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-   -   Tolkien Bio-pic (http://forum.barrowdowns.com/showthread.php?t=19305)

Inziladun 06-15-2019 05:12 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by TheGreatElvenWarrior (Post 718349)
So my mom was saying that she wanted to see this movie with me when she came to visit. Now that she's here, I kind of want her to forget it. She always takes movies literally, even if they're not supposed to be accurate to the last detail. :rolleyes:

That would merely give you license to explain all the wrongness. ;)

TheGreatElvenWarrior 06-15-2019 10:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Inziladun (Post 718350)
That would merely give you license to explain all the wrongness. ;)

Well, a license to complain is very tempting. :p

Zigūr 06-16-2019 05:10 AM

I saw it tonight. I wanted to see the new local documentary 2040 but it was sold out (seeing it tomorrow) and my father had been asking me if I wanted to see the bio-pic for weeks so I decided to just bite the bullet.

It was better than I expected, but I found it tepid, unfocused and lacking in atmosphere and dramatic thrust. To me it seemed as if the film didn't know if it wanted to be about his writing, his relationship with Edith, the war, or his friendship with GB Smith, and by trying to be about all of these things to equal degrees it didn't say much about any of them.

I suppose I appreciated that it didn't entirely gloss over his interest in philology and Germanic language, myth and folklore, but I feel as if that's not saying a great deal. My father claims that the wallpaper in his study at the end was William Morris's Strawberry Thief design, which if so is a nice touch (historically accurate or not), as I'm a quite strong proponent of the Morris-Tolkien connection.

Regardless I think anyone interested in this period of the Professor's life would be far better off simply reading John Garth's (in my opinion) excellent Tolkien and the Great War.

Oh, and also I still think that if they really had wanted to make an interesting film about his early life (and budget wasn't a concern) it would be a quasi-experimental film which cut (preferably without explanation) between his wartime experiences and an adaptation of The Fall of Gondolin.


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