the kid elements
to some of the Star Wars films.
Yeah.
And I was like,
oh, this is more kid.
But when I rewatched it,
I was like,
I always knew that it was too long,
but I was like,
my God, sitting.
It's so hard to watch these movies
by yourself on a television.
Like these really are movies that are meant for, you know, movie theaters.
Because if you're not watching it in a movie theater, I don't know.
It's a lot to get through.
It is.
It is so much.
It's like a lot of information.
Yeah.
I feel like also we have to keep in mind that we are watching all these
movies within like four days like every week we put on like a new three-hour um epic movie that
is beyond comprehension um so john how did you become a lord of the rings fan i i so I saw the movies first and, um, it was something that my family, like we went to,
cause they came out, I believe like one year after another.
Right.
And they were always coming out during like Christmas time.
I feel like they came out like one, two, three in a row, like, uh, 2002, three, four, something
around like that.
Uh, and so it was something that my family and i would
watch we would go to the movies we have like like what a part of our christmas tradition was to go
and see a movie like on christmas um and we would watch them together and then after watching the
first one my dad like bought the book uh I also grew up pretty Christian,
so I'd known about Chronicles of Narnia
and was a fan of those books.
They had made-for-TV movies.
This was before they started making the other ones.
Those Chronicles of Narnia, where there would be weird PBS.
Yes.
I think I remember watching those.
Yeah. I never knew remember watching those. Yeah.
I never knew those were religious until I was an adult.
Like I never got that.
Wait, what?
I didn't know that they were religious until right now.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like C.S. Lewis was really religious.
So it was kind of like written into everything.
But they were really fantastical as well.
Yes.
So it was just, it seemed imaginary.
It's easy to miss the allegories
and I mean it's more you know
it wasn't the idea was
the kind of you know
transfer the
the more like the
the ideas of like courage
and love and you know
like the Lord of the Rings is
similar in this you know aspect of
like you have the hobbits which rings is similar in this you know aspect of like you have the hobbits
which are very kind of small on you know not unseemly what was i gonna say like you don't
notice them earnest subtle subtle um and they are they wind up being the heroes of you know
the stories both in the hobbit and in lord of the just, okay, so they sped up the frame rate,
so it felt jarring, and I was like,
ugh, everything seems too sharp,
and it was so it seemed more lifelike.
And I was like, I don't need a movie to seem more,
I know it's a movie.
I didn't know they did that.
What does that mean?
Yeah, so it was recorded in, like,
48 frames per second.
Movies are typically, like, 24 frames per second movies are typically like 24 frames per second
so it's like double the speed yeah um it's kind of i to what i equate it to is you know when you
if you go to like uh an electronic store and there's like televisions on display they have
this like kind of smoothing technology so sometimes you're looking at and you're like
why does it look weird yeah Yeah. Similar to that.
But it was it was the first time a film The Hobbit was the first time a film had ever been recorded in like a 48.
Oh, that's the first movie to do.
See, I don't like I didn't like it.
It felt like too real. But then also it was mixed with cartoony shit.
So like when they're flying in the sky and he's like eagles or whatever, I was like, oh, you people look super real.
This eagle doesn't.
Yeah.
I mean, see, OK,
with all the Star Wars movies,
I always preferred the practical effects
and I felt like the CGI stuff
was like too much,
especially because they were like
doing a lot of stuff
for the first time, too.
And it just seemed like
it was so video game looking.
But with this, i thought it was kind
of cute i don't know why my whole opinion was so different about this but i didn't mind the eagles
i was like get them and then i was like yeah get soup back around like i just was like having fun
i mean maybe i was in the right mood for this but it wasn't maybe and maybe i was in a bad mood for
this because it started out with all this talking
that i was like i don't fucking care i did complain about that i was just like give me the people i
know but then i forgot like just like with the star wars movies you're like who's that and you'll
find out later so it yes and to be fair this is everyone, even people who like these movies will admit that they are way too long.
That this book, so the Hobbit, again, not only was the Hobbit a children's book, but it was shorter in length than any one chapter, than any one chapter of the three Lord of the Rings movies.
What?
of the Rings movies.
What?
Meaning they,
yes.
So they took a book that was shorter
than any three
Lord of the Rings books
themselves
and then split
that shorter book
into three movies,
which is insane.
And they're all three hours?
And clearly a money grab.
Yeah.
And they're all,
yeah,
and not only are they,
not only are they three movies,
but the movies themselves
are three hours long.
So there's so much stuff in here that is not in the book at all whatsoever.
It's all embellished.
And the reality is because the book, because this is one story split into three movies,
it suffers the same fate as any of those books that like the Mockingjay that's split into two
or any movie that's like part one and
part two.
And then you watch it.
You're like,
this wasn't a full story.
So like,
it's like taking act one of any movie and then making that the whole movie.
Like,
yeah.
Yeah.
You know,
I think it's not until 40 minutes in when they actually leave.
Like that's like,
that's like page like 10.
You know what I mean?
That's insane. Well, wait wait listen to this like fact so peter jackson admitted on the dvd featureette that much of the hobbit movie was made up on the spot jackson said they would often be forced to
shoot scenes without storyboards or even completed scripts with jackson just making it up as i went
along now that would piss me off. Yes.
That's truly so insane.
I would be like, you brought me here and you don't have a game plan?
And like, it's an expensive movie
to not know what you're doing.
Yes.
But they knew that so many Lord of the Rings fans
would just come and watch this, which they did.
It made a lot of money.
Yeah, but they all hated it right
yeah i mean like it was like a love-hate relationship it's a similar with the prequels
you know in the in the sense that even though people don't like them those movies still made
a ton of money and people still kept watching them you know it's like you're still excited
they don't yeah you're so excited because you love the world you love the universe
yeah
there's no backwills
to this right
there's just
backwills
oh my god
you got the prequels
you got the core three
and then you got the
you got the quills
and then you got the backwills
well so there actually
there is a book
that was released
and it's not it's one of these things that was, it was released after Tolkien died.
So it was released by his son, but it's called the Silmarillion.
And that's like a backstory to like middle earth and like the world and explains like a lot about like, they keep calling this the third age like The Hobbit
and Lord of the Rings
take place in the third age
but
there was like
this book talks about
what the first age was
and what the second age was.
Were there black people
in those ages?
You know
there should be black people
in all these movies
and there aren't.
And it's
I think about that all the time.
They're the whitest movies ever.
They don't need to be white.
There's no reason for that.
It's fake.
It's all fake.
There's 13 dwarves.
There's men.
And they make all of them white.
It's like, it was like you had, you could, even Ocean's 13 put one black guy in it.
You know what I mean?
You're going out of your way at that point.
It's like, there's so many different types of people.
Like the trolls, the hobbits, the dwarves, the elves.
I mean, yeah, it's crazy.
Yeah.
Oh, Lord.
Now, do you feel like you could tell that he was making it up?
I don't think that.
I mean, I think I would say that about any of them, honestly,
because they're so meandering.
I mean, I guess I didn't.
Well, there was some stuff that I was like, wait, the fuck?
Like that man who had a bird's nest for hair and then was given life to these dead rodents.
I was like, who are you?
And then he like wasn't really that important.
Yeah, that was so weird.
He's not in the book.
So he's he's a he's a wizard that's talked about or I think is like briefly mentioned but you never see he's a
wizard i forgot that whole scene he literally got hedgehogs that were like one that was dying and he
was like blowing on it and like putting like little like smelling salts by it and he was like
nothing's working yes and then the other hedgehogs were like, wait, our friend, and he's like, get away from her!
And then he gives her like that blue juice
and then like breathes life back into it,
and there was no point.
There was no point to that.
That's so funny.
No, that was completely made up,
but Lauren, did you like,
I feel like Lauren liked that part.
I did like that part.
It was cute.
Yeah, I was like, that was cute.
I did like that part.
It was like, what's happening here?
Like, oh, this little guy, he needs help.
And like, it was just so dramatic
and it felt like really silly.
And then, and like,
and like the way he was like trying to put stuff
by its mouth was funny to me.
Yeah.
I liked him.
The character's name is Radagast.
I blinked on the name for a second,
but yeah, that's Radagast.
He's mentioned, there's like five wizards, you know, but he's just mentioned as like my cousin in X Woods. And so they were like, let's see this guy. What would he be like? And what would he do in the woods? You know, and watching him save a little hedgehog with like from who knows what, from some evil magic i guess uh was very cute wasn't
he saving him from the necromancer necromancer oh that was scary that thing which we never saw again
i thought that was gonna play a bigger role me too there was a lot of things where i was like
we're getting little dips yeah remember it's a very short book stretched out into three movies i have to say i also might
have a soft spot for it because i was in this play when i was a kid and it was like one of my first
chill like plays i ever did it was like a children's theater in my town low stakes but i was
very excited and my character was um one of the troll i don't know if it's considered a troll in
this movie but i was a troll And it's when they're,
those really three like disgusting naked things
that are eating,
trying to eat them on the spit.
Oh, when they turn to stone?
Did they turn to stone?
Yeah, they turned to stone.
They did, yeah.
They're trolls.
I was one of those.
Oh.
Wait, I was so confused about them turning to stone
because I was like,
all right, they're chilling
they're terrorizing and then all of a sudden
Gandhi splits
the rock and then there's the sun
and I was like are they like allergic to the sun
also if the sun was shining the whole time
why weren't they stoned the whole time
yeah so
it's one of these things of like
the trolls
if they are exposed to sunlight,
we'll turn to stone.
Um,
in the book,
Gandalf confuses them by,
uh,
imitating their voices and gets them to keep arguing with each other.
And then as they're arguing,
they don't realize that the sun is coming up.
And so then they turned to stone in the movie.
I think, I guess in the movie
that would be much more,
it's a little harder to do
and it just looked cooler
for Gandalf to once again be like,
you shall not pass.
But he didn't say that,
but it was a similar action.
Didn't you feel like Gandalf
was sillier in this one?
He was too silly
and I was like, wait, the fuck?
This is not who you are later.
Also, he looked older, which bothered me.
I know it shouldn't have.
Right.
I was told very rudely by the people who live with me,
well, it was 12 years later, Nicole.
Of course he looks older!
And I was like, but in the world, he's younger,
so why didn't a younger actor play him?
It does make it more confusing because I felt I thought these movies came out first.
I was very confused about the timeline of everything.
And then, yeah, he looks older.
It feels like we have the CGI maybe now to like just make him look younger.
But that wasn't a thing, probably.
But yeah, I don't know.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know, the actor is older. I mean, you couldn't recast a thing, probably. But I don't know. Yeah, yeah. You know, the actor was older.
I mean, you couldn't recast that part, though.
Ian McKellen is just so great as Gandalf.
He is the best.
And he is sillier because the character is sillier in The Hobbit
because The Hobbit's a children's book.
Yeah, because there was that part with Cate Blanchett
where she was like, you already knew?
And he was like, aw.
He was making a weird face. They were like, she was like, you already knew and he was like, aww. He was making a weird face
and we're like,
huh?
Yes, I do,
I kind of love Gandalf
in this movie
because he's so,
he's so mischievous
and like,
he keeps kind of like
disappearing
and he's like fighting with,
fighting with both like,
you know,
all the different trolls
and,
and fighting with Bilbo
at the same time.
Like he,
he's very, he not uh the kind of
like all-knowing sage that he becomes in lord of the rings yeah um though they still try to have
it that way too it's a little confusing it's hard it's always hard when you retrofit something and
the book was retrofitted and then the movies came out after Lord of the Rings so and that's also part of like
with him making shit up like while he's making
it Peter Jackson like there
like how does that happen
when you already have this text that is like
written a book and a script
and then you're like hmm like how do you
how do you get loose when like you need so much
CGI and other things going on
right I think I've
I feel like Peterson just felt because
he did such a great job with the lord of the rings movie i think one of the things about the lord of
the rings movies too is like there really weren't that many examples of of fantasy movies that were
on such a huge budget that could like transform these like you know i guess harry potter was
happening at a similar time but these movies did better and they were like more they were a huge budget that could like transform these like you know i guess harry potter was happening
at a similar time but these movies did better and they were like more they were they were like
critically acclaimed too like they they won oscars you know they were nominated for oscars like
almost every year um i don't think harry potter ever got that and because that probably more
because it was children i guess yeah but that's not fair. No, I don't. It isn't fair.
Not that I'm like a Harry Potter freak or something.
I'm just like.
Well, I mean, J.K. Rowling makes it hard to like Harry Potter.
That's the thing.
She's really turning anyone who might have gotten into this.
Yeah.
It's kind of wild.
I'm like, what is your deal?
Just like have your money and be quiet.
That's the thing.
I'm like, you could have your horrible opinion to yourself in your mansion with everything anyone could ever want like shut up yeah um okay
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OK, we're back.
Should we get into the plot?
Let's do it.
All right. So Hobbit, Bill Blow Baggins, he he begins writing down the full story of his adventure that took place 60 years prior
with his nephew frodo uh the dwarf king thoro he brought an arrow of prosperity to for his people
under the lonely mountain uh until the arrival of the dragon smarg smarg destroyed the town of dale and drove the dwarves out of their mountain and stole their
gold thorin thoros grandson sees king thorandu and his wood elves wait wood elves i missed i don't
know what a wood elf on a nearby hill sign is oh those little guys the whole thing the crew
that was falling off the tree at that point and everything, right? That's what a wood elf is? Yes.
Yeah.
And they're upset when they look at them and leave instead of helping them.
This leaves Thorin's lifelong hatred of elves.
So the wood elves are the...
The wood elves are just elves for the purpose of this movie.
It's just the elves.
But in the book, The Hobbit, they were called wood elves. But they're just elves that live in the woods. it's just the elves but in the book the hobbit they were called wood elves
but they're they're just elves that live in the woods but they're the same like cape blanchett
and brett mckenzie and whatever yeah okay okay i think in the big i think in the in the beginning
of this movie uh an unexpected journey you see the quote-unquote what else one is like on this really big elk you know
and he's like and he's like
looking down and they're like help
us the doors are like help us and
then he looks down and he just turns
nah see you later
guys yeah and it's so it's
supposed to kind of dramatize
this rift between
the dwarves and the elves
because they felt betrayed.
I see.
Oh, okay.
So then when they all come together later,
it's like, cool.
Or whatever, right?
So in the Shire, Bilbo is tricked by Gandalf
into hosting a party for Thorin and his crew of dwarves.
Gandalf's goal is to recruit Bilbo
to help them enter the Lonely Mountain.
Bilbo is not into it, but changes
his mind when they leave without him the next day.
As they travel, the gang ends up
captured
by three trolls.
That's me. Bilbo stalls the trolls
from eating them until dawn, and then Gandalf
exposes them to sunlight.
Oh, I do remember freezing on stage
like this when I was dying.
Very fun. I when I was dying. Very fun.
I wish I saw that.
I actually know who has the video
and I don't want to ask.
I need you to.
It's all I ever want is to see you in The Hobbit.
As they travel,
they get captured by trolls.
The sunlight causing the trolls to turn to stone.
They find treasure and elven blades
in the troll's cave,
which they take. mean okay so the whole party at bilbo's house i was like this is a lot and then
there was a song and i was like is this a musical and then the boys i live with were like it is i
mean kind of there's more songs later. I liked that whole,
I liked the whole dinner party scene.
I liked when they were throwing the plates.
I thought it was very fun.
This was Bilbo Baggins hates.
And I sang a song in The Hobbit
and it went a little something like this.
Mutton yesterday,
mutton again today.
That's all we got is mutton,
mutton, mutton, mutton, mutton again today that's all we got is mutton mutton mutton mutton yesterday mutton all last week looks like it's mutton tomorrow tomorrow tomorrow
i love it i'm here for it that's incredible we have to get our little fingies on that tape
it has to be the worst thing ever filmed
I'm sure
I
yeah yeah
we gotta find it
also
one of the dwarves
looks like Jimmy Fowley
yes
and I didn't realize
that's who he was
posting about
Jimmy Fowley
who if you're listening
you don't know
is a comedian
who is like
so fucking funny
so funny
he posts
he does look like
that one dwarf who wants chips at one point.
And he's like, I don't eat green stuff.
I don't eat greens.
Yes.
He has like full on like bowl cut bangs, but like a long haircut.
Glory.
And he, Jimmy posted that picture like it was a selfie.
And then he did it every single day for like a month.
And people were getting so mad.
And then now he has a relationship
like online with that guy.
He's like buddies with him on Instagram.
That's incredible.
That guy's supportive of it.
I bought the shirt that he was selling
with that face on it and I wear it a lot.
It has new meaning now.
It's so funny.
And I had no idea it was from Lord of the Rings.
We were watching it and I was like,
Jimmy Fallon?
And John laughed really hard. It was like, no, that's the guy that Jimmy's been talking.
I was like, oh my God.
It's so good.
I think I need this shirt now.
Oh, it really made me giggle.
Amazing.
Okay.
So the wizard, Rastafarian and the brown finds Radagast.
Is that how you say it?
That's what I would say. Radagast. Is that how you say it? That's what I would say.
Radagast.
The Brown finds Gandalf and company and tells him about an encounter at Dol Guldur with a necromancer, a sorcerer who's been corrupting Greenwood with dark magic. through a hidden passage to Riverdale where L. Ron Hubbard discloses a hidden indication
of a secret door on the company's map of Lonely Mountain,
which is only visible on Durin's Day.
Gandy later approaches with the White Council
consisting of L. Ron Galadriel and Samaron the White.
Is that Count Dooku, Samaron the White?
Yeah, Christopher Lee. Yeah, it's the same. Is that Count Dooku, Samuron the White? Yeah, Christopher Lee.
Yeah, it's the same.
Yeah.
Same actor, yeah.
So Count Dooku and presents the-
And this is when they were getting along.
I was confused, and Mike explained this to me
because since it takes place before,
he was his mentor,
and then he turns on him and spins him around in that fight.
Yeah.
Oh, I didn't realize that that was his mentor,
but also I was like, this feels fake.
I was like,
yeah, yeah.
I don't,
because he has ulterior motives.
Yeah.
Well, you still don't even,
even in this movie,
you know,
knowing what you know
from Lord of the Rings,
you're still like,
is he,
because he,
in that scene,
he keeps defending,
or he keeps saying like,
no, there's no way
that that's true true and you're like
is he corrupted already you kind of
don't know this is also
not in the book at all so it's
completely this might have been like the improv
scene
scenes where he's like I don't know will they
won't they act however you want
yeah it's I think it's
something that was maybe taken from
the Silmarillion but I don't know because I never read that.
But I think it's like assumed something like this could have been happening knowing the timeline, but it's not in the actual book, The Hobbit.
Here's a fun fact.
I didn't realize Sauron and Samuron were two different things.
Yes.
Wait, you still don't know the difference?
Sauron is...
Oh, don't expect us to retain this.
Sauron is the fire pussy,
and then Samuron is the person...
Saruman, yeah, is the wizard, is the white wizard.
Sauron is the ultimate bad guy
and he's the eye
that you keep seeing in Lord of the Rings.
Okay. Oh.
Yes, I think
I feel like this point has been made,
but their names are very confusing. One should be like
Carl and the other one should be
Gary, you know? So it's
different. Basically, this is like
Saruman and Sramaran
are like the Ben and Ben
of Star Wars.
It's like you can't use Ben
multiple times
when the name could be anything.
Mm, good point.
I never even thought about that.
Wow.
Well, we've been watching
and retaining, so.
Ben, Ben.
We're here to teach.
Two Bens, you're right.
But Saruman the White,
let's see, the White Council, which is so funny that it's called
the White Council and it's like, yeah, duh.
Everybody here is all white.
We already know it's the freaking White Council.
And they present
a Morgul blade
a weapon of the Witch
King of Agmar
which Radagast
obtained from Dolgurl as a sign that the necromancer is linked to
an eventual return to sauron while saruman oh man concerns to the even more present matter of the
dwarves quest requesting that gandy put an ed to it gandy secretly reveals that Gladriel, Glad, Glad or Gradigirl. Yep.
Gladriel.
Say it.
Gladriel.
Gladriel, that he had anticipated this and had the dwarves move on without him.
Gotta say, the hardest paragraph of my life
was right there.
Honestly, it's hard to follow.
I was gonna say, for anyone out there listening
who just isn't watching,
but is learning from us explaining it,
they're like, still don't know.
Still have no clue.
And to be honest,
it was that confusing inside the movie itself.
Right?
The movie was confusing.
That whole part I found really confusing
when they were having that meeting with the wizards
and I didn't really...
It's, again, it's like they're doing it.
It's like fan service, right?
Like they're doing it for the people. Essentially, they're doing it for people who like fan service, right? Like they're doing it for the, for the people.
Essentially they're doing it for people who watch the Lord of the Rings
movies,
but,
but never read the books,
never read the Hobbit.
And then they're going to watch the Hobbit as if it's some sort of
prequel,
you know,
which I guess technically it is.
And so they're trying to connect those storylines.
So you're like,
Oh,
like,
look,
it was happening then,
you know because
because uh there this story takes place i forgot how many years like 60 years or something before
yeah so it but the thing is it has nothing to do with the actual plot of the of the movie
or of the hobbit series so it's this weird side piece that if you don't really understand it like it's hard for
people who do understand it because it's it has nothing to do with the story like all of the
things that they talk about you know it does they do follow up with it you'll see more in in the
other sequels like they keep this weird kind of tangent going but it's ultimately not like it's
all it's all made up for these movies,
so it doesn't have as much substance.
Are the dwarves power players in the next two movies as well?
I mean, that's your company.
You follow those dwarves.
I don't love them.
I like them.
They're not quite charismatic.
I think they're all disgusting, but I like them.
Yeah, I think it's tough because it's like a fun company, but you don't really, other than maybe, you know, like Oakenshield, you don't really know who they are.
Like, you know who the leader is, but then the other ones, like, they don't really distinguish them enough. And so even, even when,
as you keep going on,
it's hard to be like,
Oh,
that it's not,
it's like the seven doors,
you know,
you need kind of names like sleepy and dopey.
Like you need those things to know who,
what the personalities of these doors are supposed to be.
That would be nice.
I felt like at the point where they were all maybe going to die when that
tree was falling,
I was like,
let's let a few of them go.
Like I was like,
it's okay.
Just for some drama. Let's let a few of them go like i was like just for some drama let's let a few of them go let a few of them go yeah i was missing i know i made fun of the sam frodo bromance but i was really missing like love yeah these movies do
not have that heart they don't they don't have love but i i love martin freeman i think he's charming he's so good very charming and very wonderful he carries the weight
of like elijah and the other guys yeah he just doesn't have and it's kind of a problem with the
source material because it's the point of this of the book you know is like it's just this this guy who lived a really humble life and
never left his hometown and then all of a sudden a wizard shows up on his door and is like do you
want to go on an adventure and he's like no and then and then the wizard convinces him to and
then there's like there's a part of him they don't really explain this in the movies but he has uh
his mother's blood so he's both a
baggins that's his father's side of the family and he's also a toque that his mother's maiden name is
toque and so so his toque his toqueish blood is more prone to adventure and so like it's about
his like this adventurous side of him that he always got, that he always had from his mother gets like, you know, ignited because he has the chance to go on adventure, an adventure.
I feel like that would be a really important thing to include.
Like, I think that would be interesting.
And I actually think the beginning would have been cooler if it was really clear.
Like, because I feel like I didn't really hold on to that part of it where like, he's like, I don't want to go and I'm just a humble guy or whatever.
really hold on to that part of it where like he's like i don't want to go and i'm just a humble guy or whatever i feel like that would have been a more interesting story because i feel like near
the end he was like i should have never left like i'm i'm not meant to like be doing stuff like this
i thought that was more relatable like it was like the heart that you were kind of you know i mean
i would have liked to have been thinking that the whole time about him but i wasn't really
yeah it's it's i don't know they like i think they technically included it in like one line but they didn't really play it up and
it's tough because the scene when he decides to go it's there's no real reason for it he's just
like i felt like he just woke up and was like i should be going he's yeah he like woke up and
they're all gone and he like i guess because they were gone he was like wait a minute i actually do want to go now and you're like okay you like you'll buy it for
the sake of the movie but it it's such a weak it's so to watch lord of the rings where they're
like we have to destroy this way ring to save the the middle earth like you have to save this
whole universe and then this movie it's just like a guy who's like i want an
adventure the stakes are like a thousand times low and they had to like kind of create these stakes
of i think with this movie the the idea was supposed to be like at the end he's like well i
realized that you guys that i have a home but you guys don't have a home. And I want you to find a home.
But didn't he think he was bullshitting?
Yeah.
Like, I feel like he was going like, um, yeah.
Cause he was like pretending he didn't have the ring.
And he was like, oh, cause like, I thought like, I'm here.
Cause like, and I care about you.
And then Gandalf was like, yeah.
And they were like winking and he was like, okay.
And like the other guy was like.
That's one of the scenes they improvised
and they were like, I don't know, let's just keep that in.
It might have been because it was really,
that line isn't in the book.
Yeah, he was like, I realized I had a home
and he's literally holding onto the ring in his pocket
and Gandalf's like, I know what's happening here,
which is, there's a lot in those looks. Gandalf's given these looks that are like's like, I know what's happening here, which is, there's a lot in those looks.
Gandalf's giving these looks
that are like very like,
hmm.
There's a lot of looks
in this movie in general.
There's a lot of people staring
and looking
and not saying anything.
Do you feel like Peter Jackson
was like,
let's just do some like filler looks
and I can kind of like
put these in wherever
and be like,
hmm, I know something.
Like, just give me a little.
And then he left all of them in. put these in wherever like be like hmm I know something like just give me a little now you're scared
and then he left all of them in
yeah
he was like you know
when we need it
I'll sprinkle it in
and then he was like
I like all 13 of these
let's have a
I feel like at the end of the movie
they were like
alright let's get a shot
of every single person
looking at
looking at Bilbo
and then looking at Giftoff
and looking at each other
well that's like all the movies.
The movies really love unnecessary shots.
They do.
Like I was so upset in the last one that we watched that there was a hundred different
endings.
But then we found out in the book, there's a bunch of different endings.
Yeah.
There's even more.
Yeah.
Wait, there's more in the book?
Yeah.
In the, in the Return of the King you're talking about?
Yeah.
I didn't know there was more.
And it like, there's a whole thing where Bilbo goes back to the shire and it's like overrun by orcs
and so they have to like save the shire oh that's creepy yeah wait that's wild yeah it's too long
yeah that is too long what's funny is that there's enough material. There's a lot of material left out of Lord of the Rings because they had to be concise to fit it into a reasonably watchable movie.
But why not turn them into six different movies?
Well, they didn't know that they could do that until...
I feel like the first movie to really do that was Harry Potter, the last Harry Potter movie.
Yeah, where they split that up into two movies.
And they split it up into two because it was like,
it was so dense and they were like,
we feel like the fans would want this.
And then when it did Gangbusters,
both part one and two both made like,
you know, a gazillion dollars.
Then Hollywood was like, wait a minute.
You mean we could take one story and split it up
and make it like it's a franchise
and then people will come and watch it?
And once they did that,
all hope was lost.
Truly.
I think they did that.
Did they do that with the last Hunger Games book?
Yep, they did it with the last Hunger Games.
Which is so wild
because the Hunger Games books
are literally this thin.
Exactly.
They're so...
There's not much material
in the Hunger Games books.
Really?
Yeah, they're like
a real quick read suzanne collins said i'll get you in and i'll get you out it's it's exactly this
movie the hobbit is just as short and quick of a read also the name suzanne collins doesn't ring
any bells like she has not been given enough credit with those movies no she hasn't i've
never heard it in my life and And yet I know everything about it.
I've seen The Hunger Games.
That's fair.
Yeah, that's true.
You know, let's put
by Suzanne Collins at the top of that.
Yeah, they should.
You know, I have my issues
with The Hunger Games
because Katniss Everdeen
is described as having like
darker skin and like darker hair.
And I was like,
I don't think she'd be white because like
no offense to white people i feel like if we were doing the hunger games they would be the ones in
charge so like i feel like the people who'd be fighting would just be like different people of
color so i feel like katniss is supposed to be brazilian that's what i feel in my heart that's
my hot take i'd buy it thank you i'm with. I'm with you all the way. I should probably keep going with this plot
because we haven't gone through it.
Oh, yeah, it's long.
The company journeys into the Misty Mountains
where they find themselves amid a colossal battle
between stone giants.
I liked this part.
Did you like the stone giants?
I didn't mind them.
They were interesting and scary.
So they take refuge in a cave
and are captured by goblins
who take them to their leader,
the great goblin.
Bilbo becomes separated from the dwarves and falls into a crevice
where he encounters Gollum,
who, ugh, I was pissed,
who unknowingly drops a golden ring.
Pocketing the ring,
Bilbo finds himself confronted by Gollum
and they play a riddle game,
betting that Bilbo will be shown the way out
if he wins or eaten by Gollum if he loses.
Bilbo eventually wins by asking Gollum
what he has in his pocket. Noticing his ring is lost, Gollum realizes that Bilbo possesses it and
chases him. Bilbo discovers that the ring grants him invisibility, but when he has a chance to kill
Gollum, Bilbo spares his life out of pity, which is the biggest mistake, and escapes while Gollum
shouts his hatred towards the hobbit Baggins. Lauren hates Gollum.
I don't love Gollum
but I appreciated Gollum.
I think I'm a creature of habit.
I like the things I recognize.
Yeah. Like I recognize
Gollum so I enjoyed it because I heard
about how he got the ring from Gollum
so it was nice to see. But that being
said, Gollum is real ugly.
Just disgusting.
And he had a chance to kill him.
He's like a cave creature.
He would be, in a horror film,
he would be the monster that's killing everybody.
Because that's what he is.
He actually, in essence, is,
he's eating, he's surviving of like the spare fish and then
goblins that fall down
and he eats them. He eats goblins?
He was gonna eat Bilbo.
He was like beating that guy to death and the guy
would wake up and be like, shut the fuck up
and he like knocked him out again.
Shut the fuck up.
And so, and he also
and the reason he talks to himself
it's like also the ring, like talks to himself It's like it's like also
The ring like they talk about that but it's
Also just the fact that he's lived this
Life of solitude
Where he's you know he has no one
Else to talk to so he's like gone
Crazy and talks to himself
He's true
And he's so clumsy with the ring
He just dropped it and
It's his precious.
It's like you got he needs a string or something.
Yeah, he should have put it on a string.
He should use one of his stringy hairs.
Yeah.
Yes. Pull out one of your nasty eight little stringy hairs and make yourself a little string necklace.
So the thinking behind this is not in the movie whatsoever, but the thinking behind it is that he can't like,
it's the,
the ring has corrupted him and like kind of turned him into this creature and
he can't hold onto it all the time.
And so he has to like,
like put it at different places to like kind of get some separation from it.
And that,
and,
and so he misplaces it and loses it.
But it's also just like in the, you know, in this, and, and I, so he misplaces it and loses it. Um, but it's also just like in the,
you know,
in this,
in this story,
it's just this fantastical story where there's a creature that's called
Gollum who like likes giving riddles,
you know,
if you,
I mean,
if you think about it,
all of everything in these stories is like taken from some other kind of
folklore.
It's nothing,
nothing too new.
I feel like hobbits are the most original thing to come out of Lord of the Rings.
Yeah, I agree with that.
I just wish that the stories
were just a little bit more streamlined
so it was easier to understand.
Because I felt like I'd be watching scenes
and then the scene would end and I'd be
like hmm I know if I ask what happens John will get mad at me and be like I saw you watching
why don't you understand what happened that is me I mean or I look away for one second he's like
you have to watch if you're gonna talk about it I'm like but it's just it's it's hard to like
keep up with when you're like I'm it i'm like but it's just it's it's hard to like keep up with
when you're like i'm literally just watching a bunch of people wearing fur walk through mountains
yeah it's just it's a lot to like take in are you guys gonna watch the animated hobbit movie i think
so that movie just to give you perspective that that movie is one movie. It includes the plots from the first, second, and third movies that you're watching now.
And it is one hour and like 12 minutes long.
Oh, we're going to like it.
Okay.
We're going to love that.
This story can be told in a very concise way and not skip a beat.
Like you wouldn't.
It's the same exact storyline.
But this movie is like you know a martin
scorsese film where they're like let's just stretch everything out to the maximum possible
it really is stretched okay so meanwhile the great goblin reveals to the dwarves of as as on as
yazan an orc warchief who killed thorow and lost his forearm to thorin in the battle outside the
dwarven kingdom of moria which uh has placed a bounty on thoror thorin's head gandalf arrives
and leads the dwarves in an escape killing the great goblin bilbo exits the mountain and rejoins
the company keeping his newly obtained ring secret.
The company is ambushed by Azon from 90 Day Fiance and his hunting party and takes refuge in the trees.
Thorin charges at Yazan, who overpowers and severely injures him with his warg.
Bilbo saves Thorin from the Arks and challenges Zazog,
just as the company is rescued by eagles,
implied to be sent by Galadadryl.
Oh, I didn't get that.
I didn't get why the eagles came either.
Well, I know that Gandalf spoke to the butterfly
and sent it off, and I thought the butterfly got them.
Oh.
But I guess... Yeah, actually, that's what got them. Oh. But I guess. Yeah, actually
that's what I thought too.
But I guess it was the
I guess it was Galadriel in this movie.
In the book it's just that
the eagles see.
They see the fires.
They come. They actually can talk.
Oh, that would be helpful. And they come and they
save them. And the reason that they save
them is because Gandalf like helped them once.
Oh, well, they escape to safety of the Karak where Gandalf revives Thorin,
who renounces his previous disdain for Biblo after saving him.
I've been I was calling him Diplo earlier.
Diplo is really good.
Bilbo.
Bilbo. Bilbo.
I don't know why
it's so hard for me to remember.
Bilbo saved Thorin
and so then Thorin was like,
I like you now.
Yeah, that was very dramatic
where he was like,
you, I told you that you would
be a hindrance and a burden.
And I couldn't be more wrong.
He had me fooled
because I truly was like
this insufferable idiot.
If anything, Diplo's doing a great job
and help them.
So I don't know why you're doing all this.
And then you like turned
and I was like, oh, I guess I was invested.
I don't know.
I maybe I didn't like the movie.
It just happens.
Like when Bilbo almost died
off the side of that mountain,
then that guy was like,
he shouldn't even be here.
I was like, yeah, he almost died off the side of that mountain then that guy was like he shouldn't even be here I was like yeah he almost died it's like be nice Thorin's Thorin's not a nice guy like he's
kind of uh both in the movies and in the books I mean like I think the movie makes him a little
bit more or tries to make him a little bit more likable because he's like supposed to be a noble
king or like a valiant you know warrior or something but he is also like you because he's like supposed to be a noble king or like a valiant you know warrior or something
but he is also like
you know he's very rude
yeah
okay the last minute is they see the lonely
mountain in the distance where a sleeping smog is
awoken by a thrush knocking a snail
against a stone and then he all that gold
drips off him I kind of like that part
I like that part because I was like ooh
more fun is to be had.
They had to do some sort of cliffhanger.
I think maybe my problem with this movie is there was no eye candy.
There was no Orlando bloom.
There was no Vigo Mortensen.
Uh,
you know,
we only got a little bit of L. Ron Hubbard.
So I just, yeah, I think I wanted more sexy.
And that's not to say that Bilfer and Beaufer and Ori and Nori and Phil and
Killy and Ballad and Dwayne, they're not, you know, terrible looking.
Killy and Feeley are supposed to be.
They're like very, they're like young feely are supposed to be they're like very
they're like young they're supposed to be like the young spry ones
uh they're that's funny i don't know if i don't know how to describe i'm trying like i don't even
know how to differentiate them so that you can know who i'm talking right it's like they don't
give them enough no yeah they don't have enough to do.
There's too many.
I agree.
They should.
Some should have died.
Yeah.
So we could have gotten
to know some of them.
Yeah.
Wait, who's Linder?
Oh, oh, oh, I know.
OK, so he's from
Flight of the Conchords.
Brett McKenzie.
Who was he in the movie?
OK, so there's the part
where this is actually funny.
Oh, I guess he's an elf.
He walks down the stairs
when they're up
when they first get
to that special place.
Like, they cross over that bridge, and they're suddenly in the elf world.
And he walks down the stairs, and then Mike was like,
they gave Brett McKenzie a bigger role because he's famous by the time they did this part.
And then I was like, oh, let me rewind.
I didn't see him.
And he was like, no, you just, like, were looking at him, and that was him.
And then you said, let me rewind and find him.
Because I didn't think he looked like that.
So he's the one, because he has no beard.
He looks totally different, but he has this elf long hair
and he has like, you know, 10 lines at a point
where they first get to the little elf world.
Yeah, he's just like one of the wood elves
who like meets them.
Yeah, it's not really an important character.
I have another question.
So you mentioned the Tooks.
So Belladonna Took is his mom?
Mm-hmm.
So there's talking about her blood,
like her bloodline, like her bloodline.
They talk about it later on.
They're like, oh, I forgot what the name is.
But like one of Bilbo's from his mom's side,
great, great, great, great grandfather was so big he could ride a horse and oh yes once he like knocked off like
this goblin's head and it went into a hole and that's how the game golf like oh my god like
that's the that's the level of childness that's like this is like that's what it's supposed to be
that's why this movie is a little schizo
because it's very much like,
it's 100% based off this children's book.
So it's so silly.
You have all these dwarves whose names rhyme,
like all of them rhyme.
It's like Fili and Kili and Owen and Gloan
and Nori and Dori and Nori.
And then you have like,
they're just like, you know.
I can't believe you rattled all those off.
I know, it was like you knew them,
like they were your friends.
But you just have all the,
and it's like they're singing songs
and it's like, there's like trolls
and like all of the things are very,
like it's all like mishaps
and like it's a fun little thing.
But then the movie,
because it's linked to this Lord of the Rings trilogy
that is very much, like much more mature.
It's like,
well,
we got to add violence and fighting.
And so it's like,
it's like kind of,
it's too dark for a kid's movie,
you know,
like it's weird.
I know.
Cause I was thinking,
I was thinking it was so silly and fun that I was picturing showing my
nephews,
but I was like,
they might be scared of this.
Like there seems like there's too much.
Wait,
how old are they?
Seven and four.
I think that, yeah, I think they would be scared yeah and it is weird because it does teeter between being
super silly and then like oh we cut this man's off head off and we're gonna roll it to him and
he's not gonna be happy about it how about that big character that had like balls for a neck
that was wild oh the goblin the goblin king yeah yes the goblin king was the wildest looking
creature I've ever seen
yeah it was pretty gross
I did not like him
that whole sequence is
it's
again it's like crazy
cause it's
it's gross
he like slits his throat
that was sick
yeah
it's pretty fucking
vulgar
but after he does it
the goblin king goes
that'll do it
like
well that's the point I was like this is goof troop like he was like peace out vulgar. But after he does it, the Goblin King goes, that'll do it. Well,
that's the point.
I was like,
this is goof troop.
he was like,
peace out.
And he just like,
fell off a bridge.
That'll do it.
That'll do it.
It's like,
that's the,
it's like,
what are you,
what is this movie?
It's not scary
because it's so
like silly and dorky
in those moments.
Then I was kind of like,
hee hee,
like that's fine.
Like I'm not like,
but like, because the other movies were kind of trying hee hee like that's fine like I'm not like but like
because the other movies
were kind of
trying to be more serious
and then it makes the part
like when they're spinning
the wizard on the floor
like it makes it funnier
because you're like
okay it's not that serious
like so there's gotta be
a middle ground
somewhere in here
but I don't know
if we found it
yeah
do you want to do
some trivia Nicole
yum
okay so
in the Lord of the Rings
trilogy
the scale illusion was accomplished by placing hobbit or dwarf actors and actresses trivia, Nicole? Yum. Okay, so in the Lord of the Rings trilogy,
the scale illusion was accomplished
by placing
hobbit or dwarf actors
and actresses
further away from the camera
than Sir Ian McKellen,
but still live
on the same set.
So yeah, we talked about that.
This time, however,
the illusion had to be
accomplished by having
the other actors and actresses
on a completely different set.
That's so crazy.
While McKellen performed
his part all alone
on a green screen set
with only an earpiece
connecting him to the
performance being
provided by the rest of
the cast.
He hated that.
McKellen ended up
feeling lonely and
frustrated.
To cheer him up the
cast and crew snuck
into the tent in which
he stayed during breaks
and deckered it with
mementos from the Lord
of the Rings films,
mainly old props and
tapestries from Rivendell
and Lothorian as well as
fresh fruit and flowers.
This is so sad. That is so sad. fresh fruit and flowers. I can't take that.
This is so sad.
That is so sad.
He had to be like,
why couldn't he hang out
with them?
Yeah.
In between.
Well, I guess in between
they were shooting
so that there'd be,
like during their shooting
they'd be setting up
for his shots.
Oh, yeah.
So then that,
or they were shooting
it simultaneously.
I don't know.
That sucks.
That's so sad.
I would be so upset to be alone. Why did they were shooting it simultaneously. I don't know. That's that's so sad. I would be so upset to be alone.
Why did they do this?
That's so depressing.
To try to make it look more realistic, but it doesn't look any more.
No.
I mean, to me, it doesn't look any more or less realistic.
Yeah.
I felt like it was even more confusing in this one than other ones.
I feel like the scale was almost more dramatic
than I had seen.
And then that seems like a flaw.
Like, it felt like there was a point
where you're like, they're that small?
Like, I mean, I was like all over the place.
While filming the battle of Abba...
You get all the hard words, yeah.
...Richel Armitage Thorin
smacked himself
in the face
so hard with his shield
that he managed to bite
completely through
his lower lip
the injury can be seen
in the finished movie
when Azog
holds up
Thor's severed head
and Thorin screams
the left side of his lip
is swollen
and there's a pool of blood
between his gums
and his lip
ew
oh boy
yikes
Daniel Radcliffe
Shia LaBeouf James McAvoy Aaronkin, and Tobey Maguire were considered for the role of Bilbo Baggins.
However, Peter Jackson has said that his first choice was always Martin Freeman.
Freeman was initially unable to accept the role due to scheduling conflicts with Sherlock in 2010,
but Jackson reworked the entire shooting schedule for the trilogy to accommodate him.
Well, that's nice.
Imagine. I would love to be at that point in my career. That'd be amazing. but Jackson reworked the entire shooting schedule for the trilogy to accommodate him. Well, that's imagine.
I would love to be at that point in my career.
That'd be amazing.
Where someone's like,
Oh,
we'll adjust things for you.
Instead they go,
cool.
You don't get to go to Marisha and we're going to shoot this movie without
you.
The method of creating the Hobbit was,
the Hobbit beat was changed for this movie.
Could you tell this is something that just happened?
It seems pretty specific.
Very specific.
I was so excited to go to this island and they said,
we can't work with this.
I want to hear more about that later.
I'll tell you.
The method of creating Hobbit feet was changed for this movie.
The Hobbit feet, they look bigger.
For the Lord of the Rings trilogy,
the prosthetic feet only fit over the actors and actresses' feet,
requiring them to be reapplied after periods of walking in them.
For this movie, the prosthetic went all the way up to their knees.
Why?
Oh, that seems bad, too.
It feels like they could make a shoe that you could just put on with a sort of, I don't know.
But I guess their ankles are out, so it would have to be a boot that would go past their shorts.
Right.
Ugh.
Yeah.
That seems annoying to have to get your feet with prosthetic makeup for hours and hours.
I guess it's better than your head, but...
The first movie in Peter Jackson's Middle Earth franchise
without Oscar wins.
This is that one.
It was nominated in three categories,
but failed to win in any of them.
Wow. That probably hurt that one. It was nominated in three categories but failed to win in any of them. Wow, that probably
hurt that ego.
The movie went through
several stages
of pre-production hell
including
separate legal disputes
between New Line Cinema,
Peter Jackson,
and the Tolkien family members
which complicated production.
When MGM finally moved
the project forward
in 2008,
more complications ensued
when MGM entered bankruptcy
and froze production
causing director guillermo del toro to step down after three years of pre-production oh my god
later was almost cast out of new zealand when several unions and guilds blacklisted the project
and shooting delayed shooting was delayed again when peter jack Jackson was recovering from surgery for a perforated ulcer.
Oh my God.
Yikes.
And then the last bit of trivia was that this was released the same
year as the novel's 75th anniversary.
Oh wow.
So maybe it was delayed for a reason.
Yeah.
It was fate.
What do you guys feel like the themes of this movie?
Oh my God.
Are we back in school?
I guess the themes are
whoa um i feel like friendship um friendship maybe taking a journey that you didn't think
you needed to go on to become the person you needed to be risking yourself for others. Yeah, I like that. I think that's true.
Yeah.
Lying to pretend like you're better than you are
by being like, I was trying to help you all along
when really you were just there
because you felt like you were left out.
I don't know if you guys talked about it before,
but there's a lot of talk about how Tolkien wrote this book
and I guess to an extent the lord of the rings based
off his experiences from like fighting as a soldier in world war one yes and so that's like
essentially he's kind of a bilbo is like an avatar for him where it's like he had this very
nice life where he didn't have to think about like he had food he had a shelter he was like i'm i live in the shire everything is
nice and then had to go to war and literally like encounters all of these things that he'd never seen
before all this violence and destruction and all that and he's like fighting for something good
you know and it kind of changes him for the better who knows you know but that's yeah that's interesting i mean here's
the thing i'm truly gaslit every episode of this show because now i am i'm like curious about the
second movie i'm like yeah well what's gonna happen with all these people will we get some
smoke shows who are fun to look at or will it be the same old dwarves who knows I don't I don't either I do
does Smeagol
slash Gollum come back
I think so right
no I don't
I don't believe he comes for comes
back in these movies he's not
he we we've passed his
part I don't I actually don't remember
but I but he he's not in the book
anymore i'm pretty sure he's not i mean that makes sense because he's like obsessed with the ring and
i guess you'd have to turn the storyline to like god i'm trying to get the ring back yeah it's not
it's not about that you will you're gonna get men there there are lots of men okay there are there
are men or at least at least a man coming and an elf one oh an elf we're
getting the cute elf you're getting more you're getting more elves yeah hell yeah i like women
are hot and elf men are not that's my take that's a hot take i like all elves equally
also this film earned 303 million dollars in the United States and Canada. It grossed worldwide at $1 billion.
And it's the 15th film in history to earn over a billion dollars.
It's literally insane.
That's so wild.
A billion dollars?
A billion dollars for one third of a story.
Yeah, that's nuts.
Yeah, that's crazy.
God, these people are rich.
The film holds a 64% approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes
with an average score of 6.54 out of 10.
And I think that's way lower than any of the Lord of the Rings movies.
They all had like 10 out of 10.
People did not like this.
Christopher Orof from The Atlantic said,
it frequently seems as though Jackson was less interested in making The Hobbit
than in remaking his own famous, fabulously successful Lord of the Rings series.
That's pretty rough.
I don't think he was trying to remake Lord of the Rings.
It was so much.
Actually, maybe I do because it was.
I don't know.
I think it's more like he's trying to make it as epic as those movies and try to lean.
He didn't lean away fully, but in some ways he leaned away from like the childishness of the story.
You know, like the eagles don't away from like the childishness of the story, you know,
like the,
the,
the eagles don't talk in this,
you know,
the,
I think like the troll,
uh,
the re the way that the troll finds Bilbo is not by just reaching back,
but in the book,
it's like the purse talks like he goes to like,
Bilbo's trying to steal something in the purse is like,
Hey,
who are you?
It's like very silly and, and the purse is like, hey, who are you? I remember that, yes.
It's, like, very silly and shy.
I remember that from my play.
I do.
The main criticism of An Unexpected Journey was the decision to split the story into three films
as well as the intricate treatment of a simple children's book story.
So people were just like, make it simpler, I guess.
And the film was nominated for three
academy awards as we said it was best visual effects best production design and best makeup
and hairstyling and they won an academy scientific and technical award the scientific and engineering
award for inventing a technique which has made huge advances in bringing the bringing to life
computer generated characters such as gollum to film and screen. Oh yeah, because he was like the first.
I mean, it was him and Jar Jar that were like the first.
To the first CGI characters.
Well, I mean, well, I think we learned far more
than we ever expected.
Honestly, yes.
John, you were.
An unexpected journey.
You went on an unexpected journey.
I didn't even mean to do that.
I'm genuinely excited to watch the next one.
This happens every episode.
I come in being like, I'm hot.
I hated it.
Oh, okay.
Well, we're talking about it.
It actually wasn't so bad.
I did love that Looney Tune who had birds under his hat.
I loved when he brought that little thing back to life.
So there's things I liked.
Yeah.
There's a lot of heart.
I remember watching this movie.
And when I was in the theaters, and I actually watched this with my family, too.
Oddly enough, my sister, I feel like my sister got proposed to literally after we saw this movie.
Oh, really?
Yeah, I'm pretty sure that happened.
Because the whole family was together.
yeah I'm pretty sure that happened
because the whole family
was together
because we were
including my brother-in-law
because we were watching
this movie
like around Christmas time
and
what I remember thinking
watching it
in the theaters
was like
I know this is too long
and this is like
not exactly right
but I'm
I'm happy to be back
in Middle Earth
that was kind of like
the
it was like I'm you know and there so Middle Earth. That was kind of like the... It was like I'm...
You know, and they're...
So watching it right after Lord of the Rings
is pretty tough because, you know,
these movies came out like,
I don't know how many years,
like eight or, you know,
eight or nine years later.
And so there was a good distance between them.
And so when they came out,
it was like, oh, nice.
Like I'm returning to this place that I knew,
you know, but they're along
oh right because with with the first ones they shot them one after the other so like yeah ian
mckellen's age difference really wouldn't be noticeable even though they were those three
movies came out one year apart from each other right so it's like he was aging much more than
the films the process of making the film um that's interesting i'm interested to know how you guys
like this because i don't for me the second movie is i think it's higher rating around tomatoes but
i don't like it like the second movie is like to me very little hat like very little happens in
this movie but in that movie very little feels like what's the runtime on that one it's and i
it's still like a three hour movie
and it's like
what were we doing guys
you're really stretching this
yeah you will see the dragon
that might be enough for me
the dragon does look cool
wait so it's called the hobbit the desolation of smog
the desolation of smog
what a funny
why do some people say it's smog
but in the movie it's like some people Smaug and some people say it's Smaug?
But in the movie,
it's like some people said Smaug
and some people said Smaug.
I guess it's Smaug.
They couldn't keep track
of who was saying what.
Oh, actually,
this isn't that bad of a runtime.
161 minutes.
At least in the hundreds.
That's actually good.
Right?
So like an hour and a half is 90.
Uh-oh.
No, it's never... is 90 uh oh that's 240
never mind
I thought it was like
maybe two hours
I was like wow you're really
like you've watched too many
long movies you're like oh it's not that bad
it's 20 minutes under three hours
I mean it is so wild
that all of these movies are three hours. I mean, it is so wild that all of these movies are three hours long.
It's kind of, it's wrong.
It is wrong.
It's morally wrong.
It is.
And I think I'm almost positive there's extended versions of these movies, which I don't even know how that's possible.
The third one doesn't seem to have a theatrical extended one.
The second one does.
I feel like if you have, if they're extended,
it just is like bloopers that they kept in.
They're like, we fucked up.
Honestly, I would love it just to be bloopers.
Peter Jackson walking in frame and everyone's like, Peter!
Do you think there are bloopers somewhere?
I would like to watch that.
I would also like to watch that.
Yeah, if anyone knows about bloopers
on any of the Lord of the Rings movies, we would like to watch that. Yeah. If anyone knows about bloopers on any of the Lord of the Rings movies,
we would like to watch them.
Yes.
That seems fun.
They're three hours long.
John, do you have anything you want to promote?
Oh, just the podcast, I guess.
If you listen, Black Men Can't Jump in Hollywood podcast on iTunes or wherever,
wherever you get podcasts.
And Astronomy Club.
Yeah. If you haven't watched Astronomy Club on Netflix.
It's very funny.
They have a great sketch where people are eating a gingerbread house.
And that's as much as I'll give you.
You got to watch it.
It's funny.
Oh, there's also a great Cat Williams sketch.
It's a funny show.
Watch it.
Oh, thank you.
Nicole,
do you have anything
you want to plug?
Yes,
I want to plug
wear a fucking mask
because we could have
had a summer.
I would like to have a fall.
Please wear a mask.
Lauren,
is there anything
you want to promote?
I want to promote
don't wear a mask.
I love this
the way it is now.
Yeah,
wear a fucking mask
and follow our Patreons
and help us get through this.
Help us get paid
since we can't fucking leave our houses.
I have a Patreon,
a 90 Day Fiance one.
Lauren has a Patreon
where she's doing a whole lot of cool stuff.
Just go find it.
Everyone, please.
And please tweet at us,
you know, Lord of the Rings.
I have seen,
I actually have found
some of these posts interesting that people are tweeting stuff at us and know Lord of the Rings I have seen I actually have found some of these posts
interesting that people
are tweeting stuff at us
and I'm like
actually interested
I feel like with Star Wars
there's too much
and so
it starts to be like
who cares
but
I think the thing I like
about the Lord of the Rings
fans is there's no
it's like
unbiased news
they're just telling me
facts
it doesn't have a
spin on it
where they're like,
this is why this is better than this.
Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
This movie sucks.
It's just like,
I like all of it.
It's all pretty nice.
The Hobbit,
not so much for me,
but here's some information
about The Hobbit.
Absolutely.
It's a kind fan base.
Yes.
And I think it's because,
I mean,
because it's the books,
you know,
by all of the movies are going to
be you know not lesser but like it's not the books right like when you're when you're reading a book
you kind of envision what it is in your head and then the movie translates that and you're like oh
I like some of that and I didn't like that or whatever you're not that precious about it but
you're they get into like this imagined created world and so i mean i'm not
that like i know there are like lord of the rings fans who are like who know elvish and like can
speak in elven tongue you know like that yeah so yeah it's a whole world everyone loved mary
by the way it made me so comments on mary's episode they were like obsessed and her elvish
really shut well i was just like she she made it sound so romantic in a way where I was like,
oh, I'm foolish for not seeing the romance.
I almost watched the movie again.
And then I woke up and I said, you silly bitch, you'll never.
That would be literally insane if you watched it again.
I don't know what would happen.
It's not okay.
Okay, we have our Battle of the Five Stars segment
where we read reviews.
And if you leave a review on your favorite podcast platform,
you'll get a chance to have it read on air.
So this one comes from Purple Frog 25.
It's called The New Queens of Gondor.
I am a huge Lord of the Rings nerd,
and this podcast was the most entertaining
and delightful thing in the world.
It means so much to me to welcome new
people to the fandom, to criticize the many
annoying and weird parts, and to obsess over
these characters with someone else. Thank you for
coming to Middle Earth. I hope you like it. P.S.
The trilogy is better than The Hobbit. Sorry, not
sorry. Thank you, Purple Frog 25.
This is adorable. That was...
See, yeah, these people are so nice. That was so
nice. I think our
Star Wars five-star reviews were like,
C-3PO wants to bend you over or something.
It was like...
Goodness.
Yeah, our Star Wars,
the Star Wars, they were a little wilder than...
These people are just kind and they're like,
thank you.
Thank you for coming to Middle Earth.
It's so adorable.
It's really nice.
Yeah, welcome to Middle Earth.
I hope you like it.
That's incredible.
Yeah, Star Wars is like,
if you don't like this,
you're the worst person ever.
All right, till next time.
We're going to be talking about The Hobbit 2,
Return to The Hobbit Land.
Thanks, John, for being here.
Thank you, John.
That was very fun.
Bye,bye.
That was a Hiddem Original.