Box office The trilogy's online promotional trailer was first released on 27 April 2000 and set a new record for download hits, registering 1.7 million hits in the first 24 hours of its release. The trailer used a selection from the soundtrack for
Braveheart and
The Shawshank Redemption among other cuts. In 2001, 24 minutes of footage from the series, primarily the
Moria sequence, was shown at the
54th Cannes Film Festival, and was very well received. The showing also included an area designed to look like
Middle-earth. A preview of
The Two Towers was inserted just before the end credits near the end of the film's theatrical run. A promotional trailer was later released, containing music re-scored from the film
Requiem for a Dream.
The Two Towers was released 18 December 2002. It grossed $62 million in its first U.S. weekend and out-grossed its predecessor with over $923 million worldwide. The promotional trailer for
The Return of the King was debuted exclusively before the New Line Cinema film
Secondhand Lions on 23 September 2003. Released 17 December 2003, its first U.S. weekend gross was $72.6 million, and became the second film, after
Titanic (1997), to gross over $1.1 billion worldwide. The films are the
highest-grossing in
New Zealand cinema history, and the second-highest grossing franchise filmed in New Zealand behind
Avatar.
Critical and public response The Lord of the Rings trilogy received widespread acclaim and is ranked among the greatest film trilogies ever made.
Kenneth Turan of the
Los Angeles Times wrote that "the trilogy will not soon, if ever, find its equal", while
Todd McCarthy of
Variety described the films as "one of the most ambitious and phenomenally successful dream projects of all time".
The Fellowship of the Ring was voted the greatest fantasy movie of all time in a reader's poll conducted by American magazine
Wired in 2012, while
The Two Towers and
The Return of the King placed fourth and third respectively.
The Independent ranked
The Lord of the Rings trilogy at No. 2 on its list of "10 greatest movie trilogies of all time".
The Lord of the Rings trilogy is ranked at No. 2 in
/Films list of "The 15 Greatest Trilogies Of All Time", while
Empire ranked it at No. 1 in its list of "The 33 Greatest Movie Trilogies". The series appears in the
Dallas–Fort Worth Film Critics Association: Top 10 Films,
Times All-Time 100 Movies, and
James Berardinelli's Top 100. In 2007,
USA Today named the series as the most important films of the past 25 years.
Entertainment Weekly put it on its end-of-the-decade, "best-of" list, saying: "Bringing a cherished book to the big screen? No sweat. Peter Jackson's trilogy — or, as we like to call it, our preciousssss — exerted its irresistible pull, on advanced Elvish speakers and neophytes alike."
Paste named it one of the 50 Best Movies of the Decade (2000–2009), ranking it at No. 4. In another
Time magazine list, the series ranks second in "Best Movies of the Decade". In addition, six characters and their respective actors made the list of 'The 100 Greatest Movie Characters', also compiled by
Empire, with
Viggo Mortensen's portrayal of Aragorn ranking No. 15,
Ian McKellen's portrayal of Gandalf ranking No. 30,
Ian Holm's portrayal of Bilbo Baggins (shared with
Martin Freeman for his portrayal of the same character in
The Hobbit films) ranking No. 61,
Andy Serkis' portrayal of Gollum ranking No. 66,
Sean Astin's portrayal of Samwise Gamgee ranking No. 77, and
Orlando Bloom's portrayal of Legolas ranking No. 94.
The New York Times suggested in a 2021 article that regular viewing of the film series had become a particular phenomenon for "millennial women", drawing a comparison to
Star Wars.
Industry response The series drew acclaim from within the industry, including from the film directors
Steven Spielberg,
James Cameron, and
George Lucas.
John Boorman, who once wrote a script for a
Lord of the Rings film, said he was happy his own version was unmade as Jackson's film trilogy was "of such scope and magnitude that it can only be compared to the building of the great Gothic cathedrals." Forrest J. Ackerman, who once presented a film treatment to Tolkien, and appeared on Jackson's
Bad Taste said his pitch "could never have been given the grand treatment that Peter Jackson afforded it." Arthur Rankin said Jackson was making "marvellous films". Some filmmakers, however, were more critical.
Heinz Edelmann, who pitched the idea of an animated feature when United Artists considered shooting the films with
the Beatles, thought it was "badly directed".
Ralph Bakshi, who made
an animated film based on the first half of the trilogy, did not watch the films, but was told that Jackson's film was derivative of his. Ahead of the films' release, he said he did not "understand it" but that he did "wish it to be a good movie." Later, he begruged Saul Zaentz for not notifying him of the live-action film, and said that Jackson had his film to study and therefore had "a little easier time than I did." Tolkien and created "special effects garbage" to sell toys, as well as being derivative of his own film. until being forced to mention him, at which point (according to Bakshi) he mentioned Bakshi's influence "only once" as "PR bolony". and, in 2015, even apologised for some of his remarks.
Accolades received multiple accolades for his portrayal of
Gandalf, including a nomination for
Best Supporting Actor at the
74th Academy Awards. The three films together were nominated for a total of 30
Academy Awards, of which they won 17, both records for any movie trilogy.
The Fellowship of the Ring earned 13 nominations, the most of any film at the
74th Academy Awards, winning four;
The Two Towers won two awards from six nominations at the
75th Academy Awards;
The Return of the King won in every category in which it was nominated at the
76th Academy Awards, setting the reigning Oscar record for the highest clean sweep, and its 11
Academy Awards wins ties the record held by
Ben-Hur (1959) and
Titanic (1997).
The Return of the King also became only the second
sequel to win the Oscar for Best Picture after
The Godfather Part II (1974). Additionally, members of the production crew won the
Academy Award for Technical Achievement for the rendering of skin textures on creatures on
The Return of the King, and
Stephen Regelous won the
Academy Award for Scientific and Engineering Award for the design and development of
MASSIVE, "the autonomous agent animation system used for the battle sequences in
The Lord of the Rings trilogy." Each film in the series won the
Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation, the
MTV Movie Award for Movie of the Year, and the
Saturn Award for Best Fantasy Film. The first and third films also won the
BAFTA Award for Best Film. The
New York Film Critics Circle awarded
The Return of the King its Best Picture Award at the
2003 Awards Ceremony, hosted by
Andrew Johnston, chair of the organisation at that time, who called it "a masterful piece of filmmaking."
Comparisons with the written work Commentators have compared Jackson's film trilogy with Tolkien's written work, remarking that while both have been extremely successful commercially, they differ in many respects. Critics have admired Jackson's ability to film the long and complex work at all; the beauty of the
cinematography,
sets, and costumes; and the epic scale of his version of Tolkien's story. They have however found the characters and the story greatly weakened by Jackson's emphasis on action and violence at the expense of psychological depth; the loss of Tolkien's emphasis on free will and individual responsibility; and the replacement of Frodo's inner journey by an American
monomyth with Aragorn as the hero.
Wayne G. Hammond's opinion that the film sacrifices the book's richness of characterization and narrative for violence, thrills, and cheap humour, or
Christopher Tolkien's view that Jackson's interpretation is unacceptable, to granting, with Jackson and Boyens, that the film version is inevitably different. From that standpoint, scholars such as
Brian Rosebury and
Tom Shippey have described the films as a partial success, giving some of the feeling and capturing some of the key themes of the novel. Yvette Kisor considers that Jackson was unfaithful to many of Tolkien's details, but succeeded in achieving something of the same impact and feelings of
providence,
eucatastrophe, and
interconnectedness.
Dimitra Fimi suggests that Jackson was continuing Tolkien's tradition of adapting
folklore, incorporating both the fans' views on that folklore, and cinematic traditions such as the
zombie in the film trilogy to produce its own modern folklore. == Home media ==