Movie Background

The Lord of the Rings

Young Hobbit Frodo Baggins is swept into a perilous and wondrous adventure when he is entrusted with destroying the One Ring, forged by the Dark Lord Sauron. Frodo sets forth with a compact fellowship of nine companions. Yet the journey proves to be no easy path for the Fellowship of the Ring, as they undertake the ultimate quest to cleanse Middle-earth of evil.

Director(s)

Ralph Bakshi

John Sparey

Where to watch

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Cast & Crew

Mic Rodgers

Mic Rodgers

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Philip Stone

Philip Stone

Theoden (voice)

John Hurt

John Hurt

Aragorn (voice)

Anthony Daniels

Anthony Daniels

Legolas (voice)

Alan Tilvern

Alan Tilvern

Innkeeper (voice)

Peter Woodthorpe

Peter Woodthorpe

Gollum (voice)

Norman Bird

Norman Bird

Bilbo (voice)

André Morell

André Morell

Elrond (voice)

Dominic Guard

Dominic Guard

Pippin (voice)

Jerry Maren

Jerry Maren

Character Actor (voice)

Chuck Hayward

Chuck Hayward

Character Actor (voice)

Christopher Guard

Christopher Guard

Frodo (voice)

Billy Barty

Billy Barty

Character Actor (voice)

Mel Smith

Mel Smith

Character Actor (voice)

Ralph Bakshi

Ralph Bakshi

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Peter Risch

Peter Risch

Character Actor (voice)

Fraser Kerr

Fraser Kerr

Saruman (voice)

Michael Graham Cox

Michael Graham Cox

Boromir (voice)

Annette Crosbie

Annette Crosbie

Galadriel (voice)

David Buck

David Buck

Gimli (voice)

Simon Chandler

Simon Chandler

Merry (voice)

John Sparey

John Sparey

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William Squire

William Squire

Gandalf (voice)

John Westbrook

John Westbrook

Treebeard (voice)

Michael Scholes

Michael Scholes

Sam (voice)

Michael Deacon

Michael Deacon

Wormtongue (voice)

Details

GenresAdventure, Animation, Fantasy
Runtime2h 12 mins
Released on15 Nov 1978
Languageen
Age RatingU
Produced InUnited Kingdom
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Reviews

RealZero

6/10

I actually liked this one more than I assumed from the few things I had seen about it before. Seeing it independent of the Jackson Lord of the Rings movies: First off, being adapted from the books, the story and characters are classic and quite nice. Of course, considering they put two of three LotR book into just about two hours, there's a lot of the story's content missing. But I think the movies does a quite good job, considering that limitation, to show the big, most important parts. The characters look, considering the age of the movie, quite nice, the voice actors do a good job, and several of the drawn backgrounds look really nice. The few calm scenes feel nice as well. The usage of rotoscoped live-action in between looks interesting, certainly an interesting stylistic choice, I personally am not a big fan of the mix of it, though. Especially in the few scenes where drawn and live-action characters are shown together it feels a little uncanny. It's not something that's really bad, though, I personally would just have preferred to stick to the drawn models. Some of the character's movement feels a bit "acted over the top", but even that is kinda entertaining. On the same hand it sadly doesn't offer any really moving or "epic" speeches or emotions, but still, the voice actors do a nice job. So, overall, I think it's not a bad adaption of the two books, again, under the limitation of only having two hours. - Now, of course, in comparison, the Jackson movies are more impressive in every way and I'd certainly go with them. But given time, money and age limitations, this one does a nice job. And it's certainly visible how Jackson was partially inspired by this, and comparing individual scenes, it's nice to see how similar some of them are handled. This movie shows its age, but it's certainly not a bad one. I would've liked to see the third book being adapted like this as well. Sam's still the best buddy!

All Trailers

The Lord of the Rings (animated 1978)
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