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Customer reviews

Rating 4.7 out of 5 stars with 2254 reviews

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The vast majority of our reviews come from verified purchases. Reviews from customers may include My Best Buy members, employees, and Tech Insider Network members (as tagged). Select reviewers may receive discounted products, promotional considerations or entries into drawings for honest, helpful reviews.
Page 1 Showing 1-20 of 2,254 reviews
  • Rated 5 out of 5 stars

    Excellent film, must see!

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    This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.

    Great actors and special effects. I thoroughly enjoyed this flic. Couldn't wait to pick up this Blu-ray Disc. I'll watch this many times.

    I would recommend this to a friend
  • Rated 5 out of 5 stars

    Great addition to the LOTR Trilogy

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    Posted .
    This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.

    Be aware that the Ultra Violet copy can not be redeemed on Itunes. That was my only bad experience with this purchase. Other than that, Good movie.

    I would recommend this to a friend
  • Rated 5 out of 5 stars

    An amazing movie!

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    This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.

    I saw this in the theater, but the extended bits make the movie even better. The bonus features are incredible as well!

    I would recommend this to a friend
  • Rated 4 out of 5 stars

    Have to get over that it is not the kid version

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    Posted . Owned for 3 weeks when reviewed.
    This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.

    Tolkien originally wrote the Hobbit for his grandkids then went big with Middle Earth. Once you get past that this is a much expanded storytelling of the age and not just the story from the Hobbit, it is quite a good watch. The oversized hobgoblin seems a bit of a stretch for my imagination. Not what I had in my head. But the dwarf song in Bag End is worth the whole movie. The extended version is the only way to go with all of the Tolkien films.

    I would recommend this to a friend
  • Rated 4 out of 5 stars

    Roads go ever, ever on…

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    This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.

    “All good stories deserve embellishment,” Gandalf The Grey (Ian McKellen) tells Bilbo (Martin Freeman) before the latter has even left the snug, leathery comfort of his Bag End armchair and embarked on his Unexpected Journey. There is no way this line, a pithy conclusion to a tall tale of Bilbo’s Tookish grandfather (beheads goblin, invents golf), could have been written unknowingly. The Hobbit is a good story. And embellishment, controversially for some, has been the order of Peter Jackson, Fran Walsh, Philippa Boyens and Guillermo Del Toro’s adaptation — both narratively (An Unexpected Journey is now a trilogy opener rather than part one of two) and visually; this sunnier, 60-years-younger Middle-earth was digitally shot at double the frame rate of the three earlier movies which concerned this mythic realm’s difficult autumn years. To begin with the first form of embellishment is to immediately address the concern that Jackson and co.’s Hobbit may be a painful inflation of a slim, bedtime storybook, as opposed to The Lord Of The Rings’ leaner interpretation of a vast fantasy-historical epic. Team Jackson looks outside the novel’s narrative (which, while quicker than Rings, is still rich in detail and packed with incident) to the Tolkienverse yonder, and unashamedly treats The Hobbit as a prequel in which the return of Sauron The Deceiver is foreshadowed ominously. Yet the cutaways to guano-faced nature-wizard Radagast The Brown (Sylvester McCoy) nursing hedgehogs, going boss-eyed and rabbit-sledging to creepy ruined forts do feel of limited relevance to the main quest. Beyond Gandalf expressing to a sceptical Saruman (Christopher Lee) his fear that dwarf economy-hoarding wyrm Smaug could come into play as a fiery WMD for “the enemy”, the threads concerning the White Council, the Necromancer and aforementioned fort Dol Guldur— all direct prequel material — have yet to be firmly twined with Bilbo’s relatively modest adventure. He may find the One Ring here, but for now its connection to Sauron is known only by us and Howard Shore’s string section. Even so, this particular trek to a mountain has been smartly remoulded — the final destination’s always a mountain, this one Lonely rather than Doomed. It is well-paced, bringing in chief antagonist Azog (Manu Bennett), the albino orc-lord barely in the book, who from the start is hunting the “dwarf scum”, soon giving the quest frantic chase movie impetus. Existing set-pieces have been thoughtfully redrafted, so don’t expect the encounter with the trolls (a cockney Three Stooges) to play out as it does in the novel. And new sequences have been added, such as a skirmish with warg-mounted orcs on Rivendell’s borders. The Goblin Town diversion comes replete with Jacksonian grace notes, featuring a neat swinging gantry gag that references King Kong — although he doesn’t let these set-pieces breathe as freely as those in either Rings or Kong. While it’s good to see Gandalf get stuck in like never before, this is no Moria. And despite the running time, there is still the occasional sense that Jackson is rushing, underpinned by the fact that, for all their elaborate individuality, the dwarves remain somewhat amorphous, with only Thorin (an impressive Richard Armitage), Balin (Ken Stott), Bofur (James Nesbitt) and Fili/Kili (Dean O’Gorman/Aidan Turner) given any special attention. Still, thanks to an Ian Holm-presented prologue, we’re in no doubt as to the significance of their mission. This isn’t just a treasure hunt: this is a desperate gambit to reclaim a homeland for a people who have suffered a generation of bitter diaspora. There is an appeal to the way Tolkien’s book begins small, seemingly trivial — Bilbo the reluctant burglar off on a perilous jaunt — then rises out into something so huge that five armies roll up to the ultimate fracas. But it is appropriate to Jackson’s cinematic rendition of Middle-earth that we should swiftly understand Thorin’s position (part Aragorn, part Boromir) in its weighty narrative history. This comes not only via the prologue, in which we witness the full glory of Erebor and its nuking by malevolent bat-lizard Smaug (of whom there are glimpses), but also an impressive flashback to Thorin’s hard-fought, albeit temporary, triumph over Azog on the slopes outside Moria. One question raised by the book is: why precisely did Bilbo, a homely fellow and appreciator of simple comforts, agree to head off into such danger? And why didn’t he bail when the going got extreme? These are ingeniously addressed, and in fact form the arc of An Unexpected Journey. The Hobbit Episode I is the story of how Bilbo commits to adventure, how he realises his motive. And Team Jackson’s answer is elegantly simple, a fine-brushed masterstroke of scripting: the creature who just wants to go back home discovers that what he’s doing here is helping these homeless dwarves reclaim theirs. It’s a concept sold flawlessly by Martin Freeman, perfect casting for the fusty halfling. There really is no other character like Bilbo in Tolkien’s chronicles, and he is arguably this saga’s strongest: a proper, decent, everyday sort of chap (if a little on the conservative side) whose resourcefulness is drawn from a deep well of inner strength. Not as beleaguered as Frodo, nor as acquiescent as Samwise, nor as comical as Merry and/or Pippin. “I’m not a hero or a warrior,” Bilbo asserts. He’s us. And Freeman encapsulates that throughout, without mugging or winking. His Bilbo does take his predicament seriously, and while this is the jauntiest — at times silliest, at times funniest, certainly the most child-friendly — Middle-earth movie yet, Freeman remains its emotional lodestone. The most powerful moment comes during the Riddles In The Dark incident, which briefly brings back Andy Serkis’ Gollum, the other arguably strongest character in the saga. It is a joy and a thrill to once more see mo-cap master Serkis owning the role, and to have the celebrated encounter brilliantly re-envisioned through the prism of the Sméagol/Gollum split personality. However, the true punch of poignancy comes at that most pivotal of moments: when Bilbo, invisibly standing over Gollum with sword at his throat, exercises mercy. Jackson holds on Freeman’s face. This isn’t just Tim-from-The Office or Watson in pointy ears, but an actor at the height of his prowess finding every layer to a character it now seems he was born to play. So what, finally, of that other embellishment, the history-making visual treatment? 48 frames per second is, as they say, something else. And you can take that both ways. On the one hand, the crispness of detail is almost overwhelming, whether you’re noticing the seam down the back of Gandalf’s hat, or repulsed by the scabby goitre dangling from the Great Goblin’s (Barry Humphries) hideously distended face. On the other, there’s something about the lack of grain and motion blur that oddly makes the movie feel less epic — it’s so immediate and intimate that the distance between seat and screen is all but removed. This may make you feel more thrillingly part of the action, or it may diminish the spectacle and unflatteringly highlight the film’s more set-bound nature. Something to bear in mind when deciding if you’re going to seek out the upgraded experience

    I would recommend this to a friend
  • Rated 5 out of 5 stars

    Hobbit movies

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    Posted . Owned for 8 months when reviewed.
    This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.

    Love all 3 Hobbit movies, extended version shows scenes not on the regular dvd’s. The Hobbit movies and Lord of the Rings movies are the best movies of all time!

    I would recommend this to a friend
  • Rated 5 out of 5 stars

    Amazing

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    This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.

    Talk about an amazing starting journey. It puts the beginning in everything g to come. Not going to spoil it, it’s a must watch for anyone who likes Lord of the rings.

    I would recommend this to a friend
  • Rated 5 out of 5 stars

    Everyone should own this

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    Posted . Owned for 1 week when reviewed.
    This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.

    Why are you reading reviews for this movie? It’s a great movie, great series, and there’s nothing extra or special it’s just the Blu-ray.

    I would recommend this to a friend
  • Rated 5 out of 5 stars

    Amazing!

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    Posted . Owned for 1 week when reviewed.
    This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.

    I loved Lord of the Rings. This movie was similar, but better in so many ways. I love that it didn't feel rushed like the LOTR series.

    I would recommend this to a friend
  • Rated 4 out of 5 stars

    Modern Classic

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    This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.

    Thoroughly enjoyed Peter Jackson's Rings Trilogy, couldn't wait for his take on The Hobbit. He didn't disappoint. Needed this to complete my collection of the Extended editions of the films. The extras alone are worth it!

    I would recommend this to a friend
  • Rated 5 out of 5 stars

    Perfect addition to the collection

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    This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.

    As this was one of my favorite stories growing up I was very excited when it was put to film and it does not disappoint!

    I would recommend this to a friend
  • Rated 5 out of 5 stars

    Complete collection

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    This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.

    Had the extended 3D set already but I have every release of the middle earth films and these were on sale so I had to

    I would recommend this to a friend
  • Rated 5 out of 5 stars

    Great picture and sound at a great price for true

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    This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.

    True fans will be very pleased with all the special features. Great value at Best Buy for instant gratification.

    I would recommend this to a friend
  • Rated 5 out of 5 stars

    Great movie

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    Posted . Owned for more than 2 years when reviewed.
    This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.

    Had to buy this movie. Saw in theaters. Awesome movie and the others made were amazing also

    I would recommend this to a friend
  • Rated 5 out of 5 stars

    awesome movie

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    Posted . Owned for 1 month when reviewed.
    This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.

    GREAT movie with astounding visuals, last movie of the hobbit trilogy. Looks great in Blu-ray

    I would recommend this to a friend
  • Rated 5 out of 5 stars

    Surprising better than LoTR for me

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    This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.

    I was surprised that I liked this movie so much having somewhat low expectations after watching LoTR. Yes, I know that a lot of people thought that LoTR was better, but I did not care for the Orcs in that movie and the over emphasis on evil and battles. I am actually not a great fan of dragons either, but one that talks made it a good villain for the dwarfs. The story and all of the characters are quite complicated and I found the overall plot, that is the need for the Dwarfs to retake their homeland back from the dragon to be interesting. I didn't realize that Gandolf had such a big role as well as the Elves. I liked how they all came to help the Dwarfs. Anyhow, The Hobbit is about a Hobbit who unexpectedly comes to help the Dwarfs get their homeland back on the urging of Gandolf. On blu-ray, the movie is a visual feast and on sale I couldn't resist. I think it also has a lot of replay value and so I look forward to watching it (and trying to understand all of its facets) again.

    I would recommend this to a friend
  • Rated 5 out of 5 stars

    great movie

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    Posted . Owned for 1 month when reviewed.
    This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.

    great movie , great actors , great story . came in great condition and quickly .

    I would recommend this to a friend
  • Rated 5 out of 5 stars

    Great 3D movie

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    This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.

    Bought this because it was 3D. It is impressive in quality of the picture, and a good story.

    I would recommend this to a friend
  • Rated 5 out of 5 stars

    Great Movie!!!! Great Price!!!!

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    Posted . Owned for 1 week when reviewed.
    This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.

    Great Movie!!!! The best part was the price. The extended edition is a most.

    I would recommend this to a friend
  • Rated 5 out of 5 stars

    The hobbits An unexpected JourneyBlu-ray 3-D

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    Posted .
    This reviewer received promo considerations or sweepstakes entry for writing a review.

    The hobbits An unexpected Journey Blu-ray 3-D Pretty good movie to watch

    I would recommend this to a friend