A few pages ago you mentioned how one of the themes of the movies is men coming into their own and rising up to save themselves... which is then undermined by men having to be constantly bailed out by the supernatural (magical trees, magical army of the dead, Sauron's defeat causing an earthquake to swallow his armies, etc). That's not even a theme of the books, but even so, Jackson manages to undermine his own theme that he was trying to include in the movies!Brian Earl Spilner said:
You disagree with Aragorn's decision, which is totally fine. That's a different topic of discussion than what my point was, which was countering the argument that Peter Jackson had some fundamental misunderstanding of Tolkien's work by having Aragorn execute him.
Now in the case of Aragorn executing, yes executing, the Mouth we have a clear cut example of Jackson choosing to ignore one of the overriding themes of his work: The Power of Mercy. Through Bilbo and Frodo's mercy, Gollum was spared and the quest was able to be completed. Through mercy to Wormtongue, Saruman was able to be eliminated in way that would not lay a curse on the Shire. Through the practice of mercy, one of Tolkiens other key themes is able to come through: "Oft Evil Shall Evil Mar".
But he didn't kill anyone.Quote:
Aragorn is a flawed man just like anybody else in Middle Earth.
In fact, book Aragorn threatened to kill anyone who touched his sword when arriving at Edoras...
While I'm not a fan of that threat, that sword is more than just a hump of metal forged into a weapon. It represents his lineage and his own internal power.
The point still stands: The Mouth of Sauron, while insolent, was not a threat. His sword was not drawn. He was murdered in cold blood.