All I ever wanted was the truth. Remember those words as you read the ones that follow. I never set out to topple my father's kingdom of lies from a sense of misplaced pride. I never wanted to bleed the species to its marrow, reaving half the galaxy clean of human life in this bitter crusade. I never desired any of this, though I know the reasons for which it must be done. But all I ever wanted was the truth.
Well no, I'm describing early drafts, different stories that had parts reused and abandoned nomenclature - things that Tolkien put aside and decided were not part of the Legendarium much like his story of Galadriel and Teleporno. I agree that "canon" gets incredibly woolly with Tolkien's work as we can't be sure which of his notes he intended to be "true" - like his mixed genealogies that make the Three Emissaries anywhere between the third and twenty-somethingth generation of Elves which clearly can't all be canon - but if the author clearly says something doesn't fit we should be able to agree it isn't canon.
As I said earlier there are ways to accept the Silmarillion as canonical but the stories it tells are not true to the history of Arda. For that matter though both the Peter Jackson trilogy and Rings of Power can be considered "canon" but not strictly speaking true, you just have to imagine which peoples would have told the stories that way.We have Elves as incompetent, arrogant, lazy drunks and talking animals in the Hobbit. Just because it's ridiculous doesn't mean it's not canon. It's as canonical as people are willing to accept it to be, and the explanations of such canon can be explained as being 'Bilbo's far fetched tales'. That's how one would consider the Silmarillion as being canonical in the same context; a historic account written from a long-lost historic perspective, one which may have certain imbellishments, yet is still accepted as true to the history of Tolkien's universe.
The argument to be made for Marmaduke and the Lord of Cats is they were both written and abandoned by Tolkien the same as the story of Galadriel and Teleporno.That being said, Rings of Power, Shadows of Mordor/War and the LOTR Table Top games are clearly not accepted as being canon whatsoever by the fanbase. That's the very clear difference we're talking about. The ridiculousness of Hobbits named Marmaduke and Sauron being Lord of Cats has nothing to do with whether they are being accepted as canon or not; it's all to do with what the fanbase would accept as canon. There is no argument being made to accept Marmaduke and Lord of Cats as canon. It's a false equivalency here.
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I'm sure you can appreciate the idea of a setting where "everything is canon, not everything is true."
It's a loose categorization term. I would see it as relevant as placing any movie into a certain genre, like 'fantasy' or 'science fiction' or 'horror'. Certain movies fit those descriptions very well, certain movies don't at all. Doesn't mean the term is meaningless, since it is useful to determine broad categorizations.
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But you said it yourself, they were abandoned. Never released officially, never recognized by the fanbase as official material. There's nothing to discuss here, it's merely a bad example.
I could just say the same about drunken Elves and talking wolves and trolls. Whether people consider those to be canon or not is really up to them. Some will merely accept it as Bilbo's embellishments, rather than a true accounting of races and creatures within the world itself. Some will merely accept it as a different group or type of Elf, wolf or troll displaying those attributes. Some will not consider it canon at all, and merely ascribe to the latest official depictions of these races. There isn't really one answer to canon here, like saying 'YES ALL TROLLS TALK' or anything like that.
Last edited by Triceron; 2023-01-25 at 09:10 PM.
Not sure about Marmaduke but I'm pretty sure the Lord of Cats shows up somewhere in HoM-e as an antagonist in the tale of Beren and Luthien which makes it as canon as Galadriel and Teleporno. Other than your nebulous concept of being "accepted by the fanbase" your criticisms could be ascribed to most of Tolkien's works outside of the Hobbit and LotR. Christopher Tolkien released the Silmarillion to be the most coherent story he could scrape together with minimal additions from himself, it isn't necessarily what JRR would have wanted published if he had chance to finish his work.
The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings are the only things we can point at as being canon. Not necessarily true as they were written by Hobbits who may not have known all the facts, but they were completed, packaged up and published by Tolkien.I could just say the same about drunken Elves and talking wolves and trolls. Whether people consider those to be canon or not is really up to them. Some will merely accept it as Bilbo's embellishments, rather than a true accounting of races and creatures within the world itself. Some will merely accept it as a different group or type of Elf, wolf or troll displaying those attributes. Some will not consider it canon at all, and merely ascribe to the latest official depictions of these races. There isn't really one answer to canon here, like saying 'YES ALL TROLLS TALK' or anything like that.
All I ever wanted was the truth. Remember those words as you read the ones that follow. I never set out to topple my father's kingdom of lies from a sense of misplaced pride. I never wanted to bleed the species to its marrow, reaving half the galaxy clean of human life in this bitter crusade. I never desired any of this, though I know the reasons for which it must be done. But all I ever wanted was the truth.
And that is the point.
Canon would be what fans regard as the officially continuity.
Authors are prone to mistakes, and in certain cases they pass away before any clarifications can be made concerning contradictions. Canon is, IMO, the continuity as fans regard it to be.
That is why something like whether the Fantastic Beasts movies are considered canon or not is completely debatable. Just because JK Rowling says they are canon doesn't exactly mean they are. There are plenty of inconsistencies, retcons or contradictions to the HP universe which makes it questionable at best, and it's really up to the fanbase to decide what is and isn't canon. There's no singular answer, it's absolutely up to debate.
So when someone like Spaghettimonk comes along and talks about canon, it's in context to what he regards as canon. And if you counter that, it's in context of not aligning with what you consider canon. There is no objective answer to what is true canon and what is not. You are both right, you are both wrong, because ultimately it is a debatable topic.
Right, but we're not talking about the Hobbit and LOTR being non-canon, we're talking about the other works such as Simarillion. If that's what we're talking about, then whether it is considered canon or not is really dependent on who you are talking to. It's absolutely debateable, not just merely dismissable as 'non-canon' like you are trying to imply it to be.The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings are the only things we can point at as being canon. Not necessarily true as they were written by Hobbits who may not have known all the facts, but they were completed, packaged up and published by Tolkien.
It doesn't matter if it is completed, packaged up and published by Tolkien or not. Would you say the last books to Wheel of Time are non-canonical just because they weren't written by Robert Jordan? It'd be debateable, right?
Last edited by Triceron; 2023-01-25 at 09:42 PM.
But putting say predator into hero because it fulfils some of the same troops as other monster movies don’t actually effect the worlds like trying to describe a canon does.
Like what if the fan LoTR fanbase has a second wind on shadow of Mordor in 20 or so years and think it as good as the Jackson movies or even the books, would SoM become part of the LoTR canon with every thing else even if it doesn’t make any sense in the world?
All I ever wanted was the truth. Remember those words as you read the ones that follow. I never set out to topple my father's kingdom of lies from a sense of misplaced pride. I never wanted to bleed the species to its marrow, reaving half the galaxy clean of human life in this bitter crusade. I never desired any of this, though I know the reasons for which it must be done. But all I ever wanted was the truth.
I mean, then it's a what if.
What if Tolkien was cloned in the future to write continuations of the LOTR in the far future? What if an AI replicated his writing style to mimic his entire persona and memories to continue the franchise in the way he intended? What if? What if?
Well, if we're talking about Canon, then it'd all be in the context of what the fanbase regards it to be. Because the terminology isn't just specific to 'the writings of a singular authoritative source'.
And if we're talking about PJ movies, then they absolutely exist within their own canon. And the Hobbit movies exist within that same canon. And try as it may, even Rings of Power aims to set itself within that same (shared) universe. And yes, that can happen even without PJ's involvement in the material. So is it canon to PJ's movies? Debateable, because it's really up to fans to decide whether they are or they aren't. Even if an authoritative source set the record straight as to whether it really is or not, canon would only be as relevant as how the fans accept it. Just like the JK Rowling-confirmed Fantastic Beasts canonicity is still widely debated. Just like Lucas deciding Greedo Shot First is still widely debated.
We see this exact thing happen to the Star Wars universe. The expanded universe was considered canon. Many different authors, many different creators, all lending their creativity to build on the same universe. Plenty of contradictions, plenty of retcons, etc. But it was all generally accepted by fans as being within the same continuity, and not merely branching out into different retellings or alternate universes. Canon isn't just 'the things that George Lucas wrote'.
Last edited by Triceron; 2023-01-25 at 09:59 PM.
You did mention the depiction of Elves in the Hobbit being canon. While it is greatly debated I don't think anyone can argue that the books written, completed and submitted for publishing by JRR Tolkien are not canon. The thing is whilst that is canon it is not necessarily "true" to the setting.
It absolutely does though. Whilst there is a huge amount of debate over everything else The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings are canon by all applicable definitions.It doesn't matter if it is completed, packaged up and published by Tolkien or not.
Nope, they are officially recognised by the original author (who left notes in the knowledge he wouldn't live to complete the work,) new author, publisher and author's estate as being the canonical continuation of the Wheel of Time. This is different to Tolkien's Legendarium where the general consensus is "this is what he wrote but here are four other versions and we're not entirely sure if he meant to keep it that way or intended to replace it with something else that he liked more but would have required everything else being rewritten and dear God it's all scribbled on mixed up bits of paper and scattered around the country."Would you say the last books to Wheel of Time are non-canonical just because they weren't written by Robert Jordan? It'd be debateable, right?
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What's canon comes from an authorative source though, that's its whole thing. If the controller of an IP authoritatively says "this is the canon" then that is the canon. The word you're looking for is "liked." Many people say that Greedo shooting first isn't liked, but that doesn't make it non-canon.
We're not debating whether the Hobbit or LOTR are canon though.
My reply is specifically in context of external materials being regarded as canon. "Canon" is not mutually exclusive to a singular authoritative source.
It's actually quite the same deal, because you can't say 'they are officially recognized by the original author' when they came out after he died. You can say he gave his go on it happening, but not in a way that implies he officially recognizes the finished product when it literally isn't possible since he's dead.Nope, they are officially recognised by the original author (who left notes in the knowledge he wouldn't live to complete the work,) new author, publisher and author's estate as being the canonical continuation of the Wheel of Time. This is different to Tolkien's Legendarium where the general consensus is "this is what he wrote but here are four other versions and we're not entirely sure if he meant to keep it that way or intended to replace it with something else that he liked more but would have required everything else being rewritten and dear God it's all scribbled on mixed up bits of paper and scattered around the country."
The Wheel of Time books are canon because the fans have accepted it to be canon. It is absolutely possible for the fans to NOT recognize the last books as canon as well. The difference is most fans widely regard them to be canon, to the point where it's rarely debated. The books follow the same singular continuity that the original author intended. Whereas Silmarillion, as you explained, has plenty of inconsistencies and contradictions, which leaves it open to debate. If we're merely making a technical point of 'is it from the author's body of work', then neither the Brandon Sanderson or Christopher Tolkien books would be (technically) considered canon.
And what you are debating is pretty much already covered by your own recognition that it could all be canonical, just not necessarily all true. Canon is really a loose definition. Even in Wikipedia, certain Tolkien scholars consider all published writings to be canon, while others merely consider the entire body of work of a singular author to be canon. The term is quite loose, even when it comes to the experts who would define them.
As for whether Silmarillion is considered canon? Well, many do consider it canon. You argue that it is not. And everyone is right.
But that's my point. 'Canon' isn't merely what the authoritative source regards as being official. It's grown beyond that description considering the entire premise of authoritative continuity has been widely debated. The term has shifted to include and recognize what a fanbase considers. And that includes experts and scholars on Tolkien's work having different concepts of what is and is not 'authoritative'. We get into this exact grey area because the Silmarillion is both written and not written by Tolkien. It is his works, and it is also not his works.What's canon comes from an authorative source though, that's its whole thing. If the controller of an IP authoritatively says "this is the canon" then that is the canon.
And besides that, who would be the current authoritative source who would define this? Does the Tolkien estate consider it non-canon? Debateable at best, right?
That's where we get into grey area.The word you're looking for is "liked." Many people say that Greedo shooting first isn't liked, but that doesn't make it non-canon.
Lawrence Kasdan could be considered a post-Lucas authoritative source on Star Wars canon. He considers Han Shot First to be canon, and wrote scenes in Solo to corroborate that timeline of events. Is it canon or isn't it? It's still widely debated, because it isn't so simple to define a singular authoritative source. That's pretty much what we have here with Tolkien and the Silmarillion.
The idea of 'ghost writers' continuing Middle Earth would be very little different to how Disney continues Star Wars without Lucas. Should we consider the sequel trilogy and Mandalorian series are non-canon because they are outside of Lucas' body of work? Much of the Lovecraft mythos was expanded in this very way, and the term 'canon' is really only as relevant as the individual wishes to regard the Mythos. The regard of Lovecraft Mythos canon is well beyond the author.
In the case of Tolkien's work, the regard for LOTR and Hobbit to be definitively canonical while any other works is considered debateable is, as I will clearly point out, how the fans choose to regard the canon. The fans openly defer to the experts on the subject; the scholars who have decided to exclusively regard only Tolkien's body of work (which may include his post-humous published works), while openly excluding any fiction created within his universe by other creators. This how this particular fanbase chooses to regard Middle Earth canon. Very exclusively. This choice would be in high contrast to other properties, such as Star Wars, where fans have come to accept a much more flexible, collaborative process to its world building.
Last edited by Triceron; 2023-01-25 at 10:52 PM.
I think the show was just 'okay' personally I think the two extreme sides are once again blowing this out of proportion (sorry if you are on one of them). Its either the best thing ever or the worst thing ever and once again here's me in the middle just like 'its was okay, I guess'. Its Last Jedi all over again, which is fittingly comparable. That movie had some stuff I liked but also some stuff I disliked and to me was an average fine and okay movie. Not great just okay. I don;t think it was awful. Usually when two extremes come to blows on movies or shows like this I always balance the middle (except Captain Marvel I actually liked that movie, fite me lol)
I tried to rewatch Rings of Power for a second time, and it was harder than the first time. The story is by far the weakest part, not all of it, but most of the characters are just dull. Including Galadriel who is so dislikeable and spiteful. But there are some nice things, I enjoy the set design, I enjoy the sweeping shots, and some actors are not all bad. I love Elrond and Durin and Disa that I wish the show was just about them lol.
And I will die on a hill to defend the shows score, I have the soundtrack its amazing, I would say the soundtrack was way too good for the show lol.
Despite it not being a good Tolkien inspired show, and maybe even the worst thing adapted from Tolkien (will need to rewatch that Rankin/Bass Hobbit movie to confirm), I still cannot in good conscience say the show is BAD. I gave it a 5/10 on imdb and I feel its a fitting rating.
Last edited by Orby; 2023-01-25 at 10:30 PM.
I love Warcraft, I dislike WoW
Unsubbed since January 2021, now a Warcraft fan from a distance
That may be the "cover story" but Tolkien wrote it that way because he didn't think fantasy told to adults would be successful. In the 60's he wanted to re-write The Hobbit to make it more of an "adult tale" but it was abandoned after at least 3 chapters.
The two published books should certainly be treated as higher canon then his unpublished work. However even then he didn't see them as finished but something to change as he saw fit.
"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..."
lets just put it that if you take away the LoTR from it/rename places and characters it wasn't a good show for me. The dialogue is bad, the story is bad, the acting is mediocre, the costumes range from good to worst cosplay level (gods I hate the Numenorean armor). The music was great sure, and the visuals good (but nothing to blow me away considering the 600 million budget for this season), but the show had so many failings. Add in the fact that it had h a $600 million budget and it is not a good show, especially when you consider it was supposed to be an adaptation for a beloved authors work causing it to only get worse for me.
So are you. Do you really think there was an endless supply of boats heading to Valinor? Couldn't "go to the front of the line" be given as a boon? Out of all the things to get upset at with Rings of Power I'm always baffled when things like "they got a reward" as something that is impossible. The canon, both published and unpublished don't cover mundane things. It is logical that it could happen and never stated that it could never happen.
"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..."
Loving the “what does canon mean” discussion. I’ll give my definition, prts see if I can get that into webster, or ever more prestigious; the urban dictionary!
Canon:
Expression used by those overly fixated on a fictional work. Canon describes everything the person believes to be true about a fictional work, while discarding conflicting views as non-canon. While this term is used to gatekeep the opinion of “the fandom”, no evidence has been found that any person using the term had been elected speaker of the fandom, nor to have conducted any representative polling.
That about sums it up, me thinks.
If you are taking away the reason they paid so much money then of course it won't fit its budget when including the amount they paid for just the rights. It was $250 million for the rights and $450 million for s1 production. Also an adaptation of an author's work is a subjective thing. Remember son of the author didn't like the last adaptation even though many fans did.
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That is still just as silly of a definition as some of the others. Canon is simply the official facts of a story. It isn't something a fan decides but what the author, or the owners of the IP, decide. Just like when Disney bought Star Wars they started their own canon even for the EU that was "official but not movie level" of canon.
"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..."
Its really not that deep of a discussion in the first place.
The Tolkien Estate considers the books he wrote and that were published during his life as hard canon. And what they mean is that they want the reader to see them as completed works because that's ultimately what stories that Tolkien felt confident telling and releasing to the world.
Not that his other stories aren't important, but they are ultimately incomplete and shouldn't detract from his previously published work.
The EU being canon was highly in debate for the whole of its life time some fans said it was others said it wasn’t, Lucas said there were two canons one with the movies ones with the EU which fans then turned into 3 canons saying some of the EU is canon to Lucas’s first but other parts aren’t, then there was further splits of what was canon to Which parts of the EU like did star killer found the rebels or not is Kotor canon to clone wars because of a cut scene, and then the Disney canon and then making every thing legends and fans trying to say X and Y is canon based on Easter eggs.
Starwars is like the ultimate example of why the fan base deciding what’s canon makes the term meaningless and why we should go off of what Lucas/Disney say is canon.
All I ever wanted was the truth. Remember those words as you read the ones that follow. I never set out to topple my father's kingdom of lies from a sense of misplaced pride. I never wanted to bleed the species to its marrow, reaving half the galaxy clean of human life in this bitter crusade. I never desired any of this, though I know the reasons for which it must be done. But all I ever wanted was the truth.