Culture The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power review: Amazon's prequel is kind of a catastrophe - Potential spoliers for show.

Entertainment Weekly (Archive) - August 31, 2022
by, Darren Franich

There are ways to do a prequel, and The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power does them all wrong. It takes six or seven things everyone remembers from the famous movie trilogy, adds a water tank, makes nobody fun, teases mysteries that aren't mysteries, and sends the best character on a pointless detour. The latter is uber-elf Galadriel (Morfydd Clark) who spends the premiere telling people to worry about Sauron. In response, people tell her not to worry about Sauron. That's one hour down, seven to go this season. Sound like a billion dollars yet?

J.R.R. Tolkien imagined Galadriel as an immortal who leaves a sunswept garden paradise because she yearns "to see the wide unguarded lands" of Middle-Earth and "to rule there a realm at her own will." Cate Blanchett played her in Peter Jackson's movies as a Vulcan Witch for Justice. The new Prime Video series (debuting with two episodes on Friday) soldiers her up on a vengeance kick. Millennia before Gollum, Galadriel is "Commander of the Northern Armies" and "the Warrior of the Wastelands." She free-solos up a frozen mountain alongside an ultra-mega waterfall. War claimed her brother and drenched the world in blood. She suspects vanquished Sauron still lingers and has hunted him for ageless decades. Most other elves think Sauron's gone forever. A lieutenant begs her to end the quest and go home, because their search party is approaching a land "where even sunlight fears to tread." This is not the only accidentally funny line, but it is the most brazenly dumb. Um, Mr. Elf Lieutenant, isn't the sun-scaring shadow country exactly where you should look for the wicked godmonster?

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Galadriel narrates a history-lesson prologue. There is a battle montage, Mordor weirdness, then a hard cut to halfling antics. This is the precise structure that began 2001's The Fellowship of the Ring feature. Nori Brandyfoot (Markella Kavenagh) even looks like Elijah Wood's Frodo, all wide eyes and bushy hair — and the little Harfoot's journey begins with the arrival of a bearded outside (Daniel Weyman). Obvious reference points do this show no justice. In Fellowship, Jackson cranked a trip to underground Moria into a cinematic horror-action-comedy rock opera. When an equivalent setting appears here, it's big, bright, and bland. It is where a dwarf complains to an elf: "You missed my wedding!" The mood is stilted, dull. They ride an elevator.

Despite all the streaming-war headlines, this series is nothing like HBO's concurrent Game of Thrones spinoff. House of the Dragon is a family drama plus dragons. The two Rings of Power episodes I've seen feel more like an eight-hour Infinity War, with disparate goods coalescing toward a big bad. The one thread that feels new concerns Arondir (Ismael Cruz Córdova) and Bronwyn (Nazanin Boniadi), star-crossed in a disputed land. He's an elf patrolling unruly humans who call him nasty names like "Knife Ears." She's a single mom whose sweet chats with Arondir cause social ruckus. Tensions are generational. Arondir remembers when the locals fought for evil. Bronwyn's fellow villagers despise the occupying force leftover from a conflict no human remembers.

I don't think Tolkien intended his elves to seem a tad fascist. And Jackson didn't worry about casting an ensemble of white British guys and white Americans talking British. Rings of Power casually diversifies its fictional races, a casting decision that's thankfully normal in contemporary fantasy. But unlike, say, House of the Dragon, this series also briefly takes fantasy-world racism seriously. The humans don't like Arondir. The Harfoots fear everyone else. "What have elves ever done to you?" Galadriel asks jerky Halbrand (Charlie Vickers), a human running from a brutal past.

Foregrounding inter-species anxiety is certainly a new Middle-Earth take. I worry it won't last. Violent forces converge quickly around Arondir and Bronwyn, which means those actors get one flirty scene before the action ramps up. A dwarf-elf alliance looms. There may be bigger things to worry about than, like, interpersonal relations. People keep finding a strange scary sigil, so congratulations, Rings of Power writers, you brought Sauron to television and made him a TV serial killer.

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What do we want from The Lord of the Rings now? Tolkien tapped a well of myth at once elemental and post-modern, dragooning ancient moods of dark wizard fairy lore toward brave new worlds of super-powered planetary terror. He produced four proper novels, followed by The Silmarillion (posthumously collated, totally awesome) and then a half-century of the dead-writer version of lost Tupac tapes. (Rings of Power is officially "based on The Lord of the Rings and Appendices.") Age only enriches his vast imagination; somehow Sauron's All-Seeing Eye now perfectly summarizes the digital surveillance state. And Middle-Earth is still full of tantalizing mysteries along the margins, with subcontinental centuries of eldritch history broom-swept under phrases like "the South" and "the East."

You'd think a new tale would want to explore less-traveled corners of Tolkien's wide unguarded lands. And Rings of Power does conjure the elves' previously unseen homeland, Valinor, in two embarrassing ways. First, it's a babbling brook where cute kids frolic. Then, it's a heavenly light ray pouring out of parting clouds. The latter is almost a Monty Python special effect — and that's before one person decides, against the furthest stretch of fantasy logic, to swim across an ocean. Otherwise, the first two hours stick to seen-it-before places and boring situations. Officious cliff-adjacent elves proffer blank wisdom: "The same wind that seeks to blow out a fire may also cause its spread." Nori says Chosen One things: "It's like there's a reason this happened! Like I was supposed to find him!" Rising politician Elrond (Robert Aramayo) starts prepping a long-winded industrial project which will require "a work force greater than any ever assembled."

Tolkien's saga was anti-industrialization, which makes it hilarious that Rings of Power is an Amazon product. (Imagine Saruman throwing an Arbor Day party.) Much press has swirled around the production cost, but if a huge budget made great TV, we'd be on Terra Nova season 12. Showrunners J. D. Payne and Patrick McKay show no instinct for pacing. Some characters seem to teleport far distances, while others walk slowly between villages (despite horses, like, existing). A big sea attack looks unfinished, introducing a massive threat that's quickly forgotten. Director J. A. Bayona finds isolated moments of grandeur, but the helicopter shots get repetitive fast. The fights aren't quite up to the Walking Dead level, and the battles won't make any Crab Feeders nervous. Frequent cuts to an explanatory map are more funny than informative.

Amazon only made the two episodes available to critics. Maybe things pick up. New locations could feel less like Now That's What I Call Middle-Earth! karaoke. Owain Arthur and Sophia Nomvete have a sitcom-couple spark as Moria marrieds, while Peter Mullan is recognizably eerie under layers of dwarf makeup. Clark's a rising star who was unfathomably freaky in Saint Maud. She imports that film's obsessive mania to a role that (so far) mainly constitutes of the kind of random-encounter duels that torment Final Fantasy players. The other characters are so lame I was rooting for the orcs.

Viewers hungry for Middle-Earth Anything could be satisfied, and I guess you could argue Rings of Power is no worse than all the other expensively empty genre adventures (Altered Carbon, anyone?) that have proliferated through the streaming era. But this series is a special catastrophe of ruined potential, sacrificing a glorious universe's limitless possibilities at the altar of tried-and-true blockbuster desperation. Grade: C-
 
I overheard one of my coworkers talking about how he and his wife can't wait to watch this show when it drops, so I have a feeling uninformed normies are going to bolster this pile of horseshit to success regardless of how bad it is. Streaming TV audiences have absolutely no standards for entertainment.
 
I overheard one of my coworkers talking about how he and his wife can't wait to watch this show when it drops, so I have a feeling uninformed normies are going to bolster this pile of horseshit to success regardless of how bad it is. Streaming TV audiences have absolutely no standards for entertainment.
In the interest of exchanging anecdotes, my coworkers have been raw dogging this show as an obvious disaster. I expect middling performance is the best Amazon can hope for.
 
In the interest of exchanging anecdotes, my coworkers have been raw dogging this show as an obvious disaster. I expect middling performance is the best Amazon can hope for.
I hope you're right. I'd like for my pessimism to be proven wrong. And to be fair, my one coworker is the only person I've heard even mention this show IRL.
 
In the interest of exchanging anecdotes, my coworkers have been raw dogging this show as an obvious disaster. I expect middling performance is the best Amazon can hope for.
I'm thinking they'll have some good numbers for the first episode or two then either a massive drop off, or a large and steady drop off. With how bad some of the costumes have been I can't imagine the special effects are any good, so even the people who are just looking for a good popcorn flick will drop it.
 
I'm not surprised that the show sucks, but I am surprised that journalists are admitting that it sucks. They still haven't played the race card yet though "I guess white America just wasn't ready for a modern Lord of the Rings"
 
*crosses fingers* please be bad enough for Amazon to Cancel all it's fantasy series.

Season 2 of wheel of time might kill me.
I feel your pain. I was not brave enough to watch WoT and will not be watching this dumpster fire. Unfortunately, they're both under contract to do a minimum amount of seasons lest they have to pay the Jordan and Tolien estates for cancellation. We're in this for the long haul.
 
I love Tolkien but the Silmarillion is about as dry as an old woman's vagina when she is getting a root canal at high noon in Death Valley.
Totally disagree. I find the Silmarillion much more rich and exciting than LotR.

I haven't read it in 30+ years, but a lot of it is still very vivid in my head. I haven't picked up any Tolkien book since Unfinished Tales ages ago, but the First Age stuff, much more than the Third Age stuff, turned me into a bit of a Tolkien geek.

Glaurung at the gates of NArgothrond, The Kinslaying, Luthien bewitching Morgoth. The fucketry in Dor-Lomin, Everything about Turin (Beleg (or was it Mablung), the spearing of Finduilas to the tree, Nienor, that lame guy), Hurin at the entrance to Gondolin, the Fall of Gondolin, The Nirnaeth Arnodiad or whatever it was called, Eol and whats her face (Morwen?), Feanor, the sons of Feanor, Barahir, Huor, Tuor, Finrod in the dungeons of Minas Tirith, Dagor Bragollach, a ton of things.

It reads like Greek mythology to me, and Greek mythology has very wet vaginas.
 
Totally disagree. I find the Silmarillion much more rich and exciting than LotR.

I haven't read it in 30+ years, but a lot of it is still very vivid in my head. I haven't picked up any Tolkien book since Unfinished Tales ages ago, but the First Age stuff, much more than the Third Age stuff, turned me into a bit of a Tolkien geek.

Glaurung at the gates of NArgothrond, The Kinslaying, Luthien bewitching Morgoth. The fucketry in Dor-Lomin, Everything about Turin (Beleg (or was it Mablung), the spearing of Finduilas to the tree, Nienor, that lame guy), Hurin at the entrance to Gondolin, the Fall of Gondolin, The Nirnaeth Arnodiad or whatever it was called, Eol and whats her face (Morwen?), Feanor, the sons of Feanor, Barahir, Huor, Tuor, Finrod in the dungeons of Minas Tirith, Dagor Bragollach, a ton of things.

It reads like Greek mythology to me, and Greek mythology has very wet vaginas.
My Dad has a copy of the Silmarillion that he's been slowly reading through for years. He says it's a lot like a religious holy book, interesting as hell but so dense with info that barreling through it like a novel is almost impossible without missing tons of subtext.
 
Fingers crossed this show crashes and burns but I wouldn't put it past Bezos and Co. to plug their ears, scream LALALALALALALALALALALALALLAALALALALA at the top of their lungs, and lie about this bastardization of a beloved work's ratings.
 
Fingers crossed this show crashes and burns but I wouldn't put it past Bezos and Co. to plug their ears, scream LALALALALALALALALALALALALLAALALALALA at the top of their lungs, and lie about this bastardization of a beloved work's ratings.
illegal immigrants are going to be forced to watch it in order to stay in the US
 
Maybe it's because it's what I grew up on, and still love older D&D, but fantasy is one of the easier scenarios to writd out. Damn near everything the west knows or understands is a derivative of Tolkien in one way or another. You don't even have to put X of the Rings or whatever; just make a fantasy with Elves, Dwarves, magic, etc and the audience will be less discerning about you destroying a timeless classic. It's not that hard, just stop destroying what people like.
Tolkien or Conan/Lovecraft, although people tend to be less aware of everything the latter contributed. (In D&D that‘d be the lizard folk, Yao ti, sex scenes, eldritch horrors, etc).
*crosses fingers* please be bad enough for Amazon to Cancel all it's fantasy series.

Season 2 of wheel of time might kill me.
One of my friends who’s really into wheel of time was extremely distraught at their interpretation of the series.
 
Well, no fucking shit. How long before Amazon shelves this one out of shame? Is there really so much money being funneled into the agenda-pushing that they had to do this? There's never been a return on profits the 1,000 times it's been tried.
Amazon makes great stuff like Terminal List and then utter TRASH like this.

Man, what a strange company

Tolkien or Conan/Lovecraft, although people tend to be less aware of everything the latter contributed. (In D&D that‘d be the lizard folk, Yao ti, sex scenes, eldritch horrors, etc).

One of my friends who’s really into wheel of time was extremely distraught at their interpretation of the series.
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Amazon has LOADS of cool, unique fantasy content to pull from, think Banestorm, Forgotten Realms, Pathfinder, etc.

Hell they could even be based an make a Cadillacs and Dinosaurs show.

But nope they decide to be stupid and screw up one of the most foundational fantasy series the English speaking world made in the 20th century.
 
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