Well it was very awkward, wasn't it?
"They call him Strider. Here is his dad's name. You must find out his real name by yourself."
why
why cant you just tell me you turd
Yeah the dialogue there was fucking diabolical.
Well it was very awkward, wasn't it?
"They call him Strider. Here is his dad's name. You must find out his real name by yourself."
why
why cant you just tell me you turd
As far as the Legendarium is concerned, he had his own designs of dominion over Middle-earth. By aligning himself with Sauron he gained valuable time. Saruman intended to usurp Sauron eventually.I take it he too thought the Ring forever lost? What made him switch to becoming Sauron's aid to begin with?
Well it was very awkward, wasn't it?
"They call him Strider. Here is his dad's name. You must find out his real name by yourself."
why
why cant you just tell me you turd
One of the greatest of all the Eldar, described as second only in power to Fëanor himself, and said to surpass even Fëanor in wisdom. Not only among the mightiest of the Noldor, she was also radiantly beautiful, and her voice was deep and clear in tone. Galadriel was also the tallest of all Elven-women, with a height in modern terms approaching 6' 4" (or about 1.9 m). Most famous of all her attributes, though, was her shimmering golden hair, shot through with strands of silver.
Thing with power in Tolkien-verse is that most of it comes down to contest of wills, which is why it's directly implied even lesser creatures can attain great power (Frodo was for instance, able to actually use the power of the ring himself, unlike the other bearers before him, so with the right training he could very well rise to power himself).ElyrionX said:Also, just how goddamn powerful is Galadriel? Does she outpower the wizards?
I saw the film a few days ago. I wanted to let my opinion settle before writing my thoughts.
This 3rd Hobbit film was easily the worst of all 6, and possibly the worst Jackson film I have ever seen. It violated nearly every principle of Film 101, from lack of proper tension, to lack of proper character building and story continuity, etc.
Why did the stone cold Elf King suddenly find his emotion once again during the love scene with Tauriel and her dead dwarf?
Why was this film so incredibly awkwardly paced?
Others have already asked the same questions that popped into my mind, so I won't retread. I was incredibly disappointed. I'd give it a 6/10 and would feel that is generous.
I did feel there were some positives:
1. Legolas' absolutely insane stunts / antics
2. The battle with Sauron himself [Galadriel]
3. The love scene with the dead dwarf excluding the contradictory character of the Elf King was actually touching
4. The auction scene at the end.
Other than that....blech. I'll watch all 6 and hope it works together better than apart.
Thing with power in Tolkien-verse is that most of it comes down to contest of wills, which is why it's directly implied even lesser creatures can attain great power (Frodo was for instance, able to actually use the power of the ring himself, unlike the other bearers before him, so with the right training he could very well rise to power himself).
On top of that - Galadriel is one of the oldest people alive (she's been around since before the first age), and one of the elven ring-bearers - with her ring power being chiefly protection against evil.
The written canon never pits her against a Maiar directly - but there have been elven lords who fought, and even killed Balrogs, and one that gravely injured Morgoth himself, suggesting the powers aren't as absolute as all that.
Also note Sauron was able to bend Saruman's mind through Palantir use - but he was resisted by Aragorn, who was after all just a human.
Saw this last night, and while I did have issues with it, I thought it was by far the best of The Hobbit films.
I saw this yesterday, and like the First Hobbit film (never saw the 2nd one), it felt like there was a core of a good film in there that was lost in Peter Jackson's self-indulgence. Cut 40 minutes off the run time and it'd be much better.
Read the Ars Technica review and you'll probably rethink your position.
Just because you agree with that review doesn't mean reading it will change anyone else's minds.
Just because you agree with that review doesn't mean reading it will change anyone else's minds.
Thing with power in Tolkien-verse is that most of it comes down to contest of wills, which is why it's directly implied even lesser creatures can attain great power (Frodo was for instance, able to actually use the power of the ring himself, unlike the other bearers before him, so with the right training he could very well rise to power himself).
On top of that - Galadriel is one of the oldest people alive (she's been around since before the first age), and one of the elven ring-bearers - with her ring power being chiefly protection against evil.
The written canon never pits her against a Maiar directly - but there have been elven lords who fought, and even killed Balrogs, and one that gravely injured Morgoth himself, suggesting the powers aren't as absolute as all that.
Also note Sauron was able to bend Saruman's mind through Palantir use - but he was resisted by Aragorn, who was after all just a human.
I really didn't like how the movie was called "The Battle of the FIVE Armies". What five? Orcs, dwarves, and elves were the only armies I saw. A band of rag tag refugee humans are not an army. There were two separate orc armies, but they both fall under Orc in my book. A few grunt style goblins for one of the orc armies don't count separate to me either. I've also read some places that listed the eagles as an army. Don't make me laugh.
I liked the movie, I just couldn't get over that point.
I really didn't like how the movie was called "The Battle of the FIVE Armies". What five? Orcs, dwarves, and elves were the only armies I saw. A band of rag tag refugee humans are not an army. There were two separate orc armies, but they both fall under Orc in my book. A few grunt style goblins for one of the orc armies don't count separate to me either. I've also read some places that listed the eagles as an army. Don't make me laugh.
I liked the movie, I just couldn't get over that point.
Even some parts I liked, like DolGoldur, had serious issues overall. The three of us that saw it, all fans of the books, had to pool what we noticed in that scene to figure out wtf happened, and there's still questions. We decided it was the Witch King, not Sauron himself, that was the big figure there, with Sauron's eye sort of behind him, although a lot of people in this thread keep saying Sauron so I'm not as sure anymore.
You never know - it may trigger sudden realizations.
Well it was very awkward, wasn't it?
"They call him Strider. Here is his dad's name. You must find out his real name by yourself."
why
why cant you just tell me you turd
I'm not a huge expert on LotR stuff, but I think his 'real' name is Elessar which means 'hope' in elvish. So I think 'finding his real name' was a double entendre about finding out what Aragon's true place in everything is. At least, that's how I interpreted it.
I'm not a huge expert on LotR stuff, but I think his 'real' name is Elessar which means 'hope' in elvish. So I think 'finding his real name' was a double entendre about finding out what Aragon's true place in everything is. At least, that's how I interpreted it.
Did he not only get that name when he was crowned King?
No, he's always Elessar.
I'm not a huge expert on LotR stuff, but I think his 'real' name is Elessar which means 'hope' in elvish. So I think 'finding his real name' was a double entendre about finding out what Aragon's true place in everything is. At least, that's how I interpreted it.
This was my first experience with the Lord of the Rings universe, and I enjoyed it. I'm left with one single question. Is the rest of the series an Anime as well? Every action scene and romance scene seemed like it came straight out of Japan.
You haven't seen any of the other five movies? Buy all the EEs and let us know what you think 16 hours later.
Ain't nobody got time for that. I struggle getting through a two hour movie. No way I'm touching that series unless they release abridged editions.
Ain't nobody got time for that. I struggle getting through a two hour movie. No way I'm touching that series unless they release abridged editions.