#frealaf my beloved
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Ending this year with my favorite characters
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War of the Rohirrim thoughts:
Overall, I would say that I quite enjoyed stepping back into the world of LOTR (and it would be impossible for a single film to live up to the atmosphere of the original trilogy) it was a relief to see that, despite a few deviations/flaws, you can tell there was a lot of care and respect for the source material from those involved.
I only wish they provided more of a historical context as to the disparity or ongoing conflict between the Dunlendings and the Rohirrim to give more depth to the 'contract' or marriage proposal that eventually goes awry. I also wish that they fleshed out Wulf more and I think reducing him, even jokingly to an "incel" (or even reducing the character of H茅ra under a label) doesn't do justice to their characters. Wulf could have been more of a compelling villain and the fact that his late father's general (a new character in the story of the movie) placed some measure of faith in his rulership, points to that possibility. But, I guess it's also realisitic that he fumbled those grand ambitions (if there was a tiny seedling of that in his quest of revenge) in the end. I was pleasantly surprised to learn that General Tark (?) had more nuance than just throwaway supporting villain.
Apart from one major plot deviation concerning how the conflict is resolved, some may take issue, but with the choice of how the story was more Hera focused at that point, I'm not sure how the writers could have made it align with how it really concluded according to the book. I'm also not sure if the writers intended to open up the question I had been wondering before this was film was released about "deeds remembered in history" and added to that with "who" and "how" these tales are recorded or passed down generations. It is mentioned in Appendix A of RotK that "[m]any lords and warriors, and many fair and valiant women are named in the songs of Rohan [...] (Tolkien 424). So, it's not far-fetched to think there could have been such a story about Hera but it was never written down or recorded as such, and the story as 脡owyn tells it may have survived only orally through song.
There was no "girlbossery" to be found in H茅ra if ROP's "Galadriel" is an exemplary model of that regurgitated toxic trope. She had her strengths and weaknesses and cared deeply for her family and for her people.
I enjoyed the familial relationships we saw, though I wish there was more, especially of Fr茅al谩f. I wish we could've gotten more on his situation in Dunharrow during the Long Winter and how and why it was difficult to secure aid for the refugees in the Suthberg (Hornburg later named after Helm Hammerhand).
As to the allegations that may be out there that Helm is a "Gary Stu" , I think he's more akin to the mythic characters like Beowulf or Gilgamesh; just an epic, larger than life character --and I think the medium of animation did that mythic hyperbole justice, and live-action would require some kind of creative framing to suspend the disbelief of the audience.
For me, the movie had the potential to be more, but I still enjoyed it, coming away with loving Rohan and the Rohirrim all the more, especially Fr茅al谩f, who may hearken back to another horse-lord, but is not a "copy-paste" of him, just as Hera is not a facsimile of 脡owyn (though I do wish they had given her a more Anglo-Saxon inspired name).
TLDR; if you enjoyed the trilogy/ hated the travesty that is ROP, you will most likely enjoy this movie.
(Also, kudos to the voice-acting, especially Luke Pasqualino.)
#rambles#just my thoughts#war of the rohirrim#lord of the rings#anti rop#yes some things could have been better#but it was still enjoyable#the dude bros can stay mad#frealaf my beloved#and hama hammerhand has my heart#lotr#also what did wulf really want for himself/not his father's wish/there had to be something more?
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