When Christopher Tolkien passed it has become less strict.Do we know anything how picky the people or person who're in charge of Tolkien's estate are? If they're really picky and hands on, that could be a good way to judge how accurate to the books this is.
Elves are a goddamn cheat code.Yes.
All of them.
As a WoT fan, I didn't mind the diversity--I minded changing elements of the story that did not need to be changed.A lot of the criticism of The Wheel of Time was about the diverse cast... I think its a damned if you do, damned if you don't type of thing. Such is life in the throes of the culture war.
The Tolkien estate has basically turned to focusing on bringing in lots of dough, and less on Tolkien's wishes since Christopher Tolkien passed. Like fireproof78 said, but to a further extent.Do we know anything how picky the people or person who're in charge of Tolkien's estate are? If they're really picky and hands on, that could be a good way to judge how accurate to the books this is.
Same here. Think it's a great opportunity to grow the fan base. Diversity of cast will do no harm in this effort.I was starting to wonder if that was the case, since we're suddenly seeing a million different shows, movies and games coming out.
Either way, I'm still excited for this, so far everything I've read and seen from this looks great.
I would say he went into a ton of detail, with The Silmarillion, The History of Middle Earth, and about 10-20 other works.I haven't read anything past the first half of The Two Towers, but from what I've seen online, it sounds like Tolkien never went into a ton of detail about everything that went down in The Second Age, so that really gives them a lot of freedom, as long as they hit those big events from his writing. The biggest change I've heard about is that they're squishing together events that were spread out over thousands of years in the books, which makes sense to me, it can be hard to tell a coherent ongoing story with consistent characters when you're trying to tell a story over that much time.
I would say he went into a ton of detail, with The Silmarillion, The History of Middle Earth, and about 10-20 other works.
Apparently they have, because they hired an intimacy coach and required that actors be okay with nudity.Would the Tolkien estate approve of on-screen sex within the context of their patriarch's legacy - any of it - once translated to the small screen?
Apparently they have, because they hired an intimacy coach and required that actors be okay with nudity.
No, but they approved it....the Tolkien estate did this? Truly?
Yes. Tolkien was not ignorant of sex.Would the Tolkien estate approve of on-screen sex within the context of their patriarch's legacy - any of it - once translated to the small screen?
Oh, from what I'd seen online I was under the impression he focused most of the Silmarillion and that stuff on the First Age, with just a brief overview of what happened in the Second.I would say he went into a ton of detail, with The Silmarillion, The History of Middle Earth, and about 10-20 other works.
As for the sex, this is a different group of people, writing in a different era, with different expectations, so obviously they're not going to do things the same way Tolkien did.
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