I watched the fifth episode, and I liked it better than the first four. No hobbits or dark wizards. The only storylines were things that were outlined in Tolkien's writings, with some fleshing out to give individual characters something to do. Celebrimbor being tempted into worse and worse decisions - I liked how Annatar appealed to his vanity by bringing up his grandpa in the previous episode - "you know, everyone says you're just a pale imitation of Feanor, but you can really show everyone if you make these rings." The smarmy son of Pharazon being a dick to the Faithful in Numenor - he's a good bad guy, I'm looking forward to seeing him drown and/or get stabbed by Elendil. I am wondering about the pace of the season - sometimes, it seems like they're advancing towards the end of the Second Age at breakneck speed - it looks like Eregion is about to get wiped out within the next episode or two - and then they have some stupid interlude with hobbits wandering around. It just kills the pacing.
Hearing the talk about this season I decided to pick up last season where I had abandoned it. Less because I like the show than because I want to see how characters and events are portrayed visually. Saw the season finale last night, which was the best episode thus far, though it felt rushed. The pacing in general is funky, too much slow burn and then cramming too many big events together too quickly. But anyway I like how Sauron was portrayed, sneaky bastard that he is. And I’m actually looking forward to catching up with this season now. Leaving most of the harfoots behind helps with that.
Wasn't the creation of the three rings a massive own goal for Sauron? If he stays low another couple of centuries, the elves would have left Middle-Earth, as shown by the weird tree from Gil-Galad. Instead he revealed himself creating the rings, given the elves motivation and the tool to stay in Middle Earth. What am I missing? While I like most of the visual, I do not like the Stoors village. It gives me the cheapest theme park or tv movie vibes. I also don't like how the elves are written. They are thousands of years old, a substantial part of that time spent fighting a war which makes WW2 and the Cold War look likes childs play. Still they seem to act like amateurs.
yes. but he was supposed to enslave the elves using them as happened with Men but they were hidden from him.
I've always maintained this was a theme of Tolkien - the high races all mess up due to various failings I like the way the elves and dwarves are portrayed as powerful but quite fallible, or even vain and arrogant in the case of Celebrimbor and Gil-galad
Sauron didn't want the elves to leave. He wanted to enslave them. But yeah, he miscalculated. The thing is, that is how Tolkien wrote the elves. And I get it to some extent. There is some wisdom that comes with immortality, but there is also some foolishness that comes with it. Humans due to their short life span are both more foolish and wiser in different ways, and often more courageous. This is seen even more in the Simarillion than in Lord of The Rings or the Hobbit. But the Rings of Power series takes the foolishness of the elves to a whole new level.
So in general I like the Anatar storyline but i do as usual find the scripting a bit baffling. We just had Sauron trick Celebrimbor, Galadriel etc in one guise, then it's repeated in a new form, and this was just after he tricked the orc lord - like we get it - he can take any form Like wouldn't it just have been tighter for him to trick Celebrimbor once in the Anatar form? (Which I think is how Tolkien wrote it). Often it feels intentionally obtuse I like the sea of Rhun quest - though getting rid of the hobbits would be good. This stuff feels more like proper D&D style campaigning to me. The dwarves as comic relief remains dumb - i don't get why all the adaptions do this I kind of wish they'd develop the numenor storyline more - as that seems like a chance to do something new compared to the Sauron stuff
I'm in episode 7. Spoiler, kind of - Elrond kisses Galadriel. Dude, that's your future mother in law. But now I'm wondering at what point Galadriel married Celeborn - I think the summary at the end of the Silmarillion says Celeborn came from Doriath, Thingol and Melian's realm in the First Age, so they should already be together. And at what point did they have Celebrian, who became Elrond's wife and Arwen's mother? And then in looking at the summaries of the Second and Third Ages at the back of the Silmarillion - where was Galadriel at the time of the Last Alliance? Gil-galad and Elendil were besieging Sauron in Mordor, with Isildur, Cirdan and Elrond all present, but Galadriel wasn't there? Anyways, back to the show, it's moving better with fewer hobbits over the last few episodes.
For people with Bluesky, there's a series of cartoons behind this link which sum up the Rings of Power series. I found them entertaining. https://bsky.app/profile/davekellett.bsky.social/post/3l5juayshif2m
Speaking of which, that was a really limp dick version of Tom Bombadil on the show. So they turned him into a dull trope of the enigmatic magical mentor? Lame.
No kidding. I don't see how anyone could read how the book depicts Bombadil and then come up with that character we saw.
It felt more like they wanted/needed a certain type of character to coach Gandalf so plugged in Tom. And then thought “oh, I guess we’d better have him quietly mutter some of his songs or something.”
I'm only halfway through, and while it's not terrible, maybe even enjoyable, the bar set by the first season was a mile underground. In terms of massively underwhelming tv interpretations of books that I love, it's not at Foundation levels of wtf.
So finally looped back to this and Ep4 was surprisingly .... good? I like that mostly the elven leaders are portrayed as arrogant, bumbling, floppy haired elitists. This is how I always understood them to be in the books. Like the High Men, they fail for these kinds of reasons. Galadriel works much better in this season as the hot head who sees more clearly. And Elrond as a naive dork who has to wise up, but is right about one thing. And finally the Gandalf story has some movement. I really do not like the amnesia trope - one of the dumbest tv tropes than can be used. And now it feels like we have to do the master/apprentice thing with Tom in the Yoda role. Sigh. But at least stuff is happening and I don't mind Tom at all as i always disliked him in the books anyway. Like he is a fine idea, but for some reason Tolkien decided to make him wildly powerful, then had to rely on <reasons> for why he would be written out of the action Also the narrative arcs have settled down to much more D&D style adventuring and much less high level campaign stuff. This show is not GoT! So it works much better to have action because much of the dialogue and intrigue is Fail-tier. Especially any episode without the dwarves is a big win. Hoping it continues in this direction because with all that budget, i would much rather it is sunk into fights with wights and wizards than <checks notes> Durin being mad with his dad
Yeah, I think there were some episodes in the middle which are decent and point how the show should have been like. Don't worry, everything will get back on track.
I'll repeat. Bombadil is horribly written in ROP. His character is nearly the opposite of how Tolkien describes him. It's like the ROP writers never read any of the Bombadil stuff.
Don't like the character in the book? I see this string of words you've put together, but I don't understand them.
I think a lot of stuff in Tolkien's background and especially his love of Norse mythology make Tom understandable. Tom is absolutely purposeful and is not a throw away even if at some level the purpose is to be enigmatic. My take---and Tolkien has vacillated on this, giving contradictory answers in different letters---is that Tom represents nature itself, enduring regardless of the machinations of mortals and immortals.