Lord Of The Rings - Two Towers (2002)
Genre Adventure; Fantasy; Action
Studio New Line Cinema
Movie Release Date 1/1/2002
Country USA
Language English
Audience Rating PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
Running Time 179 mins
Format DVD
Color Color
Cast
Elijah Wood Frodo Baggins
Ian McKellen Gandalf
Liv Tyler Arwen
Viggo Mortensen Aragorn
Sean Astin Samwise Gamgee
Cate Blanchett Galadriel
Bernard Hill Théoden
Christopher Lee Saruman
Billy Boyd Pippin
Dominic Monaghan Merry
John Rhys-Davies Gimli / Voice of Treebeard
Brad Dourif Grima Wormtongue
Sean Bean Boromir
Orlando Bloom Legolas Greenleaf
Hugo Weaving Elrond
Crew
Director Peter Jackson
Writer Peter Jackson
Writer J.R.R. Tolkien
Producer Peter Jackson
Producer Fran Walsh
Musician Howard Shore
Cinematography Andrew Lesnie
Plot
The extended edition of The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring was perhaps the most comprehensive DVD release to date, and its follow-up proves a similarly colossal achievement, with significant extra footage and a multitude of worthwhile bonus features. The extended version of The Two Towers adds 43 minutes to the theatrical version's 179-minute running time, and there are valuable additions to the film. Two new scenes might appease those who feel that the characterization of Faramir was the film's most egregious departure from the book, and fans will appreciate an appearance of the Huorns at Helm's Deep plus a nod to the absence of Tom Bombadil. Seeing a little more interplay between the gorgeous Eowyn and Aragorn is welcome, as is a grim introduction to Eomer and Theoden's son. And among the many other additions, there's an extended epilogue that might not have worked in the theater, but is more effective here in setting up The Return of the King. While the 30 minutes added to The Fellowship of the Ring felt just right in enriching the film, the extra footage in The Two Towers at times seems a bit extraneous--we see moments that in the theatrical version we had been told about, and some fleshed-out conversations and incidents are rather minor. But director Peter Jackson's vision of J.R.R. Tolkien's world is so marvelous that it's hard to complain about any extra time we can spend there.

While it may seem that there would be nothing left to say after the bevy of features on the extended Fellowship, the four commentary tracks and two discs of supplements on The Two Towers remain informative, fascinating, and funny, far surpassing the recycled materials on the two-disc theatrical version. Highlights of the 6.5 hours' worth of documentaries offer insight on the stunts, the design work, the locations, and the creation of Gollum, and--most intriguing for rabid fans--the film's writers (including Jackson) discuss why they created events that weren't in the book. Providing variety are animatics, rough footage, countless sketches, and a sound-mixing demonstration. Again, the most interesting commentary tracks are by Jackson and writers Fran Walsh and Philippa Boyens and by 16 members of the cast (eight of whom didn't appear in the first film, and even including John Noble, whose Denethor character only appears in this extended cut). The first two installments of Peter Jackson's trilogy have established themselves as the best fantasy films of all time, and among the best film trilogies of all time, and their extended-edition DVD sets have set a new standard for expanding on the already-epic films and providing comprehensive bonus features. --David Horiuchi

Features
Disc 1: Widescreen Box set Dolby DTS Surround Sound Color
Personal Details
My Rating 0
Seen It Yes
Index 167
Collection Status In Collection
Purchase Price $24.98
Location Shelf 3
Links Amazon US
All Movie Guide
Amazon US
Amazon.co.uk
Amazon.de
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Amazon.ca
Movie Collector Connect
IMDB
Edition Details
Distributor New Line Home Video
Edition Platinum Series Special Extended Edition
Barcode 794043650420
Region Region 1
Release Date 11/18/2003
Packaging Custom Case
Screen Ratio 2.35:1
Subtitles English; Spanish
Audio Tracks English Dolby Digital 2.0 Surround
Layers Single Side, Single Layer
No. of Disks/Tapes 4