Lord of the Rings Trilogy: Extended Editions Announced for Blu-ray

Lord of the Rings Trilogy: Extended Editions Announced for Blu-ray

Warner Home Video will release all three of Peter Jackson’s visual masterpieces in their extended editions on June 28 as a stunning 15-disc Blu-ray collection, The Lord of the Rings Motion Picture Trilogy: Extended Edition (Blu-ray).

By EdGross - Mar 21, 2011 09:03 AM EST
Filed Under: Fantasy

One of the most magical, intensely spectacular epic adventures in motion picture history comes alive when these extended editions explode onto Blu-ray with unsurpassed high definition picture and sound. Sound + Vision Magazine ranked the 2010 release of the Trilogy as #5 in their Top 10 Blu-rays of the Year, noting that it was one of only two releases to earn five stars for sound and calling it “breathtaking.” Now fans can see and hear the extended trilogy at home the way it was meant to be seen, on Blu-ray Hi-Def. Based on the length of each extended edition feature film and in order to present each film in the highest possible picture quality, each film is presented on 2 Blu-ray Discs.

The Lord of the Rings franchise’s popularity continues unabated, with pre-sales response soaring. The official Facebook page (facebook.com/lordoftheringstrilogy) has reached more than 4 million friends and boasts an average 1M comments per post. The page includes updated insider information, Trivia Tuesdays, Caption This! posts, clips, trailers, sweepstakes, promotions photo galleries and more. Also featured, a new application that will allow fans to generate their very own ‘Elvish’ name, to be available soon.

This highly anticipated Extended Edition (Blu-ray) set will be released in English 6.1 DTS-HD MA audio and includes a new transfer of The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring which was remastered from the original 2k digital files. The set boasts more than 26 hours of additional content, highlighted by the rare behind-the-scenes documentaries created by Costa Botes, the filmmaker given unprecedented access to the set of each production by Peter Jackson. Costa Botes was able to capture raw and riveting behind-the-scenes film footage. His unique approach to storytelling – allowing the footage to speak for itself – results in an intimate and candid backstage pass to the challenges, preparations and camaraderie that went into shooting one of the greatest cinematic adventures of all time. The feature-length documentaries, with more than four and a half hours of footage, focus on a number of complexities and circumstances that tested the filmmakers, cast and crew during the shoot, as well as a look at some of the comical antics and personal moments on the set. The Costa Botes documentaries accompany acclaimed special features by Michael Pellerin from the original extended cut releases to make this the most comprehensive The Lord of the Rings compilation ever. (All three DVDs were honored with Saturn Award wins for Best DVD in their release years - 2002, 2003 & 2004, plus multiple trade awards).

The Oscar®-winning The Lord of the Rings trilogy, revered as one of the most thrilling epic adventures in motion picture history and one of the highest grossing adventure film franchises to ever be created, was born with the release of The Fellowship of the Ring™, followed by The Two Towers™ and The Return of the King™. Now they are offered on Blu-ray with more than 2 hours of extended scenes that were carefully selected under the supervision of director Peter Jackson.

Out of the 30 total Academy Award nominations received, The Lord of the Rings movies won a record 17 Academy Awards®, including Best Picture, Best Director, Best Adapted Screenplay and 8 others for the third film. Based on the best-selling novels by J.R.R. Tolkien, Jackson’s movie trilogy is an epic journey of men, hobbits, elves, dwarves and the rest of Middle-earth’s creatures and cultures. The films chronicle the struggle of good versus evil with fantastic special effects and a strong emotional center; capturing the enduring fellowship and ultimate sacrifice while enhancing the chaos and destruction of Middle-earth.

The Lord of the Rings Motion Picture Trilogy: Extended Edition (Blu-ray) will be packaged in multi-disc elite packaging inside a premium rigid slipcase and will retail for $119.98 SRP. Orders are due May 24, 2011.

Additionally, Warner Bros. Consumer Products has teamed up with top licensees Games Workshop Ltd., Tonner Doll Company, Inc., Sideshow Collectibles, NECA, The Noble Collection, WETA, Pez Candy, Funko, LLC, Bioworld Merchandising Inc. and WMS Gaming to create an array of merchandise support for The Lord of the Rings Trilogy, including apparel and accessories, novelties and collectibles, stationery and paper goods, toys and games.

The Lord of the Rings: War in the North is an intense Action RPG video game based on the renowned works of J.R.R. Tolkien and will launch in 2011 on the PlayStation®3 computer entertainment system, the Xbox 360® video game and entertainment system from Microsoft and Games for Windows® in 2011. Evolving the RPG genre through innovative online, interdependent co-op play for up to three players who form their own Fellowship, this game breaks new ground as the first The Lord of the Rings video game to embrace the gritty and brutal reality of J.R.R. Tolkien’s Middle-earth. Exploring previously unseen lands, storylines and characters as well as those familiar from past feature films, gamers experience expansive co-op gameplay and upgradeable weapons, character customization and development, skills and special abilities. Gamers must play together or perish as they work to defeat Sauron’s forces in the North. Learn more at www.warinthenorth.com

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BatLantern
BatLantern - 3/21/2011, 9:34 AM
@intruder indeed
comicbookjerk
comicbookjerk - 3/21/2011, 9:57 AM
Well I really Hope with the cababilitys bLu Ray has we don't have to Insert 2nd disk to wacth the other half of the movie, that really got on my nirves half way through each one I would have to Inert the 2nd part of the film
niknik
niknik - 3/21/2011, 10:01 AM
"Based on the length of each extended edition feature film and in order to present each film in the highest possible picture quality, each film is presented on 2 Blu-ray Discs."


Well then you will have to suffer through it there ArrionShadow. This is absolutely necessary to get the quality needed to make it worth while. Compressing 4 hours of video onto one Blu-Ray disc would have made the film look worse than a crappy VHS tape, particularly in the action sequences which have a lot of motion. Trust me. I am an electronics systems specialist and I "specialize" in digital video recording. 2 discs is a must. If I'm going to drop this type of coin on the definitive version I want the full 25Mbps bandwidth that Blu-Ray can offer.

Besides, most epic films of more than 3 hours have an intermission. Nothing wrong with that. After all, who wants to sit one their a$$ for 4 hours straight anyway? Get up off your a$$, go take a leak, make a sandwich, and grab another beverage. Chances are you will be needing a break by that point anyway. Small price to pay for full quality true HD.
Gmoney84
Gmoney84 - 3/21/2011, 10:06 AM
OH, SNAP! I'm all over this like white on rice!
DudeGuy
DudeGuy - 3/21/2011, 10:11 AM
seeing as how I dont feel like reading all of that can someone tell me if each movie will be on one disc and not on 2? If not oh well but it would really be great if they did that. It amazes me how they can fit over four hours of special features on one disc but cant fit the whole movie on one disc. Cant wait for this to come out. Glad I saved my money.
starwalker1977
starwalker1977 - 3/21/2011, 10:21 AM
Darkmatter...I like your style dude
robbo1701
robbo1701 - 3/21/2011, 10:25 AM
i like the film i really do but i have the extended edition on dvd im probs not gonna go out and buy these on blu ray, i'll be updating my Marvel/DC collection first to blu ray lol
IncredibleRulk
IncredibleRulk - 3/21/2011, 10:31 AM
I can taste the milk from here.
MarkCassidy
MarkCassidy - 3/21/2011, 10:52 AM
I love em, but won't be buying em straight away.
luv1138
luv1138 - 3/21/2011, 11:29 AM
BOOOO! LOTR SUCKS! HAHA!
GeekSexy
GeekSexy - 3/21/2011, 11:31 AM
15 Discs?! That breaks it for me. I have been looking forward to this release forever, but I'm tired of companies thinking more is more. When Blu-rays were first being hyped they mentioned how LOTR extended version could fit on ONE disc, but the studios never spring for the larger storage. If the actual films are each on one disc, I will probably still pick them up, but if they get split up forget it.

I am so sick of these 2 and 3 disc releases of regular movies on Blu-ray. That's the same amount of discs for DVD! Use the f@#%ing unique storage capability that Blu-ray should have and put it all on one disc. "Bambi" doesn't require 2 discs to hold all of it's features. There are some people who don't care if the picture or sound are in high-def for say, "The Gilmore Girls", but put the whole season on one disc and Blu-ray will probably win over the rest of those hold-outs that just won't let go of DVD.
captainbeta
captainbeta - 3/21/2011, 11:35 AM
sign me up!
marvel72
marvel72 - 3/21/2011, 11:43 AM
i'll definetly be buying them,no more getting out of the chair to swap the disc over just to watch the second half of the film.
niknik
niknik - 3/21/2011, 11:45 AM
@GeekSexy

Read my previous comment. Once again for the non-technical folks here: You cannot fit four hours of 1080P video on a Blu-Ray disc without compressing the data, resulting in a video of inferior quality. A dual layer Blu-Ray disc can hold around five times the data of DVD, but DVD's don't deal with high definition 1080P video. Even Blu-ray's higher storage capacity still only allows for just over two hours of 1080P high definition video on average when at it's lowest compression (highest quality) rate.

If you want a quality image, then you get off your butt and change discs halfway through the nearly four hour film. If you are too lazy to get off your a$$ once every two hours, then get the cheap dvd version and enjoy your crappy picture.

Since they state there are two discs per film, one could assume that of the fifteen discs, six of them are for the three features. That would leave the nine additional discs for all of the bonus material. That's a lot of bonus material!
GeekSexy
GeekSexy - 3/21/2011, 12:02 PM
Listen, niknik, it's not about "getting off of my butt", it's about being taken out of the moment. True movie lovers immerse themselves in a movie and having it cut off when you're really into it is not worth the extra quality. It's the storytelling, not a slightly prettier picture, that I'm trying to enjoy.

Plus, a higher capacity Blu-ray is possible. Blu-ray discs can store up to 25GB of data on a single layer disc or up to 50 GB on a dual layer disc. This translates into about 4.5 hours of high-definition video at full-resolution (1920 x 1080p) in high-quality (minimal compression) for a single layer disc or 9 hours for a dual layer disc.

Right now there is a 200GB capable disc, but it costs a little more. For what we're paying, we deserve the best possible options.
GeekSexy
GeekSexy - 3/21/2011, 12:09 PM
The general public has been convinced that more discs are needed to retain quality, but the truth is that companies don't believe that consumers would pay the same price for 1 disc as they would for 3. It's basic marketing.
GrayFox1025
GrayFox1025 - 3/21/2011, 12:24 PM
finally we get a date. cant wait
VeritasAequitas
VeritasAequitas - 3/21/2011, 1:11 PM
@GeekSexy

You are 100% correct about the quality to capacity ratios on the Blu-ray's. 25GB of data on a single layer disk and 50 GB on a dual layer disc. 4.5 hours of high-definition video at full-resolution (1920 x 1080p) for a single layer disc and about 9 hours for a dual layer disc. Yep these things are very true. Hopefully they put the movie on the 1st disk and all the extra stuff on the 2nd disk. But even with that, that only makes 6 disks. I'm not sure what they are going to do with the other 9 of the 15 disks they are going to release ?
HavocT
HavocT - 3/21/2011, 1:37 PM
I thought we have bluray to prevent this sort of crap, and get good quality.

I was pissed after watching the first movie in theaters... 2-3 hours without an end... that just made me lose complete interest. Looked like a bunch of people larping or some shit anyway.
Crazyhorrormovienerd
Crazyhorrormovienerd - 3/21/2011, 8:01 PM
Wasn't there already an article about this?
NotThatGuy
NotThatGuy - 3/22/2011, 4:04 AM
My preeesssiuss
niknik
niknik - 3/22/2011, 7:39 AM
"Plus, a higher capacity Blu-ray is possible. Blu-ray discs can store up to 25GB of data on a single layer disc or up to 50 GB on a dual layer disc. This translates into about 4.5 hours of high-definition video at full-resolution (1920 x 1080p) in high-quality (minimal compression) for a single layer disc or 9 hours for a dual layer disc."

Not true. You can fit 9 hours of "HD" video on a dual layer if your are only running at about 12Mbit/s using the Mpeg-4 AVC codec that is being used today. That is not the highest quality you can get from Blu-Ray. Not even close. A film recorded at that low bandwidth will have all kinds of digital artifacts in the image, especially during action scenes with a lot of motion.........and LOTR has a LOT of epic actions scenes with TONS of motion. It would look like total crap at that bit rate.

The term "HD" is a loose one and they play it that way......fast and loose. You can compress the hell out of it and they still call it "HD" but it looks like crap. Like putting lipstick on a pig.

Blu-Ray's maximum bandwidth/bit rate is 48Mbit/s for Video/Audio encoding. That's the highest bandwidth or lowest compression rate possible. In other words the highest quality possible. At that rate you can fit just over two hours of TRUE HD 1900 x 1080 24P framed video using the H.264 Mpeg-4AVC codec.

You need two discs if you want the highest quality video and audio. If this is the definitive collection, then it should be the highest quality possible, even if that means changing the disc after two hours.

Now they could fit a 4 hour film on one dual layer Blu-Ray disc if they compressed it at around a 25Mbit/s bit rate and it would look ok. I don't want ok. I want the best quality I can get when I shell out that kind of coin.
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