![]() ![]() ![]() Peter Jackson’s theatrical adaptation of “The Fellowship of the Ring” was released 20 years ago this month, just three months after the September 11th attacks. Because that’s the power of “Lord of the Rings” – the story never changes, but the meaning transforms into what we need it to be, and in turn, transforms us. Sam and Aragorn, characters we wished were our friends, have become our avatars. Warner Brosīut it’s also a story that is ours – we who have lived through a pandemic that’s irrevocably changed the world as we knew it, forcing us to make choices and upend our lives in ways we likely never considered. Theirs is a world of hobbits and elves and orcs and Ents and the Nazgûl and humans who do terrible and beautiful things.Īragorn, Gandalf, Legolas, Boromir, Gimli, Samwise, Frodo, Merry and Pippin - heroes and friends. “Lord of the Rings” is the story of unlikely heroes who rise to the occasion, who give up the joys of first and second breakfasts to do what’s right. They persevered and ultimately made good on their promise, returning home, forever changed by what they’d seen and done They made dangerous mistakes and witnessed innumerable tragedies. They looked evil in the eye more than once. ![]() They joined a band of bellicose strangers who’d become their brothers. They journeyed through the most treacherous terrains of Middle-earth for years on the word of a wizard. Frodo Baggins, his steadfast companion Samwise Gamgee and their accidental journey-mates, jejune cousins Merry and Pippin, could have been content living out their days in the Shire with their fellow hobbits, feasting and smoking in pastoral comfort.īut when a mission that would determine the fate of their little world and the much wider one was foisted upon them, they heeded the call. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |