Subject: On one point you mentioned.
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Posted on: 2015-12-09 20:25:00 UTC

Specifically, this line: I strongly object to most things that are changed or added just because the director or whoever felt like it. As someone who has danced between writing and filmmaking, I wanted to say a few words in defense of this practice.

Telling a director or screenwriter that they can't add any touches of their own is unfair to them. They're creative folks too, with their own stylistic choices and methods. They're not just machines that take in stories and pump out film. Think of it like this: they're being given the chance to work on a (very likely) popular franchise. Maybe it's even something they're fans of. Why deny them the chance to help shape it at least a little bit?

That said, I will acknowledge that directors and screenwriters can go to far with changes. If the end result is something that upsets both fans of the original source material and newcomers, then the blame is well deserved. Adaptational changes should make sense when viewed through both the canon and the process of adaptation itself.

I can't speak too much as to LotR itself. I think it's fairly well known on this board that I'm not a fan of Tolkien's work. I thought the movies were fine as big high fantasy epics. I will say is that quite a a number of the changes you mentioned that bothered you, I can see being justified in some way. Not all, but a few of them.

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