Everyone’s talking about the show The Rings of Power, so we’ve been thinking a lot this week about The Lord of the Rings. Mostly, we’ve been thinking about the films—the special effects, the costumes, and how they might have been different. But we’ve also looked at the life of Tolkien himself and the meaning behind the books.
Here's a look back at the facts we learned this week. These short summaries are not meant to be appreciated by themselves—each one links to a full article we put out this past week with much more info, so click every one that interests you, or you will elect the way of pain.
His last movie, The Frighteners, flopped, and his other stuff was low-budget, so it’s baffling that New Line Cinema funded his production to the tune of $300 million.
The movies needed experienced riders, they just happened to find a bunch of women, and so they rolled with it, disguising them with beards to play the men of Rohan.
We’re not going to spoil it here, but if you’ve watched the latest episode, check the theory out.
Fredegar Bolger in the Shire dressed as Frodo to explain the guy’s absence from the area. We don’t totally understand what this disguise entailed, but it must have been ridiculous.
Actors swished black licorice mouthwash between takes, so their mouths would reflect orcs’ black blood.
They don’t have the rights to The Silmarillion, Unfinished Tales, or The History of Middle-earth. They only have the rights to content from the Lord of the Rings trilogy and The Hobbit (which, you might notice, include only vague references to earlier time periods.
Ronnie Lee Gardner watched the films during a self-imposed 48-hour fast preceding his death by firing squad for murdering three people.
Peter Jackson shot epilogues for Faramir and Eowyn, Legolas, and Gimli, and we have a snippet of footage.
Fran Walsh also cowrote all three movies and composed songs for the trilogy.
Oh, it was nothing explicit, it was just footage of her pretending to talk on the phone, but it’s still pretty funny.
You might have heard fans throw this idea around to honor Sam, but it misses the point of the story, which mocked linking honor and power.
Warning: We may have indulged in a little pipe weed before coming up with this comparison.