Some images from the film, images from Entertainment Weekly.
https://ew.com/lord-rings-war-rohirrim ... villain-exclusive-8661309
Meet the 'rebellious' heroine and 'fascinating' villain of Lord of the Rings anime prequel
Producer Philippa Boyens, director Kenji Kamiyama, and voice actress Gaia Wise preview "The War of the Rohirrim."
https://ew.com/lord-rings-war-rohirrim ... villain-exclusive-8661309
Warner Bros. Animation, New Line Cinema and Sola Entertainment previewed 20 minutes of its upcoming anime feature “The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim,” receiving thunderous applause during the packed presentation on Tuesday at the Annecy Animation Festival.😍
https://variety.com/2024/film/news/lor ... ootage-annecy-1236033199/
Judgement reserved on this until I have seen it. It might be good...on the other hand!
Like it or not, the cat is out of the bag when it comes to Tolkien film adaptations. like many here, I suspect, I came to Tolkien long before the films were even thought of. But we have to accept that Middle-earth is now a popular culture fixture. There are many whose only exposure to Middle-earth is through the movies and computer games and have no intention of reading Tolkien - they just want visual entertainment involving characters who have now become as famous as Darth Vader and Mickey Mouse. It matters not - the books are still there and nothing will change that.
The error many people make new to Tolkien is mixing the books and the films. This is like comparing apples and pears - both are completely different.
Like it or not, the cat is out of the bag when it comes to Tolkien film adaptations. like many here, I suspect, I came to Tolkien long before the films were even thought of. But we have to accept that Middle-earth is now a popular culture fixture. There are many whose only exposure to Middle-earth is through the movies and computer games and have no intention of reading Tolkien - they just want visual entertainment involving characters who have now become as famous as Darth Vader and Mickey Mouse. It matters not - the books are still there and nothing will change that.
The error many people make new to Tolkien is mixing the books and the films. This is like comparing apples and pears - both are completely different.
Looks good. But ‘do I NEED to see it in a cinema?’
Not that badly. But mark me! The first day it hits streaming, I’m there.
Not that badly. But mark me! The first day it hits streaming, I’m there.
Scarlet_Sorcerer wrote:
Looks good. But ‘do I NEED to see it in a cinema?’
Not that badly. But mark me! The first day it hits streaming, I’m there.
Every movie that is released to cinema is made for cinema so I would argue, and urge you to see it on the big screen. Your local cinema needs you more than a streaming service does.