Tolkien Universe's banner
Tolkien Universe's profile picture

Tolkien Universe

@tolkienzone37,683 subscribers

Fan account | Exploring Middle-earth one tweet at a time | Not all those who wander are lost 🍃

Shorts

The 1978 animated Lord of the Rings used real actors in live-action, then traced over them — a technique called rotoscoping. That’s why the battles look so weirdly real.

The 1978 animated Lord of the Rings used real actors in live-action, then traced over them — a technique called rotoscoping. That’s why the battles look so weirdly real.

1,081,740 просмотров

You can’t fool me. That’s not a volcanic eruption, it’s Gandalf facing off against Durin’s Bane.

You can’t fool me. That’s not a volcanic eruption, it’s Gandalf facing off against Durin’s Bane.

251,027 просмотров

The Lord of the Rings Extended Editions add over two hours of story and character depth Extra scenes expand Faramir, Boromir, and the politics of Rohan and Gondor. Many fans consider the Extended Cuts the definitive version of the trilogy.

The Lord of the Rings Extended Editions add over two hours of story and character depth Extra scenes expand Faramir, Boromir, and the politics of Rohan and Gondor. Many fans consider the Extended Cuts the definitive version of the trilogy.

424,343 просмотров

Viggo Mortensen still remembers The Oath of Elendil, the song in Elvish that Aragorn sings during his coronation in The Lord of the Rings.

Viggo Mortensen still remembers The Oath of Elendil, the song in Elvish that Aragorn sings during his coronation in The Lord of the Rings.

202,025 просмотров

-Never thought I'd die fighting side by side with an elf -What about side by side with a friend? -Aye, I could do that.

-Never thought I'd die fighting side by side with an elf -What about side by side with a friend? -Aye, I could do that.

60,945 просмотров

This is how the siege of Minas Tirith was filmed in The Lord of the Rings. Why use CGI when you can throw flaming rocks at the actors?

This is how the siege of Minas Tirith was filmed in The Lord of the Rings. Why use CGI when you can throw flaming rocks at the actors?

76,808 просмотров

A Lord of the Rings fan is recreating Middle-earth with Legos in his attic:

A Lord of the Rings fan is recreating Middle-earth with Legos in his attic:

46,446 просмотров

The only right way to educate your children if you're a fan of The Lord of the Rings:

The only right way to educate your children if you're a fan of The Lord of the Rings:

35,107 просмотров

Few performances changed cinema like Andy Serkis as Gollum. The mirror scene in The Two Towers (2002) remains one of the most iconic in film history.

Few performances changed cinema like Andy Serkis as Gollum. The mirror scene in The Two Towers (2002) remains one of the most iconic in film history.

16,865 просмотров

Videos

tolkienzone's profile picture

One of the most brutal scenes in The Return of the King Extended Edition is Aragorn confronting Sauron through the palantír. On the surface, it almost plays like a fantasy trash-talk session between two enemies from opposite sides of the world. Aragorn reveals himself as Isildur's heir. He shows Sauron the reforged Sword of Elendil. No more hiding - he wants the Dark Lord to know that the bloodline that once brought him down has returned. It's an incredibly bold move. Sauron doesn't answer with rage. He answers with cruelty. Instead of just threatening Aragorn, he shows him a vision of Arwen dying. In one instant, the whole confrontation stops being about kingship, armies, swords, or prophecy. Sauron finds the one wound that actually matters and presses straight into it. That's what makes the scene land so hard. Aragorn shows up with legacy. Sauron answers with loss. The palantír isn't just a magic object here - it's psychological warfare. Aragorn is trying to pull Sauron's full attention onto himself and away from Frodo and Sam. Sauron is trying to break Aragorn's resolve by convincing him the future he's fighting for is already gone. That's exactly why the scene works so well in the Extended Edition. It gives Aragorn a victory and a wound in the same breath. He has the strength to face Sauron head-on, but not without being shaken. He can challenge the Dark Lord directly, but he's still human enough to be gutted by the thought of losing Arwen. That contrast is what makes him heroic. Not because he feels no fear. But because Sauron shows him the exact thing that could break him, and he still marches to war anyway.

Tolkien Universe

107,740 просмотров • 10 дней назад

tolkienzone's profile picture

In the book this moment belongs to Glorfindel. He finds the hobbits, Frodo rides Asfaloth to Rivendell alone, and the flood at the Ford of Bruinen comes from Elrond, with Gandalf shaping the horses out of the water. The film hands all of it to Arwen. Prefer the book or not, it's easy to see why the change works on screen. Without this scene Arwen stays mostly an idea. The beautiful immortal woman Aragorn loves, waiting back in Rivendell, more romance than character. Instead the movie introduces her as grace under pressure. She's riding through the forest with a dying Frodo in front of her, the Nine closing in, and she still turns around to face them. That image says more than any line could. Arwen, sword drawn, standing against the Ringwraiths. It plays like a painting. One elf. One wounded hobbit. Nine servants of Sauron. The river at her back. The scratch on her cheek makes it. She's magical but not untouchable. The chase cost her something. Then the line. "If you want him, come and claim him." It works because she never pretends she can beat the Nazgûl by force. She's buying seconds, standing between Frodo and death until the river answers her. The second she starts speaking Elvish, the scene turns. Liv Tyler's voice, the echo, the rising water, the horses forming out of the flood. Middle-earth itself is listening to her. That's why it's stuck around for twenty years. The film chose to make her love, her courage and her immortality visible in one moment.

Tolkien Universe

22,363 просмотров • 3 дней назад

tolkienzone's profile picture

Tolkien explains why the Fellowship didn't fly the Eagles to Mordor.

Tolkien Universe

898,760 просмотров • 5 месяцев назад

tolkienzone's profile picture

The Council of Elrond might be the most underrated scene in the entire trilogy, and it's all because of Boromir. Everyone remembers the Black Speech, the darkening sky, Gandalf's voice cracking the room in half. But the real story of that scene is a good man quietly falling apart. The moment Frodo sets the ring down, Boromir is the first to speak. "So it is true." Two seconds, and the ring already has him. But here's what makes it tragic instead of villainous. Boromir never wanted it for himself. Watch his speech about Gondor. His father holding back Mordor for years, his people bleeding so everyone else's lands stay safe, and no one even thanking them for it. He's not greedy. He's desperate. He's a man who has watched his home fight alone for too long, and now someone puts a weapon on the table and tells him he can't use it. And listen to the music underneath. The second he speaks of Gondor, the horn theme plays quietly beneath him. Even while the ring is corrupting him, the score remembers who he really is. A man of Númenor. A protector. That's why the older you get, the more Boromir hits. As a kid you see the guy who tried to take the ring. As an adult you see the man carrying a weight nobody helped him carry, whose only real flaw was loving his people too much. He fails the test at the Council. But he dies with a horn to his lips defending two hobbits who couldn't defend themselves. The most human character in Middle-earth, start to finish

Tolkien Universe

68,350 просмотров • 14 дней назад