Lord
of the Rings versus Star Wars
Seconds
out, round two…
Jonathan
Hicks investigates the strange battle brewing between these two huge
franchises. I've had a lot of
free time on my hands recently. I've been able to surf the net and have a
great old time - catching up on old sites, dropping lines to old net-friends.
Mostly, though, I've been surfing the site looking for news and reviews on
the newest release from Peter Jackson and team - Lord of the Rings: The
Two Towers. I can't deny that
these new movies excite and delight me. My very first exposure to the realms
of science fiction and fantasy was The Hobbit. I'd like to say that it
made a huge impression on me and I wanted to live in a hole in the ground -
but, unfortunately, I was seven years old so the impression lasted for as
long as it took for the next fad to come along, and that fad was Star Wars.
For years I leapt about wanting to be a Jedi Knight and praying for
the next film to arrive. Then, whilst I was at
school in about 1980, our teacher decided to treat us to a radio play they
had acquired from the BBC. In groups we would sit with headphones on
and listen to this strange tale, concerning Hobbits, a grey wizard,
Elves, Dwarves, Balrogs, battles, great
sacrifice and legendary heroism. Every day I'd scrabble to be first to get
the headphones on. At first I was amazed
- there was something other than Star Wars to inflame the senses? So I
hunted out a copy of this radio play and a copy of the book it was based on.
The land of Middle-Earth had entered my life. The Hobbit, the
Silmarillion, the Books of Lost Tales, all these and more I gathered to
me and read with a passion. It got so involving that Star Wars Episode V -
The Empire Strikes Back passed me by completely. I never saw the film at
the cinema on its original release. I never saw it in the cinema until the Special
Edition re-releases back in 1997. So what had happened
to my love of Star Wars? Well, it hadn't gone anywhere. I was still
enamored by this world of blaster fights and spaceships, mystical energies
and amazing feats of heroism. The two shared a theme - heroes and personal
struggle, but whilst Star Wars was huge heart-pumping action and
spurts of melodrama, the whole Middle-Earth was more emotional, with a
history so rich you could almost believe it. The two helped me escape in
different ways. So it was with a
sense of confusion, then, that I first read blurb like: 'Star Wars is
dead, long live The Lord of the Rings!' - 'Lucas move over, Jackson is the
new Lord!' - 'Lucas had better buck his ideas up, Jackson holds the torch
now!' - 'Jackson is the pretender to the throne, Lucas is the true master!' -
'Lord of the Rings is trying and failing to fill the shoes of Lucas!' -
'Stormtroopers could kick Orc ass any day!' I
was a little surprised that the two had been set against each other but, the
more I thought about it the more I realised that
the two teams of fans would be head-to-head, so it's not a bit shocking.
We've seen it all before with the Star Trek/Star Wars stuff. I've given it a lot of thought. I've gone over the views
of people, fans and non-fans alike, and I've come to a conclusion. I wish I
could say that it has a reason set deep in the subconscious, a conflict of
the perception of heroes and the emotional and physical toil of individuals
against evil. The presentation of the corruption of power, the grey in
between the good and bad sides, the conflict of decisions that could change
the future. I thought that these arguments were based around the perception
of such things and how they are handled in the medium of science fiction and
fantasy. So I read the opinions of the fans who were
arguing for both sides and came to a startling conclusion. It had nothing to
do with that. It was much simpler. They were analy
retentive fanboys. It's true. All we've
got here are a bunch of people who have been exposed to/grown up with/found a
love for each of their chosen genres and are defending it. It's got nothing
to do with the content of each story, or the visual competency of the film
makers, it's the simple fact that they're concerned that their favourite
movie is going to be eclipsed by the other. They're obsessed with statistics
and numbers, spouting all kinds of stuff about Oscar©®™ nominations
and box office takings to improve the image of their genre. The Lord of
the Rings cycle of movies does stand to make cinema history in many
respects, but Star Wars is going to remain in the books as the first
one to define that history. So lets take a look
at the main arguments: 'The special effects
are worse/better than Star Wars/Lord of the Rings!' It's obvious that ILM
does not hold the top slot for CGI effects anymore, but wasn't it
obvious that this would happen, that the level of effects would get to a
point and then people would catch up? If it makes you feel any better,
Jackson and some of his guys were invited to The Ranch by McCallum
and Lucas and wandered the place seeing how the Star Wars guys
did it, and took some of that experience back with them. So, other than the
fact that Weta Digital have some talented guys working for them, they got a
little bit of knowledge from the fellas that have been doing it for years.
Besides, special effects do not a movie make. Remember some of the travesties
of recent years? Great special effects, lousy movie. I'm one of the first to
say that Star Wars Episode One - The Phantom Menace is not a great
film, but the effects are great. If you try to argue your point by saying 'Star
Wars is one long computer game' or Lord of the Rings effects are all
in the dark' then you're as shallow as you sound. Star Wars may have a
lot of digital effects, but they can do it so why not? And the Rings
are mostly dark - but it works! Deal with it. 'Lucas/Jackson created it all - Lucas/Jackson just ripped off Tolkien/Flash Gordon! Lucas/Jackson
is a creative genius!' I'm going to have to
disagree with that one, I'm afraid. How can Jackson 'rip off' an
interpretation of a well-known book? Perhaps if he called Frodo 'Brodo', had him protecting the Shire from
the 'Lord of the Bracelets' and had to throw the bracelet into
the fires of 'Mount Dum' then I might
of got a little suspicious. If Lucas had called Luke Skywalker 'Flush
Golden' fighting against 'Mang the
Misery' then I might have rubbed my chin and gone 'hmmm... strange'.
But that's not what happened, is it? George Lucas designed his own
world of science fiction and borrowed from all kinds of sources; Saturday
morning serials, old westerns, even Akira Kurosawa movies, and balled
them all together to make his own legend. Jackson took the most famous
book after the Bible, changed it slightly to suit the medium of the
silver screen and took design cues from history and two of the most famous Tolkien artists. So what did they rip off?
Nothing! They took established mediums and made them their own, so they're
both as skilled/sneaky as each other. On the side of Lord of the Rings,
you have to wonder whether the Lucas camp is now just a huge
merchandising campaign... but now that I have a bunch of Lord of the Rings
action figures around my PC and movie tie-in books then I can see that
the studios are as bad as each other and I try to stay out of that whole
affair. No-one is forcing you to buy it, people! 'Lord of the
Rings/Star Wars has a better
story/more heart than Star Wars/Lord of the Rings!' Since when? If you
take the story of the original Star Wars you've got a protagonist
living away from the troubles of the world and is pointed to adventure by an
old man who has great power, and he must battle against a great evil by
destroying his instrument of destructive force. Lord of the Rings is
about a protagonist living away from the troubles of the world and is pointed
to adventure by an old man who has great power, and he must battle against a
great evil by destroying his instrument of destructive force. Erm... hold on
a second... So, what is my take
on all of this? Well, it's simple - it's like two football teams and the
reason they like the team they have decided to support is simply because they
have. Variety in the medium is what makes the cinema enjoyable, but there are
some who have a very blinkered view of what they want to see and feel
threatened if something comes along that might topple their single-minded
object of affection. In extreme cases it's bloody-minded fanboys
who refuse to allow their genre to be threatened by a newcomer. Perhaps Jackson's
view will raise the bar and set the standards for films to come, but it does
not detract from the enjoyment and love for other films like Star Wars.
I'd like to say 'why can't we all get along' but that's just wishful
thinking. All those people felt betrayed when Star Wars Episode One - The
Phantom Menace wasn't the film they wanted it to be are looking for
something new and they have latched onto the Lord of the Rings,
declaring Lucas's demise because he apparently 'raped their childhood'
(a horrible phrase used by short-sighted hypocrites) and rallying under the
banner of Jackson. It's like they need someone to feed them the
escapism they crave without realising any of it for
themselves, or the Star Wars Episode Two - Attack of the Clones
bandwagon is the new way to go so they take a huge jump and land in the back. I honestly despair
for the filmmakers when I read this tripe. I like both, I have my problems
with both, there a certain things in both I wish they hadn't done. But, at
the end of the day, it's how much I enjoy those
films that count. I thought Star Wars Episode One - The Phantom Menace
was a bad film, but when it came out I spent time defending it like the fanboy I was, until one day I sat and watched it and
thought 'this is actually quite a bad film'. But it hasn't destroyed
my faith in Star Wars. It's just one part of a greater picture. And if
films like Lord of the Rings do raise the bar, forcing filmmakers to
create cinema bigger and better then more power to it and them. All I see is
the whole movie world benefiting from it all. A lot of people say 'Lucas
had better do something special to beat Jackson's movie!' and if he rises
to the challenge and makes the biggest Star Wars movie ever then who
benefits? Everyone! So enjoy your films but don't carp on about why 'my film is better
than yours', because you just sound like an insecure fanboy
whose worried about people not liking your genre and
trying desperately to justify your pastime. If you don't like it then fine;
state your reasons and that's that. But why limit it to Lord of the
Rings/Star Wars? You’re self-centered ignorants
with a bloated sense of self-importance. Get over yourselves. |