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.
Nutty, my wank for that is
Minas Tirith is too close to Mordor for people to live outside the walls.
BUT
one problem I had that was besides the tree being dead, I didn't get a sense that Gondor and MT had fallen into hard times under the stewards as opposed to the Kings as it is described in the books.
Minas Tirith not fallen into hard times? Come on! Remember the condition of the library? Clearly, they'd cut back severely on staff in the Archives!
That's the truth. Anybody who doesn't have a problem with
open flames
next to 3,000 year old manuscripts obviously didn't actually pass his archiving classes. Also, NSM with the indexing and organization.
There were a couple of posts upthread about Frodo's pity being an integral element of his success and I agree entirely. That pity importantly links back to Gandalf's speech about mercy and to Bilbo not killing Gollum when he had the chance, and how that affected Bilbo's ability to resist the ring. In a sense, Frodo understands that his pity/mercy for Gollum is crucial to his own resistance to the ring. Sam is in the right when he argues for getting rid of the old villain Gollum, in that he knows Gollum will betray them. Frodo may make the less tactically sound decision, but it is the merciful one, and he is rewarded for it, in the grander scheme. It is a good reminder that being right about something isn't always what is most important or even best. Even the very wise cannot see all things.
Then again, being right makes you less likely to be
stabbed by a giant spider and mummified, later stripped, beaten and tied up by orcs.
I firmly maintain that it takes both attitudes (mercy/distrust) to get to the goalposts, and privileging either one over the other is a mistake.
When I think about all the horrible things that COULD have happened, casting-wise, I can't really get too worked up about the pretty pretty elf princess.
This is how I feel as well. Just imagine Bay and Bruckheimer casting this movie, if you want to break out in a cold sweat.
shudder
cold-sweat?
I have read in more than one place that Russell Crowe turned down the part of Strider.
I have been a fan of him in some movies, but talk about *shudder* as far as these movies are concerned.
Viggo meets the Queen (of Denmark) - read what he said in the "comments" below the picture.
Oh, and I must admit that when Gollum is in the midst of his transformation to the Gollum we are most familiar with -- I noticed a distinct resemblance to Michael Jackson . . . talk about scary!
Shelob being female is zoologically accurate.
Well, much as I realize that, the way she's described, espec. in the books (which I have skimmed, as I still hate his writing styles enough that the Silmarillion will remain the only one I've read), and the whole set up of the situation is disturbingly sexualized *and* the one thing most likely to ping my "issues, much?" radar.