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Old 04-14-2010, 11:25 PM   #1
Nerwen
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Fascinating thread.

I never watched Babylon 5 regularly– mainly because it was mostly screened in the middle of the night– and so I have little knowledge of the overall story, but even so I noticed a lot of Tolkien parellels. I actually thought I might be imagining things.



*You had to be very dedicated and/or insomniac to follow any SF series here when I was a teenager, let me tell you.
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Old 04-15-2010, 12:54 AM   #2
Estelyn Telcontar
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Estelyn Telcontar has reached the Cracks of Doom and destroyed the Ring!Estelyn Telcontar has reached the Cracks of Doom and destroyed the Ring!Estelyn Telcontar has reached the Cracks of Doom and destroyed the Ring!Estelyn Telcontar has reached the Cracks of Doom and destroyed the Ring!Estelyn Telcontar has reached the Cracks of Doom and destroyed the Ring!Estelyn Telcontar has reached the Cracks of Doom and destroyed the Ring!Estelyn Telcontar has reached the Cracks of Doom and destroyed the Ring!Estelyn Telcontar has reached the Cracks of Doom and destroyed the Ring!Estelyn Telcontar has reached the Cracks of Doom and destroyed the Ring!Estelyn Telcontar has reached the Cracks of Doom and destroyed the Ring!
davem, you're right about the contrast between order and chaos as being the definitive difference between the Vorlons and Shadows (as Ibrîn already confirmed) - and neither is good when imposed upon others. It reminds me of the Valar and their bumbling efforts to "help" the Children. Freeing themselves from both influences is what the younger races need to continue their development - a very Tolkienesque thought.

Interestingly, both of the older races are also defined by the questions they ask: for the Vorlons, it is, "Who are you?", for the Shadows, "What do you want?" The former reminds me forcibly of a (rare) serious Tom Bombadil quote:
Quote:
Tell me, who are you, alone, yourself and nameless?
Bombadil is perhaps like B5's Lorien in some ways - calling himself Eldest, yet allowing the Hobbits to make their own choices and mistakes, only assisting them when absolutely necessary and then leaving them to go their own way. Ibrîn, I don't see Lorien as an Eru parallel - he appears to be a created being and leaves in the end. I would instead see elements of Gandalf in his character - as always in the series, there are no copies, just influences. And that again is like Tolkien's own story development - using previous influences and weaving them together in a new way to create something unique.

I do, however, agree wholeheartedly with you that it would have been interesting to see what JMS would have made of the LotR movie!! Perhaps he would not have been interested in bringing someone else's (sub-)created world to the screen, what with his own imagination being filled with the scope of his world.

There is another parallel in the development of the plot: the victory over the older races is a moral one, based on a confrontation with knowledge, rather than primarily military in the end. That is very like the end of Sauron's realm. And like that victory, it does not end the tale; there is still the heroes' own world which must be cleaned up. The similarities to the Scouring are there, though on a different scale.

B5 was there before the LotR movies, but of course the similarities in story bring up parallels in the visual settings and the casting of the characters. For example, I've been thinking that I would have liked to see Jason Carter (the actor who played the Ranger Marcus Cole) as Strider - he would have brought more dignity to King Aragorn, I imagine.

I'm enjoying all of your contributions!
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Old 10-10-2010, 02:52 PM   #3
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I've found another online article comparing B5 and LotR here. It goes into the general themes more than into specific details, which makes it very interesting to read. Here's a central passage:
Quote:
...Babylon 5 might justly be called "an atheist's answer to Tolkien". All the same themes are there: the dangers of power for both the mature and immature, the drive to grow up into what one can be by virtue of one's nature, the inexpressibly moving human attempt to engage with realities that transcend all understanding, the epic, ages long conflict between right and wrong, the passing of one Age into another with deep, saddening loss of beauty but great hope for the future, noble heroes and baseborn traitors, fierce wars and faithful loves, courage and fear, wisdom and utter foolishness.
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Old 01-28-2013, 06:57 AM   #4
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Theism and atheism

Quote:
Originally Posted by Estelyn Telcontar View Post
I've found another online article comparing B5 and LotR here. It goes into the general themes more than into specific details, which makes it very interesting to read. Here's a central passage:
I don't quite agree with the author of the link when he says:
...Babylon 5 might justly be called "an atheist's answer to Tolkien".

It seems to me that the chief difference between the universes of B5 and Middle Earth is not that of theism and atheism, but of optimism and pessimism. As Terry Pratchett says:

“I'd rather be a rising ape than a falling angel.”

Where JRR's tales are full of the decline from higher to lower, the future of mankind and other races in B5 is to achieve a Vorlon/Valar like state.

Yes, the two stories are written by people who consider themselves theists and atheists, but I do not regard these labels as necessarily poles apart since there are optimists and pessimists in both camps. The Eden parable contains this symbolised in the two trees. The tree of the knowledge of good and evil leads to the 'fall', the state in which "thorns and thistles" grow if we do not keep our garden/soul tended, but the other tree is still there if we are willing to pass through the fire of the Cherubim/Four Living Creatures/Valar who guard it. There is, ultimately, a sense optimism in Tolkien's work as in B5, because in both cases the heroes pass though the fire to the realm of light, beyond the West, beyond the Rim...


"Most probably we are in Eden still. It is only our eyes that have changed."

G.K.Chesterton -The Defendant (1901)
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Old 01-28-2013, 01:05 PM   #5
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Interesting thoughts, Ardent - as to overt religious content, there's actually more in B5 than in Hobbit/LotR. There are monks and preachers coming to the space station, and members of the crew state their religious preferences. Religious beliefs as a valid part of daily life are shown quite respectfully, considering that the writer does not adhere to any himself.
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Old 02-02-2013, 10:38 PM   #6
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This issue was raised in another thread on the age of Faramir:

Originally Posted by Bêthberry

If death is supposed to be a gift to the race of man, then why is longevity such an important issue? Why are the "high" supposed to live longer and why is a decrease in life span a sign of weakness or decline?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Belegorn View Post
To your last enquiry in Appendix A it is said, "their years lessened as their fear of death grew" [p. 354] The decline in their lifespans was in conjunction with their continued rejection of the fate of Men. This is basically the shadow that fell upon Numenor as the Edain, "began to long for the immortality of the Eldar... in the days of Tar-Minastir, eleventh King... the thought of death darkened the hearts of the people." [RotK, p. 353]

The people were not accepting their fates. They grew resentful of the choice of Elros to be a King of Men rather than of the Elves. They thougt they should be given a choice too to decide their fates and many of them wanted to be immortal as the Elves were. Keep in mind how far this dread of death went; they began sacrificing people to Melkor in the hope that they could be released from death ...
This is the theme of the B5 episode 'Deathwalker' [season1:9] where there is a serum for immortaily created by killing others. Deathwalker's purpose in creating it was to set races against each other, an act of revenge against her own fate.

It also relates to something said by John Cleese's character in the remake of The Day the Earth Stood Still:
"It's only on the brink that people find the will to change. Only at the precipice do we evolve."
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Old 02-09-2013, 03:34 PM   #7
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Silmaril Did Tolkien have a Minbari soul?

I like the thread you began here, Esty. While I don't know enough of B5 as I should, in what I've seen I've got hints of Tolkien's influence.

I came across an interesting piece of fanfiction where, in Chapter 4, a reference to Tolkien and one of his poems provokes an interesting response from Delenn. The piece is called 'The Road Less Travelled', and the chapter can be found here:

http://www.fanfiction.net/s/3442388/...Less-Travelled

The piece is a crossover between Babylon 5, Star Trek: Enterprise, and Dead Like Me. The USS Enterprise, under Captain Archer, has come to the B5 universe; and in Chapter 4 there are discussions on when the timelines in the different universes diverged with relation to Earth, including its popular culture. Commander Summers, from the Enterprise, remarks that the Minbari language sounds like Elvish, leading to this:


"That language sounds a lot like Elven, as written by J.R.R Tolkien." Summers said absently.

"That's funny considering your ears," Garibaldi winced as he felt himself get poked in the ribs. "Commander..."

"Commander Summers is mostly human," Ivanova explained, figuring that Delenn would understand due to her transformation the previous year, becoming part human. Both Commander Summers and Delenn were hybrids of a sort. "Her ears are the result of her mixed heritage. She is part Vulcan."

"Really?" Delenn enquired. "What is this Elven? Who is Tolkien?"

"Elven is a language created by Tolkien, a writer on Earth, in the 1950s," Summers explained. "There are several dialects of it. They are derivatives of various Earth languages. Anyhow. It forms part of the mythos surrounding the Lord of The Rings, The Hobbit and The Silmarillion."

"Could you speak some of the language?" Delenn asked, sounding curious.

"I am not well versed," Summers admitted. "Though, I do know a poem which was translated into Western Common or English as the book is written in it. It is one of my favourites, though it is fairly sad. It's about an elven king, named Gil-galad."

"May I hear it?" Delenn asked, her curiosity rising rapidly.

"Very well," Summers nodded, recalling the poem:

"Gil-galad was an Elven-king.

Of him the harpers sadly sing, the last whose realm was fair and free, between the Mountains and the Sea. His sword was long, his lance was keen, his shining helm afar was seen; the countless stars of heaven's field were mirrored in his silver shield. But long ago he rode away, and where he dwelleth none can say; for into darkness fell his star in Mordor where the shadows are."

Delenn went pale as she heard the last line. How do they know of the Shadows? Delenn thought rapidly. "What do you know about the Shadows? What is this Mordor?"

"Mordor was the realm of Sauron," Summers went on. "One of the great evils of Middle Earth. It is the focus of the Lord of The Rings. I have the books, and the movies if you wish to take a look."

"Yes, I would very much like to," Delenn was both intrigued and surprised. How can they know about the Shadows? She thought again. The Earth of that period had only just started venturing into space. They shouldn't have had any genuine knowledge of aliens, let alone Shadows.

"I hope you enjoy them," Summers said. "I have to say, my favourite character is Legolas, though George's favourite is Strider or Aragorn, the ranger from the north." George had seen so many jerks in her long life that she confessed to Tru that she would have loved to have known someone as noble and cool as Aragorn.

"Ranger?" This was disturbing, yet very revealing. Is that a subtle reference to the Anla'shok?

"Yeah, the rangers are cool," Summers continued. "They fought the evil that came from the shadows of Sauron and Mordor. They walked the paths less travelled." As she spoke, Summers had noticed the colour draining from Delenn's face. "Are you okay, Ambassador?"

"Yes," Delenn nodded abruptly, trying to brace herself from the shock. How could have this human writer known so much, she needed to know more, and she needed to speak with the Vorlon, Ambassador Kosh. This Tolkien must have had a Minbari soul, Delenn realised. I have to find out more about the books and movies she referred to.



Regardless of the whole piece of fanfiction, that bit made me smile. It would be nice to think that Tolkien might still have such an influence long after all of us here are dead, in 'states unborn and accents yet unknown'.

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