Brian Earl Spilner said:
It seems people have taken to calling head cult chick Feminem.
Fantastic.
Mom's spaghetti
Brian Earl Spilner said:
It seems people have taken to calling head cult chick Feminem.
Fantastic.
Sir Ian McKellen confirmed that the Stranger did have his abs.#1 said:
I thought the "follow your noise" line confirms it's Gandalf. It looks like a younger version of him and the delivery of his lines are very "Gandalf-y."
OnlyForNow said:
That's some serious RetCon if he ends up being Gandlaf.
That'd make him about 6,000 years old at the start of LOTR.
AgE2theBONE said:
There is no reason in the world for them to make the wizard Gandalf.
We don't know anything about the blue wizards so the show can do anything they like with him if he's one of the blues.
It's totally unnecessary to make him freaking Gandalf.
that is poor storytelling, and fan-serving your audience instead of having confidence in your story,TV Casualty said:AgE2theBONE said:
There is no reason in the world for them to make the wizard Gandalf.
We don't know anything about the blue wizards so the show can do anything they like with him if he's one of the blues.
It's totally unnecessary to make him freaking Gandalf.
The Lord of the Rings movies had Gandalf and Hobbits. People love Gandalf and Hobbits so the show runners put in homeless Gandalf and Harfoots. There's really not much more to it than that.
In their minds they can't possibly do a show with out Gandalf and hobbits going on an adventure. They seem to believe that it is essential to any Tolkien story to draw in a wider audience. It's what people have seen and they liked it, so give them more of it.
C@LAg said:that is poor storytelling, and fan-serving your audience instead of having confidence in your story,TV Casualty said:AgE2theBONE said:
There is no reason in the world for them to make the wizard Gandalf.
We don't know anything about the blue wizards so the show can do anything they like with him if he's one of the blues.
It's totally unnecessary to make him freaking Gandalf.
The Lord of the Rings movies had Gandalf and Hobbits. People love Gandalf and Hobbits so the show runners put in homeless Gandalf and Harfoots. There's really not much more to it than that.
In their minds they can't possibly do a show with out Gandalf and hobbits going on an adventure. They seem to believe that it is essential to any Tolkien story to draw in a wider audience. It's what people have seen and they liked it, so give them more of it.
We don't know a ton about the Blue Wizards (and Tolkien didn't either; he had a couple of theories and changed his mind at least once), but they did go east and south to Rhun and possibly points beyond. There's contradicting evidence as to whether they came to Middle-Earth in the Second or Third Age. Saruman apparently spent some time in the east as well, but the legendarium is generally pretty firm that he came to Middle-Earth in the Third Age.Maximus_Meridius said:I think Meteor Man is going to be Gandalf, but I ALSO think we get Blue Wizards. I'm going to need one of you guys that are far more versed than me to check me, wasn't one of the popular theories that one (or both) of the Blue Wizards went waaaay east, like, to Rhun? I'm kinda wondering if they didn't just decide to set that up, Gandalf needs help remembering who he is (I'm not going to comment on what I think of this, btw), and so he goes and trains with the Blue Wizards in Rhun. I think this is supported by the fact that the cultists know of the Istari. Traditionally the blues are said to have come first, so it makes sense.powerbelly said:
His ability to control fire also points to gandalf. I just don't think we will get blue wizards
Alternatively, and maybe I'm way out in the weeds here, but didn't Saruman travel way east, too? Like, I think that's actually part of canon, right? So maybe we're all saying the wrong wizard?
Incidentally, I thought it was a pretty good finale, but I feel that the ring forging happened way too dang quick (and did Celebrimbor kinda dirty...he knows what an alloy is, guys...)
You don't have to play up this "I'm too cool for the history" bad boy persona with us. We accept you as you are.TCTTS said:
As someone whocould not care less about ancient canon, or how long it supposedly took in the books to ride from one location to another, can't read, that was an incredibly satisfying first season finale. To see how Sauron and the rings came to be was exactly what I didn't know I wanted from a show like this.
I disagree. Even with the license constraints on what they can use and where, there is/was still a VERY compelling story they could have told while still being much truer to the lore. It would have had to be much more Game of Thrones than LOTR, but they still could have thrown more LOTR humor and downlow moments into it to give it more of a mass appeal.TCTTS said:
Eh, personally, I think the Gandalf idea is fun. That, and it's not about "confidence." It's about Amazon giving the majority of the audience exactly what they want. I don't care if it's "accurate" or not. I get that it pisses a number of people off, but at this point, as a casual fan, I'm rooting for a true LOTR prequel, with "baby" Galadriel, "baby" Sauron, "baby" Hobbits, and yes, even "baby" Gandalf. If anything, it's the smartest play to ensure the widest audience.
The Porkchop Express said:You don't have to play up this "I'm too cool for the history" bad boy persona with us. We accept you as you are.TCTTS said:
As someone whocould not care less about ancient canon, or how long it supposedly took in the books to ride from one location to another, can't read, that was an incredibly satisfying first season finale. To see how Sauron and the rings came to be was exactly what I didn't know I wanted from a show like this.
C@LAg said:I disagree. Even with the license constraints on what they can use and where, there is/was still a VERY compelling story they could have told while still being much truer to the lore. It would have had to be much more Game of Thrones than LOTR, but they still could have thrown more LOTR humor and downlow moments into it to give it more of a mass appeal.TCTTS said:
Eh, personally, I think the Gandalf idea is fun. That, and it's not about "confidence." It's about Amazon giving the majority of the audience exactly what they want. I don't care if it's "accurate" or not. I get that it pisses a number of people off, but at this point, as a casual fan, I'm rooting for a true LOTR prequel, with "baby" Galadriel, "baby" Sauron, "baby" Hobbits, and yes, even "baby" Gandalf. If anything, it's the smartest play to ensure the widest audience.
I mean... this story is literally the Odyssey/Iliad of the Tolkien Universe, And like those stories, there are plenty of heroes trials/tribulations a competent/confident writing team could have utilized.
I am not faulting anyone who is truly enjoying it, but for me, it is still the fan-fiction I alluded to it being many months ago. Just really well done fan fiction.
redline248 said:
I love that you take him seriously
The #RingsOfPower set was so secretive, the actor playing Sauron didn't even know he was Sauron for the first few episodes. Warning: SPOILERS AHEAD‼️ https://t.co/LXBevvmV0k
— Entertainment Weekly (@EW) October 14, 2022
TCTTS said:C@LAg said:I disagree. Even with the license constraints on what they can use and where, there is/was still a VERY compelling story they could have told while still being much truer to the lore. It would have had to be much more Game of Thrones than LOTR, but they still could have thrown more LOTR humor and downlow moments into it to give it more of a mass appeal.TCTTS said:
Eh, personally, I think the Gandalf idea is fun. That, and it's not about "confidence." It's about Amazon giving the majority of the audience exactly what they want. I don't care if it's "accurate" or not. I get that it pisses a number of people off, but at this point, as a casual fan, I'm rooting for a true LOTR prequel, with "baby" Galadriel, "baby" Sauron, "baby" Hobbits, and yes, even "baby" Gandalf. If anything, it's the smartest play to ensure the widest audience.
I mean... this story is literally the Odyssey/Iliad of the Tolkien Universe, And like those stories, there are plenty of heroes trials/tribulations a competent/confident writing team could have utilized.
I am not faulting anyone who is truly enjoying it, but for me, it is still the fan-fiction I alluded to it being many months ago. Just really well done fan fiction.
My only argument is that form a corporate perspective it was *smarter* to lean into familiarity. If only because, in this particular instance, simpletons like me respond better to that familiarity and nostalgia.
i do not think we are arguing here.TCTTS said:C@LAg said:I disagree. Even with the license constraints on what they can use and where, there is/was still a VERY compelling story they could have told while still being much truer to the lore. It would have had to be much more Game of Thrones than LOTR, but they still could have thrown more LOTR humor and downlow moments into it to give it more of a mass appeal.TCTTS said:
Eh, personally, I think the Gandalf idea is fun. That, and it's not about "confidence." It's about Amazon giving the majority of the audience exactly what they want. I don't care if it's "accurate" or not. I get that it pisses a number of people off, but at this point, as a casual fan, I'm rooting for a true LOTR prequel, with "baby" Galadriel, "baby" Sauron, "baby" Hobbits, and yes, even "baby" Gandalf. If anything, it's the smartest play to ensure the widest audience.
I mean... this story is literally the Odyssey/Iliad of the Tolkien Universe, And like those stories, there are plenty of heroes trials/tribulations a competent/confident writing team could have utilized.
I am not faulting anyone who is truly enjoying it, but for me, it is still the fan-fiction I alluded to it being many months ago. Just really well done fan fiction.
I totally get what you're saying, and I'm not arguing that the show wouldn't/couldn't have been better if they would have stuck more closely to the lore, left Gandalf out, etc. My only argument is that form a corporate perspective it was *smarter* to lean into familiarity. If only because, in this particular instance, simpletons like me respond better to that familiarity and nostalgia.
Oh I completely understand why they would do it, what their reasons would be.TV Casualty said:AgE2theBONE said:
There is no reason in the world for them to make the wizard Gandalf.
We don't know anything about the blue wizards so the show can do anything they like with him if he's one of the blues.
It's totally unnecessary to make him freaking Gandalf.
The Lord of the Rings movies had Gandalf and Hobbits. People love Gandalf and Hobbits so the show runners put in homeless Gandalf and Harfoots. There's really not much more to it than that.
In their minds they can't possibly do a show with out Gandalf and hobbits going on an adventure. They seem to believe that it is essential to any Tolkien story to draw in a wider audience. It's what people have seen and they liked it, so give them more of it.
TCTTS said:
Orome said:
I think them ham-fisting so many Lord of the Rings symmetries hurt the story. #MemberBerries
No, I just like saying you can't read.TCTTS said:redline248 said:
I love that you take him seriously
I can always tell when there's an ounce of truth to his otherwise joking posts.
Quote:
I sometimes felt like this show wasn't written for fans like me, which bums me out. I get trying to change some things to make the show more appealing to non-book readers, but us book readers deserve some love, too.
Brian Earl Spilner said:Quote:
I sometimes felt like this show wasn't written for fans like me, which bums me out. I get trying to change some things to make the show more appealing to non-book readers, but us book readers deserve some love, too.
Well put me down as a book reader who very much enjoyed this season.
Hey, the men of Harad and Umbar have to have a reason to join him in the 3rd ageBrian Earl Spilner said:
You know Galadriel should probably send word to the Southlanders about their king being a bad guy.
redline248 said:
So, Sauron goes from wanting to heal middle earth under the light of the one to wanting to cover it all in darkness....b/c Galadriel broke his heart.