Of course this soft spot could also be due to the fact that despite its flaws this program still remains most faithful to the books and features a reasonably well-performed version of one of my favorite parts, that being the scenes with Tom Bombadil, which the 1981 BBC radiodrama, released three years or so after this version, omits entirely as does the 2001 film, much to the displeasure of many fans. Even now at 31 I still have a soft spot for this program, even after hearing the BBC's version. This could of course be because this was my first exposure to Middle-Earth and I was only ten or so at the time. I don't feel this program is the travesty many believe it to be. Minus some stars for overusing some actors but. I wish someone would produce an unabridged narrated version, read by a weighty voice - Ian McKellan or Ian Holm perhaps - or maybe even Viggo Mortesen (just the thought! I don't think I would use my ipod for anything else ever again!) If you can get it, the BBC dramatization is far and away superior to this, although even that has its issues. The music sounds like the worst kind of 70s TV show, the high elves are munchkins, and I am not even out of the shire! But here's the really sad part, as a die hard lover of Tolkien I couldn't resist buying it, and I will probably continue to listen to it, despite cringing at every other word. Those involved obviously had no understanding of Tolkien's world or vision whatsoever. What on middle earth were the makers thinking? This is the most dreadful dramatization of any book I have ever heard. I wish I had paid attention to the reviews on itunes, or the the sample I listened to, and had not wasted my credits on all 4 Tolkien dramatizations without listening to one first.
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