Sony Concord FAIL!
Tale
A sudden attack by Wulf, a cunning and treacherous lord of Rohan, seeking revenge for his father’s death, forces Helm Hammerhand, King of Rohan, and his people to make a brave last stand at the ancient fortress of Hornburg. The film is narrated by Miranda Otto as Éowyn, reprising her role from Sir Peter Jackson’s The Lord of the Rings; series.. After an encounter with the orcs, an animation of wavy hair appears behind Helm’s ear. The Warner Brothers Animation logo briefly appears with Japanese kanji to pay homage to the anime style of the film. . Appears in YellowFlash 2: FlashCast: Ape Man Wukong SALT!
Sola Entertainment and Warner Bros
Star Wars The Acolyte Cancellation CHAOS! (2024). What can you do when you have The Lord of the Rings, have an anime crossover, and explore a new era in its universe? This new Lord of the Rings film is still an adventure film in some ways: it’s exciting, colorful, tense, and engaging. Animation offer a colorful, adventurous design and presentation with some well-crafted character designs and fight sequences. Many of the sound design and action sequences are bright and tense, by LOTR’s exciting standards, still selling what the world is like.
The world that J
R. R. Tolkien created is large and ambitious, there are many approaches and styles that can be explored to see many different aspects of their world and setting. Instead of creating the beautiful and classic story and world that Peter Jackson created, The Lord of the Rings 39 is coming. War of the Rohirrim is the definition of a beautiful mess, a mess that still impresses me and fails to impress me at the same time. It suffers from what modern anime cinema and Hollywood suffer from.
Things could have been approached quite well with the concepts and world
Made with static color animation, ambitious concepts, and great action sequences, but coupled with clichédly bad aspects of character development and engagement, uneven writing, and phoning in tedious anime tropes that are dry. It lacks what made Jackson’s LOTR great, because unlike Jackson’s approach, many of the characters are uninteresting and you don’t connect with or remember them on an emotional level. It’s almost like it’s repeating some of the worst aspects of the Hobbit trilogy. It’s a shame, because the beautiful character designs and backgrounds are stunning, despite some use of weak CGI. The voice acting is pretty good, along with the musical score and suspenseful moments. But for a LOTR story, it really doesn’t feel like a LOTR story.
And yet it did
You can call it anything else and I would believe it’s something new and different from LOTR. But let me say this, no one asked for anime and LOTR to become a thing. I applaud the studio and filmmakers for actually doing it.