I knew they couldn't use much, if indeed anything, from
The Silmarillion, which turned out to be a shame; because a giant eagle turned into a flaming carcass by an attacking dragon, and crashing down into the midst of an army of thousands of elves fighting thousands of orcs, is a visual that is never going to get old. And the Two Trees the size of mountains was a gorgeous sight.
However... the rest was just bad. And I understand they don't want to scare off the general audience, but messing around with the timeline they way they have has made things a bit of a mess (a lot of a mess, actually). It appears as if they're going to condense about 1500 years of the 2nd Age into a few. I guess that works for your bog-standard viewer, time skips seem to confuse and scare them, but it basically loses all the grandeur and scope imo.
The acting is... soap opera stuff. Galadriel is a standout in this respect; she should be elegant, imposing, regal and dangerous, but she just comes across as a moody, entitled teenager who is really good at using a sword (at this point in history, in the original text, not only is she literally thousands of years old, she has also borne a child. She's Gil-Galad's Great Aunt ffs!). The whole affair has more than a whiff of dodgy YA films about it: "Let's gawp at the pretty people falling out with each other, having wiil-they-won't-they romances, and doing some cool stuff... with added angst!"
I did like the idea of portraying the Eldar who remained in Middle Earth after surviving the never-ending disasters of the 1st Age as essentially PTSD sufferers. And also the fact that they see themselves as the stalwart heroes of the battle against evil while studiously avoiding mentioning The Kinslaying and all the other awful stuff they got up to (this last may be something that's contractually obliged, but it is a very Noldorin way of looking at events that were, apart from the inciting incident, mostly their own fault). But apart from Galadriel having a of a bit strop about it, it seems to go no further.
The writing is full of uneccessary, manufactured conflict. I get that you literally can't have Tolkien's language (I love him, but nobody has ever actually spoken like that) coming out of peoples' mouths and have anyone take it seriously, but the character dialogue manages to either sound dumb or pretentious, and often the same charater in the same scene veers wildly between both.
It looks pretty, though. You can certainly see where the frankly ridiculous amount of money it cost was spent. So I guess it has that going for it.
I suspect that, though I will probably continue watching for now, it's probably going to turn into a hate watch as it continues given the (poor) level of acting and storytelling on display and the liberties being taken with the text (btw when the
showed up, I was rather hoping they'd nicked that bit from Guy Kay's
Fionavar Tapestry - if you're going to take liberties with the text, go big or go home). Maybe it will improve, maybe it won't, but currently it appears that Amazon have made an epic somewhat humdrum.
This post has been edited by stone monkey: 02 September 2022 - 11:05 PM
If an opinion contrary to your own makes you angry, that is a sign that you are subconsciously aware of having no good reason for thinking as you do. If some one maintains that two and two are five, or that Iceland is on the equator, you feel pity rather than anger, unless you know so little of arithmetic or geography that his opinion shakes your own contrary conviction. … So whenever you find yourself getting angry about a difference of opinion, be on your guard; you will probably find, on examination, that your belief is going beyond what the evidence warrants. Bertrand Russell