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Yes there's an excuse. It wasn't filmed.
That's what I meant- there was no excuse not to film and hence no excuse not to include it in the DVD.
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It's also not as simple as merely adding it to the film. That part wasn't just left out, the ending was constructed as if it was never meant to be included. Adding it would require an actual CHANGE to the ending.
Have you ever read the book? The only difference between the movie's ending and the book's ending
was the exclusion of the Scouring of the Shire. It's like the exclusion of the Old Forest in FotR- they just didn't show it. No ending would have to be changed at all- seriously, I know you've read the book, which kind of confuses me that you think they'd have to change the ending. Hell, they even kept the last line of the book in the movie.
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You obviously feel it was an important scene. I don't and obviously Peter Jackson didn't either. Neither of us is right or wrong...
No, I'm right, you're wrong.

It's not a little matter of opinion, it IS an essential part of the story- the simple fact Tolkien wrote it should say as much. As long as LotR is, Tolkien didn't write anything that wasn't necessary- he was not an author who simply threw things in just to make it longer.
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No matter what people are going to complain about stuff that's been changed or removed but if the film was a literal translation of the book it would have been REALLY long and REALLY boring.
Why do you think the general public thinks The Two Towers is better than Fellowship of the Ring? Because they thought FotR was REALLY long and REALLY boring. Why do you think Tolkien fans think Fellowship of the Ring is better than The Two Towers? Because FotR was a much more faithful adaption of the book. RotK could have been both- theatrically it could be what the public wants and on DVD what the fans want.
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I think Peter Jackson did pretty much the best job anyone could have.
Best? No. One dam fine job that nobody else could have replicated? Hell yes. I think overall he made a very faithful adaption of the book, with most of the changes being not only necessary but extremely well done. That doesn't mean I think ALL the changes were necessary OR well done (I think we can all agree that the person who put elves in Helm's Deep needs to be crucified). That's precisely why I said judge the movie as just that, a movie, and
not as an adaption of the book, because faithful it was not. That doesn't keep me from regarding each movie independantly as the three greatest cinematic masterpieces ever crafted by mortal hands- I shudder to think if my brain could handle judging the entire 10+ hour epic.