I just think it's rather odd that a nation that prides itself on its virility should feel compelled to strap on forty pounds of protective gear just in order to play rugby.

Giles ,'Beneath You'


LotR - The Return of the King: "We named the *dog* 'Strider'".  

Frodo: Please, what does it always mean, this... this "Aragorn"? Elrond: That's his name. Aragorn, son of Arathorn. Aragorn: I like "Strider." Elrond: We named the *dog* "Strider".

A discussion of Lord of the Rings - The Return of the King. If you're a pervy hobbit fancier, this is the place for you.


Connie Neil - Jan 02, 2004 7:32:24 pm PST #1031 of 3902
brillig

trying to figure out the sett

Hail, Anne W, queen of the fiber arts geeks! (fortunately no one's wearing any bobbin lace, so I don't have to figure that out in my head. Though I have been trying to deduce the patterns of Eowyn's funeral dress)

The Big Green Army of Creeping Doom always makes me think of that X-Files episode where they're out in the forest and the glowy bug things from the trees wrap them in cocoons. Or, Scrubbing Bubbles, when they're climbing the walls of Minis Tirith.


Volans - Jan 03, 2004 4:49:04 am PST #1032 of 3902
move out and draw fire

Some really well-written fanfic has made me an Imrahil fan

Link? I've always been an Imrahil fan. He's possibly more of a Golden Boy than Faramir in the books.

Anne, one of the women at The Two Towers does costumes for the Folger, and has actually fondled the elven cloaks. Let me see if I can get the sett from her.

Scrubbing Bubbles

Yes! and *snerk*


Kathy A - Jan 03, 2004 7:31:52 am PST #1033 of 3902
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

Link? I've always been an Imrahil fan. He's possibly more of a Golden Boy than Faramir in the books.

Captain, My Captain by Isabeau of Greenlea has one of the best Imrahils I've read. It's a saga (53 chapters!), and starts out very Faramir-centric with an original female character who's not a Mary-Sue but who manages to get herself involved with just about every minor character (and a few major ones) from RotK. The writer does an excellent job of inserting this original story in and around the events after Frodo and Sam leave the Rangers in Ithilien all the way through and succeeding Arwen and Aragorn's wedding. Imrahil shows up pretty quickly and becomes a major character in the fic after a few chapters. Her Faramir and Elrohir are also well-written, and I like the way she shows Aragorn's discomfort with his new role as King.


sumi - Jan 03, 2004 11:00:13 am PST #1034 of 3902
Art Crawl!!!

Is Imrahil, Faramir and Boromir's uncle?

Because, wasn't their mother from Dol Amroth?

(And doesn't this mean that Eomer and Eowyn marry cousins?)

Otherwise -- I've been EXTREMELY lucky with the audiences that I've seen the movie with -- no weirdness or wrongness or rudeness. And I've seen it 4 times now.

BTW, don't bother with IMAX, the shape of the IMAX screen messes up the lighting and the color of the movie. (Possibly everyone already knew that it would do that.)


sumi - Jan 03, 2004 11:44:29 am PST #1035 of 3902
Art Crawl!!!

Oh, and I got the RotK soundtrack for Christmas.

Are there EE soundtrack albums?


Elais - Jan 03, 2004 12:30:47 pm PST #1036 of 3902
making her home at bronzebeta.com since 2001

It's nice to know someone else is doing this. I've been freeze-framing anything with a decent shot of the Elven cloaks, trying to figure out the sett. My loom needs a workout, and I've already been thinking of what fibers to blend for best effect.

Would this help? White Tree


Kathy A - Jan 03, 2004 3:09:28 pm PST #1037 of 3902
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

Is Imrahil, Faramir and Boromir's uncle?

Yes.

Because, wasn't their mother from Dol Amroth?

Yes (Finduilas was Imrahil's sister).

(And doesn't this mean that Eomer and Eowyn marry cousins?)

And, wait for it...yes!

BTW, don't bother with IMAX, the shape of the IMAX screen messes up the lighting and the color of the movie. (Possibly everyone already knew that it would do that.)

Thanks for the advice, because I was thinking about tracking down an IMAX showing for my next viewing, which I think will be a few weeks away, at least.

I've been watching my TTTEE, and Sam's big speech at the end is really touching me now, more so than a year ago, especially the part about "how could things go back to the way they were, when so much bad had happened?" Pair that up with Frodo's quote that's my current tagline ("How do you pick up the threads of an old life? How do you go on, when in your heart you begin to understand: there is no going back. There is some things that time cannot mend. Some hurts that go too deep. That have taken hold."), and we see that while "the sun shines out the clearer," things can never go back.


smonster - Jan 04, 2004 7:35:10 am PST #1038 of 3902
We won’t stop until everyone is gay.

Err, Anne, I'm sure that there may be copyright issues, but I can't see as how if you were to make some cloaks for friends and they chose to send you bits of paper as recompense that it could be in anyway wrong.

Hmm. Yes. I wholeheartedly concur. I've been jonesing for an elven cloak (except one that crosses over at the neckline like the hobbit cloaks did) since the moment they hit the screen in FotR.


Beverly - Jan 04, 2004 7:52:34 am PST #1039 of 3902
Days shrink and grow cold, sunlight through leaves is my song. Winter is long.

I believe one of the fan sites offers the actual fabric of the elven cloaks, using the same wool from the particular breed of NZ sheep, woven on the same looms as the fabric used in the films. They sell it as a "commemorative" swatch, or, as one woman at Trilogy Tuesday was wearing, a scarf or muffler. I have seen a closeup photo of the fabric, as well. I'll google and post it if I can find it.

Cutting a complete quarter circle, put together with a single seam at the center back, uses much more fabric than a simple length gathered at the neck. But it lies much flatter at the shoulder, puts the selvedge as the front edges of the garment, rather than hemmed front edges, and the garment drapes better and flares at the hem much better if it's cut quarter-circle. Heh. Not that I've noticed how the cloaks were made, or anything.


Gleebo - Jan 04, 2004 7:52:35 pm PST #1040 of 3902
"God...my brilliance is now becoming a bit of a burden...get back to me." Dr. Cox - Scrubs

I saw the movie earlier this week and loved it. Can't decide if I like it better than FotR or not. I still put TTT at 3rd of the 3. I loved the battle scenes in RotK, especially hurling pieces of the city at each other.

I haven't frequented the LotR threads before, but why is it that elves never ever seem to get even the smallest bit of dirty while the rest of the lot gets dirty as fuck?

To me, seeing Aragorn washed up just isnt as cool as when he is all gritty and dirty.

Also, Sam is my favoritest character in a movie of all time.