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.
You are not the one to decide if its a good show or not, your personal feelings have no impact on if a show is considered good or not, the simple facts prove the show is good, most ppl who watched the show liked it and that is proven if you look at all the data, you were never going to get an adaptation that tolkien purests would be happy with, the simple reality is the show has been proven that its good and more ppl like it than not.
Its almost impossible to make a true adaptation from a book to a tv series, even tolkien knew it wasnt possible.
STAR-J4R9-YYK4 use this for 5000 credits in star citizen
Disney is a corporation that pretends to own "Star Wars". Virtually everyone who was involved in creating Star Wars is no longer involved in Star Wars. Just because a corporation owns a trademark called "Star Wars" does not make them Star Wars. The "sequel trilogy", the Mandalorian, Andor, whatever, is not Star Wars. It is a completely different movie. It's corporate fanfiction. The only thing it has in common is the name slapped on the box. It's pretension. You wouldn't buy tickets to a "Metallica" concert that starred people who weren't Metallica, would you? There are two original members of Metallica: Lars Ulrich and James Hetfield. They have always been in the band. If they are not present, then you do not have Metallica. Star Wars was made by George Lucas. If you do not have George Lucas, you do not have Star Wars, only a product by a corporation that happens to own the name "Star Wars". Tolkien has been dead for a long, long time. The Peter Jackson "Lord of the Rings" movies were fun action flicks, but they're not Lord of the Rings. Final Fantasy XI was the last FF game with the involvement of the OG creators of Sakaguchi, Uematsu, and Koichi Ishii. Everything after is other games with the FF brand name slapped on it, but is not truly Final Fantasy. Suikoden without Junko Kawano is not Suikoden. RWBY without Monty Oum is not RWBY. Berserk without Kentaro Miura is not Berserk.
Reject corporate skinsuits that have no authorship.
I think its undeniable that its canon. It is however, incomplete. Tolkien is the ultimate and only source of canon in his literary universe. Or at least that's how his estate treats it.
I think they want readers to interact with the Silmarillion as more of a reference of how Tolkien envisioned the world in the LotR and the Hobbit rather than a literal bible. But that said, no matter how fragmented it is, it was penned by him and you can't really dismiss its usefulness as a tool in trying to match the themes in his work.
But that's my point here.
They aren't exactly defining it. If we're talking about Silmarillion's canonicity, then we're talking about what the fanbase is widely regarding it as. Not what the fanbase decides, what the fanbase is regarding. I am not talking about a collective decision, I want to be clear here. I'm talking about how the fanbase generally regards as being canonical. I think an argument can be made that Silmarillion is widely considered to be canon; not because it was a collective decision but because many people consider it to be.
Which is exactly what makes it debateable. It's complicated, not as simple as merely dismissing it based on slippery slope.
Last edited by Triceron; 2023-01-25 at 11:50 PM.
Talk about copium of the highest levels. The creator of Star Wars sold it to Disney. If they don't own it then neither did George Lucas because he intentionally passed the work to a successor. Just because it was sold to a corporation doesn't really change anything. Star Wars is a great example because people were hating on George Lucas for the prequel trilogoy so they didn't even care about authorship. Just as you don't really care about corporate skinsuits.
You are merely looking for a way to dismiss something you don't like for any reason.
"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..."
Yes but it's debatable because the author and Estate say it's complicated. Deciding how canon a part of the Silmarillion is means figuring out what Tolkien intended for each piece and how it fits together. Even Christopher Tolkien was unsure about whether the works he compiled could be conisdered "canon" and spent a great deal of his life bringing together the rest of his father's work to give greater insights into it. However if he had simply pulled it together and said "this is canon" then it would be canon unless, maybe, you could find a note from JRR saying "this isn't canon."
The main point though is canonicity derives from an authority who can ring fence stuff and say "this is canon." Tolkien's stuff is debatable for a lot of reasons, but in cases like Star Wars and Wheel of Time people have definitively said what's canon and what isn't, and how random internet people feel about it can't change that.
All this talk about canon is to somehow validate the garbage changes in the show, as one can use as excuse to make such nonsense like magic mithrill.
"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..."
Maybe after Wheel of Time I am more forgiving of Rings of Power, I think I gave WoT a 4/10 and RoP a 5/10. Despite similar issues with both shows, there was far more lasting enjoyment in RoP for me (I use the term 'enjoyment' loosely). I have no intention of watching WoT season 2, Rings of Power at least I want to give another go at season 2 because there was enough to like in the first season to at least make me curious of season 2. If season 2 really is that bad I would stop. I don't like hate watching shit. thats not fun to me. Otherwise I would have continued watching the god awful season 2 of Witcher, which I stopped at on episode 3 lol. I couldn't even rate it cos I didn't finish it :P
Last edited by Orby; 2023-01-26 at 10:07 AM.
I love Warcraft, I dislike WoW
Unsubbed since January 2021, now a Warcraft fan from a distance
If I am being fair I think I said in an early post that remove it from Tolkien I would give the show a 5/10 so agree with you there, though I might rate WoT lower than you (probably because of the last episode being so bad, the scene with Rand was just so fucking lackluster and the PS2 MAYBE PS 3 graphics really felt bad).
they have defined a pretty clear canon with the 3 LoTR novels and the hobbit just like Lucas did with his first 6 movies, even selling those rights and withholding others as they are the main canon story’s.
Rather the Silmarillion is part of that or is it’s own canon like the EU was or rather some story’s of it are canon and other aren’t is all up what the estate has said even if I don’t know what that stance is.
And that’s what makes this definition of canon meaningless.but because many people consider it to be.
many people would likely consider what Jackson did canon many others won’t and say just the word for word novels are, many may take one story from the Silmarillion and apply it while saying other story’s don’t fit, many may say only what Tolkien wrote is canon and things added by his son aren’t, many may say that only what he published is canon and scattered notes don’t count or story’s that didn’t make it into the Silmarillion should count, and while not likely right now many may look at say shadow of modor down the line and say that should be canon because they like it.
If you are saying Canon is what “many” want it to be then canon is every thing and nothing because there are endless groups of “many” wanting different things.
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Literally no one talking about canon is talking about RoP.
Last edited by Lorgar Aurelian; 2023-01-26 at 07:20 PM.
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.
But that isn't a definitive answer either. There isn't one.
If some experts decide to consider Silmarillion part of the Hobbit and LOTR canon, would they be wrong to do so? Because you happen to see it part of its own canon? I mean, what we're all boiling down to is a series of fan-driven regard for canon. It's a 'I don't know' situation, where it's literally individuals having different regard of what the 'official continuity' really consists of. It's ultimately up to the fans to decide for themselves what the 'some stories' are canon or not means to them, if the authoritative source isn't clearly defining those lines.
That's the point. Canon is not definitive if the authoritative source is not clearly defining the lines, and even then the authoritative source may not always be correct in certain circumstances. Han shot first is a very clear example of something that is technically canon, but not always recognized as being so within the same fandom. Like, it can legitimately be rejected as being canon due to the way the movie continuity works.If you are saying Canon is what “many” want it to be then canon is every thing and nothing because there are endless groups of “many” wanting different things.
Cuz all I can say is the explanation that Silmarillion could be an EU and in its own canon, is itself a fan-derived conclusion that you're presenting here. If that is one point that you are arguing, then you're expressing your interpretation as a fan. This is exactly what I'm talking about when I say the canon is in the hands of the fanbase; we aren't talking about you as a fan singularly defining what is canon, rather we are regarding that you are expressing your viewpoint in how the canon is defined and it is just as acceptable as someone else believing the Silmarillion to be absolutely canonical to the other books. There is no singular definition in this case.
Last edited by Triceron; 2023-01-26 at 08:43 PM.
If the estate said other wise, Yes. If they aren't saying its canon then only what they say (Lotr-hobbit) Is canon.
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Post I was going to reply to was delated, but from a quick google It sound's like the Silmarillion was never considered canon to the published works or even parts of it self By his son or at best was "all of it's cannon, not all of it's true" like 40k as far as Tolkien him self was considered.
I set myself therefore to work out a single text, selecting and arranging in such a
way as seemed to me to produce the most coherent and internally self-consistent
narrative. In this work the concluding chapters (from the death of Túrin
Turambar) introduced peculiar difficulties, in that they had remained unchanged
for many years, and were in some respects in serious disharmony with more
developed conceptions in other parts of the book.
A complete consistency (either within the compass of The Silmarillion itself
or between The Silmarillion and other published writings of my father’s) is not
to be looked for, and could only be achieved, if at all, at heavy and needless cost.I'm sure some one who cares more about the works then me would be able to find further info about rather this view changed or not.my father come to conceive The Silmarillion as a compilation, a
compendious narrative, made long afterwards from sources of great diversity
(poems, and annals, and oral tales) that had survived in agelong tradition; and
this conception has indeed its parallel in the actual history of the book, for a
great deal of earlier prose and poetry does underlie it, and it is to some extent a
compendium in fact and not only in theory.
Last edited by Lorgar Aurelian; 2023-01-26 at 09:26 PM.
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.