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bestboy-huan · 10 days
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I know that Peter’s Jackson Lord of the Rings trilogy technically has flaws but also….it doesn’t. It’s perfect.
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bestboy-huan · 29 days
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bestboy-huan · 1 month
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The thing about method acting is everyone talks about that joker guy being a dick or whatever but no one ever talks about Viggo Mortensen in the lord of the rings sleeping in the horse stables and leading the entire cast on random adventures
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bestboy-huan · 2 months
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bestboy-huan · 2 months
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i don’t really care for lord of the rings all that much but bombadil civil war still makes me lose my mind
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bestboy-huan · 2 months
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the way aragorn runs is so chaotic
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bestboy-huan · 2 months
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bestboy-huan · 3 months
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Sam Gamgee + text posts
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bestboy-huan · 3 months
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bestboy-huan · 5 months
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Not to Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes (1885) post on main but, the thing about Sherlock Holmes that many modern adaptations don’t understand is that Holmes and Watson are friends. Holmes loves Watson, and I don’t even mean this in a ship way. That’s his best friend who he cares for so much. Watson does not put up with Holmes, that is his best friend; that’s why they are near one another. They are also gay but like. You don’t have to understand that one yet.
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bestboy-huan · 5 months
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i think all quiet on the western front and the lord of the rings are in direct conversation with each other, as in theyre the retelling of the same war with one saying here’s what happened, we all died, and it did not matter at all and another going hush little boy, of course we won, of course your friends came back
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bestboy-huan · 5 months
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That’s it, the Professor is truly the King of Sass
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bestboy-huan · 6 months
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Happy low opacity elrond day to all who celebrate it
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bestboy-huan · 6 months
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do you want me. have you wanted me. will you want me. when will you want me
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bestboy-huan · 7 months
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Finwë is like “Of course I love all my sons equally. Right, Fëanor, Falafel and Finances?”
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bestboy-huan · 7 months
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Of all the redemption arcs in popular fantasy media, I feel like Theoden's in The Lord of the Rings is the most overlooked.
The movies emphasize the magical control that the evil powers exercise over Theoden, but in the books, it's more obviously a depiction of bad kingship, in the British medieval sense. Theoden takes bad advice; he neglects his family; he fails to reward his knights; and he leaves his people vulnerable to attack. He also does not honor his kingdom's promises to help nearby kingdoms, as we can tell from Boromir's account of what Gondor has been going through.
Gandalf doesn't just cast out the curse and magically fix everything. He encourages Theoden to free himself from his bad advisor, but Theoden has to take all the subsequent steps. And those choices are not easy; after so much neglect, his knights are scattered, and his only option for defending his people is to gather them at Helm's Deep. The siege does not go well. His people are afraid and despairing. But nevertheless, he holds firm and charges out to meet the enemy -- and Gandalf literally meets him halfway, bringing with him the lost knights, whom Theoden welcomes and rewards after the battle.
Theoden could have just gone home after that. But when Gondor calls for aid, Theoden proves his worth by honoring his promises. He keeps his oaths not only to his people but to his allies.
And the climax of his redemption in the book is not his death, but his leadership. The ride of the Rohirrim against Sauron's armies is described in lavish detail, with an uncharacteristically heated pace: Theoden leads the entire line of Rohan, his banner streaming behind him in the wind as they race toward their foe. And that's the end of the chapter.
I love Theoden's arc so much, and especially that moment so much, because the message is not that he has to win battles or seek power. He just has to keep fighting. Theoden's greatest enemy isn't really Sauron: it's despair. And over the course of the book, he keeps choosing hope and action over despair and hesitation, until finally he can lead his people with courage.
As someone who struggles a lot with despair, I really needed to hear that story.
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bestboy-huan · 7 months
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I saw a post saying that Boromir looked too scruffy in FotR for a Captain of Gondor, and I tried to move on, but I’m hyperfixating. Has anyone ever solo backpacked? I have. By the end, not only did I look like shit, but by day two I was talking to myself. On another occasion I did fourteen days’ backcountry as the lone woman in a group of twelve men, no showers, no deodorant, and brother, by the end of that we were all EXTREMELY feral. You think we looked like heirs to the throne of anywhere? We were thirteen wolverines in ripstop.
My boy Boromir? Spent FOUR MONTHS in the wilderness! Alone! No roads! High floods! His horse died! I’m amazed he showed up to Imladris wearing clothes, let alone with a decent haircut. I’m fully convinced that he left Gondor looking like Richard Sharpe being presented to the Prince Regent in 1813
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*electric guitar riff*
And then rocked up to Imladris a hundred ten days later like
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