Thread: Death portrayal
View Single Post
Old 06-15-2005, 08:01 PM   #15
Knight of Gondor
Ghost Prince of Cardolan
 
Knight of Gondor's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2002
Location: Kentucky
Posts: 744
Knight of Gondor has just left Hobbiton.
Send a message via Yahoo to Knight of Gondor
I've been told my quote-by-quote responses get tedious, but I'm sorry, there's a lot here I wanted to respond to!

Quote:
I seem to remember reading somewhere (though I might well be mistaken) that death, or the ability to die, was a gift given to mortal men by Eru.
You refer to the passage in The Silmarillion:

It is one with this gift of freedom that the children of Men dwell only a short space in the world alive, and are not bound to it, and depart soon whither the Elves know not. Whereas the Elves remain until the end of days, and their love of the Earth, and all the world is more single and more poignant therefore, and as the years lengthen ever more sorrowful. For the Elves die not till the world dies, unless they are slain or waste in grief (and to both these seeming deaths they are subject); neither does age subdue their strength, unless one grow weary of ten thousand centuries; and dying they are gathered to the halls of Mandos in Valinor, whence they may in time return. But the sons of Men die indeed, and leave the world; wherefore they are called Guests or Strangers. Death is their fate, the gift if Ilúvatar, which as time wears even the Powers shall envy. But Melkor has cast his shadow upon it, and confounded it with darkness, and brought forth evil out of good and fear out of hope. Yet of old the Valar declared to the Elves in Valinor that Men shall join in the Second Music of the Ainur; whereas Ilúvatar has not revealed what he purposes for the Elves after the World’s end, and Melkor has not discovered it.”

Quote:
If this is the case then I was just wondering whether anyone thought that PJ actually pulled this idea off quite well in the films?
I think it functions well enough. As I’ve said before (and most people know already), PJ had to walk a fine line between pleasing Tolkien illiterates, and the esteemed, elite, august body of Tolkien fans and/or Tolkien purists. For safety’s sake (money) he leaned towards making it user-friendly to the Tolkien illiterates, and consequently earned the wrath of many Tolkien purists. (Absence of Bombadil, presence of Arwen, etc.)

I think that PJ handled the death sequences pretty well, all things considered. Only those with background knowledge in matters of life and death in Middle-Earth (which are vague enough as it is!) know somewhat of what death truly means in the films.

Quote:
For example in the charge of the Rohirrim where they all chant "Death!" as they ride to what they know will be death for a good many of them.
Reflective, I believe, of their glorification of battle. I believe Faramir lamented that Rohan had glorified war, whereas Gondor (or at least Faramir) believed it to be a necessary evil to protect that which they love. Éowyn encapsulated the feeling, I think, when she sought death in battle because she could not win renown by winning the love of Aragorn.

On matters of war, I have a little of Rohan and a little of Gondor in me. The site of a thousand hardy warriors caught up in a rapturous pledge of “DEATH!”, essentially saying “glory in death, or glory in victory!” still runs chills down my back. But the world has gotten a front seat to the horrors of war these past few years.

Quote:
Or when Boromir dies - it is a solemn moment, and sad, but not so much for his death as for his failure in life.
I disagree. Boromir conquered the evil in him, he did not fail in life. Having recently read “Following Gandalf” by Matthew Dickerson (recommended), I am fresh from the study of Boromir’s spiritual victory, even though physically he was defeated. Aragorn seized the opportunity to tell Boromir had conquered, that “few have gained such a victory.” Gandalf expressed his gladness that Boromir “escaped in the end.” Boromir came near the brink of utter disaster, and returned to die an honorable death protecting Merry and Pippin.

Quote:
Would say that the films never stated that death was a gift, whether explicitly or implicitly. Not that I would fault PJ for that, because you'd have to get into more explanation and exposition, and as he didn't even have an extra moment in ROTK to show the fate of Bill the pony, well...
I really don’t blame PJ for this. People complained about how many supposed endings RotK had, and I suppose from a purely cinematic standpoint, it did have quite a few. (But think of how many BEGINNINGS it had!) But he really didn’t have enough time for a lot of exposition, and even if he tried, how would he fit it in?

LEGOLAS to GIMLI: “From the beginning of the world, Eru gave to Men the gift of death, that they should depart from the world after their life has been filled, and their purpose fulfilled.”

GIMLI: “Well, I’m short, but I can beat you up anyway!”

See? It would be difficult to find a good and fitting place to fit that exposition into, and it would be hard to set it up.

Quote:
Regarding the Rohirrim chant, what the movies showed (maybe more so than the books) was that the Rohirrim expected to die that morning. It was like they were saying, en masse, "well, the situation's bad, there's no way we can win, we're going to die today anyway so let's go and kill as many of those foul orcs as possible and not worry about anything."
Gamling said to Rohirrim soldiers that “we cannot defeat the forces of Mordor in battle.” Théoden responded “No, we cannot. But we will meet them in battle nonetheless.” Whew, goosebumps! I love the grim determination of that line. I think that was the whole mindset. If a Rohan warrior were faced with fleeing with his family into the hills, or dying a glorious death on the field of battle, Rohan inbreeding would dictate that he choose glorious death.

Théoden once asked “What can Man do against such reckless hate?” Aragorn seems to have the answer. “Ride out with me. Ride out and meet them!” In other words, meet their reckless determination with their own reckless determination. Uruk-hai were laying siege to Helm’s Deep without fear of their fate, and the Rohirrim were putting this into practice in the Pelennor charge. It was portrayed beautifully. Absolutely the most chilling moment (in an awesome, spectacular way!) I have EVER seen in a movie, and perhaps ever will see, depending on what goosebump moments will be in The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.

Quote:
Some fear death as Boromir(movie) did, he was dying in shame until Aragorn tells him that he has reclaimed his honour and fought valiantly and Boromir is calm about dying and his only regret was not seeing Aragorn crowned king.
Did he fear death, or was he merely steeped in the grief and regret of his actions minutes earlier?

Quote:
Basically, he is saying that today is a day of battle and bloodspill, and the sun is rising behind us so to battle we go to deal death or be dealth death. "Ride now, ride now, ride for ruin, and the world's ending. Death, death,..."
And isn’t it interesting to contrast it with Aragorn’s? Going from memory here, but let me try. (I won’t merely flip forward on the DVD to the speech just to get the text right…the scene is too special for that!)

“Men of Gondor, of Rohan, my brothers! I see in your eyes the same fear that would take the heart of me! A day may come when the world of men fails! An hour of wolves, and shattered shields when the world of men comes crashing down! BUT IT IS NOT THIS DAY! THIS DAY WE FIGHT! By all that you hold dear on this good earth; I bid you STAND! – MEN OF THE WEST!!

Such a difference in emotion, in spirit. Aragorn gives them the courage of today, AND the hope of tomorrow, helping them to see the cause for which they fight (all that they hold dear on this good earth) and giving them the determination NOT to let that day be the day when the world of men fails. Whew, there’s those goosebumps. Both battle speeches are simply, without question, the best cinema I have yet seen.

Quote:
The quote that (Movie) Gandalf uses is the description that (Book) Frodo sees when he is passing into Valinor with the last of the elves. Gandalf is also from Valinor and is thought to be sent by the Valar as the greatest servant of Manwe. Therefore, did PJ make the mistake of using Gandalf to describe mortal death as the immortal's description of the passing into Valinor?
I think his speech, though absolutely beautiful, enhanced by Howard Shore’s heavenly theme, was supposed to be directed towards a covers-all approach to death. Supposedly to give hope to everyone, in the movie, and even in the movie theater. Not sure it worked out too well, because there aren’t too many faiths that hold the promise of heaven for everyone on earth. (Not to get into a faith discussion/debate, I’m just saying)

Quote:
Death certainly was not a gift in the Christian ethos which Tolkien believed in; it was/is punishment for the sin of disobedience (if I am understanding this correctly) or was a consequence of learning, of eating the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good and evil. If death is a punishment, then it becomes something to be feared, especially with dark predictions about torment in hell for people who have not behaved according to the required mythology.
Interesting point. Do most cultures view death as a good thing? I don’t think so. But death is either the greatest blessing, or the worst of curses, depending on where you stand with God. (Hey, PM me about it sometime, I’ll give you the “good person” quiz!)
__________________
Eagerly awaiting the REAL Return of the King - Jesus Christ! Revelation 19:11-16
Knight of Gondor is offline   Reply With Quote