Last edited by Triceron; 2022-09-18 at 03:23 AM.
So you believe Sauron personally did everything in the Second Age? That he never had his servants act on his plans? It is strange how you know Sauron is behind it all yet still refuse to associate him with those actions on the show. Even if you knew nothing of the lore and the greater Tolkien stuff the show sets up Sauron as still out there and a threat. You can't be that blind to not get that, right?
"Man is his own star. His acts are his angels, good or ill, While his fatal shadows walk silently beside him."-Rhyme of the Primeval Paradine AFC 54
You know a community is bad when moderators lock a thread because "...this isnt the place to talk about it either seeing as it will get trolled..."
No, and I didn't assert that he did everything himself. I said he was shown doing something himself and for that, he earns his status as a great deceiver and manipulator who orchestrated the creation of the Rings.
So far the show has shown a rising evil with the good guys being incompetent and letting Evil slip through every contingency plan they had to find the last remnants of it. Sauron has had zero direct involvement in any of this.
Watchtowers and Elf patrols in the Southlands? Worthless. Gil Galad sending commanders to find the last remnants of evil? Intentionally left unchecked by ignorance. I can't even say that evil outsmarted the good guys, because there's nothing that establishes anything the Elves or Humans having done anything smart in the first place.
Like I said, this show is all about failure. And the main characters are literally written to fail upwards through a contrived narrative. Nothing feels earned.
Sauron is supposed to be behind it all but all that's happened was built around a mark. We're halfway through the first season and he's not had his direct hand in anything so far. He could literally BE dead and the show wouldn't be any different, it'd just be about his minions carrying on his legacy and a bunch of people hoping he'd come back.
If not for the Elrond and Dwarf scenes, I'd have very little reason to continue watching really. The rest sucks and is poorly written and poorly paced.
Last edited by Triceron; 2022-09-18 at 04:20 AM.
Yes, the elves are complacent and apathetic about an evil they think they already defeated. That's like...the whole point.
Given what has been said/implied up to this point, we can assume that the watchtowers like the one Arondir was manning were as much to keep an eye on the Men who once served that evil as to protect against the evil itself. Hence the racial tensions.
And I do hope you're not expecting to see Sauron at the height of his power by the end of the first fucking season... We might not even see him at all until much later.
Last edited by s_bushido; 2022-09-18 at 05:17 AM.
I still have to say how its hilarious that the showrunners think orcs are vampires, like they could not go out in the sun,d espise showing they did that plenty of times, in the very show
This is what pisses me off more about the show, there is so many shit like this that suck away all the fun the show could have.
Like, how Not-Legolas had to be elt alive, because ~~reasons~~, just so he can save the kid later/tell a dumbass warning.
Then you have everyone from the village leaving, but no one gets food, and the only reason is for the kid to get out, rly bad reason
Sauron left his mark in the bodies of his enemies, so their enemies find out his plans, massive bid dick move right there /s
The only creatures actually disabled by sunlight are the trolls in The Hobbit; for the rest, Tolkien made it a central theme that most of the evil creatures in his lore hate the light and avoid it if they can, but can and will endure it if necessary. So while orcs may prefer to stay out of the sunlight and move about at night, they CAN and DO move around in sunlight if the situation calls for it. That's always been established lore, and explicitly features in books like The Lord of the Rings.
.Yeah, he did, my point is that the people doing he show don't, they show that the orcs burn in the sunlight like vampires, and thats BS
Like, in the part where they were going o get the kid, they just stop going there, because the sun...despite being fully covered...despite the show showing how they can be fine covered or not.
Sauron left the mark of his plan in the Finrod(Galadriel brother) body, that shit makes no sense and its just to justify her journey, but they didn't knew how to do it in a good/clever way.His minions or former followers could also leave those marks?
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Indeed, thats why im calling out the show for their BS.
What is more baffling is that even if they made a new canon, they contradict themselves, lie showing orcs burning without the hood, but their arms/legs are just fine, they don't burn, and some burn differently and in that one scene, they didn't went to follow despite being covered
I think they only hit the mark with their design, close to Azog from the hobbits, but everyone being pale white is kinda meh.
And that's a terrible premise for a TV series that shouldn't be adapted in this way if so.
Know how people say certain things don't work for TV so the book needs to be changed? This would be one of those things. Having an enemy that is directly involved with the happenings that cause troubles for the main characters builds a connection with the main villain. Like even the first Harry Potter gets this right by actually having Voldemort appear and be the direct explanation for all the trouble Harry and co experience during their first year at Hogwarts. It's not just everyone bumbling into allowing evil to return, it's literally them being shown with plenty of precautions, and evil outsmarting their efforts.
And sadly, this is something the book actually explains while the show isn't following it. For some reason the writers felt it would be smarter to make the villain a mystery to keep fans guessing which red herring character Sauron would be, and it fundamentally hurts the connection anyone has to an actual bad guy when done like this. This is not a murder mystery
If Sauron isn't back yet be the season's end, then to be honest the evil should not even be detected as growing until they're good to unveil that he's directly manipulating this all. And right now the show has left it so ambiguous that it could be his return causing this, or it could be the result of the mark causing a plan to go through without his intervention at all, like a meme that goes viral well after the creator's died. And there's a big difference in whether this 'growing evil' feels earned or not.
It's like trying to credit the AMC CEO for the recent rise in AMC stocks, as if he had anything to do with the short-trading and memestocks.
Last edited by Triceron; 2022-09-18 at 09:14 AM.
Found this by random chance.
Really liked his take and it mirrors what a lot has been said in this thread regarding to what people dislike.
Explains why the biggest issue is the main characters, while the side characters are usually praised more.
Last edited by Kumorii; 2022-09-18 at 09:37 AM.
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That would be great but the lord of gifts is not present in this series yet. So this isn't even a logical explanation. The problem is they wrote it this way, not because of any lore reason. To even try and use some kind of lore reason for this when it is obviously narrative convenience is the problem. We don't even know if Annatar is going to even appear in this series.
We are talking about a few Elves being in a town to watch for any potential sign of sauron and getting the call to withdraw, just at the same time that they <gasp> find actual evidence of Sauron and not only that get captured. And the only reason that sequence of events happens is because of writing not because it makes any sense in reality. Of course everything in fiction is based on writing, but the point is that the hand of the writer is not supposed to be obvious in doing things which don't fit in the world or are out of place.
Later based on what? How can you determine how much time it took to make that gash? That didn't appear over night and neither did those tunnels. You are trying to use logic to explain something that is a writing issue because that writing is not following logic. By logical reasoning that gash would have been visible long before the elves began withdrawing because the orcs have been working on it for a long time. Again, this "coincidence" of them finding this gash just as the Elves are withdrawing is purely written this way for narrative convenience not because it makes logical sense within the world itself. Which was the point. You haven't disproven it, you are just trying to find ways to explain it, rather than admitting obviously it happened that way because of writing and there is no real lore or logic to explain this otherwise.
Yeah, everyone have more or less the same take, the nonsense and lack of care they had with the show, he actually picked things that i didn't, i guess i was so defeated at the end of the episode id didn't notice how he left his weapon and run like a moron, also, he looks old as a human, not rly an elf.
Shadiversity is doing some reviews of the episodes that i think touches more on the writing said of the series
If he gets 2 microphones I think it would be fine. But his microphone set to their normal talking voice doesn't really handle his screaming to well.
Having one with lower gain would help, but that would also lead to more work in edit to switch between the 2. This is how AVGN does it, which is why is screaming is something you can listen to without your ears breaking. Bar his earlier stuff.
But this is going off-topic![]()
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This is my issue with most things that have established bases. Just don't. Don't try to get a new audience. Stick to the natural one that already exists. Make shit for them. It's still more than enough to be successful, especially if you don't fucking squander your money needlessly on every episode overpaying for everything. Elden Ring proved that. Regardless of generational changes, you'll still always get new people who are curious and you'll still always hook a handful of them to keep the audience strong.