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Post #617582

Author
CP3S
Parent topic
The OT.com J. R. R. Tolkien & Middle Earth Discussion Thread
Link to post in topic
https://originaltrilogy.com/post/id/617582/action/topic#617582
Date created
3-Jan-2013, 8:22 PM

darth_ender said:

@C3PS, in The Fellowship film, Saruman says the Uruk-hai are a cross of orcs and goblin-men. In the novel they are said to be a cross of orcs and men. I'm assuming your friends were relying on the film as their source. As for goblins being stronger, I've never read anything, nor remember seeing anything on film that implied that; goblins have always appeared to be weaker when any distinction was made, it seems. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uruk-hai#Adaptations

Yeah, they are definitely 100% dependent on the movies for anything they know about LOTR. That is weird. Any ideas where Jackson came up with the orcs and goblin-men thing? What the heck is a "goblin-man" according to the movies? In the book "goblin-men" is what some characters actually call the Uruk-hai, IIRC. So they are basically claiming Uruk-hai are a cross between orcs and uruk-hai, right?

Anyway, I guess that means they were completely right then, following Jackson's lore.

 

The History of the Hobbit...hadn't seen that before. That looks really cool!

I know, right! That was a book I was extremely excited about and couldn't wait for in the months prior to its release. Then volume one finally came out and I figured I could wait an extra few weeks to get it at a reduced used price off amazon. I guess I got sidetracked or used to waiting for it, now it has been out for years, and I still haven't managed to get it. Still really want it.

 

darth_ender said:


    What do you think about ommitting the Scouring of the Shire and Tom Bombadil?

I think it is good Tom got cut. The scouring of the Shire is one of my favorite parts of the book. In fact, sometimes I will just pick up the book and read that section when I feel like a small dose of Tolkien without a big commitment.

I feel like it is a really important part of the story and really shows the growth and maturity the hobbit characters went through during their adventure. They left scared and nervous young hobbits, and returned to something their former selves would have once considered a nightmare, but now they laugh in its face and run it off. However, ROTK already felt a bit bogged down at the end, it would have been hard to find a place to put it, and it would have messed with the pacing of the film. Like Akwat said, it would have been pretty anti-climactic being shoved in after the climax of the film.

 

@ Akwat. I've always wanted to do an edit that follows the book chronology of events. Did you do that in yours?

In fact, since I am very ADHD and have a very hard time sitting through 3 hour plus long movies in one sitting, I've always wanted to edit all three extended editions of the LOTR films into 40-50 minute episodes like a television series, ordering and editing together each episode as closely as possible to chapters from the book (for example, for a whole episode we'd follow Frodo and Sam, rather than flipping back and forth between various character's stories every few minutes as done in the films. Also wanted to add a brief title intro to make them feel authentic.

Watching The Hobbit has kind of re-sparked my interest in doing something like this, only now with the three Hobbit films as season one of the series. I'd be a lot of work though.

 

Akwat said:

Goblins and orcs are just two different names for the same creature. Cross an orc with a human, however, and you get a half-orc. Saruman's Uruk-Hai are a particular breed of half-orc that were stronger, smarter, and larger than regular orcs and could also withstand sunlight. Another product of Saruman's "orc husbandry" was a race called "goblin-men" which are only mentioned once or twice, and about whom very little is known. Most likely, they too were a specific breed of half-orc, distinct from both Uruk-Hai and from garden-variety half-orcs. (In the FOTR movie, Gandalf tells Elrond that the Uruk-Hai are a product of Saruman's cross-breeding orcs with goblin-men. I'm pretty sure, from a book standpoint, that this is erroneous.)

Ah, I knew of the few different breeds of half-orcs, but I thought goblin-men was used to describe Uruk-Hai when told from the perspective of characters who didn't know what a Uruk-Hai was. I took it as more of a descriptive name for something that appears to be a cross between an orc/goblin and a human (which of course, was a Uruk).

And yeah, I am sure the films saying they are a cross between goblin-men and orcs is entirely erroneous from the book standpoint. Clearly Jackson and Co made the decision to separate the species of goblins and orcs long before An Unexpected Journey.

 

I also hated the inclusion of the anachronistic golf and croquet references. I think the golf joke worked fine for the book, but in a film made to be a prequel to the Lord of the Rings movies, it was really out of place.

Ordinarily I would agree on this point. But seeing as how these references were straight out of the book, somehow I can't bring myself to fault them. I couldn't help but smile when I heard these references in the theatre.

I know they came from Tolkien, and I think they fit fine with the tone of the book just fine. I just fell they were something that made it fit poorly with the LOTR films. Leaving them out of the movie, when they left out so many other things, would have been preferable to me.