BenFiasco14 said:
I still have a gut feeling this is gonna be a horrendous show/undertaking - also JW Fallen Kingdom was terribad.
Shife said:
This gets more interesting.
Unless the timeline is totally screwed up, I'd guess this begins with the forging of the 3 elvish rings, 7 dwarf rings, 9 rings of men and finally the one ring in some sort of prologue. For example the rings of power were forged almost 2000 years before Elendil and sons set foot in Middle Earth.
So this probably begins with backstory then moves to present day -- being very late Second Age -- when Arnor and Gondor battle the forces of Mordor. We see the three chief cities of Gondor on the map with their original names and the capital in the north, Annuminas, but not the second capital of the north, Fornost. The season probably ends around the last alliance.
Keep in mind how long these damn Numenoreans live so it would not be uncommon from a pure Tolkeinist perspective to have multiple 10+ year jumps forward until something worthwhile happens. Another example: There are over 100 years between Elendil coming to Middle Earth and Isildur taking the ring from Sauron.
Would not be surprised if time spans are shortened since human viewers tend to not like processing extra long lifespans given our own 70-100 year range.
EDIT: The three Hobbit races had not yet migrated over the Misty Mountains yet either so there is no Shire if we believe the map.
I think so many people find it ironic that a random internet dork is spouting faux intellectual observations on what Tolkien would find ironic about his fans instead of this dork just enjoying the depth of Middle Earth and Arda and the hundreds of tales contained within.Render said:
I think Tolkien would find it ironic that so many people obsess over his world building yet ignore the deeper themes that were the reasons he wrote the dang books to begin with.
It'd be ironic to him because it perfectly reflects the story in LOTR: men are easily tempted by the ring and do not see the deeper threat in it.
Uh huhBrian Earl Spilner said:
But he didn't write the books because of those themes. He wrote them to have a story for the languages he'd created.
Render said:
I've never read the Silmarillion, so I have no Tolkien cred.
Man vs Man, man vs nature, nature vs ringsRender said:Uh huhBrian Earl Spilner said:
But he didn't write the books because of those themes. He wrote them to have a story for the languages he'd created.
Edited to add: Tolkien created his stories for many reasons, I'll grant you that. But for some reason people always seem to overlook the deeper -- and ultimately more important stuff -- in his stories. And that's my point.
Is this normal?Quote:
As pre-production on the Lord Of the Rings TV series is gearing up in New Zealand, the streamer recently moved ahead with an early Season 2 renewal for the sprawling adaptation of J.R.R. Tolkien's fantasy novels. As part of that, Amazon commissioned the reassembling of the writers room to break the second season.
In conjunction with the early renewal, the LOTR series will go on a 4-5-month hiatus after filming the first two episodes from Season 1, directed by J.A. Bayona. The writing team of the series, led by showrunners and executive producers J.D. Payne and Patrick McKay, will use the time to map out and write the bulk of Season 2 scripts
Brian Earl Spilner said:
For real.