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The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey - Extended Edition (3D)
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Product description
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey is the first chapter in Peter Jackson's new epic trilogy set in Middle-Earth 60 years before J.R.R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings saga. Follow Bilbo Baggins as he's swept into a quest to reclaim the lost Dwarf Kingdom of Erebor, long ago conquered by the dragon Smaug. Approached by the wizard Gandalf the Grey, Bilbo finds himself joining a company of thirteen dwarves led by the legendary warrior Thorin Oakenshield. Their journey will take them through treacherous lands swarming with Trolls, Goblins, Orcs and deadly Wargs. They must escape the goblin tunnels, where Bilbo meets the creature Gollum who will change his life forever. Alone with Gollum on the shores of an underground lake, the unassuming Bilbo Baggins not only discovers guile and courage that surprise him, he also gains possession of Gollum's "precious" ring that holds unexpected and useful qualities, tied to the fate of all Middle-Earth. Several key talent members from The Lord of the Rings trilogy reprise their roles, along with exciting new cast members. The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey - Extended Edition includes extended version of film and nearly 9 hours of fascinating in-depth looks at the production.
Bonus Feature Details:
- The Filmmaker's Commentary - Director,writer and producer Peter Jackson and writer and co-producer Philippa Boyens provide their Perspective and stories on creating the first film of The Hobbit
- New Zealand: Home of Middle-Earth from Matamata to Queenstown, travel with Peter Jackson and his team across the stunning locations of New Zealand, transformed by the filmmakers into Middle-earth
- The Appendices Part 7 a Long-Expected Journey: The Chronicles of the Hobbit, a fourteen part chronological history of the filming of an unexpected journey, covering pre-production in the various departments of the film in the months leading up to the start of principal photography, the boot camp training for the main cast and the work done on set chronologically through the three shooting blocks and in the world of its digital effects
- The Journey Back to Middle-Earth
- Riddles in the Dark - Gollum's Cave
- An Unexpected Party - Bag End
- Roast Mutton - Trollshaws Forest
- Bastion of the Greenwood - Rhosgobel
- A Short Rest – Rivendell and London
- Over Hill – The Misty Mountains
- Under Hill - Goblin Town
- Out of the Frying Pan - The Forest Ledge
- Return to Hobbiton - The Shire
- The Epic of Scene 88 - Strath Taieri
- The Battle of Moria - Azanulbizar
- Edge of the Wilderland - Pick-ups and the Carrock
- Home is Behind, The World Ahead
Product details
- Rated : U (Universal)
- Language : English
- Package Dimensions : 17.2 x 13.4 x 2.4 cm; 200 Grams
- Director : Peter Jackson
- Media Format : Anamorphic, Dolby
- Run time : 3 hours and 2 minutes
- Release date : 21 November 2013
- Actors : Ian Mckellen, Martin Freeman, Richard Armitage, James Nesbitt, Ken Stott
- Dubbed: : English
- Subtitles: : English
- Studio : Sony DADC
- ASIN : B00EOJTFZE
- Number of discs : 5
- Manufacturer : Sony DADC
- Item Weight : 200 g
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,885 in Movies & TV Shows (See Top 100 in Movies & TV Shows)
- #600 in Drama
- #670 in Action & Adventure (Movies & TV Shows)
- Customer Reviews:
Customer reviews
Reviewed in India on 31 July 2017
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Quality of the movie is excellent, that include picture and audio. The box is great but is missing those special artword and booklets that were present in the Lord of the Rings EE boxset. Also, the print quality on the slipcover of the disc case is very poor. You can make out that a photo copy was taken and placed here. Very disappointed with Sony DADC about that. When we pay so much, we do expect quality even in the non-important things.
The boxset is similar to those released in the US, UK. A must-have for your bluray collection.
GOOD MOVIE.... GOOD PRINT..... LOADS OF AMAZING SPECIAL FEATURES.... Explaining how the movie was made..... All The Location it was shot.... The Entire Cast and Crew and Production team..... The Creativity and planning behind Making of the film.... It's loads of in dept knowledge which makes you want to respect the creativity, dedication and hard work of the entire team.If you get a good deal and discounts.... I Recommend this DVD SET 5 Dvds..... You won't be disappointed.....
PRESS ON THE LIKE BUTTON..... If you Appreciate my small piece of hard work and feedback I have given you and has helped you.
Reviewed in India 🇮🇳 on 31 July 2017
GOOD MOVIE.... GOOD PRINT..... LOADS OF AMAZING SPECIAL FEATURES.... Explaining how the movie was made..... All The Location it was shot.... The Entire Cast and Crew and Production team..... The Creativity and planning behind Making of the film.... It's loads of in dept knowledge which makes you want to respect the creativity, dedication and hard work of the entire team.If you get a good deal and discounts.... I Recommend this DVD SET 5 Dvds..... You won't be disappointed.....
PRESS ON THE LIKE BUTTON..... If you Appreciate my small piece of hard work and feedback I have given you and has helped you.
Thanks for this great product. I had a wonderful time in enjoying the movie on this DVD.
Blu Ray was perfect condition no scratch and all the 5 disc was included without damage but seem little old while looking outside but it was sealed so no issue.
bought ₹599 which is actually ₹1999 MRP rate.
Overall I'm happy with what I received.
Blu Ray was perfect condition no scratch and all the 5 disc was included without damage but seem little old while looking outside but it was sealed so no issue.
bought ₹599 which is actually ₹1999 MRP rate.
Overall I'm happy with what I received.
Top reviews from other countries
Now, the real question is what version you should buy of An Unexpected Journey. Unless you are a completion-ist that has to have every scene and every special feature for each entry (i.e. me) then this should be your choice. However, I have a reason I knocked a star off of this review. For nostalgic reasons, this edition did not feel like an extended edition such as the previous LOTR movie. For starters, the actual movie case doesn't have that old timey book feel like the original trilogy DVD versions. Here we get a character insert picture no matter what as if it was a typical bu-ray cover you find anywhere in a retail store. The extra minuets added to the film are barely noticeable with not real new emphasis to have you go "whoa! This is a brand new scene altogether! Or "holy crap! That's awesome they added that in!" One scene is either hit or miss depending on your humor level. I like anything that displays how dwarves feel about elves and I laughed regardless, but for some, yeah I can kind of see why it was pointless. As much as I liked the singing in the movie, I could have done without the Goblin king's. It sounded better on paper, but you can see why they decided to leave it out.
Overall, this is a nice package to buy if you do not have An Unexpected Journey yet. If you just need the first entry for movie narrative sake, you could honestly just skip on this and purchase the theatrical version. However, if you are a fan, then this should already be in your movie collection. The only thing that would have sweetened the deal, is if it came with a DVD copy.
Nerd moments for the rest of this review:
This movie was met with a mixed bag of disappointment or content. I can understand a few of the gripes like it takes too long to get things started, maybe parts not originally in the book were elaborated too much, that certain something is missing to what made reading the Hobbit so special. But you know what? The reason I liked this movie as much as I did was due that I knew what I was getting myself into. Even when I watched this in the theater, the DVD theatrical release, and the extended Blu-Ray version, I still find myself enjoying an Unexpected Journey quite a bit...almost more than Fellowship of the Ring. I was already used to Peter Jackson's adaptation of the Lord of the Rings. In fact, I'm glad he wanted to pick up the pieces and finish what Guillermo del Toro started. They did the same exact thing with the previous trilogy, so why not? And to be honest from a business side with WB, it was probably the smarter choice. Instead of 1 movie to tie it all together, why not push it into an epic trilogy format that has a strong beginning, darker middle, and the defining end to it all?.... Of course the irony of that statement comes crashing into a wall with the last segment of Desolation of Smaug... but let's not get there yet.
But what I cannot understand is how anybody would want to compare this movie to the much loathed Episode 1: The Phantom Menace for the Star Wars franchise. I'm sorry, but I think you are ignorant if you think so. Why? Because this movie can actually be watched without feeling embarrassed about piss poor dialogue, nonexistent acting, and terrible use of CGI. I promise you the parts with Radagast the brown are leagues beyond whatever the #$&% Lucas and company were trying to achieve with Jar Jar Binks. Even though there is a heavier use of CGI and green screen in this title than compared to the LOTR trilogy, it is still a fun and beautiful movie to watch. So much effort was put into this and this is just the first part of the Hobbit movie trilogy. Yes, it can feel bloated and it drags on, but at least it's interesting bloat and drag. Not, "oh my god, the magic is dead" reaction so many of us felt with each Star Wars prequel. Hey, imdb.com and rottentomatoes.com's ratings speak the truth. In my opinion, an Unexpected Journey will probably be the strongest out of the whole trilogy. It's not as strong as Fellowship of the Ring, as most will tell you. But if I have to return to the world of Middle Earth for a prequel, then I prefer it this way.
Adding to the burden of the brunt is the controversial decision to extend THE HOBBIT into a trilogy. That approach worked ideally well for Jackson's THE LORD OF THE RINGS, but because THE HOBBIT is a considerably shorter book (more like one third of the trilogy), it doesn't really merit the decision for three two-and-a-half hour movies. A more ideal approach would have been to film the book as a two-part series, not a trilogy. On a technical level there's nothing majorly wrong with Jackson's direction; the casting and performances are both excellent, the cinematography breathtaking as always, and the visual effects, for the most part, are as impressive as ever. The problem is that the movies are just too unnecessarily long.
In fact, it takes a whopping 45 minutes to get Bilbo Baggins (Martin Freeman) out of his cozy home in Hobbiton to go out on his fateful quest with the eponymous wizard Gandalf (Ian MacKellen), as well as a pack of dwarves led by a brooding fellow named Thorin Oakenshield (Richard Armitage). En route, we first see a lengthy, ten-minute prologue in which the old Bilbo (played with a wavering sincerity by Ian Holm) begins writing his book about his adventures, starting with the downfall of the Dwarven city of Erebor. The subsequent half hour is basically the first chapter, in which Bilbo's quiet humble life is turned upside down when the dwarves intrude into his household and take over his pantry in no time. The nature of this scene is also noticeably more lighthearted than even the prologue of the first RINGS film, THE FELLOWSHIP OF THE RING. In all fairness, the tone of Tolkien's HOBBIT is more of a children's story and what's on the screen is more or less true to the original, but it also requires a subjective approach. Fans familiar with the book will get the gist of it and more or less be fine, but for more antsy audience members, it does require patience to sit through this scene.
Extending scenes like this aren't the only aesthetic choices that Jackson chooses to approach when tackling the story to screen. Sometimes he ends up culling information from the footnotes of Tolkien's fantasy, even borrowing bits of THE SIMILARION for good measure. For instance, we meet the wizard Radagast, an eccentric fellow who cares for animals and goes around riding on a massive "rabbit" sleigh. There is also a shady backstory involving a conflict between Thorin against a nasty-looking orc named Azgog (a mostly computer-animated villain with a vicious grin and a prosthetic arm). Finally we get a surprisingly long scene at the Elven city of Rivendell in which Gandalf converses with his colleague, the ill-fated sorcerer Saruman (Christopher Lee) about the potential return of Sauron. This is obviously meant to tie THE HOBBIT into THE LORD OF THE RINGS trilogy, which is understandable because this is, after all, a prequel, but again, whether one is willing to sit through such slow scenes depends on the nature.
THE HOBBIT: AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY really comes to life during the bits when it actually sticks to the story. The sequence where Bilbo and company are captured by giant trolls does justice to the book. In the second half, we get a scarifying roller-coaster style confrontation with two stone giants (a scene which nailed me to my seat) to a visit to the infamous Goblin City, ruled by a bloated fellow called the Goblin King. But the film's real highlight is the "Riddles in the Dark" sequence, a cunningly choreographed, thrilling confrontation in which Bilbo must outsmart the twisted Gollum (again brought to life by the remarkable motion capture and hoarse voice of Andy Serkis).
Despite the occasional lull in the story, though, I honestly wasn't necessarily bored at all by any of this; I have quite enjoyed Tolkien's stories and I could spend hour after hour in the fantasy world that Jackson still manages to fully realize on the screen, thanks to the luscious sets and aforementioned cinematography. And unlike George Lucas, who obviously was no great "actor's director" when it came to his weaker STAR WARS prequel trilogy, Jackson hasn't lost his ability to extol performances from his cast. Freeman was practically born to play Bilbo, embuing the character's neurotic reluctance with a charm that easily makes even the slowest parts of the film tolerable to sit through. Armitage mostly portrays Thorin as a grumpy, dour fellow who doubts his new charge, but he does so with hints of a tortured personality. Sylvestor McCoy is also quite good as the eccentric Radagast, and the dwarves are all well cast and fitting for their roles. And of course, it's gratifying to see McKellan, Lee, Serkis, and even Cate Blanchett (as Galadriel) reprise their roles.
On a more controversial move, Jackson chose to shoot this HOBBIT trilogy in High Frame Rate mode, in which the speed of the frames is increased from 24fps to 48fps. It's a bold, daring move, and in many ways it works quite well for this movie; Middle Earth looks spectacular and rich in its depth with the 3D format, but other times it gives the feel of a super-polished real-life documentary on TV rather than a film. Having said that, though, the film plays well either way so aside from the frame rate length.
Is this HOBBIT trilogy on par with the original LORD OF THE RINGS? No. But it's still well-made and executed with a style that only Jackson can do. In short, whether you decide that THE HOBBIT: AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY is for you depends on how much you are willing to overlook the eccentric decision to extend what is essentially a shorter story and embark on another adventure. Having said that, though, I still quite enjoyed the movie and if nothing else, it left me eager for the next chapter.
First of all, the extended edition features excellent editing. You have to really be watching for the additional and extended scenes as they are perfectly edited into the film. There is no visual quality drop and the score is beautifully composed to make the work feel whole. The film looks amazing with great use of CGI, makeup, and costumes. I know many people were disappointed with the increased CGI when compared to the LOTR trilogy, but it does not take away from the experience for me.
The film itself is an impressive feat; however, unlike the original trilogy extended editions, this extended edition doesn’t make the film better. It does not make the film worse, it just does not add anything as monumental as “The Mouth of Sauron” was in The Return of the King extended edition. A little over half of the 13 additional minutes are of the dwarves and goblins singing and doing other silly acts for comic relief. This adds a lighter feel to the film that makes it feel more like the novel and less like The Lord of the Rings.
As for the film itself, it is phenomenal. The film stands up to the LOTR trilogy and is a worthy addition to the franchise. Casting was done brilliantly, with Martin Freeman as Bilbo and Richard Armitage as Thorin stealing the show. The action, while not as real as in the LOTR trilogy due to increased CGI, was exciting and plentiful. Howard Shore also continues his fine work in the franchise composing a wonderful score blending in new sounds along with bringing back some of the familiar themes from the original trilogy. The original source material from the novel is done justice along with added material present to help set up the LOTR trilogy. All of this combines into a satisfying package that makes me excited to see the remaining two chapters.
While I cannot say that this extended edition is the absolute best version of the film, it is not any worse than the others. This version adds onto an already fantastic work, and hardcore fans of the franchise would do themselves justice watching this version of the film.
Score: 9/10
Note: This Blu-ray also comes with two additional discs featuring Hours of behind the scenes content that I personally have not viewed yet. As most people will be purchasing this product for the actual film I did not deem it necessary to include the extra content in my review.
I did a review of the extended edition Fellowship of the Rings. It was fantastic and well worth the money as were the extended editions of the other two movies.
The extended edition for The Hobbit is not as fantastic. There are a couple scenes that really make you think, "Ohhhh! Now I get it!" but that's about it. In spite of the minimal changes, it is still worth the money in my opinion. The additional material is also good - not as good as the Lord of the Rings extended editions but still.
I have never read the books and he read them but a long time ago so we can not speak to any differences between the books and the movie.
If you are choosing between buying the extended edition and the original, definitely buy the extended edition.
If you are not a big fan and you already own the original version, you might not want to bother.
If you are a fan, even if you own the original version, you will probably appreciate the extended edition - it's a borderline call.
The packaging is a little different than the extended editions of the Lord of the Rings but it was designed to be part of that set and that shows. I don't care about that really but I understand collectors do.
Until now, we have not purchased Blu-rays but we happened to need another dvd player and the prices for the Blu-rays have dropped so much we decided to go ahead with the Blu-ray player. We had seen the Blu-ray movies in stores displayed next to the DVD version of the movies and the difference was amazing. Still, with neither of us being fanatical about picture quality and sound beyond the "quite good" point, it is still more expensive to buy the Blu-ray discs (although they are dropping in price). We came to the conclusion that it would be worth it to buy Blu-rays of movies that were particularly graphic intensive such as the Hobbit but for run of the mill movies we would stick with the cheaper dvds.
We were disappointed with the Hobbit on Blu-ray. We had watched the Hobbit before on pay-per-view and we could not see any real difference between the HD and the Blu-ray. In this case, the Blu-ray was actually a dollar or so cheaper so no big deal but don't expect to be stunned by the Blu-ray.
This came with a code for a free Ultraviolet copy. If you don't know what this is please do your research. Since we did not go out and buy brand new latest and greatest equipment just to watch this movie, the free Ultraviolet copy was useless. It would not play on anything except our new Blu-ray player and why would we need it for that? We have the Blu-ray disc. Personally, I see the Ultraviolet copy as utterly useless and NOT a selling point for anything at all.










