john rhys-davies | The Film Magazine https://www.thefilmagazine.com A Place for Cinema Sun, 17 Dec 2023 02:36:53 +0000 en-GB hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.2 https://www.thefilmagazine.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/cropped-TFM-LOGO-32x32.png john rhys-davies | The Film Magazine https://www.thefilmagazine.com 32 32 85523816 10 Best The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King Moments https://www.thefilmagazine.com/10-best-lord-of-the-rings-return-of-the-king-moments/ https://www.thefilmagazine.com/10-best-lord-of-the-rings-return-of-the-king-moments/#respond Sun, 17 Dec 2023 02:36:51 +0000 https://www.thefilmagazine.com/?p=41347 The most impactful, memorable and iconic moments from Peter Jackson's trilogy concluding 'The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King'. List by Martha Lane.

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The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003) is the final instalment in the hugely successful Lord of the Rings trilogy. It is the most critically acclaimed of the three films (earning a joint all-time record 11 Academy Awards) and the biggest box office success of the franchise.

Sauron shows no signs of stopping even as Isengard crumbles. His eyes are on Minis Tirith, the last beacon of hope for Gondor. While Merry and Pippin are reunited with the Fellowship (though not for too long), Frodo and Sam are now right under Sauron’s eye, behind the gates of Mordor. There’s treachery afoot, battles to win, fathers to impress, and cities to conquer. And a king to return.

Will Middle Earth succumb to evil? Will Sam ever see the Shire again? Will Pippin be a fool until he dies?

Will Frodo destroy the ring?

In this Movie List from The Film Magazine, we are counting down the most impactful, hilarious and memorable moments from the gripping conclusion of Peter Jackson’s fantasy saga, for this: the 10 Best The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King Moments.

Follow @thefilmagazine on X (Twitter).


10. Mount Doom Erupts

Inside the volcano things aren’t moving fast enough. The ring isn’t melting. Just as it looks like our King will be defeated, Sauron’s tower falls and the eye implodes. The ground surrounding the heroes disintegrates, taking the orcs and trolls with it.

It’s over. They’ve won.

Or have they?

In the seconds after everyone’s elation, Mount Doom explodes. Everyone looks crestfallen as Sam and Frodo are still up there. This device has been used before with Gandalf and the Balrog, Aragorn and the warg. For a second, this feels different. There is a moment when we truly believe that Sam and Frodo made the ultimate sacrifice.

Recommended for you: 10 Best Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers Moments


9. Merry and Pippin Lead the Charge

Vastly outnumbered, Aragorn and his followers head to the black gate to draw Sauron’s eye while Sam and Frodo make the final leg of their journey into Mount Doom. Aragorn’s “not this day” speech is stirring and emotional. This is it. It’s now or never.

“For Frodo!” Is the battle cry.

And, in an army of a thousand experienced soldiers, it is Merry and Pippin who run first. They’ve come so far from the firework stealing miscreants of the first film. They are warriors as brave as any man or elf.

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10 Best The Lord of The Rings: The Two Towers Moments https://www.thefilmagazine.com/10-best-the-lord-of-the-rings-the-two-towers-moments/ https://www.thefilmagazine.com/10-best-the-lord-of-the-rings-the-two-towers-moments/#respond Sun, 17 Dec 2023 02:27:12 +0000 https://www.thefilmagazine.com/?p=41344 The most spectacular, meaningful and memorable moments from Peter Jackson's 'The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers', the trilogy's middle entry. List by Martha Lane.

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The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (2002) is the second instalment in Peter Jackson’s adaptation of J.R.R. Tolkien’s epic fantasy. Frodo and Sam have separated from the Fellowship. Unbeknownst to them, their friends Merry and Pippin have been kidnapped, Boromir is dead and orcs are swarming.

Middle parts of trilogies are often the worst. They have to do so much bridging and they don’t get the satisfaction of story arc conclusions as they are too busy setting up what comes next instead.

The Two Towers does not fall prey to this. It is as exciting as the first film, while having the luxury of our investment. Everyone cares very deeply about what happens to what remains of the Fellowship. A host of new characters are introduced as the battle for Middle Earth continues, the most significant being the people of Rohan. And an extra woman, Éowyn (Miranda Otto), to boot.

The Two Towers is filled with lengthy battles, death and despair, and yet it still manages to be warm-hearted, full of humour and hopeful.

In this Movie List from The Film Magazine, we are counting down the most impactful, hilarious and memorable moments from Peter Jackson’s timeless epic, for this: the 10 Best The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers Moments.

Follow @thefilmagazine on X (Twitter).


10. The Nazgûl

The Wraiths were scary enough in The Fellowship of the Ring, but in The Two Towers they’ve been promoted. Now referred to as Nazgûl, which feels more sinister, and on the backs of great dragons, these agents of Sauron really are a force to be reckoned with.

The screeching, sniffing presence of them over the Dead Marshes as Sam and Frodo cower is the taster, but as their giant wingspans cast a shadow over the city of Osgiliath they truly are a sight to behold.

Recommended for you: 10 Best The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring Moments


9. The Uruk-hais March

The Two Towers is a film with many battles, and obviously we are rooting for the good guys, but the final march of the Uruk-hais as they approach Helm’s Deep is nothing short of majestic.

Thousands upon thousands of them marching in time, lit by flickering torches, metal clanging and roaring like lions. They have no morals and no fear. The juxtaposition between them and the rag-tag army Aragorn has managed to gather does an excellent job of building tension.  

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10 Best The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring Moments https://www.thefilmagazine.com/10-best-lord-of-the-rings-the-fellowship-of-the-ring-moments/ https://www.thefilmagazine.com/10-best-lord-of-the-rings-the-fellowship-of-the-ring-moments/#respond Sun, 17 Dec 2023 02:17:57 +0000 https://www.thefilmagazine.com/?p=41336 The most impactful, hilarious and memorable moments from Peter Jackson's timeless epic 'The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring' (2001). List by Martha Lane.

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The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001) is the first instalment of the hugely successful Lord of the Rings trilogy, directed by Peter Jackson. The series was lauded for its score, cinematography, special effects, costume, and effective adaptation of the original material.

Middle Earth is under threat as Sauron, a great malevolent force, is gathering power. The lands of men, elves, wizards, and dwarfs have lived for hundreds of years believing the great evil had been vanquished. Wowzers, were they wrong.

It’s all down to the hobbits – long-living, hairy-footed, ale-swigging, home-comfort-loving people about the size of a human child – to fix it. Turns out Bilbo Baggins (Ian Holm) has been in procession of a very precious, very dangerous artifact since his exploits in “The Hobbit” 70 years prior.

The task to return the ring is placed in the tiny hands of his nephew, Frodo Baggins (Elijah Wood). It’s all fine though, because Gandalf (Ian McKellen) has arranged for a band of warriors, a fellowship if you will, to help him on this perilous journey.

The Fellowship of the Ring thrust director Peter Jackson and its cast members into the stratosphere of fame. While some depictions may be considered problematic by today’s standards, and Lord of the Rings certainly isn’t passing any Bechdel test, the classic struggle of good versus evil means it remains popular over twenty years later.

In this Movie List from The Film Magazine, we are counting down the most impactful, hilarious and memorable moments from Peter Jackson’s timeless epic, for this: the 10 Best Lord of The Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring Moments.

Follow @thefilmagazine on X (Twitter).


10. Gardening

The scene has been set, the Hobbits introduced, and Frodo (Elijah Wood) has begrudgingly accepted his mission. While Gandalf (Ian McKellen) is asserting the grave danger the young hobbit will face, he hears a crack outside. An eavesdropper? A spy from the very depths of Mordor? Or perhaps, just a gardener? Gandalf lunges with his staff, and pulls out of the perennials, Samwise Gamgee (Sean Austin).

This is a great introduction to Sam as it shows his cheek, tenacity, and loyalty.

Recommended for you: The Lord of the Rings & The Hobbit Movies Ranked


9. The Ringwraiths Attack

Tolkien built a very serious world with realms of peril and intense men conversing. Peter Jackson’s rendering of this world adds a much-needed dose of humour. The Fellowship of the Ring is not afraid to poke fun at itself a little bit.

The Ringwraiths are a terrifying sight (and sound). These are the creatures that all of Middle Earth is afraid of. The wraiths with their metal hands and black cloaks attacking pillows hidden beneath the bedspreads in the Prancing Pony is a scooby-doo-esque flash of comedy.

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Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny (2023) Review https://www.thefilmagazine.com/indiana-jones-dial-of-destiny-review/ https://www.thefilmagazine.com/indiana-jones-dial-of-destiny-review/#respond Wed, 28 Jun 2023 19:15:30 +0000 https://www.thefilmagazine.com/?p=38135 Some will say that Indiana Jones belongs in the past. That he's too old. That the ideas are overplayed. 'Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny' (2023) proves those people wrong. Review by Joseph Wade.

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Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny (2023)
Director: James Mangold
Screenwriters: Jez Butterworth, John-Henry Butterworth, David Koepp
Starring: Harrison Ford, Phoebe Waller-Bridge, Ethann Isidore, Antonio Banderas, Boyd Holbrook, Shaunette Renée Wilson, Mads Mikkelsen, John Rhys-Davies

What does an 80-year-old globe-trotting archaeologist with experience of the occult, religious phenomena, ancient aliens and fighting Nazis have left to fear? Time.

42 years have passed since Harrison Ford first donned the fedora and stepped onto our screens as Indiana Jones in Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981). If you were to go back 42 years from the release of that first adventure, you’d be in 1939, months away from the Nazis invading Poland and plunging the world into its 2nd World War. He may not move quite like he once did, but his eyes still glimmer the same. Harrison Ford is still Indiana Jones.

In 2023’s Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny, it’s 1969 and the United States is about to land a man on the moon – a mission Indiana describes as ‘a pointless endeavour to a world of nothingness’. He’s characteristically grumpy, upset by his personal circumstances, and frustrated by being pushed into retirement from his work as a college professor. His joints are a little sore and he needs a break from the noises of modern life. When a voice from his past arrives asking questions of an ancient dial said to predict when and where fissures in time will occur, he is forced into an adventure for one more artefact. One that, of course, belongs in a museum…

The dial is believed to offer the opportunity of time travel to the person who correctly navigates it, though Indiana Jones is quick to dismiss that as “magic, not science”, adding the caveat that he has seen things he can’t explain. “Sometimes,” he says, “it’s not about what you believe, but about how hard you believe it.”

It is no coincidence that the ultimate MacGuffin of the 2023 version of Indiana Jones is time itself. Forty-plus years on from his debut, and in the twilight of his life, time is the greatest fear of all. The possibility that he might be able to control it is enticing, and the fear that someone else could wield it is potentially world-shifting. The latter is even more monumental when those chasing it are Nazis. “Why is it always Nazis?”

The Nazis, the MacGuffin, the title itself… it’s all very Indiana Jones, all very nostalgic. In this respect, Dial of Destiny is very in-keeping with the recent Hollywood trend of maximising Intellectual Property (IP) by restoring interest in the legacies of their most famous characters. It’s a shrewd streaming-era business move that attempts to bring eyes to the original films on Disney Plus almost as much as it aims to make its own money. And yet, while Dial of Destiny can certainly be seen through this lens, the film offers more than the neglectful offerings available elsewhere, incorporating legacy into its narrative not to simply celebrate an IP a studio wants to freshen up, but to offer a timely and important commentary on the preservation of old film techniques, to warn against the dissolving of film preservation, and to pay homage to the classic cinema that paved the way. Yes, Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny is a film about films.

The movie opens with a sequence directly ripped from the 2nd half of Buster Keaton’s monumental silent-era action-comedy The General (1926), complete with train surfing, bad guys shooting at other bad guys by accident, and water pumps proving to be inescapable obstacles. Almost 100 years on, it remains as exciting and effective as it ever was. We are subsequently launched into a first act in which Jones is woefully underestimated, a sure comment on how the current era of studio filmmaking underestimates the masters. Dial of Destiny of course pays tribute to the films within its own franchise, and specifically the moments that made us fall in love with it, but it’s in Indiana’s supporting characters Helena (Phoebe Waller-Bridge) and Teddy (Ethann Isidore) that the message of the film is truly illuminated.

Helena and Teddy each undergo character arcs that transition them from heartless capitalists looking for a quick buck and a quick exit to loving people willing to risk it all for those who risked it for them, an early line from Waller-Bridge dismissing theft with the claim, “that’s capitalism”, being fantastically juxtaposed by a later act of kindness. In the face of time-pursuing Nazis, they develop into a poignant mirror to the Nazi villains led by Mads Mikkelsen’s Jürgen Voller, a group defined in this movie not by their racist ideologies but by their fierce dedication to exploiting the past for personal gain. They pursue the dial so they can change the past, their intention to restore Nazi dominance, just as the studios use their ownership of artefacts of cinema to revisit the past and create new avenues of revenue to re-establish their dominance with, or politicians revisit past colonialist ideologies and psychological techniques in an attempt to seize power and control over the populace – even if that might be of detriment to everyone, including themselves.

Indiana is, as a result, a beacon of hope. A hero we look to as a means to restore our faith that filmmaking can be more than exploitative nonsense. Just as Top Gun: Maverick reassured us in 2022 of how better action films can be made away from the CGI norm of the 21st century, and how the old masters still have important contributions to offer, Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny attempts to reassure us that good filmmaking ought not to suffer at the hands of exploitative business practices. It isn’t as well-made – its heavy reliance on computer generated imagery a better-than-expected 8 out of 10 but still not as whirlwind nor revolutionary as its 2022 brethren, and so much of the film is very dark (likely too dark for a family watching on Disney Plus to enjoy during the day time) – but if there was a hero to remind us of why we need movie stars and why we need movies, Indiana Jones is the one. A film franchise built on the back of paying homage to filmmakers from eras gone by, brought back to remind us of the power of the filmmaker even in a corporate world looking to constantly rinse every property of its last drop of quality and appeal. It feels right.

And why always Nazis? Homage to the rest of the franchise, sure. But also because they’re the ultimate representatives of strict and damaging ideological practices. And mostly, because we’re still fighting them in real life. This is 2023, and the far right is more prevalent than it has been for decades – they’re still here.

Phoebe Waller-Bridge’s Helena is perhaps the best of the new additions to the cast, her character being everything you’d want from a well-travelled, brave and intelligent archaeologist but without any of the objectification or perfectionisms of previous women heroes in male-dominated franchises. She is positioned within the narrative as a relative, a parent figure, a fish out of water, but never an object. She is cunning but she is also excitable. She is, simply, a well-written character, and a fulcrum around whom many of the film’s biggest character developments occur.

The writing team of Jez Butterworth, John-Henry Butterworth, David Koepp and director James Mangold must be commended for the depth of their allegories and the consistency of their message. And Mangold must, as the first director of an Indiana Jones movie that isn’t the legendary Steven Spielberg, be praised for ensuring so many of these allegorical elements, character arcs and titbits of excitement and interest remain present in his completed vision. There are moments where Mangold lets the action go for a little too long, and others where he abandons absolute realism in a way you couldn’t foresee early-era Spielberg doing, but this looks and feels every bit as much an Indiana Jones film as the others, while expertly navigating its new territory. The collective work of Mangold and the screenwriting trio isn’t perfect, and Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny isn’t a perfect film, but it is good. And it is Indiana Jones.

Reassuringly scored by the old master John Williams, and starring a suitably sparky Harrison Ford, Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny feels in many ways like a last hurrah for those who got so many of us into the magic of the movies. It pays homage to the history of American cinema, to the origins of the Indiana Jones franchise, to the very idea of cinema itself in the streaming age. And as Indiana Jones himself suffers from being too attached to the past, from being shunted to the edges of society and let go by the culture he lives within, we are poignantly shown just how much we need him, and how much we should cherish him.

There are some who will say that Indiana Jones belongs in the past. That he’s too old, that the ideas are overplayed. Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny proves that those people are wrong.

Score: 18/24

Recommended for you: Indiana Jones Movies Ranked

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