That depends entirely on which Peter Jackson shows up the LOTR genius or the hobbit George Lucas clone.
Brian Earl Spilner said:
Don't get me wrong, I am a huge LOTR fanboy. But, isn't it presumptuous to assume this will be a massive GoT-like success? 5 seasons guaranteed???
I recently re-read FOTR and there are a few things that would be interesting that happen between The Hobbit and Fellowship, but none that I find to be "must-see" television.Brian Earl Spilner said:
The biggest question mark for me is how they will approach it from a storytelling perspective.
The obvious choice would be many parallel storylines interweaved throughout the season, a-la GoT.
But what if they dedicate entire storylines to each season, a-la The Wire?
Season 1 - Young Aragorn
Season 2 - Rohan
Season 3 - Gondor
Etc.
But, I suppose the main problem with that is sustaining each storyline for an entire season. That would be difficult to pull off. You'd have to have several mini-storylines within each season, different sets of characters, etc.
And, you also lose being able to follow one (or several) character throughout the entire series, like we've been able to do with Jon Snow.
Thoughts?
that would be a cool story to tell...Sid said:
HBO should pick up "The Black Company" as their post-GOT medieval fantasy show. Would be plenty gritty and nudity (an HBO requirement) could easily be fit in.
Quad Dog said:
Let's be honest here, what initially brought eyeballs to Game of Thrones was **** and dragons (See Ian McShane quote about GoT). Can Lord of The Rings do the same to pull in a neutral audience?
This was my first thought when I read multi season.Brian Earl Spilner said:
The biggest question mark for me is how they will approach it from a storytelling perspective.
The obvious choice would be many parallel storylines interweaved throughout the season, a-la GoT.
But what if they dedicate entire storylines to each season, a-la The Wire?
Season 1 - Young Aragorn
Season 2 - Rohan
Season 3 - Gondor
Etc.
But, I suppose the main problem with that is sustaining each storyline for an entire season. That would be difficult to pull off. You'd have to have several mini-storylines within each season, different sets of characters, etc.
And, you also lose being able to follow one (or several) character throughout the entire series, like we've been able to do with Jon Snow.
Thoughts?
Yea, that could be 2-3 seasons for sure, and would need to nail the casting for Aragorn..and probably the other rangers/Dunedain. Wonder how long we will have to wait.ja86 said:
just build around Aragorn's story has enough in it to run many seasons. First, the the rangers of the north are fighting constantly against the evil that occupied the north. He dad is killed early and he is fostered in Rivendell. As he grows up, falls in love and finds out he has to be one badass dude to win the hand of his love. So he goes and fights with the armies of gondor, he fights with the armies of Rohan, he is fighting in the north, and east, and he goes into the deep south and explores. This is all before he meets gandalf. Hard to work boobs into a Tolkien story but there there will be plenty of betrayal, death and destruction.
There are all kinds of conflict going on to build a story around. The shire was nice and peaceful, but nothing else was.
It would be really interesting to see the reaction of the Tolkein family and the legions of Tolkein's fans to a show, based on his work, with the kind of violence, language and nudity of Game of Thrones. I can't imagine that would sit real well.Quad Dog said:
Let's be honest here, what initially brought eyeballs to Game of Thrones was **** and dragons (See Ian McShane quote about GoT). Can Lord of The Rings do the same to pull in a neutral audience?
MuckRaker96 said:
Melisandre - Galadriel during her party days
Quote:
What is also fascinating about this report is that it specifies that only the show's first season will focus on Aragorn. Previous reports confirmed that the show will have at least five seasons -- hence the billion dollar price tag -- which, as Slashfilm notes, seems to indicate that it could be taking an anthology-style approach to exploring the rich fantasy world of J.R.R. Tolkien. We'll continue to update this story as it develops, but in the meantime we'll just be rewatching the extended edition of The Two Towers on repeat.
Brian Earl Spilner said:
Looks like I was on the money with this.Quote:
What is also fascinating about this report is that it specifies that only the show's first season will focus on Aragorn. Previous reports confirmed that the show will have at least five seasons -- hence the billion dollar price tag -- which, as Slashfilm notes, seems to indicate that it could be taking an anthology-style approach to exploring the rich fantasy world of J.R.R. Tolkien. We'll continue to update this story as it develops, but in the meantime we'll just be rewatching the extended edition of The Two Towers on repeat.
I was expecting more the Thorongil version of Aragorn. Where he's traveling to Gondor, Rohan, etc. serving different lords.Brian Earl Spilner said:
The latter, most likely. Full-on Jon Snow.
And not a bad thing really. Will make for a better arc and is in line with the films.
#1 said:
So the official twitter account for the show just unveiled a map of middle earth. Let the countdown begin! I'm excited to revisit this world!