Eldritch Warlord said:Of course LotR is still relevant, even if it's just because of its enormous influence on fantasy. The simplest definition of a High Fantasy setting is "like Lord of the Rings."
You should definitely see The Hobbit too.
There's many counter-arguments to that.RJ 17 said:Really the only thing that makes LotR irrelevant is when you think how easy it would have been to break the story...namely the whole "Ummmmm...why didn't we just take the Eagles to Mordor?"
The one I like most is that they couldn't possible hope to destroy the Ring if Sauron saw them coming, which he obviously would have if they just flew to Mount Doom.
There's also the fact that the Eagles are servants of Manwë who exist to observe the mortal realm, not alter its history. This is lost in the films but even rescuing Gandalf from Isengard was an uncomfortable grey area to them. In the book the Eagle complains that he "came to bear tidings, not burdens."
Thank you for exploding that lazy and obnoxious 'plot hole'.
It's one that's always irritated me as a fan of the books first and foremost.
I find it interesting that many people on the thread refer to the movies first, then the games, but seldom the actual source material.
Which is a shame, to be honest, as it's one of the most engaging books I've ever read- I found it very, very difficult to read much other fantasy after it because I was so in love with Tolkien's living, breathing Middle Earth which had its own history and cultures, adventures and the ever present sense that you walked upon the lands of your forefathers at every step.
It's a setting that I find so rich and refreshing to return to again and again I can't ever see myself getting bored with it.
It's been a while since I've watched the movies, which I adore, but ever since I first read the Lord of the Rings when I was 12 going on 13, I've returned to Middle Earth more or less every year to dive in and out of the books.
Perhaps that makes me a Tolkien obsessive, but the fact remains that I can never grow tired or bored of a book that transports me instantly to another world with a word describing the glint of snow on the Misty Mountains, or the thundering clamour of the Falls of Rauros.
I'd definitely recommend people to approach it as a book that starts off as a slightly slow burning tale, that steadily ramps up the fear and danger that Frodo and his companions face.
Which brings me to another point- Frodo of the movies is often portrayed as weak willed and helpless, which is a shame, as this undermines what Tolkien presents Frodo as in the books.
He is someone who is way in over his head, but remains firmly resolute to do the right thing.
A person whose strength of will is much greater than it appears and who continues to seek the destruction of the One Ring, even though it constantly weighs on his mind, because he knows how evil it is, and what will happen to other people if he fails.
This is getting a bit long, so I'll sign off and let you guys to it.