Below is the review on the Aint It Cool News website
(www.aintitcool.com)

Quick Music Review: 
"Okay, all of the Hobbit's songs are wonderful. They
give a happiness and joy to their lives that are
completely in character. Everything else just seems
tacked on, however. The Elves' songs sound far too
Scandanavian rather than otherworldly, and any other
songs are just embarassing, save for Rebecca Jackson
Mendoza as Galadriel. The lyrics to her song
"Lothlorien" are cringeworthy, but she sells it like
it was the greatest song ever written."

Full Review (Points for Gollum again):
Hey Harry, 433 from Minneapolis here in Toronto,
Ontario with a review of the $28 Million stage
production of "The Lord of the Rings".

Note I didn't say "Lord of the Rings: The Musical" as
it's been called through its preproduction and
advertising. The producers are trying to shy away from
the "musical" label, and I can see why -- when I first
heard about this, my immediate thought was the 1966
production of "It's a Bird, It's a Plane, It's
Superman", a transparent attempt for Broadway to jump
on the "superheroes as camp" bandwagon given the
success of the BATMAN television series. I thought
that it would be some small off-Broadway-type
production, cutely cringeworthy.

This past December at Butt-Numb-a-Thon, my lovely
ex-girlfriend Hippolyta invited my girlfriend and I to
Toronto in March for the premiere. She had procured
good seats due to her membership in Toronto's Downtown
Business Alliance or something along those lines. We
had been itching to visit for a while now, and this
gave us the final push to lay down a firm date for our
vacation.

The Toronto daily papers have been giving "The Lord of
the Rings" mediocre to poor reviews, my favorite being
headlined "Middling Earth". We went in expecting very
little, and it was somewhat enjoyable.

Michael Therriault has been getting the lion's share
of praise in the press for his portrayal of Gollum,
and indeed got by far the loudest applause and cheers
in the curtain call. However, his performance seemed
to be channeling both Andy Serkis and Vyvyan from THE
YOUNG ONES. I half-expected him to walk around with a
cricket bat yelling "Bored bored bored bored..." His
movements were overemphasised, even for a 2000-seat
theater, as if trying to remind the audience that he
was still there during portions when he was onstage
but not speaking.

Brent Carver plays Gandalf in the manner of the old
Jon Lovitz "Master Thespian" SNL sketches, with pauses
for no particular reason, falling in and out of his
accent, and generally chewing the (albeit impressive)
scenery. Easily the poorest performance of the
evening, yet he is the last to come out and bow at the
end, apparently because he at one point won a Tony
Award for "Kiss of the Spider Woman". It has become a
running joke amongst Toronto theater afficianados that
Carver "acts like he's trying to get fired, yet
strangely never does."

The hobbits are all great, especially Owen Sharpe and
Dylan Roberts as Pippin and Merry, respectively. They
master their roles of both comic relief and wide-eyed
wonder at the world outside Hobbiton.

The real star of the show, though, is the stage. Not
only the much talked about 40-foot segmented rotating
and segmented rising main stage, but also the tree
branches that cover the proscenium and winds its way
up to the boxes. Clever lighting gives it the ability
to the theater through all four seasons, as well as
the Dead Marshes and Mordor. The gigantic Shelob
puppet drew an amazed gasp from the audience, and
really freaked out a woman to my left. Even seeing the
puppeteers doesn't detract from just how well-done it
is. The Balrog scene at the end of Act One used a
mediocre puppet, but the total immersive environment,
including light, sound, fog jets, warm fans, and black
strips of tissue paper (looking like ash) being blown
right at you turned it into something quite
impressive.

The battle scenes used the segmented stage quite
imaginatively to create steps, towers, and ramparts,
and the majority of stage combat was okay. However,
the interpretive dance by the human soldiers during
the battle at the White City and/or Pellenor Fields
(they combine the two, also getting rid of Faramir,
Denethor, and the Black Gates) was awful. Audience
members were laughing, and afterwards made several
"Sharks vs. Jets" comparisons. Also, the dead warriors
that Aragorn makes such a big production about going
to get at the end of Act Two show up during his final
speech before the battle, but then are never seen
again.

Having such an amazing climax at Act One really makes
the fact that the final scene with Frodo, Sam, and
Gollum at Mount Doom lasted less than a minute just
awful. They seem to forget all the amazing things they
could do with lights and make it look like Gollum and
the ring just slowly fall down a hole screaming. It
would be completely confusing to someone with no
knowledge of the books or movies, and there seemed to
be quite a bit of those folks at the theater.

There was a short Scouring of the Shire epilogue, with
Bill Ferny standing in for Wormtongue for reasons I
cannot fathom.

Now, I've gone this long without mentioning the music.
Well. Hm.

Okay, all of the Hobbit's songs are wonderful. They
give a happiness and joy to their lives that are
completely in character. Everything else just seems
tacked on, however. The Elves' songs sound far too
Scandanavian rather than otherworldly, and any other
songs are just embarassing, save for Rebecca Jackson
Mendoza as Galadriel. The lyrics to her song
"Lothlorien" are cringeworthy, but she sells it like
it was the greatest song ever written.

I know I sound really negative, but we still had a
good time. It's almost worth seeing for the sets
alone. The Hobbits and some of the supporting cast
really seemed to be having a great time, but this is
by no means a great show. It's a great spectacle, and
I can recommend it only as such.

"The Lord of the Rings" is playing at the Princess of
Wales Theatre at 300 King Street West in downtown
Toronto, Ontario. Tickets and more information are
available HERE.



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