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07-20-2006, 09:57 PM | #1 |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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What did Christopher Tolkien think?
I was reading the J.R.R. thread like this, and I saw Christopher's name mentioned as "unhappy and unsatisfied"...
Is this true? What did Christopher think of PJ's films?
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"Loud and clear it sounds in the valleys of the hills...and then let all the foes of Gondor flee!" -Boromir, The Fellowship of the Ring |
07-23-2006, 11:40 AM | #2 | |
Illustrious Ulair
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: In the home of lost causes, and forsaken beliefs, and unpopular names,and impossible loyalties
Posts: 4,240
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CT put out a statement:
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As far as I'm aware Christopher has never seen the movies. |
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07-23-2006, 01:14 PM | #3 | |
Shade of Carn Dūm
Join Date: May 2006
Location: Chozo Ruins.
Posts: 421
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Personally, I think Christopher should give the movies a go. They are the very best.
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07-23-2006, 01:37 PM | #4 |
Illustrious Ulair
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: In the home of lost causes, and forsaken beliefs, and unpopular names,and impossible loyalties
Posts: 4,240
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Sorry, but I think CT is absolutley right. The books are not suited to visual representation. Tolkien's language is absolutely essential to LotR. That's why the BBC Radio version works so much better than the movies.
I know this isn't a popular view here on the Downs, but it is correct (as is usual with me). |
07-23-2006, 02:20 PM | #5 |
Flame of the Ainulindalė
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I'm afraid that this topic has been turned over a hundred times here at the BD, but still I think it worthwhile to bring forward a few points.
"A picture says more than a thousand words" they say. I believe this is quite a widely-spread idiom (with variations). I have been against it for a long time. On occasion a word tells more than any thousand pictures. It depends of the words and pictures involved in the comparison... Think of the words of ancient Greek, like: kalos/n, filia, sophia, logos, whatever - or just plain contemporary expressions like God, love, humanity... I can't see a way to exhaust these concepts with any pictures, how artistic or highly valued they might be. Neither could I see Picasso's Guernica (sorry about the trivial example) or any other major work of the "great modernists" I love (Marc, Beckmann, Kandinsky, Rothko...) to be explained away with a mere thousand words... with any words. Or someone making a film about T.S. Eliot's The Waste Land... They seem to be incompatible. But even making a picture of a story, that's somehow tricky too. A story, when read, takes place in your mind. You may have vivid ideas of how the things look like, but more often than not, they are vague feelings and emotions depicting you the things told in the story. When you take on to filming a story, you will have to take a stance on every detail: how many toes does a Balrog have? Is Frodo's sleeve just an inch or an inch and a half from his wrist? How did Boromir indeed look at lady Galadriel, what were the minute details on his expression (and someone has to act them in reality)? And so on. Making a film kind of nails things down to something like a reality. Makes them look something actual or being. I'm not sure what I think of the films by PJ. It was great to see them and there were many beautiful sceneries and finely wrought details that stirred my emotions and made the opus breathe in a new way *, but still... The imagery of PJ somehow shadows now my reading of the LotR, and I'm not sure how good it is... I can relate to CT when he's being sceptical about transforming his father's world and stories into a film. Maybe the story and the world would be more varied and more personal without the films? But was all this individuality something J.R.R. craved for? Probably not. * That is not to say that I didn't disagree with many of the decisions the PJ-team made in adopting the story - or getting their own ideas over the original story... but that is another matter.
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Upon the hearth the fire is red Beneath the roof there is a bed; But not yet weary are our feet... |
07-23-2006, 09:13 PM | #6 | |
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
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I really think CT should watch the movies, for they got many people really into Tolkien, or got them back into him. And by being "into" Tolkien I mean all things LotR- books, films, Letters, History, etc. Does anybody know a snail mail address or anything of that sort to write to Christopher Tolkien?
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"Loud and clear it sounds in the valleys of the hills...and then let all the foes of Gondor flee!" -Boromir, The Fellowship of the Ring |
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