Lord of the Rings - Fellowship of the Ring

A marvellously sympathetic yet spectacularly cinematic treatment of the first part of Tolkien's trilogy, Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring is the film that finally showed how extraordinary digital effects could be used to support story and characters, not simply overwhelm them. Both long-time fantasy fans and newcomers alike were simultaneously amazed, astonished and left agog for parts two and three.

Jackson's abiding love for the source material comes across in the wealth of incidental detail (the stone trolls from The Hobbit, Bilbo's hand-drawn maps); and even when he deviates from the book he does so for sound dramatic reasons (the interminable Tom Bombadil interlude is deleted; Arwen not Glorfindel rescues Frodo at the ford). New Zealand stands in wonderfully for Middle-Earth and his cast are almost ideal, headed by Elijah Wood as a suitably naïve Frodo, though one with plenty of iron resolve, and Ian McKellen as an avuncular-yet-grimly determined Gandalf. The set-piece battle sequences have both an epic grandeur and a visceral, bloody immediacy: the Orcs, and Saruman's Uruk-Hai in particular, are no mere cannon-fodder, but tough and terrifying adversaries. Tolkien's legacy could hardly have been better served. -- Amazon.co.uk review

American/Canadian

US Fellowship
Widescreen Format
Full Screen Format
VHS

European

Europe Fellowship
Theatrical Version
VHS