Movie |
Hero's Journey | Elves
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6.2/10
IMDb1980 | Ralph
Best Original Score Motion Picture | 1979 | Leonard
Best Fantasy Film | 1979
Best Dramatic Presentation | 1979 | J.R.R.
Budget 4,000,000 USD
Box Office Collection 30,500,000 USD
Tim Burton worked as an animator on this movie. He was not credited, but worked as an "in-between" artist. It was his first job on a movie.
Filmed with live actors in black-and-white and rotoscoped, each animation cel drawn over a film frame of an actor. This was the first entirely rotoscoped animated feature.
Director Ralph Bakshi had originally planned to use music by Led Zeppelin in this movie, but was unable to get the rights. Led Zeppelin band members were known to be fans of the books, with several of their songs, "Misty Mountain Hop", "Over the Hills and Far Away", "The Battle of Evermore", and "Ramble On", referencing imagery and characters from Tolkien's books.
Peter Jackson first encountered The Lord of the Rings via this movie, and some shots in his live-action trilogy were influenced by it. One such shot features Frodo and the other Hobbits hiding from a Black Rider under a big tree root, while the Black Rider stalks above them. In his version of the sequence, Jackson uses a similar shot, although he filmed it from a different angle (in the book, Frodo hid separately from the other Hobbits). A second sequence features the camera slowly revolving around Strider and the Hobbits, who stand in a circle as the Black Riders approach them on Weathertop. In his staging, Jackson also used a similar shot, although his camera was much faster, and Strider is not amongst the Hobbits. A third similarity was the depiction of Gollum losing the Ring in the prologue: both movies show similar events, but the book had no such prologue, and it runs directly counter to Tolkien's scheme for the storyline. Another similarly staged scene is Legolas, Gimli, and Aragorn's discovery of Gandalf the White.
Peter Woodthorpe (Gollum) and Michael Graham Cox (Boromir) played their roles again in the BBC radio dramatization in 1981. The role of Frodo was played by Sir Ian Holm, who appeared as Bilbo in Peter Jackson's movies.
"[after Gandalf opens the door to Moria] Legolas: So all you had to do was say friend... and enter. Gilmi: Those were happier times..."
"Gandalf: One ring to rule them all; one ring to find them. One ring to keep them all, and in the darkness bind them!"