But the Screaming Orc(tm), well, that was just screenplay needing. Like the needing for Bilbo to scream "I'm going to an adventure", where he didn't want other Hobbits to know that he was no more reliable as before. It took a while before letting his Took side emerge...
Yeah, sure, but that hardly disagrees with my overall claim that the Dwarves aren't actually badasses in the film. They only think they are, and the cinematography acts like they are (even when, if you examine the things they're actually accomplishing, they're just lucky). It's a way of subverting expectations of what the movie's going to be about, which is perfect for the Hobbit. You have this whole grand adventure, but it's not what the story is about. It's the backdrop for a story about a person who's just caught up in it all, and is the only one who can see how silly everyone else is being, even as he recognizes and accepts the part of him that's enjoying being part of the story.
I see a lot of complaints about the movie being too Epic Action Filmy, but I think that people went in expecting it to be that, so they don't look any deeper. Maybe, on the other hand, I'm reading too much into something that was subtle enough that it might not really be there. Still, if I have to choose, I prefer the perspective that vastly improves the movie and makes it a far better representation of the source material than LotR was of its own. Even if Word of God makes clear that it wasn't intentional, I'll still hold with the
accidentally brilliant narrative.
Except the Elves. That's the biggest sticking point for me.
Why didn't they sing and laugh