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Parents Say: age 12+ 18 reviews
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Even the smallest can be strong -- & the weak can be courageous. Reinforces the importance of keeping your word/promise/oath & of helping those in need rather than believing it's not your problem. Thorin's obsession with his treasure shows the corrupting nguồn of wealth. As someone says in the movie, the world would be a merrier place if people valued other people above gold."> Positive Messages

Even the smallest can be strong -- và the weak ca


Many characters must rise lớn the occasion & decide whether khổng lồ band together or think only of their own people. Bilbo stands up lớn Thorin và enlist help for the people of Lake Town. Bard leads the people of Lake Town khổng lồ relative safety. The elf king allows the elves to fight even if it's not in their best interest. Tauriel may be the most skilled female ever in a Tolkien adaptation. Legolas fights honorably to lớn defend the dwarves (and Tauriel) despite his jealousy and disappointments. Thorin becomes obsessed with his treasure to the exclusion of anything else. Characters demonstrate curiosity, perseverance, và teamwork."> Positive Role Models

Many characters must rise to lớn the occasion và deci


The most violent of the Hobbit films: Huge battles with high body toàn thân counts and brutal deaths. Many beloved characters die fighting their enemies (usually with swords và arrows), as do villains. Smaug kills countless residents of Lake Town as he murderously destroys it, setting fire lớn anything và anyone in his flight path. Some frightening, jump-worthy moments include Smaug cruelly targeting a man's young son (the dragon doesn't have a chance to lớn kill him), the super Orcs battling the dwarves, Thorin threatening Bilbo, & the elves/wizards fighting the shadow of Sauron. Lots of intense, deadly confrontations between characters."> Violence & Scariness

The most violent of the Hobbit films: Huge battles


Kili and Tauriel continue their lingering looks and charged moments of connection, including an embrace, an "almost kiss," and a heartbreaking declaration of love. Legolas loves Tauriel, even if she doesn't return his lãng mạn affection."> Sex, Romance & Nudity

Kili và Tauriel continue their lingering looks an


Insults: "coward," "stinking liar," "thief," "burglar.""> Language

Insults: "coward," "stinking liar," "thief," "burg


No sản phẩm placements in the film, but the Tolkien books and Peter Jackson film adaptations have plenty of tie-ins to merchandise: apparel, video clip games, Lego toys và board games, role-playing games and costumes, special editions of the books, electronics accessories, posters and other trang chủ accessories, và more."> Products & Purchases

No product placements in the film, but the Tolkien


Gandalf smokes a pipe more than once."> Drinking, Drugs & Smoking

Gandalf smokes a pipe more than once.

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Parents Need lớn Know

Parents need to lớn know that The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies is the final (and most violent) installment in director Peter Jackson"s three-part adaptation of J.R.R. Tolkien"s classic fantasy novel -- and, as the title suggests, it features the biggest battle sequences of the trilogy. The most like


Even the smallest can be strong -- and the weak can be courageous. Reinforces the importance of keeping your word/promise/oath và of helping those in need rather than believing it"s not your problem. Thorin"s obsession with his treasure shows the corrupting power nguồn of wealth. As someone says in the movie, the world would be a merrier place if people valued other people above gold.


Many characters must rise lớn the occasion và decide whether to lớn band together or think only of their own people. Bilbo stands up to Thorin and enlist help for the people of Lake Town. Bard leads the people of Lake Town khổng lồ relative safety. The elf king allows the elves lớn fight even if it"s not in their best interest. Tauriel may be the most skilled female ever in a Tolkien adaptation. Legolas fights honorably to lớn defend the dwarves (and Tauriel) despite his jealousy and disappointments. Thorin becomes obsessed with his treasure lớn the exclusion of anything else. Characters demonstrate curiosity, perseverance, and teamwork.


No hàng hóa placements in the film, but the Tolkien books và Peter Jackson film adaptations have plenty of tie-ins to merchandise: apparel, đoạn clip games, Lego toys & board games, role-playing games & costumes, special editions of the books, electronics accessories, posters & other trang chủ accessories, và more.

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The violence in this movie could justify an R rating. It is nearly as violent as the movie "300". Decapitation after decapitation. My 10 y/o son & I read the book và watched the movies. 5 Armies is non-stop violence; more violent than the first two movies. I should not have let my son watch this.How does this film get an 11 y/o rating, while the late Harry Potter movies get a 12? Potter is extremely tame compared to lớn this.This is one instance where the CSM editor got it wrong. I wouldn"t be surprised khổng lồ see them change the suggested age rating upward to lớn at least 13. It would prevent other parents from making the same mistake I did.
Aside from a couple of particularly graphic moments in the first two movies, we felt they were fine for our kid as long as we were watching with him & explaining things. I wish I"d read the đánh giá from all three movies before beginning, because we felt compelled lớn complete the story & honestly, it"s the most obscenely graphic & horrific violence I think I"ve ever encountered on film. If the battle sequences were in another movie that wasn"t based on a children"s book & I was watching with my peers I would have loved it, but I definitely agree with an R rating for this final installment.From a values point of view, I have to say that it was mostly alright but Legolas" antics, Tauriel"s forced lãng mạn relationship và the incredible amount of damage that the main characters were able lớn withstand made it impossible khổng lồ take things at all seriously.

The final chapter in Peter Jackson’s trilogy strays furthest from the book, but there are still a few buried Easter eggs for die-hard fans lớn enjoy


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The third và final installment of Peter Jackson"s The Hobbit trilogy opened this week. The first movie, An Unexpected Journey, contained bundles of nerdy references & was largely faithful to lớn J.R.R. Tolkien’s original book. The second, The Desolation of Smaug, strayed a bit further from its source material, but was still largely Tolkien. 

The Battle of the Five Armies, however, turns a significant corner, relying on a heavy dose of artistic licensing and big screen razzle-dazzle. Much of the final film operates in a grey area somewhere between the Tolkien-Jackson dichotomies. In some cases, the Jackson additions seem khổng lồ work; in others, not so much. But overall, the essence of Middle-earth and its characters are intact enough lớn make the journey to lớn the cinema worthwhile for all but the pickiest of purists.

As per tradition, we asked Michael Drout, an English professor at Wheaton College, & John Rateliff, an independent Tolkien scholar and author of the forthcoming book, A Brief History of the Hobbit, to lớn help us navigate the hodge-podge of Tolkien material and Hollywood invention. 

Departures 

For starters, there"s the scale of things. It"s as though Tolkien’s original 1937 children’s book had been put on steroids. While the book"s Smaug does indeed descend on Lake-town to lớn punish the community for interrupting his slumber, the dragon—originally described as about 100-feet long—is now "the kích cỡ of a 747" and Lake-town—largely evacuated in the book prior khổng lồ the great worm"s arrival—bears witness khổng lồ something more akin to "the fire bombing of Dresden," says Drout. "Jackson’s Smaug was way more horrifying than Tolkien"s." The tendency toward exaggeration only continues from there: the Battle of the Five Armies involved some 6,000 or so players in the book, whereas the movie depicts an estimated 100,000 CGI-generated goblins, orcs, dwarves, men, elves, eagles, hell bats & other random monsters. Moreover, that relatively small skirmish spans just five pages in the book, but in the movie, it clocks in at over an hour. 

Strangely, despite the favoritism toward aggrandizement, Middle-earth itself seems khổng lồ have shrunk. Tauriel and Legolas ride from Erebor to lớn Angmar where the orcs" army is rallying in what seems lượt thích a few hours, though that journey would have been about 300 miles each way—plus required crossing a mountain range—in Tolkien’s world. Likewise, Dáin Ironfoot, Thorin"s super-Scottish cousin, gets summoned by a raven và manages khổng lồ rouse an army & make the 150-mile journey from the Iron Hills in what seems lượt thích a day-and-a-half. "It doesn’t come as a surprise that one of the things Warner Bros would really lượt thích to develop is a Middle-earth amusement park," Drout says, citing what is so far just rumor. "So many of these things already fit size-wise."

One of the most significant new departures from the book"s actual plot concerned Thorin, Kili and Fili"s deaths. In Tolkien"s version, Thorin and his dwarves make a heroic charge into the thick of the battle, even though they know their efforts are doomed to lớn fail. Both Fili & Kili die defending their king, và Thorin also breathes his last as a hero, surrounded by his kin. In the movie, on the other hand, Thorin leads three of his dwarves on a clandestine ambush mission which, compared to the book, is "about as different in tone as you can be," Rateliff says. "Jackson"s version was entertaining, but I"m a purist and I and lượt thích the way Tolkien did it." Thorin’s burial scene—a touching moment in the book—is also completely skipped over, although Rateliff has hopes that it will appear in the extended home-viewing edition, similar khổng lồ additions Jackson made lớn the first two films. 

Interestingly, some of Jackson"s previous changes that fans actually hailed as improvements on the book are largely lacking in this new film. Tolkien"s 12 dwarves were mostly featureless, indistinguishable characters, but in the prior two movies Jackson gave each a clear personality và individual moments for them to lớn shine on screen. Much of that was lost in this film. "In some ways, Jackson reverted lớn being more lượt thích Tolkien," Rateliff says. "But it"s a pity because the dwarves were something he’d done a really good job on."

On the other hand, other characters lượt thích Bard & Thranduil, the haughty Elvenking, become even more fleshed out in this film. In the books, Thranduil was largely lacking personality, but Jackson’s Thranduil possesses an attitude strikingly akin khổng lồ that of the Sons of Fëanor, an ancient line of elves depicted in The Silmarillion. Unlike Elrond và Galadriel, those elves were highly contemptuous of mortals and possessed a hefty sense of entitlement. "Thranduil’s a complete jerk, which I thought was cool and risky," Drout says. Whether that personality choice was a deliberate, clandestine nod khổng lồ The Silmarillion—the bible-like Middle-earth text that Jackson does not have the rights to—however, is unknown. 

Blurred lines

Unlike the last two films that were packed with delectable Easter eggs for those nerdy enough lớn catch them, this last cinematic chapter wasn"t nearly as ripe with such references. Drout noticed just one satisfyingly subtle touch: the rings Elrond, Galadriel and Gandalf were wearing in the show-off with the Sauron, aka the Necromancer. These rings—"Three Rings from the Elven-kings under the sky"—were forged at the same time as the Ring of Power. Galadriel wears Nenya, the trắng ring; Gandalf wears Narya, the red ring; và Elrond wears Vilya, the blue ring. While the details of the three Elven rings" creation are only discussed in The Silmarillion—and thus are off limits lớn Jackson—their existence is fair trò chơi since they are described in the Lord of the Rings books. 

But for the most part, a sort of Tolkien-Jackson hybrid material has replaced the previous movies" clear nods lớn the broader Tolkien lore. The trắng Council"s role in saving Gandalf at Dol Guldur is a Jackson invention, but he still faithfully represents the fact that Galadriel is indeed the strongest of the group when she alone manages lớn banish Sauron. Similarly, the giant Dune-like worms that make a brief cameo during the Battle of the Five Armies spawned from an offhand phản hồi Bilbo makes in the book: "Tell me what you want done, and I will try it, if I have lớn walk from here khổng lồ the East of East và fight the wild Were-worms in the Last Desert." Jackson apparently ran with this, creating an actual representation of those monsters.

Thorin"s rồng sickness is another shaky thread that Jackson builds up. Tolkien never explicitly calls the Lonely Mountain"s dwarvish treasure cursed, and he doesn"t tightly links Thorin"s madness khổng lồ the Arkenstone or the gold. Indeed, some Hobbit scholars do not think the treasure drove Thorin mad at all, but rather that his obstinacy và greed were simply part of his character. Jackson, however, chooses khổng lồ believe that Thorin succumbed to lớn dragon sickness—a concept originally hinted at in Beowulf, và one that Tolkien seems lớn indirectly reference in certain Middle-earth characters, who often succumb to "rapacious greed" in the presence of treasure, as well as in his lighthearted book, Farmer Giles of Ham. That Jackson’s Thorin suffers from long sickness "is an unusual reading of the it, but one that I advocated for in The History of the Hobbit," Rateliff says. "I was very interested to see that they"d arrived at the same conclusion."

Some references were obviously meant to lớn make the Hobbit trilogy more coherent with the Lord of the Rings films. The kingdom of Angmar appears in this film, which—as astute fans of the first trilogy will recall—is where the Lord of the Nazgûl hails from. The acorn that Bilbo shows Thorin presumably becomes the party Tree, under which Bilbo throws his 111th birthday in The Fellowship of the Ring. (In the Lord of the Rings books, however, it is Samwise Gamgee who is given a special nut by Galadriel, & he only plants it after returning lớn the Shire following the quest khổng lồ destroy the One Ring.) " assume that, years from now, people will start with The Hobbit và then proceed khổng lồ Lord of the Rings, rather than watch them in the order in which they were filmed," Rateliff says. "It"s clear that they tried to lớn smooth the transition." 

But in trying to make that connection, Jackson also punched some holes. The most obvious reference—Thranduil telling Legolas to go find Strider at the kết thúc of the movie—doesn"t make much sense given that Aragorn was just ten years old when the Battle of the Five Armies takes place. Additionally, if orcs can show up with an legion of catapult-firing trolls & earth-burrowing were-worms, then why doesn"t Sauron tap into those havoc-making assets 50 years later, in the Lord of the Rings battles? and finally, what happens to lớn Tauriel? Given that she"s a recent Jackson invention, there"s obviously no mention of her in the Lord of the Rings movies. "I have khổng lồ say I was astonished that Tauriel survived," Rateliff says. "It makes me wonder if they have ambitions to bởi something more with her, although I don"t see how they could contractually."

A fond farewell 

Unlike the Lord of the Rings movies, which ended on a high chú ý at the Oscars, opinions about The Hobbit are much more of a mixed bag. Some viewers are happy that the whole thing has finally come lớn an end, declaring the project a failure. As Atlantic critic Christopher Orr wrote about the trilogy, "I can finally say something more upbeat: It"s over."

It very well could be, however, that Jackson didn"t really have viewers like Orr, Rateliff và Drout in mind when he made this series of movies. Instead, he might have been appealing directly to lớn Tolkien"s originally intended audience: children. "I was bored out of my mind with some of the repetitive fighting, but my son was totally into it," Drout says. "If that was target demographic, then he completely nailed it."

But regardless of whether the movies were primarily intended for kids or adults, Drout và Rateliff—die-hard fans that they are—still appreciate them despite their arguable flaws. Jackson excels at creating stunning, exceptionally detailed visuals that depict places previously only seen in the Tolkien reader"s imagination, và he also captures the spirit of Bilbo"s transformation from a sheltered thành viên of the bourgeoisie to a capable hobbit who can navigate the heroic world. "Even though a lot was edited, I thought they got the essence down," Rateliff says. "They included the parts that I really needed to see."

And while Jackson"s time in Tolkien"s universe has likely come khổng lồ the end, the experts predict that this will not be the last we see of Middle-earth. Drout imagines a "Game of Thrones"-style HBO take of the Silmarillion, while Rateliff thinks Tolkien"s work will become a fantasy version of Pride và Prejudice—a story remade every decade or so with a new director, a new cast và a new take on the classic text. "I think Jackson can be proud of what he has accomplished," Rateliff says. "But hopefully future films will be more faithful lớn the books. We purists love those things."