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Tuesday, December 16, 2003 - Page updated at 04:52 P.M.
Movie Review By Moira Macdonald
The journey is over, the Ring has reached its ultimate destination and the audience is exhausted. In a good way, that is we, like the Fellowship, have gone on a long and arduous journey, and it's left us worn out, flopped in our seats and wishing we could join those hobbits as they hoist some drinks at the end of the road. Director/co-screenwriter Peter Jackson has come to the end of his journey, too, and you can sense some reluctance to say goodbye: "The Return of the King" takes its time coming to a close, with multiple endings that stretch the running time well past the three-hour mark. But, particularly for J.R.R. Tolkien enthusiasts, it's a good stretch; the film has a luxurious all-the-time-in-the-world sense to it, like a cat languorously extending its limbs. Jackson and his co-writers could have done some further trimming of the material and some might argue that they should have, as there's a fair bit of repetition here, particularly in Frodo's scenes but you have to admire the filmmakers for seizing the moment, taking the time they needed, getting it right. The "Lord of the Rings" film trilogy took years of work and cost untold hundreds of millions of dollars and the end result, opening late tonight, is gorgeous; a rich, layered tale of a king, a wizard and two little hobbits whose courage saved their world. Despite this film's subtitle, it's really not so much about the king (Aragorn, played with matinee-idol vigor by Viggo Mortensen), than about Frodo (Elijah Wood) and Sam (Sean Astin), the brave hobbits who journey to Mordor to deposit the fabled Ring in the fires of Mount Doom. The two, accompanied by the wizened, creepy Gollum (he looks like he's made up of equal parts Chucky, Yoda and Steve Buscemi), pick their way across the craggy mountains, becoming weaker as their food supply dwindles and the Ring's powers make Frodo increasingly disoriented.
"Don't leave me here alone," he pleads with Frodo, at one point. "Don't go where I can't follow." Astin, who as Sam has a lovely, wistful quality (he always seems just on the verge of apology), at times quietly steals the movie; he's a miniature tower of strength. Despite the movie's length, many of the other characters are seen tantalizingly briefly in "Return of the King" teenage fans of Orlando Bloom's elf Legolas may be disappointed at how little he has to do here. And Christopher Lee, the white-bearded, treacherous wizard Saruman of the earlier two films, doesn't appear at all Jackson elected not to use footage of the character's escape from his tower in the Battle of Helm's Deep. It's an odd omission of a major character but no doubt will appear on the DVD.
All this grandeur, fittingly, comes down to a quiet, simple end. As we learned in another classic quest movie long ago, there's no place like home. Moira Macdonald: 206-464-2725 or mmacdonald@seattletimes.com
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