‘The Hobbit’: Like One Bad Video Game






Perhaps the most exciting thing about Peter Jackson‘s landmark, blockbuster Lord of the Rings films was that they made fans, through a combination of stunning landscapes and intricate special effects and soaring music and dramatic spectacle, feel as though we were seeing an almost impossible elevation of the potential size and scope of movies. Here was a rich, dense, sprawling series of films that thundered like myths, that were breathtaking in their realization of some pretty huge ambitions. Sure, they were massive corporate projects that earned lots of people millions of dollars, but to the regular moviegoer they were feats that proved the majesty of the movies, the potential to tell enthralling stories that also played like art. And so it’s hugely disappointing, if not all that surprising, that Jackson’s first foray back into the land of Middle Earth, The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, is such a sullenly, basely commercial and junky affair, a movie that feels not crafted with Jackson’s seemingly divine inspiration but by the hands of studio executives. Perhaps the reason that Warner Bros. is forgoing the usual console video-game tie-ins for simple mobile games is because the damn movie already looks like a video game, and not a very fun one at that.


RELATED: ‘The Hobbit’ Trailer Needs to Get Out of the Shire






The Lord of the Rings series succeeded aesthetically because it was such an elegant, painting-like wonder to behold. The textures and palettes all had the look of a particularly vibrant illustrated story book, the kind of immersive vision that exists somewhere between imagination and the real world. For The Hobbit, though, Jackson chose to film at a high frame rate and with Real 3D technology in mind — because 3D movies are doing well these days and, hell, doesn’t hurt that the tickets cost more — but the results are frequently hideous. Those among us who have bought shiny new flatscreen TVs over the past few years are likely familiar with the dreaded “Soap Opera Effect,” which turns what should be stunning, glossy images into cheap-looking messes, all strange movement and lighting, like any network soap or cheap British show. (Think Children of Men looking like Torchwood.) It’s the problem of technology over-thinking or over-performing, and it is on startling, gruesome display in The Hobbit. When you’re wearing the 3D glasses (and admittedly sitting a little off to the side), this hugely expensive movie looks like it was shot on a nice handheld digital camera on the cheap. Actors stand in strange contrast to the digital backgrounds behind them, motion looks too slick or unnatural. Gone are the somber vistas and rugged terrain, replaced by eye-aching shine and plastic-y smoothness. The most special effects-heavy sequences look very much like the non-playable parts of modern video games — the exposition bits that can amp up the graphics a bit because they don’t have to worry about the randomness of play, the stuff you see in the commercials, right before the “rated T for teen” part. I don’t know if I just had a bad projector or what, but I spent the bulk of this long movie distracted by how dreadful everything looked. With a few small exceptions — The Shire glows with lovely green, a mountain cave fight/chase sequence is bracingly rich — this is a dismally unattractive movie, featuring too many shots that I’m sure were lovely at some point but are too often ruined and chintzified by the terrible technology monster.


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So on its aesthetic merits, The Hobbit comes up more than short. The trouble is, it’s not rescued by many narrative successes. Jackson has taken largely from the first third of J.R.R. Tolkien‘s novel — about an expedition to reclaim a lost dwarf kingdom from a dragon — but he’s also added in some elements found in appendices detailing an expanded universe that Tolkien included in an edition of The Lord of the Rings. This is partly to flesh out the story as Jackson believes Tolkien meant it to be, but it’s also meant to satisfy the needs of a supersize film trilogy based on one mere book. And so we get several pointless and uninteresting diversions, mostly about dwarves and their bitter enemies the orcs, that read exactly like the filler they are. Jackson is trying to flesh out dwarf mythology, because we spend so much of our time with these little guys, but it feels tediously synthetic, as if there are two movies competing for attention with neither one getting its due. We go to the goblin caves of The Hobbit and then, upon deliverance from that dark place, are thrust right into some kind of honor-and-revenge-based conflict with a snarling, giant, one-armed orc. It’s all very crowded and strangely hurried for a movie that, all told, takes its sweet time.


RELATED: No One Likes Peter Jackson’s New ‘Hobbit’ Footage


I suspect that another of Jackson’s reasons for including all this extra dramatic battling is that, on its own, The Hobbit is something of a children’s book. We’ve got wacky, food-crazed dwarves, a mean old dragon, and a funny little guy to take us along on the journey. Jackson doesn’t deny his movie the kiddie flourishes — there’s snot humor and butt jokes and lots of other goofy stuff involving some trolls, plus two little musical numbers involving all the dwarves — but he then tries to complement them with the big, booming faith and honor stuff and it never properly congeals. One moment we’re on a sprightly children’s adventure, the next we’re talking in big fashion about all that warlike serious business. It’s a discordant mix, and I’d imagine it will leave both kids and adults out in the cold.


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The film is not without its bright spots, rare as they may be. Ian McKellen is a feisty, spirited, mysterious Gandalf as ever before, and Martin Freeman nicely and genially projects everyday hobbit-ness, even if he’s a tad underused in the film. (Yeah, in the movie called The Hobbit, there’s barely any time to focus on the darn Hobbit.) Cate Blanchett turns up once more as the ethereal elf Galadriel, lending the movie a cool classiness and a welcome dose of feminine energy. And, of course, we’re back, for one mesmerizing scene, with our beloved Gollum, so winningly and creepily played by Andy Serkis, and here yet another marvel of computer innovation. In some ways Gollum’s innate cartoonishness works better now than it did in the original trilogy, which is probably the only time that can be said of this movie. There are one or two moments in Gollum’s pivotal scene where he’s given a bit too much modern humor to play, but all told he’s the most welcome sight in the film. Maybe that’s just the newfound purist in me, yearning for the old days, but I suspect it has more to do with Gollum being the only genuinely realized character we’ve so far encountered in this new trio of films. Everyone else is a snoozy lesser version of someone else, especially the ridiculous bloodthirsty orc leader, who snarls and growls like something out of the Underworld movies. Sometimes, in the jumble of the The Hobbit‘s many cluttered and dull action scenes, the frantic blur looks like any sequence from one of those schlocky ’00s B-movies; all roughly hewn CGI clashing around nonsensically, with this orc fellow leading the charge.


RELATED: ‘The Hobbit’ Might Be Three Movies Now?


Despite all the technical advancements, if we can call them that, most moments in The Hobbit feel like Peter Jackson is sadly trying to make all those familiar LOTR elements work for him once more, without ever really being able to reignite the old flame. The supposedly awe-inducing visit to the elf city of Rivendell is a ho-hum experience in this new frame-rate-ruined world. A silly battle sequence involving a wizard, a silly Radagast the Brown, riding around pell-mell on a rabbit-drawn sled looks like an interstitial from late-era Super Mario. Even Elijah Wood, appearing briefly as Frodo, looks strange — a pale ghost of himself, as if stitched in from another movie by some forlorn and desperate hand. The film is inevitably resonant with memories of the original trilogy, and little about it can hold up to the comparison. There’s too much effort in the wrong places — action instead of story, technical tricks instead of actual design — and the constant rhythm of arbitrary event after arbitrary event becomes tiresome well before the film’s two hours and forty minutes have lurched to a halt. I’m sure there are kids who will like this wan, distracted effort — they might not yet have anything else to compare it to, depending on their age — but as a human who remembers what came before, I’m afraid The Hobbit left me nothing but frustrated, sad, and tired. Frustrated that these big-budget visionaries seem to consistently feel they have to taint their earlier masterpieces with techno-junk followups, sad that once magical lands now flicker cheap and garish in my head, and tired at the prospect of two more of these things. I exited the theater trying to remind myself that Attack of the Clones was way better than Phantom Menace and that Revenge of the Sith was better still. I then realized how depressing it was that I was making that comparison. Oh, Middle Earth. What has become of you?


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Ginnifer Goodwin's Ethereal Emmy Magazine Shoot

As the star of ABC's Once Upon a Time, Ginnifer Goodwin knows a thing or two about the fantastical, so it's only fitting that she would captivate readers and fans in a surreal cover shoot for Emmy magazine.

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In the pages of the issue, Goodwin explained why her role as Snow White/Mary Margaret Blanchard was a match made in heaven.

"I felt like I had summoned it into being because I had always wanted it so badly," Goodwin gushed before going on to admit, "Fantasy is my go-to genre as an audience member. This is my Harry Potter."

Download the complete digital issue beginning tomorrow, Thursday, December 13. The print edition is available now.

Click here to see more photos from the shoot.

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2-year-old Bronx toddler saved by Good Samaritan after wandering into traffic









An adorable 2-year-old Bronx girl dodged death today after wandering alone out of her home and walking into a traffic-heavy street — where she was scooped up by a quick-thinking Good Samaritan.

“As a father, this is nuts!” fumed Pepsi deliveryman Martin Rodriguez, 32, who spotted Samira Dawson teetering barefoot across busy White Plains Road in Parkchester wearing just a onesie and diaper. “I have a little girl the same age and it crushed me to see this.”

At 9:10 a.m. today, Samira somehow escaped her family’s apartment on Guerlain Street undetected, walked outside and strolled across White Plains Road.




“She was at the double line in the middle of the street!” Rodriguez said.

“She dropped her little bookbag in the middle of the street, and that’s all she was worried about.”

Then, “A lady grabbed her,” Rodriguez said. The unidentified woman gave Samira to a Parkchester public safety sergeant, who called cops.

“She appeared like a bubbly child,” said Police Officer Harry Kwan, who draped his coat around Samira. “She appeared nervous but obviously enjoyed being held.”

Samira’s worried-looking brother, Davante Valentine, 20, showed up at the scene at 9:39 a.m.

“I don’t know what happened,” Valentine told The Post. “All I know is I was sleeping and my [18-year-old brother] was supposed to be watching her and he left the house without telling me.”

His and Samira’s mom Ingrid Dawson — who told cops she had gone to the pharmacy that morning — showed up just before 10 a.m. and yelled, “Oh my God!” after seeing her daughter.

“You were supposed to be watching her!” Dawson, 38, snapped at Valentine.

Both police and child-protective services workers are probing the incident. No charges had been filed as of last night.










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Lennar to borrow $1.7 billion from Chinese bank




















Miami-based Lennar Corp. has gotten approval on $1.7 billion in loans from China Development Bank to fund the development and construction of two major projects in San Francisco, according to a person familiar with the transaction.

The contract, set to close by Dec. 31 subject to various conditions, would mark the first U.S. loan by the big state-owned Chinese bank. One condition — tagged the “Chinese component”— is that China Railway Construction Corp. be included as a general contracting partner in the project, the person said.

Closing by year’s end is crucial because of new tax rules set to take effect, the person added.





The agreement, first reported in The Wall Street Journal, would provide funding for the first six years of what is envisioned to be a 20-year project.

The loan agreement, reached Dec. 7 after Lennar officials met in China with bank officials, provides for $1 billion in financing to a partnership led by Lennar to redevelop Hunters Point Shipyard-Candlestick Point, a site in southeast San Francisco spanning more than 700 acres, the person said. Plans for the mixed-use community call for nearly 12,000 residential units on the site. Construction is expected to begin in the first quarter of 2013.

Under the pact, the Chinese bank would provide another $700 million to a partnership of Lennar, Stockbridge Capital Group and Wilson Meany, a real estate investment and development firm, to redevelop Treasure Island and Yerba Buena Islands in San Francisco Bay. Some 8,000 units of housing are planned for the mixed-use project on 535 acres. The U.S. Navy is set to turn over the first parcel of land to the development company in late 2013.





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Slated for execution, ex-Sweetwater cop enjoys Cuban-style last meal




















Hours before he was set to be executed by lethal injection, ex-Sweetwater cop Manuel Pardo visited with eight relatives and friends and enjoyed a Cuban-style last meal.

Pardo, who murdered nine people during a series of robberies in Miami-Dade in 1986, is to be executed at 6 p.m. at Florida State Prison, just north of Gainesville.

Pardo, who brashly urged jurors to recommend the death penalty over two decades ago, is expected to issue a written statement to the press before he is put to death.





His last-minute appeal to stay the execution was denied late Tuesday afternoon by the U.S. Court of Appeals.

With less than an hour before his scheduled death, an unlikely intervention by the U.S. Supreme Court is his only hope for life in prison. On Monday, a Jacksonville federal judge declined to halt the execution.

According to a corrections spokeswoman, Pardo’s last meal Tuesday morning was roasted pork chunks, white rice and red beans, fried plantains with tomato and avocado, topped with olive oil. He finished off the meal with pumpkin pie and Cuban coffee. It was cooked in the prison kitchen and cost under $40.

He also met with a prison chaplain and retired Catholic bishop John Snyder, said Department of Corrections spokeswoman Ann Howard.

“After visiting with family and friends, it’s best to describe him as calm,” Howard said.

Pardo and a cohort killed nine people in 1986, mostly ripping off drug dealers. Pardo also killed two women who had crossed him, and another woman who happened to be with a drug dealer he targeted.

At a 1988 trial in Miami-Dade, he admitted to the murders, saying he was ridding the streets of the “scum of the earth.”

“I’m not a criminal. I’m a soldier. As a soldier, I ask to be given the death penalty. I accomplished my mission,” he told jurors then, asking for a “glorious ending.”

A lawyer for Pardo — a former Florida highway patrolman, Boy Scout leader and decorated Navy veteran — argued he was insane at the time of the crimes. A jury rejected the claims and he was sentenced to death for all nine murders.

Over the next two decades, Pardo’s lawyers have insisted that he had been incompetent to stand trial because of a thyroid disorder that ravaged his mind.

Pardo’s lawyers also claim they had been denied all the public records on the state’s method of lethal injection, which they say is “cruel and unusual” punishment. After Gov. Rick Scott signed the death warrant in October, a Miami-Dade judge denied the appeals. The Florida Supreme Court upheld the judge’s decision.

In Monday’s order, U.S. Judge Timothy Corrigan said the claims were filed too late and that the state’s method of execution, which includes the injection of three drugs, has already been examined by the Florida Supreme Court and a federal appeals court.

Also on Tuesday, the Archdiocese of Miami planned a 6 p.m. vigil for Pardo at St. Mary Cathedral, 7525 NW 2nd Ave. The church opposes the death penalty.

In a press release acknowledging the severity of Pardo’s crimes, Archbishop Thomas Wenski said: “Recourse to the death penalty is both cruel and unnecessary. Modern society has the means of protecting itself. We do not make the case that killing is wrong by killing.”

For updates throughout the day, follow David Ovalle on Twitter at @davidovalle305.





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Jamie Foxx Dishes on Leonardo DiCaprio

It's an ET exclusive!

On Wednesday Oscar-winner and Django Unchained star Jamie Foxx sits down with Nancy O'Dell to talk about his new film and open up about his interesting on-set relationship with co-star Leonardo DiCaprio.

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Also tomorrow, Anne Hathaway's style evolution and an update on Kate Middleton's health. Plus, we unveil a mystery Hollywood bride ready to walk down the aisle.

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OWS partiers cop plea deals for destructive bash








Four Occupy Wall Street protesters collared for breaking into a vacant Williamsburg building and throwing a destructive party copped plea deals in Brooklyn Supreme Court today that land them 105 hours of community service and $500 in restitution.

The four radicals could have faced seven years in prison for their role in the illegal bash, which injured three responding police officers.

Zachary Dempster, 32, Robert Nilon, 26, Emma Engle, 21, and Matthew Whitely, 25, had been charged with riot, assault, and resisting arrest but so long as they stay out of trouble for six months, all felony charges will be dropped.




“I hope that they continue what some call ‘the good fight,’ but in a less violent manner,” said Assistant District Attorney Lewis Lieberman.

The suspects' lawyer, Martin Stolar, said of the deal, “It represents a compromise. The DA and the police did not want to take the risk of the defendants getting acquitted, and the defendants didn’t want to take the risk of getting a felony."

Nilon, who was accompanied to court by a pretty gal pal and also has a pending assault charge in Pennsylvania, said, “I’m glad to have this over.''










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Brisker growth ahead in Latin America, Caribbean




















Despite global economic uncertainties, Latin American and Caribbean economies are expected to show an uptick in 2013, according to a report released Tuesday by the United Nations’ Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean.

Next year, regional economies will grow by an estimated 3.8 percent, compared to 3.1 percent — the figure projected for 2012, said Alicia Bárcena, executive secretary of ECLAC, which is based in Santiago, Chile.

Despite the more positive outlook, the report said the region’s economic performance will still depend on possible recession in Europe, the strength of economic growth in China, the impact of modest growth in the United States and other world economic trends.





Among the Latin American countries projected to have growth rates of four percent or higher are: Brazil (4 percent), Bolivia (5 percent), Chile (4.8 percent), Colombia (4.5 percent), Nicaragua (4.5 percent), Panama (7.5 percent), Paraguay (8.5 percent), Peru (6 percent), and Uruguay (4 percent).

“[Next year] may not be the great year that we all want but it will be a good year for Colombia,’’ said Alvaro Moreno, a researcher at Colombia’s Private Competiveness Council. Revaluing the Colombian peso has proved difficult, he said, and trade in Colombia’s non-traditional exports also has been declining but oil and mining exports will contribute to growth.

Buoyant consumption levels in a number of regional economies as well as commodity prices that aren’t expected to fall significantly despite global uncertainly are contributing to regional growth.

But Bárcena warned: “The challenge for Latin America and the Caribbean is to increase and stabilize investment growth, and not to depend exclusively on consumption as a means to drive structural change with equality, to incorporate technical progress and deliver sustainable growth.’’

Among other large economies in Latin America, Mexico is expected to grow by 3.5 percent; Argentina, 3.9 percent, and Venezuela, 2 percent. The Cuban economy, with growth forecast at 3.5 percent in 2013, is expected to do slightly better than it did in 2012.

Combined Argentina and Brazil — South Florida’s most important trading partner — account for about 41.5 percent of regional gross domestic product.

While the Argentine economy is expected to improve on a 2012 growth rate of 2.2 percent, some analysts aren’t very bullish on its prospects. “Argentina has been gradually isolating itself over a number of years,’’ said Jonathan Heath, chief economist at Health & Associates in Mexico City.

“Argentina has been faking its inflation rate for a number of years and everyone knows that,’’ he said during a recent conference in Miami on Latin America’s 2013 economic forecast.

Tiny, land-locked Paraguay is expected to have the strongest economic growth in South America at 8.5 percent in 2013 but it is coming off a 1.8 percent contraction in 2012.

The news is not as encouraging in the Caribbean where growth is expected to average 2 percent next year but that is still better than this year’s projected growth rate of 1.1 percent.

The economies of many Caribbean nations remain fragile and the GDP of Jamaica is expected to grow a mere .1 percent in 2013. Sluggish growth also is expected in Barbados (1 percent), Dominica (1.7 percent), Grenada (1.2 percent), St. Kitts and Nevis (1.8 percent), St. Vincent and the Grenadines (1.5 percent), St. Lucia (1.9 percent) and Trinidad and Tobago (2.5 percent).

Haiti with 6 percent growth is forecast to have the most vibrant growth in the Caribbean but it is coming off a devastating earthquake in 2010 when its economy shrank by 5.4 percent. Guyana (4.9 percent) and Suriname (4.7 percent) are the only Caribbean countries whose economic growth rates are expected to top 4 percent next year.





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Third person dies from injuries in bus crash at Miami International Airport




















The bus that rammed into an overpass at Miami International Airport has claimed a third life.

The crash happened a few minutes before 7:30 a.m. on Dec. 1. The bus carried members of a Jehovah’s Witness congregation on their way to the annual general assembly meeting in West Palm Beach.

The driver, Ramon Ferreiro, 47, took a wrong turn on Le Jeune Road. He sped past multiple signs warning of the low clearance at the airport’s arrival concourse, smashing the 11-foot-tall bus into an overpass.





After the crash, one person died at the scene. A second person died the same day after being taken to Jackson Memorial Hospital.

On Monday, a Jackson spokeswoman announced that another person, who had been in critical condition since the crash, had died. Miami-Dade police identified her as Gliceria Emerida Garcia, 75, of Miami-Dade County.

Jackson spokeswoman Lidia Amoretti said two people remained in the hospital from the crash. Both were listed in good condition. The other nine people admitted to Jackson after the crash have been released, she said.





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Behind the New Modern Seinfeld Twitter Account, Which Is Not About Nothing






Seinfeld has never left our pop culture lexicon. Just recently we’ve seen it referenced in the presidential race and in Game of Thrones parodies. But what would the seminal “show about nothing” be like if its characters could use cell phones or Facebook? The @SeinfeldToday Twitter account, which popped up Sunday evening, ventures to propose of-the-moment plots for a modern Seinfeld. For example:  



Kramer is under investigation for heavy torrenting. Jerry’s new girlfriend writes an extremely graphic blog. George discovers Banh Mi.






— Modern Seinfeld (@SeinfeldToday) December 10, 2012


The man behind the account, BuzzFeed’s sports editor Jack Moore, started tweeting out scenarios with his friend, comedian Josh Gondelman, and then decided that the joke merited its own account. Moore is a Seinfeld fanatic himself: “I’m pretty much constantly watching episodes in the background while I’m doing anything,” he told us in an email. “I have a thumb drive with the whole series on it that I keep in my bag pretty much all the time.” 


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So far, the modern-day episode summaries ring true, despite warnings from Gawker last year that classic episodes wouldn’t have worked if the characters just had the use of newfangled technology. “It would be different but not as different as everyone acts like,” Moore wrote to us. “People always say that ‘if they had cell phones Seinfeld couldn’t exist,’ which is true for a certain type of Seinfeld episode, but not as a general rule (which I think the account shows).” 


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The account makes it obvious that Internet apps and 2012 trends would create the same awkward situations that Seinfeld thrived on. For example: 



Kramer uses grinder to meet new friends, doesn’t know it’s a gay hook-up app. Jerry refuses to admit he cried on @wtfpod.


— Modern Seinfeld (@SeinfeldToday) December 10, 2012



Elaine has a bad waiter at a nice restaurant, her negative Yelp review goes viral, she gets banned. Kramer accidentally joins the Tea Party.


— Modern Seinfeld (@SeinfeldToday) December 10, 2012



George thinks his GF is faking a gluten-intolerance, feeds her real cookies, sending her to the ER. Autocorrect ruins Jerry’s relationship.


— Modern Seinfeld (@SeinfeldToday) December 10, 2012


We kind of really want to see some of these made, actually. Reunion special? 


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