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Lord of the Rings: QUESTIONS FOR NERDS
Oh, and movie spoilers, obviously.
-Gandalf was grey/white, and Saruman was white/many-colored. I read that two other wizards were blue. What was the color of the last wizard, and what did the colors mean? -Gandalf was given a ring by one of the elves. Why? I was under the impression that save for The One Ring, the rings given out by Sauron were to be held by those who original bore them. And if not, why weren't the other rings passed to others/disposed of? -Why did the ringbearers leave for the Undying Lands? Was it to prevent Sauron's influence from remaining in Middle-Earth, or was it an act of compassion for the anguish they've lived with? Wouldn't bringing Sauron's influence into the Undying Lands be a problem? -The head orc in RotK was pink and deformed. From my understanding, he was only mentioned once in the books, and never even specified as being an orc. Is there any reference in the books that would hint at where the design or potential backstory could be in the character? An orc/human hybrid or something? -What would have happened if someone poked Sauron in the eye? :lol -What WAS the Mouth of Sauron? -What became of the Horadrim, fleeing orcs, etc after Sauron's destruction? -What IS the "Scouring of the Shire?" I understand it's the mechanization of the land or something, but what is the story behind it and how does it happen? |
Re: Lord of the Rings: QUESTIONS FOR NERDS
I'll answer the ones that I know the answer to off-hand.
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To add to Chimp's comments:
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As for the rings, the One Ring was the only one forged by Sauron himself, the others by elven smiths. Their power wasn't evil, and it was diminishing anyway - if I'm right. Quote:
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Frodo grants Saruman mercy again, which is rather gay, then Saruman tries to kill him, but his knife breaks on Frodo's mithril. Saruman is allowed to leave alive another time, but Wormtongue kills him. Then Wormtongue gets shot with arrows by the hobbits, and the Shire is cleaned up again. |
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Oh, that's good news. Well, here's the description of the Mouth of Sauron from the book:
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the ringbearers were allowed to travel to the undying lands as reward for not falling to the corruption of the Ring :(
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The scorching of the shire should have been added into the movie.
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what are you trying to say
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Galadriel and Elrond had two of the Elf rings. Who had the third one? The guy at the dock in the West? Or was that the one that Gandalf wore?
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who cares its a book the answer never existed >:
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http://www.glyphweb.com/arda/
I found something about the pink orc dude in there, but that was many a month ago. The Encyclopedia of Arda is a rather comprehensive collection of all the specifics. It has a few articles that link the movies and the books, pointing out plot differences, etc. |
It seems like the two most likely speculations for Gothmog's race are human and orc. So I'm thinking that the cause for his appearance in the movie was intented to be a cross between these two. He's pink and deformed, so I almost think the idea for the movie appearance might have been that he was a man distorted into a monster.
Many thanks for this link. I'd found an encyclopedia online back when Fellowship came out, but I'd closed it when it spoiled that Gandalf returns, and could never find it again. This site blows that one out of the water. |
Look up Goblin-Men on that site. He could easily be one of those things.
Edit: Also, look up half-orcs. |
Yeah, I read that after my post.
It would make sense to have him be one of those, seeing how they were excluded from the movies, and that could have been a nod to their existence. I guess we'll only really know when the Extended Version comes out. |
I'm too lazy to read if this has been mentioned, but that site says Gothmog is not only a balrog, but lord of the balrogs and his whole history predates the LOTR story itself. I rarely get into this kinda thing, but reading up on all that stuff brought out the nerd in me.
Can't wait for the extended edition. Anyone know if there's gonna be a huge box set with all the extended editions? I've been waiting for that :( |
I'm sure there will be, but I'm almost positive it won't come with the extras that the individual sets did. Meaning, the statues and the extra DVDs.
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Who were the men with the Elephants? my friend keeps referring to them as Easterlings but I can't seem to find them in the Encyclopedia.
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Unless I'm mistaken, those were the Horadrim.
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the elephant guys were the haradrim (or the southrons) the easterlings were not featured in the movies but attacked helm's deep and minas tirith i think? along w/ the orcs
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They were featured in The Two Towers, but weren't at the battle Helm's Deep. But they were part of the armies that amassed at Isengard before the battle.
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i'm 99% sure they were in the battle at helms deep in the book :(
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I was talking about the movie. They were shown in the armies at Isengard, but were essentially not at the battle of Helm's Deep.
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i know what is up w/ that all that setup and for what >:
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the mouth of sauron, also described as the lieutenant of barad dur, was a member of the black numenorean race. they were originally the "king's men" as opposed to members of the rebellion of elendil the elf-friend who fought against the increasingly evil kings of numenor who, out of pride and being deceived by sauron, tried to visit the undying lands which, not being for mortals, ended up having numenor demolished by the gods.
the remnant of the king's men settled in the south of middle earth, and i think became the haradrim (either the unfinished tales or the silmarrilion refer to 2 of such leaders as herumor and fuinur (sp?) who, i vaguely recall, fought against hte last such alliance of men and elves in elendil's time). 3 of hte nazgul are also black numenoreans. i think of all the races written of by tolkien, the black numenoreans are the most interesting. basically evil aragorns, proud killers obsessed with death and immortality, who sacrificed the king's men and delighted in destruction, warfare, piracy, and everything fun and awesome in the world. in one of tolkien's later books, he gave a vague discussion of the origins of the mouth of sauron as a youth from a prominent gondorian family who was abducted and rose through the ranks of the mordor army because of his cunning. but this was scrapped in the return of the king. one thing that always intrigued me was how he was a sorceror when there were only 5 wizards. i guess sorcery as defined by tolkien is a separate entity than magic, as the witch king was also a sorceror, but i find the line to be very narrow and not well-defined by tolkien. also what's interesting is that he, a man, was one of the highest ranking people in mordor, as opposed to nazgul and other creatures. one silly question: with isengard and baraddur being depicted as immensely tall fortress towers of doom, you think they had elevators or did everyone have to take the stairs? |
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