1. #5341
    The Unstoppable Force rhorle's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Triceron View Post
    The proof you're asking for is as self evident as asking whether there is any way to prove that the Beatles never went to the moon. Well, history as we know it illustrates that it did not happen. What are you really arguing about really?
    Tolkien didn't write about it either way. So it is something that is possible and when viewed under a lens of a "living world" it stands to reason that Orcs would have had some interaction on Middle-earth in those times. Even more so when it is know that after the war of wrath they fled to some of the same mountain ranges that dwarves inhabited.
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  2. #5342
    Quote Originally Posted by rhorle View Post
    Tolkien didn't write about it either way. So it is something that is possible and when viewed under a lens of a "living world" it stands to reason that Orcs would have had some interaction on Middle-earth in those times. Even more so when it is know that after the war of wrath they fled to some of the same mountain ranges that dwarves inhabited.
    If Tolkien didn't write about it then you can't imply an event significant enough to expose Orcs as being 'reasonable'. It'd be quite counter-intuitive to the canon.

    If we're talking about the show taking creative liberties and adapting stuff that never happened in the books, then yes an adaptation is free to bend the lore because it is not beholden to its canon. If you're specifically talking about the books which can no longer be appended or changed since the original creators are gone, then no, it wouldn't be reasonable to assume that it would suddenly be elaborated in some other way. It could be considered ambigious, it could be considered ill-explained, but at no point could it be assumed that an event as significant as what we're seeing in ROP like Halbrand or the Watchtower arc would somehow fit naturally back into Tolkien's work. It wouldn't fit at all, and it would be unreasonable to assume that it even could.

    Let's be clear that the show's depiction of the Orc's current actions in the Southlands has been significant enough to reach even out to Galadriel in the middle of the Ocean, who is now using that 'evidence' to support her claims and rally the Numenoreans to investigate the Southlands. What the show is depicting wouldn't reasonably work in Tolkien's canon.

    I mean the reason why the show is doing this is because it's intentionally compressing the timeline. So in a way, it'd be just as ridiculous to imply that time compression would be reasonably applicable to Tolkien's work as well. That just isn't how it works.
    Last edited by Triceron; 2022-09-22 at 05:07 PM.

  3. #5343
    Merely a Setback Lorgar Aurelian's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Triceron View Post
    If Tolkien didn't write about it then you can't imply something not written in the text as being 'reasonable'.
    Didn’t you have quite a lengthy back and forth a week or so ago about rather elfs acted like humans when it came to things like drowning even through it was never written about?
    Evil only wins when it spreads. It can cause destruction, it can cause death—but those are consequences of its nature, not its victory. Not its goal. The danger of evil, the purpose of evil, is that it causes those who would oppose it to become evil also.

  4. #5344
    Quote Originally Posted by Lorgar Aurelian View Post
    Didn’t you have quite a lengthy back and forth a week or so ago about rather elfs acted like humans when it came to things like drowning even through it was never written about?
    I'd always used the show depicted Elves acting exactly as how a human to present how they 'drown' in similar ways. I never implied that this somehow retroactively applies to Tolkien's fiction.

    I think I'm pretty clear that I treat the show and the books as completely separate entities. I treat them as multiverses, really. One can source elements from another 'universe', but there isn't really any logic that carries from one to the other. Every version has to establish its own rules.
    Last edited by Triceron; 2022-09-22 at 05:14 PM.

  5. #5345
    Merely a Setback Lorgar Aurelian's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Triceron View Post
    I'd always used the show depicted Elves acting exactly as how a human to present how they 'drown' in similar ways. I never implied that this somehow retroactively applies to Tolkien's fiction.
    Ah ok not Tolkien then, but wouldn’t that still apply to what the show has depicted? Like I don’t think we ever see any one drown in the show so don’t we have to refer to the implied notion that drowning is a reasonable thing even though it isn’t shown in the show?
    Evil only wins when it spreads. It can cause destruction, it can cause death—but those are consequences of its nature, not its victory. Not its goal. The danger of evil, the purpose of evil, is that it causes those who would oppose it to become evil also.

  6. #5346
    The Unstoppable Force rhorle's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Triceron View Post
    If Tolkien didn't write about it then you can't imply an event significant enough to expose Orcs as being 'reasonable'.
    There is nothing to say orcs stayed 100% hidden until Sauron's return. They easily could have stayed 100% hidden. Tolkien didn't write about every detail of elven, dwarven or human life but it is implied they did stuff, right? That they didn't just twiddle their thumbs until the "major" events of the time line happened. They traded, they built, destroyed, crafted, etc. All things that Tolkien didn't explicitly write about but it is reasonable to say happened.

    Galadriel only heard about by chance. She used their story and the new information about the sigil to convince the Queen to send an army. She doesn't know the extent of it but it is clear that Orcs have been attacking the Southlands for a while without knowledge. There isn't anything to say that the orc attack would be significant if she didn't also find the sigil linking to the Southlands/Mordor.

    No one has said time compression is applicable to Tolkien's work. Of course tolkien didn't compress his work as he was the one to create the original timeline.
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  7. #5347
    Quote Originally Posted by Lorgar Aurelian View Post
    Ah ok not Tolkien then, but wouldn’t that still apply to what the show has depicted? Like I don’t think we ever see any one drown in the show so don’t we have to refer to the implied notion that drowning is a reasonable thing even though it isn’t shown in the show?
    I'm not sure why it would be unreasonable? I'd never argued that Galadriel was immune to drowning in the show.

  8. #5348
    Merely a Setback Lorgar Aurelian's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Triceron View Post
    I'm not sure why it would be unreasonable? I'd never argued that Galadriel was immune to drowning in the show.
    It’s not unreasonable but as you said “If Tolkien didn't write about it then you can't imply something not written in the text as being 'reasonable'.”, wouldn’t this apply to the show as well and we can’t say it’s reasonable for her or any one else to drown given that it wasn’t shown in the show instead of written into the text?
    Evil only wins when it spreads. It can cause destruction, it can cause death—but those are consequences of its nature, not its victory. Not its goal. The danger of evil, the purpose of evil, is that it causes those who would oppose it to become evil also.

  9. #5349
    Quote Originally Posted by rhorle View Post
    There is nothing to say orcs stayed 100% hidden until Sauron's return. They easily could have stayed 100% hidden. Tolkien didn't write about every detail of elven, dwarven or human life but it is implied they did stuff, right? That they didn't just twiddle their thumbs until the "major" events of the time line happened. They traded, they built, destroyed, crafted, etc. All things that Tolkien didn't explicitly write about but it is reasonable to say happened.
    We're splitting hairs here.

    You're using numbers like 100% hidden until Sauron's return.

    In Rings of Power, the mere appearance of Orcs is news that has reached as far as Numenor, and is a direct reason why Numenor is going to join Galadriel's investigation of the Southlands. I wouldn't even know what % you'd consider that being hidden.

    Galadriel only heard about by chance. She used their story and the new information about the sigil to convince the Queen to send an army. She doesn't know the extent of it but it is clear that Orcs have been attacking the Southlands for a while without knowledge. There isn't anything to say that the orc attack would be significant if she didn't also find the sigil linking to the Southlands/Mordor.
    Halbrand being a 'king of the Southlands' who escaped to Numenor because of Orcs is a pretty big deal. If one random chance encounter is capable of shaking the world, then yes I would say it's not reasonably comparable to Tolkien's original depiction of a secret Orc army that was able to move on Eregion in secret. That isn't what's happening in Rings of Power.
    Last edited by Triceron; 2022-09-22 at 05:36 PM.

  10. #5350
    Electrodriel is one major turning off point for me so far.
    Even that black elf imposter guy is less of a problem.

    Watching anyone BUT elves is actually interesting and pleasing.
    Am really amazed at the chemistry and acting of Durin and Dysa.
    Was really amazed by Durin's actor acting out that scene with his father, with just his eyes and a bit of cheekbones.
    Electrodriel seems be unable to face/eye-act at all.

  11. #5351
    Quote Originally Posted by Lorgar Aurelian View Post
    It’s not unreasonable but as you said “If Tolkien didn't write about it then you can't imply something not written in the text as being 'reasonable'.”, wouldn’t this apply to the show as well and we can’t say it’s reasonable for her or any one else to drown given that it wasn’t shown in the show instead of written into the text?
    He's not talking about show logic merely being reasonable to the show. He's talking about show logic being reasonable within the context of Tolkien's fiction.

    As I said, if the show wants Orcs fearing the sun, burning in the sun, glittering like Twilight boys or whatever, then it can do it. But we can't retroactively apply this logic back to saying 'well it'd be reasonable in Tolkien's fiction too'. It would only be relevant if Tolkien actually wrote about it. Any else would be pure speculation, and I don't know what you'd consider 'reasonable' in that context.

    And if we're talking about what Tolkien wrote about drowning, then we reasonably assume that Elves can and do drown because he wrote a side story about an Elf who swam into the open sea and was never heard of again. That'd be the only relevant case in Tolkien's own work.
    Last edited by Triceron; 2022-09-22 at 05:47 PM.

  12. #5352
    The Unstoppable Force rhorle's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Triceron View Post
    You're using numbers like 100% hidden until Sauron's return.
    Right. That is what is being discussed and what you've argued against. As I said it would be reasonable for Orcs, with no master, to not remain 100% hidden over 1,000+ years. You claimed it isn't reasonable to say that because Tolkien never wrote it. This is exactly what is being talked about and I'm not sure why you are confused after you've argued on the subject.

    As for the show news has reached Numenor because of Galadrial meeting refugees and being rescued. It may be reasonable to assume they have heard reports of Orcs but are not interacting with Elves to pass that information along. Remember the show sets up that they have turned hostile towards elves in recent years. The elves are not omnipotent and the show hasn't shown that they had people watching port cities in the Southlands or actively patroling against Corsairs. There is an entire world of people out there that hasn't been under their thumb.

    If one random chance encounter is capable of shaking the world, then yes I would say it's not reasonably comparable to Tolkien's original depiction of a secret Orc army that was able to move on Eregion in secret.
    Lmao. Tolkien used change encounters all the time in order to shake the world. Bilbo finding the One Ring was a chance encounter. Sauron's army didn't move on Eregion in secret because his war started about 100 years after he revealed himself when creating/wearing the One Ring. Random Orc raiding parties also doesn't contradict Sauron regaining control of Orcs in secret. Remember Tolkien explicitly wrote that some Orc tribes ignored him because they didn't think Annatar was Sauron. Isn't it reasonable to think they might still have raiding parties and other "Daily life" things?

    It also ignores how Sauron was already corrupting the lands of Men "in secret" as well. Which the elves didn't notice over that 600 year or so period before the One Ring was forged. So even in Tolkien's work the Elves were not fully aware of everything happening. What we are seeing on the show is the tail end of Sauron's "hidden" phase. As I said since the Elves were unaware of port cities being attacked with Orcs or having refugees or even the Kingdom Halbrand cane from it is clear how Orcish activity could remain unseen.

    - - - Updated - - -

    Quote Originally Posted by Triceron View Post
    He's not talking about it being reasonable to the show. He's talking about it being reasonable within the context of Tolkien's fiction.
    Okay lets try this one. Is it reasonable that Elves, Dwarves, Orcs, Humans, and what not have to use the bathroom? Tolkien never writes about it so according to you it isn't something that his creations are required to do. They are required to consume food and drink but to never excrete waste. So if it is reasonable to assume they do that stuff isn't it reasonable to assume Orcs might raid and pillage? At least with Dwarves who inhabited the same mountain ranges as them? Wouldn't it be reasonable that over 1,000+ years Elves would know Orcs existed but without a master?

    Though I've seen it said that Galadriel didn't give Sam a jar of dirt but a jar of her own poop. As the elves diet would make for excellent fertilizer. Lol.
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  13. #5353
    Quote Originally Posted by rhorle View Post
    Right. That is what is being discussed and what you've argued against. As I said it would be reasonable for Orcs, with no master, to not remain 100% hidden over 1,000+ years.
    Then you're shifting the argument for the purpose of arguing technicalities.

    Are you considering the Watchtower and Halbrand's exodus to be trivial appearances of the Orcs that will otherwise keep them secret? We already know the cat's out of the bag.

    Lmao. Tolkien used change encounters all the time in order to shake the world. Bilbo finding the One Ring was a chance encounter.
    Yes but that is the canon.

    If what you're arguing is some what-if scenario of Bilbo never finding the ring and posing it as a question of whether that'd be reasonable, I would say no. That wouldn't be reasonable because we it is not mere coincidence but even EXPLAINED the Ring has a will and influence to find a new Master.

    So I refute that example that you use. You can feel free to try another if you wish.
    Last edited by Triceron; 2022-09-22 at 05:54 PM.

  14. #5354
    Merely a Setback Lorgar Aurelian's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Triceron View Post
    He's not talking about it being reasonable to the show. He's talking about it being reasonable within the context of Tolkien's fiction.

    As I said, if the show wants Orcs fearing the sun, burning in the sun, glittering like Twilight boys or whatever, then it can do it. But we can't retroactively apply this logic back to saying 'well it'd be reasonable in Tolkien's fiction too'. No, it wouldn't be unless Tolkien actually wrote about it.

    And if we're talking about what Tolkien wrote about drowning, then we reasonably assume that Elves can and do drown because he wrote a side story about an Elf who swam into the open sea and was never heard of again. That'd be the only relevant case in Tolkien's own work.
    Ya I get that he’s talking about retroactively apply what would be reasonable on the setting but aren’t you (and every one else) doing the same thing but to the show?

    Like all of us thinking Glad would/could have drown is us retroactively applying real world logic and saying “well it'd be reasonable in Show to” even though we are never shown any thing to actually fit it.

    Or even with Tolkiens work as you said he wrote a story about an elf who is never heard of again in the sea and pretty much every ones respond is “well it would be reasonable for him to have drown” even though Tolkien ever actually wrote about him drowning just him not being seen again which could have numerous other outcomes.
    Evil only wins when it spreads. It can cause destruction, it can cause death—but those are consequences of its nature, not its victory. Not its goal. The danger of evil, the purpose of evil, is that it causes those who would oppose it to become evil also.

  15. #5355
    Quote Originally Posted by Lorgar Aurelian View Post
    Ya I get that he’s talking about retroactively apply what would be reasonable on the setting but aren’t you (and every one else) doing the same thing but to the show?

    Like all of us thinking Glad would/could have drown is us retroactively applying real world logic and saying “well it'd be reasonable in Show to” even though we are never shown any thing to actually fit it.

    Or even with Tolkiens work as you said he wrote a story about an elf who is never heard of again in the sea and pretty much every ones respond is “well it would be reasonable for him to have drown” even though Tolkien ever actually wrote about him drowning just him not being seen again which could have numerous other outcomes.
    The difference is we're using these 'retroactively applied reasons' to disseminate the motivations and actions of characters.

    The entire discussion of Galadriel drowning is whether she is self-aware of the risks she's taking when she jumps off the ship and tries to swim the full distance. And in her defense, some people have tried to argue that she could somehow be resistant to drowning and is physically superior to any mere mortal who would attempt the same. Even illustrating this by showing a story where an Elf swims beyond distance of sight (even though that same story implies he fucking drowned).

    The criticism illustrated how an alternative scenario may have made more sense. It would have been more reasonable if Galadriel merely stole a ship and tried sailing back on her own. As she ended up being shown attempting in Numenor a couple episodes later.

    Whether or not Elves drown was a mostly-pointless tangent from a completely different argument being made.
    Last edited by Triceron; 2022-09-22 at 06:06 PM.

  16. #5356
    The Unstoppable Force rhorle's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Triceron View Post
    Yes but that is the canon. Then you're shifting the argument for the purpose of arguing technicalities.
    So why the double standard? Why can Tolkien use chance encounters but the show using a chance encounter is bad?

    Then you're shifting the argument for the purpose of arguing technicalities.
    Quote Originally Posted by rhorle View Post
    Do you really think that for 500 years there was no evidence of Orcs? Or even zero between the end of the War of Wrath and the return of Sauron?
    I didn't shift the argument. It is what the argument was about. I asked you a question using Tolkien's timeline to indicate how something on the show could be possible.
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  17. #5357
    Quote Originally Posted by rhorle View Post
    So why the double standard? Why can Tolkien use chance encounters but the show using a chance encounter is bad?
    I outright refuted your idea that Bilbo finding the Ring was a 'Chance encounter'. Are you even reading?

    The Ring has a will of its own and seeks out a new master. How or why, I can't explain, but Tolkien says so and that's how Bilbo came about getting the Ring.

    There is no double standard. You just can't fucking read.
    Last edited by Triceron; 2022-09-22 at 06:17 PM.

  18. #5358
    The Unstoppable Force Syegfryed's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by rhorle View Post
    Duh. However it does explain why they didn't go get people with the sun rising. If they don't like the sun it makes sense for them to not go there if something isn't around to force them. It again fits Tolkien narrative that orcs are hesitant to go in the sun but can if forced too. You can ignore the quotes from tolkien that indicate this all you want. All that shows is that you can't handle the truth of Tolkien's work and ignore is just so you can complain.
    Jus not liking something does not mean you cannot go in the sun, especially when you are covered, stopspitting this argument over and over

    they have someone forcing then, they have a goal thy were forced to do, not going there is pure garbage plot convenience deus ex machina that this show have by the dozens


    Quote Originally Posted by rhorle View Post
    I am not cherry picking anything. Are you this desperate to be part of a discussion that you'll make up your own argument just to be involved? They keep arguing two different things that fear of the sun doesn't make sense, or fit with tolkien's work, and that the sun damaging them doesn't fit. I've taken issue with one but not the other. .
    So you straight up confirm this does not fit tolkien vision, because this is not something tolkien wrote, but some shit the showrunners made up

    Gladly you refute it yourself

  19. #5359
    The Unstoppable Force rhorle's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Triceron View Post
    The Ring has a will of its own and seeks out a new master. How or why, I can't explain, but Tolkien says so and that's how it's generally explained how Bilbo came about getting the Ring.
    That still doesn't change the fact that Tolkien wrote a chance encounter and later had it explained by Gandalf implying a higher power was at work. It wasn't the ring as it can't influence the entire world like that. Otherwise wouldn't it have had an orc? It is implied that a Valar helped out in tiny way.

    “Behind that there was something else at work, beyond any design of the Ring-maker. I can put it no plainer than by saying that Bilbo was meant to find the Ring and not by its maker.”
    You are trying to argue an writing technique with an in-lore reasoning. That doesn't work. It also ignores how if they show later explains it in a similar way that I bet you'd still object to the chance encounter.

    - - - Updated - - -

    Quote Originally Posted by Syegfryed View Post
    they have someone forcing then, they have a goal thy were forced to do, not going there is pure garbage plot convenience deus ex machina that this show have by the dozens
    Who was forcing them at the time to run into the blazing rays of the rising sun? Which again doesn't contradict the vision of Tolkien since he quite often wrote about Orcs not wanting to go into the sun if they had a choice. He even created super orcs with out that weakness. As the Uruk-hai didn't tire as fast during the day like the "normal" orcs did. They were not weakened by the light and did not fear the light.
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  20. #5360
    Quote Originally Posted by rhorle View Post
    That still doesn't change the fact that Tolkien wrote a chance encounter and later had it explained by Gandalf implying a higher power was at work. It wasn't the ring as it can't influence the entire world like that. Otherwise wouldn't it have had an orc? It is implied that a Valar helped out in tiny way.
    Well then you're arguing against Tolkien's work, not me.

    Again, if you want to start a new thread about Tolkien book criticisms, feel free to. I'm not going to be baited into an off-topic discussion of the books just because you want some parity.

    Tolkien has a lot of questionable writing himself, but that is a completely separate discussion of what's happening in Rings of Power. Sorry but I'm not going to humor the discussion you want, it's really a completely different rabbit hole.

    You can see that I'm not even comparing Rings of Power to Tolkien's work, so I'm not sure why you're trying to catch me in some 'double standard'. Everything being relative to Tolkien's work is merely contrasting the differences in how the two different plots play out, and how RoP is doing it differently and doesn't fit back into 'canon'.

    You are trying to argue an writing technique with an in-lore reasoning. That doesn't work. It also ignores how if they show later explains it in a similar way that I bet you'd still object to the chance encounter.
    I'm not criticizing the show for using chance encounters in the first place. Why the fuck are you even assuming this lol.

    I made a point that the Orcs attacking HALBRAND'S VILLAGE ended up being the evidence Galadriel needed to muster forces in Numenor. You can't call this an insignificant Orc encounter that could have easily fit in Tolkien's work. It's not the fact it Orcs being found out or Halbrand meeting Galadriel was merely a chance encounter, it's the fact it's a SIGNFICANT revelation that is involving the Commander of the Elven Armies and the nation of Numenor into taking action in the Southlands.

    We're all pointing this out because you're literally arguing that the Southlands arc does not affect the Orc army remaining secret. Yes, yes it does, because Rings of Power isn't telling the same story as the original canon and you're making up excuses that make no sense. They're already being outed and Galadriel is fully aware they are in the Southlands.
    Last edited by Triceron; 2022-09-22 at 06:40 PM.

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