In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit.
J.R.R. Tolkien, The Hobbit.
The first part of Peter Jackson's
Hobbit Trilogy made its debut on Friday, and reviews indicate that it's very well done, very much in the spirit of Jackson's work on
The Lord of the Rings but perhaps more approachable for the average viewer. Reviewers also speak very highly of Martin Freeman's performance in the role of Bilbo Baggins, the hobbit who unexpectedly finds himself taken from his quiet if slightly stuffy life in Hobbiton to participate in an epic quest involving dwarves, trolls, wizards, elves, orcs, a dragon and his horde of stolen treasure, and, of course, a magical ring.
None of this is a huge surprise. Peter Jackson has a proven ability to visually portray Tolkien's Middle Earth, and it may well have been for the best that Guillermo del Toro was unable to fit
The Hobbit into his directing schedule. However, I'm a little concerned about the fact that it's the first of three movies:
An Unexpected Journey will be followed by
The Desolation of Smaug next year, and the trilogy will conclude with
There and Back Again in 2014.
My paperback copy of
The Hobbit is 272 pages in length, as opposed to the 1008 pages of
The Lord of the Rings. Word count is perhaps a better indicator of relative size - counts vary depending on what's included (chapter headings, appendices, etc.) but online sources have
The Hobbit at 95,674 words, and
The Lord of The Rings weighing in at 468,420 (not including the appendices). Short answer,
The Lord of the Rings is about four times longer than
The Hobbit, and yet the movie adaptation of
The Hobbit is apparently going to be about the same length as the
Rings series: three movies and nine plus hours.
I gather from quoted comments by Peter Jackson that some of the extra time will involve Gandalf's various travels and adventures during the time he spends away from Bilbo and the dwarves, and logically there's a lot of room to expand battle scenes and Bilbo's time spent hiding in the palace of the Elvenking and so on. Even so, I'm worried about story for the sake of profit over story for the sake of story.
I have a lot of confidence in Mr. Jackson, but I also realize that moviemaking is a business. On that basis, I can easily imagine a meeting in which a group of investment-minded suits suggest that three movies would very likely make three times as much money as one movie, hint hint hint. In support of this, there's a common thread in reviews of
An Unexpected Journey regarding parts that seem to drag on too long, or which have been enormously extended from the original text: "Things that the book mentions in one sentence are given entire scenes."
I have tentative plans to see the first installment of
The Hobbit between Christmas and New Year's, and I hope to go in with an open mind. But I have to admit that I'm a bit worried that the extra content may mean that Bilbo Baggins isn't the only person going on an unexpected journey.
- Sid