My bad, it was the other English Tom H. from the Marvel films you suggested should play Martin Luther King. So the question is, do you really think the colour of MLK's skin is not significant to his story as a leader in the civil rights movement seeking equality for African-Americans? Do you think that race is insignificant to a character who leads an isolationist African nation that kept itself hidden in the face of European colonialism?
Their beardlessness is a sign of the Elven blood they carry as nobility of the royal line of Numenor, it's particularly important for Aragorn and Faramir who, along with Denethor, represent a resurgence of the blood of the high men with abilities beyond regular humans.you said 'Aragorn, Boromir and Faramir should have been beardless', why? what does having a beard change in respect to the story being told?
You seem to be labouring under the assumption that biology in Arda works the same as it does in our world, something Tolkien firmly rejected. The Numenoreans are a few thousand years away from the time they were uplifted by godlike beings to have lifespans and abilities beyond those of normal Men, traits that waned not because of mixing with other "low Men" but due to their spiritual degradation.you went on a tangent talking about these character's appearance, so I have stated that if you want to be a pedantic little fuck about such details, then they should all look like they are from the Balkans/southern Mediterranean because that would make them as close to a 1:1 representation of the people who live in a climate such as that represented by Gondor and the surrounding areas as well as that of Numenor because again you and the rest of the cult are making such pathetic and pedantic arguments over the smallest little detail being wrong as a 'gotcha' when someone comes in with criticism of the show it's basically 'so you're ok with *insert your pedantic little pet peeve here* but not ok with *insert actual legitimate criticism here*, how is that not being a hypocrite', that's EXACTLY what you're doing to me here, it's what you have done to other in other posts.
Definitely smaller than usually portrayed, Tolkien's Orcs are not much bigger than Hobbits (though Uruk-hai are almost as tall as Men.) Broad and squat, long arms, stooped gait. To be truly how Tolkien described them they'd have to look a bit like racist Asian stereotypes though I wouldn't recommend that for a modern audience, however I find both the trilogy and the series go too far trying to make them look like disfigured monsters.using your vast wealth of knowledge on the topic, explain in painful detail how you would make the orcs look on screen, take your time I have all day, I want to know PRECISELY what every film-maker in the history of tv and cinema could do moving forward from someone such as yourself who is clearly well versed on the topic of taking something from page to screen, I'm sure you could teach generations to come with your understanding /s.
I'm not so petty as to want such a pedantic thing changed because it's not 1:1 with the source material as how orcs are portrayed in the PJ trilogy or other subsequent media since because it doesn't match with word for word descriptions in the books.
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Among the Noldor yes it was mostly the female Elves who were healers. Part of the reason they traditionally eschewed combat or soldiery was because of a belief that shedding blood lowered the potency of their healing crafts.
Tolkien was referencing the Amazons in the Greek myths, a society of warrior women known for their soldiery and who inspired the society Wonder Woman came form.And what exactly did he mean by Amazonian? [Amazon prime? - j/k btw -but yeh, this is an example of how man-maiden can be twisted to go far beyond the author's original intention] again, I think Amazonian as more of the early 80s and 70s shows/comics like Wonder Woman, or athletic women, skillful and well versed i combat as portrayed in those fantasies, but a female and a woman, funny , like She-ra in the Masters of the Universe 80s cartoons ( I watched in the 90s/00s as a kid), I never felt those characters to be mannish, despite their rather masculine roles of fighting and combat.. i just felt they were women who could fight well and thought them cool. .they never fel t like men.
As I replied to someone else, Galadriel doesn't feel like "a man" to me, just like a fantasy Elven hero who is in a role traditionally taken up by men. The Galadriel in RoP is more flawed than Tolkien described her in some of his later writings (he never settled on a final story for her and Celeborn) but the traits she displays are very much in line with the Noldor who were quite frankly awful Elves responsible for all (I think) the Kinslayings of the First Age and many other evils (though they were not explicitly evil, just misguided, bitter, proud, arrogant and disillusioned with the Valar.) It's this dark side Galadriel inherited from her people that she suppresses when Frodo offers her the Ring, finally convincing herself she is fit and worthy to sale West to Aman.This Galadriel in the show, she feels like a man, ,not one of those old time Amazons or She-Ra, she came across like an angry young male adult, and not a very good or very nice person either Lots of questionable moral decisions that I didn't like nor thought was cool. But like I mentioned previously, today's Hollywood women of action, many leads in the Galadriel mould do not come of as strong fighting women, they come off as men in women's bodies and it is often weird. But Galadriel, the character in Season 1 was not likeable.
I shall give a watch of a bit more of the first episode of season 2 when I have dinner, and see if they change her, but season 1 really did ruin the character.. how do you walk that back? It's not just her mannish behaviou though, the character does some really dodgy stuff I just thought, that's downright evil, not cunning, and far removed from what I expected an elf to be, and expected Galadriel to be. but maybe some like it, the consensus I have observed in ratings and reviews, is that most do not.
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I think it's just a matter that for most people there's nothing noteworthy about seeing the occasional non-white person in a majority white group. That's just what society looks like in America and Europe which is where most of the cast and crew come from. They could have made the aesthetic choice to make mono-ethnic groups to perfectly match descriptions in the books, or they could let anyone audition and just cast the best actors for the job. There are arguments for both and they chose the latter, and I think that Arondir and Disa are so well performed that the choice is vindicated.