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LOTR: The Fellowship of the Ring

7,945 Views | 107 Replies | Last: 1 mo ago by YouBet
Lathspell
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Brian Earl Spilner said:

Theoden still had a good arc though. He had to make a choice to finally face Saruman's army and eventually ride to save Gondor rather than running and hiding.

I thought Jackson's adaptation of Theoden, along with Bernard Hill's portrayal, is one of the highlights of the trilogy. I can't imagine someone watching the movies and thinking that is a weak point to the adaptation.
shaynew1
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Ya but pj could have made him as dope as he was in the books. He decides to ride out and invites Aragon. He wasn't all butthurt about the idea of gondor. Then when they got to pelennor he charged out ahead of everyone.

They were also singing as they tomahawked everyone in the first charge.
Brian Earl Spilner
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Sorry but Theoden in the Battle of Pelennor Fields was absolutely awesome in the movie.
shaynew1
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I don't believe you are sorry
Lathspell
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Brian Earl Spilner said:

Sorry but Theoden in the Battle of Pelennor Fields was absolutely awesome in the movie.

This.

Yes... the way Tolkien wrote that scene is absolute poetry; it's 1a or 1b in my favorite scenes in the entire book. But Jackson did a fine job with him, in the movie. Honestly, the only way to portray him better would require Jackson to change so much of the movies, but that just gets back to my criticisms on some of Jackson's decisions/vision about other plot points and not specifically about his adaptation of Theoden.
Drunken Overseas Betttor
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Theoden is the best character on screen and Rohan has the best music.

Even when every book reader is rolling their eyes at the fake drama created when Theoden acts like he won't go help Gondor in ROTK, it is ice water chills in the vein when Aragorn busts in and announces "Gondor calls for aid!" and he takes a beat and declares "AND ROHAN SHALL ANSWER."''





Although one could argue the book version would have been even more bad ass. They've just fought the battle of their lives to save Helm's Deep and when word arrives that the forces of Sauron are attacking Minas Tirith in the form of the Red Arrow, he doesn't hesitate at all, he's like Wolverine and Deadpool - LFG. That's pretty bad ass too. Like he got that taste for killing orcs and now that's all he wants to do.

His book version also just doesn't stand there and get mauled by the Witch King, he challenges that mofo, and then gets mauled.

And no Theoden post should ever happen without quoting this:

Gandalf did not move. And in that very moment, away behind in some courtyard of the city, a cock crowed. Shrill and clear he crowed, recking nothing of war nor of wizardry, welcoming only the morning that in the sky far above the shadows of death was coming with the dawn.

And as if in answer there came from far away another note.

Horns, horns, horns, in dark Mindolluin's sides they dimly echoed.
Great horns of the north wildly blowing.
Rohan had come at last."


and

Fey he seemed, or the battle-fury of his fathers ran like new fire in his veins, and he was borne up on Snowmane like a king of old"

and:

"I go to my fathers. And even in their mighty company I shall not now be ashamed."

which is even better when you recall that some of the last words of Thorin Oakenshield were

"I go now to the halls of waiting to sit beside my fathers, until the world is renewed.


OnlyForNow
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It is where the group gets their magic swords… which isn't a thing in the movies.
Lathspell
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They do get those daggers, but it's just given by Galadriel, instead of found in the Barrow Downs, and only in the extended edition. Yet another reason why the Extended Edition is the ONLY way to watch The Fellowship of the Ring!
amercer
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Lathspell said:

Brian Earl Spilner said:

Theoden still had a good arc though. He had to make a choice to finally face Saruman's army and eventually ride to save Gondor rather than running and hiding.

I thought Jackson's adaptation of Theoden, along with Bernard Hill's portrayal, is one of the highlights of the trilogy. I can't imagine someone watching the movies and thinking that is a weak point to the adaptation.


I think the actor was great and most of the portrayal was good. It's just the being actually possessed by Saruman and needing his demon cast out part that was silly. Theoden wasn't overcome by some supernatural force, he was betrayed by his all to human failings. Overcoming that was his redemption, and it didn't require any wizard magic.
Lathspell
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I think that scene is fine left to his interpretation. In the book, we are not really given a reason for Theoden's appearance when Gandalf and the Fellowship first arrive. We are just told how decrepit Theoden looked and that he walked with a cane. It wasn't until Gandalf brought him outside and cleared away much of the gloom in the sky to reveal sunlight, and then kick Theoden's walking stick away, that Theoden seemed to come to his senses. There seems to be an insinuation of some form of leechcraft, perpetrated by Grima.

I would argue that Jackson's interpretation is much easier for an audience to follow and gives an easier to understand scenario to the viewer than what a direct adaptation from the book would give.

However, whether the movie version or the book version of this confrontation, at least both include Grima calling Gandalf the elvish word for Ill-news is where I first got my gamertag, 20 years ago, lol.
amercer
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How does the CGI hold up? I watched most of Fellowship the other day and it looked good, but I think there was a lot more CGI in the other two.
Brian Earl Spilner
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My favorite movie score track of all time...

Lathspell
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You can literally take any scene from the movie and the score is peak cinema scoring.

However, it's hard for me to put the FotR score over the others because it doesn't have any of Rohan's lietmotif. I have to bundle the entire score of the full trilogy, in my head.
cr0wbar
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Recently rewatched LOTR over the summer. Not nearly as high brown fans as you all - my gripe...

Pippin. He was always getting the party into ***** I would've left his ass for dead once he got stabbed by that dagger. Dude got them probably into 4-5 unnecessary pickles. I hated that hobbits
Moe Jzyslak
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Pippin is really young compared to everyone else. When they form the Fellowship, he's only 28, which is still a child for Hobbits. Frodo was 50, Sam was 38, and Merry was 37.

When Gandalf came back to The Shire, Pippin was only 11. There was a 17 year gap between Gandalf leaving for Minas Tirith and Frodo setting out to destroy the One Ring. Tough to show that on film, though
Drunken Overseas Betttor
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There aren't a lot of sequels where a new character / people / music comes in and is so bad ass that you immediately push the main characters aside in your mind, but that's what Rohan is for me.
Granted I had been looking forward to the charge of the Pelannor Fields since the second they announced the movies, but still.

Drunken Overseas Betttor
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Moe Jzyslak said:

Pippin is really young compared to everyone else. When they form the Fellowship, he's only 28, which is still a child for Hobbits. Frodo was 50, Sam was 38, and Merry was 37.

When Gandalf came back to The Shire, Pippin was only 11. There was a 17 year gap between Gandalf leaving for Minas Tirith and Frodo setting out to destroy the One Ring. Tough to show that on film, though

My greatest regret of a line of dialogue not included from the books is in ROTK when Gandalf finds Merry in the Houses of Healing after he's helped Eowyn kill the Witch King and he says, "He should have been borne in honour into this city. He has well repaid my trust."

If you think about it, all of the Hobbits have acted very heroically up to that point, and obviously Sam and Frodo are sneaking into Mordor by then, but Merry is the first among them to really confront death and see the value of honor and let go of his fear to do the right thing.
Lathspell
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For my fellow music nerds:

Moe Jzyslak
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And at the Black Gate when Aragorn makes his charge, Pippin is the first to follow him, immediately followed by Merry. Their growth is amazing
M.C. Swag
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Quote:

And as if in answer there came from far away another note.
Horns, horns, horns, in dark Mindolluin's sides they dimly echoed.
Great horns of the north wildly blowing.
Rohan had come at last."


Lathspell
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The fact that Jackson didn't give us Gandalf's confrontation with the Witch King at the gates of Minas Tirith is so ridiculous. It's decisions like this that has lowered my opinion of RotK, over the last 20 years.

One of the most epic moments in the entire book, and Jackson completely rewrites the siege. I honestly don't understand the point of this change. It reeks of the Halfblood Prince movie changes, adding the Burrow scene. I'm stuck asking, "Why?"

The sheer imagery of a scene like that would have been beautiful to see. Instead, we get a stupid extended edition scene where the Witch King destroys Gandalf's staff. What? Are you serious? Where the hell did that come from? I truly hate that scene and just wish Jackson had more faithfully adapted the siege of Minas Tirith.

This also leads to another weak point of the Siege of Minas Tirith... a lack of characters. We never really get to know Minas Tirith or its people, in the movies. I think it's one of the reasons the stakes don't feel as high as they do in the Battle for Helm's deep. In the book, we get so many great scenes with Beregond and Pippin, which does so much to make us care more about the people of the city. Also, there are SO many more heroes in the books I wish we got to see kick ass. No Prince Imrahil and his knights, no Dunedain (including Halbarad), no Sons of Elrond, and no other lords of Gondor.

I was okay with Eomer not being at the Battle of the Hornburg because we do get one of the most epic moments in the entire series, with him leading the Riders to rescue the King. But I just wish we got more for the Siege of Gondor and Battle of the Pelennor.

I kind of get what Jackson was going for. He was building a world where the men of the west have basically fallen into uselessness and despair, with not much fight left in them until our heroes appear to save the day. In the books, it wasn't like this. The men of the west were still strong and proud, but were disjointed because there was no King to truly unite the free peoples under one banner.
YouBet
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I'm going to have to reread LOTR soon. Will be like reading the entire thing all over again. It's what sucked me into fantasy like so many other Gen X'ers back in the early 80s.
Hubert J. Farnsworth
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Quote:

For me the TT & ROTK just haven't aged well and dare I say it's just too much of the same thing. Honestly



jenn96
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Mega Lops said:

Arwen's presence in the trilogy is dumb. She should have been in like one flashback scene and the coronation. Instead, she is a battling elf completely out of place... put there so PJ could have a household female semi-lead character that otherwise contributed nothing to the story.

Eowyn on the other hand is fine and her parts were good.

This is just my opinion, but I think part of the reason Arwen got a larger role in the movies than she did in the books was to make her a slightly bigger character, to explain why Aragorn would choose her over Eowyn. In the books, she is a very small character, and Jackson may have been trying to answer the audience question of "why in the world would he choose her over Eowyn". It just fleshed her character out without altering the story very much.
Drunken Overseas Betttor
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M.C. Swag said:

Quote:

And as if in answer there came from far away another note.
Horns, horns, horns, in dark Mindolluin's sides they dimly echoed.
Great horns of the north wildly blowing.
Rohan had come at last."




So epic that Game of Thrones just straight ripped it off as they ran out of ideas.

wangus12
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Lathspell said:

You can literally take any scene from the movie and the score is peak cinema scoring.

However, it's hard for me to put the FotR score over the others because it doesn't have any of Rohan's lietmotif. I have to bundle the entire score of the full trilogy, in my head.

Same. The score for the trilogy is the GOAT and one of the greatest works of music of all time.
Brian Earl Spilner
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These two short little moments live rent-free in my head because of those awesome musical cues.



Lathspell
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The one with Shadowfax is the first time, I believe, we hear his Liefmotif, but the version we get in the "To the King!" moment is my #1 music drop of the entire trilogy.



Music only. That flip from the Fellowship's theme, when Gandalf appears to the Shadowfax theme is so freaking beautiful and powerful in that moment:

SpreadsheetAg
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Here is a good map with all the treks routed - it's interactive

Interactive Map of Middle-Earth
YouBet
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Really cool. Thanks!
dave94
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Boromir

Cinco Ranch Aggie
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This thread is making me want to re-read the books.

I saw each of the movies when they came out, which was my introduction to Middle Earth. I was aware of the books during the time that would have been my prime fantasy reading years, but honestly the books intimidated me. I loved the movies. Bought the scores, bought the theatrical DVDs, then bought the expanded editions. Those were the best versions of the movies.

It was about a decade after the movies that I finally got around to reading the books the first time. They are the best such books I have read.
BenFiasco14
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"Fly, you fools".
CNN is an enemy of the state and should be treated as such.
ABATTBQ11
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YouBet said:

ABATTBQ11 said:

He knew something was wrong, but not what. Moria was incomprehensibly massive. It wasn't so much an underground castle or fortress as an underground kingdom or state. Balin's company would have been like a frontier fort in the Louisiana territory.

I just watched this the other night because I was bored and was reminded of my confusion of why Balin was shuttered off in this random small, side room in Moria.

I haven't read the books in 40 years, so I don't recall any specifics from it. Was Balin caught unawares when the Orcs attacked and took over and that's why he was in this room? Were they just driven out of their primary abode and this is where they retreated to?


I haven't read them in 15. IIRC they knew the orcs were there but vastly underestimated their number. I think they were intent on clearing it out and reclaiming it.
An L of an Ag
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This is my favorite book series by FAR. I've re-read the entire series (including the Silmarillion) every 3 or 4 years since initially reading The Hobbit and then the LOTR in middle school.
 
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