I haven't seen this yet, but plan to. Based on my observations so far, it would seem that those with a comprehensive, or even semi-comprehensive, a priori knowledge of Tolkien's early-timeline works like the Silmarillion, are more inclined to dislike the new series, whereas casual fans are more inclined to enjoy it. There are, of course, always exceptions, so not trying to generalize here. While I have read all the main books of LOTR & Hobbit (both very ponderous in their own ways), I would still consider myself in the latter, "casual", group - I am by no means a Tolkien scholar. There are folks who have clearly dedicated good portions of their lives to studying the mythos. I'm definitely not one of them.![]()
I absolutely agree, the language isn't quite there. You can tell they are trying in certain conversations but it seems removed from the age that Tolkien used in his language. Still a nice separation from other fantasy shows, but still needs work.Yeah, it's all entertainment - even the original books - it's not holy writ. The dialogue and pacing could do with some improvement in what I've seen of this show so far but the rest seems just fine. Four stars.
Indeed.I'm liking the show so far. I can see why Tolkien scholars would be upset at the changing of his history, but creating a major multi-year show like this (from what essentially is an outline) is going to require quite a bit of leeway to make it compelling. Let's see where this takes us.
Because it's a rather impossible one. No adaptation will be perfectly true to the source material or will make for an overly long and boring film. It's not worth it. It's better to approach the film as one thing, the book another, and this series still another.And, honestly, I find the "measuring contest" between the source material and the show to be a hollow enterprise.
I would definitely place the LOTR films over Hobbit any day of the week, all day long. I've mentioned before upthread, I had always found Tolkien's prose staggeringly thick (citing the 2-page moss and bark on the tree sequence). How Jackson managed to parse the books into his final product was nothing short of stunningly brilliant, IMO, and his choice of using New Zealand as the setting for Middle Earth was inspired. It reminds me of the opinions people gave on the Last of the Mohicans film, which was fantastically done, while the written source material was apparently complete shit (I never read that one).Pretty fair assessment. Although I will say that as a lifelong Tolkien nut, I do love Jackson's LOTR movies with a passion, but not so his Hobbit movies.
I'd call that a fairly solid case. My only serious counter-argument would be simply that it's a TV show, and Galdalf is a character people know, and it would be cool to see his arrival on Middle Earth. That and his makeshift cloak had a decidedly grey quality to it . . .They're pushing hard to make you think the Stranger is either Sauron or Gandalf (or even Saruman or Radagast), but those seem to be a bit on-the-nose, so I'm gonna swing for the fences and say it's gonna be one of the previously unseen Blue Wizards, Alatar or Pallando.
The time that the Blue Wizards arrived in Middle-earth is uncertain. In Unfinished Tales, Tolkien wrote that the five Istari came to Middle-earth together in TA 1000. However, in The Peoples of Middle-earth, they are said to have arrived in the Second Age, around the year SA 1600, the time of the forging of the One Ring. Their mission was directed at weakening Sauron's forces in the eastern and southern parts of Middle-earth, whereas the other Istari were focused on the west.
"I think that they went as emissaries to distant regions, east and south... Missionaries to enemy occupied lands as it were. What success they had I do not know; but I fear that they failed, as Saruman did, though doubtless in different ways; and I suspect they were founders or beginners of secret cults and "magic" traditions that outlasted the fall of Sauron."
—J.R.R. Tolkien
https://lotr.fandom.com/wiki/Blue_Wizards
Personally I have no issue with it. I mean it's a matter of record that she's lived through EVERY war the elves were ever involved with. It'd be weird if she spent the entirety of her 8000 plus year life standing around in a silky dress looking cryptic and vaguely mystical. Plenty of time for her to have been and done all kinds of things. Like that one time she had a 120 year long tapdancing phase.I'm still cautious about Galadriel's warrior status but I do like how it's more about her quest to find proof of what she knows is to be true about Sauron's continued existence than her simply being a straight-up fighter
I'd put money on Annatar already being in Numenor when Galadriel gets there, and having no clue who he really is (at first.)Chances are he's probably Sauron but I'm still not keen on that idea, nor him being a wizard which his mutterings to the fireflies heavily implied.
Not just ents, but I also spotted an Enting or two. No Entwives that I noticed though . . .Something I forgot to mention in my review:
ENTS!!!!
That is all.![]()
I believed that is documented in the historical record called "Lord of the Dance."Personally I have no issue with it. I mean it's a matter of record that she's lived through EVERY war the elves were ever involved with. It'd be weird if she spent the entirety of her 8000 plus year life standing around in a silky dress looking cryptic and vaguely mystical. Plenty of time for her to have been and done all kinds of things. Like that one time she had a 120 year long tapdancing phase.
Yeah, that's why I don't have that much of an issue with it.Personally I have no issue with it. I mean it's a matter of record that she's lived through EVERY war the elves were ever involved with. It'd be weird if she spent the entirety of her 8000 plus year life standing around in a silky dress looking cryptic and vaguely mystical. Plenty of time for her to have been and done all kinds of things. Like that one time she had a 120 year long tapdancing phase.
I like that idea a lot. Galadriel's passion for finding him and his stronghold blinds her from seeing what's right in front of her. And even when she does see it, people will undoubtedly dismiss her because she's been so driven to find him in anywhere.I'd put money on Annatar already being in Numenor when Galadriel gets there, and having no clue who he really is (at first.)
Agreed. I couldn't quite come up with why Sauron falling from the skies didn't make sense to me but now you've pointed out the obvious reason to me. Thank you.Sauron falling out of the heavens just wouldn't make sense anyway. After all that's the domain the beings he's trying VERY hard to avoid. Swanning around Numenor this whole time seems much more likely.
Fingers crossed for Entwives at some point.Not just ents, but I also spotted an Enting or two. No Entwives that I noticed though . . .
Just think about how many Dwarf weddings and births she missed!Like that one time she had a 120 year long tapdancing phase.
You just didn't recognize them because the "Wives Wearing Beards Budget" went to them instead of the Dwarves.Not just ents, but I also spotted an Enting or two. No Entwives that I noticed though . . .
On the contrary; they were always booking her for parties!Just think about how many Dwarf weddings and births she missed!
No wonder the Elves and Dwarves were always at odds...
Reminds me of Doctor Who and the "Girl in the Fireplace" episode, how time had different meaning to the Doctor vs. the companions and others they interacted with.Just think about how many Dwarf weddings and births she missed!
No wonder the Elves and Dwarves were always at odds...
But the majority of the negative reviews — whatever the writers’ private feelings — criticized the show for non-diversity reasons. “They spent a billion dollars on backdrops and a film score,” wrote one. “The rest is slow moving, wooden acting and there is no reason to actually like the main characters. There is no soul to any of it.”
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