I love Warcraft, I dislike WoW
Unsubbed since January 2021, now a Warcraft fan from a distance
'People will be willing to give up their human rights for the false promise of security and get none in return'
Orcs, too. I'm pretty sure they specifically showed a cloud of ash/smoke that was being sent out from Mordor to cover their advance. Lighting discrepancies were probably both a matter of convenience for filming, and to visually distinguish the battle at Minas Tirith from the one that took place at Helm's Deep in the previous movie.
But it's funny that people are assuming the showrunners don't know about this when this was literally in the article they linked:
"This is kind of before the next range of big battles. So there's a lot more smooth texture. There's still wrinkles, and lines, and shape, and form, but they're not so battle scarred, but they are dealing with some skin conditions because of their exposure to the sun. They're coming back out for the first time again. So it's all a bit new. That's why they're not as dark skinned, necessarily not as muscle-y and not as battle worn as you'd seen in previous productions.”

I have no problem with orcs being redeemed, or portrayed as more than dumb evil henchman. I'm not afraid at all of a little change, even if it's not 100% in line with the legendarium.
What I'm ACTUALLY afraid of is all of that done poorly, with the most ham-fisted, on-the-nose writing imaginable.

My only problem with th Orcs in the serie, as the images i saw is how they are so damn skinny, they were supossed ot be a bit more bulky than that with longer arms.
Their face is better than the original trilogy, but the best one still is Azog imo.
for all we know, orcs and goblins are the same thing, just two different names for the same species, so, there is probably s sub-specie kind of scenario here. They didn't like light, but some of then, the big ones could endure better and the uruk-jai had no problems with it.
The "goblins" usually, were referred to the smaller orcs.
The big ones, like the ones in Mordor were taller as man and more bulky, were the "uruk"
Then there is the uruk-hai, that were hybrids with man.
The whole discussion about "good" Orcs is facetious.
Even if we assume that is "possible" because Tolkien didn't philosophically rule out for Orcs to be redeemed, it still doesn't answer the question why you would even focus on this most unlikely event that never actually happened as far as Tolkien's writings are concerned. Doesn't the act of filling out the most vague narrative spaces Tolkien deliberately didn't touch on already constitute a subversion of his work?
If large parts of your adaptation are focused on some very unlikely possibilities that only exist because of some offhand remark Tolkien made in a letter then you're already missing the mark. Because at that point you are evidently making a choice to not tell the stories Tolkien was interested in and instead focus on open questions Tolkien considered unimportant or uncomfortable at the time to fill them with your own dreck.
Last edited by Nerovar; 2022-06-23 at 12:00 PM.
The absolute state of Warcraft lore in 2021:
Kyrians: We need to keep chucking people into the Maw because it's our job.
Also Kyrians: Why is the Maw growing stronger despite all our efforts?
Durin's Bane was only a single Balrog. There are in fact multiple Balrog as written by Tolkien. There's no reason to imply there cannot be female Balrogs, or that the Balrogs can't be written in a sympathetic light. Tolkien never said they were explicitly evil, just giant fiery demonic entities that served Morgoth.
We're all arguing about hypotheticals since the show isn't actually out. The fact that we're going to see the side of the Orcs with multiple "lovable" female Orc characters already seems to indicate that a decent amount of time will be used on their characterisation. But good to know that you cannot actually engage with the argument because you choose to get hung up on the word 'large'.
Yeah this is basically the level of apologetics we can see from the usual preemptively obedient honor guard of corporate media.
The absolute state of Warcraft lore in 2021:
Kyrians: We need to keep chucking people into the Maw because it's our job.
Also Kyrians: Why is the Maw growing stronger despite all our efforts?

He said the orcs were creatures corrupted by evil, so, naturally evil, but said they were not irredeemable, so, they can be saved.
Which is of course the base of Tolkien religion, everyone can be saved, no matter what they did, how foul they were, etc.
Also, Tolkien never finished the orcs creation, so there is no "real canon" of how they came to be, he had like, 5 theories written, the last one, and prob the one that make most sense(taking account how orcs work, the timeline, etc) is that they were in truth corrupted men, not elves. Of course the elven theory is more popular because his son chose to publish that one.
The weird part of all this Orc creationism and their origin is that we see in two towers fresh Orcs being birthed out of a mud pit or something. Since this show is based off Peter Jackson's work I wonder how that plays in to the story, or why they have a need for birthing persons
Over time, since this show was announced, it has only created a longer and longer shadow of dread. It seems like the more info comes out of the show, that the focus seems less about making a tolkien show and about making a generic fantasy-exploration show, like all the other fantasy shows out there.
Its really a shame. Im not one to judge a show or story before it has been presented, but i think you can judge intent and design before a thing is published, and Rings of Power does not have a good intent if we look at what it pushes onto the public. The show tries to push inclusivity, story-analyses and bringing a modern story, when the original content does not really guide to that.
I wish Rings of Power the best really, but i would not be surprised if this show ends up being another Wheel of Time, Shadow and Bone or Carnival Row, which while not being outright bad, is just bland and does not stand out as anything worth paying attention to.
May the lore be great and the stories interesting. A game without a story, is a game without a soul. Value the lore and it will reward you with fun!
Don't let yourself be satisfied with what you expect and what you seem as obvious. Ask for something good, surprising and better. Your own standards ends up being other peoples standard.
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.
Back on the planet Bal, where the Balrogs come from, I don't doubt at all there are females there. Maybe Morgoth didn't take any females with him aboard his interdimensional spaceship back to Middle-Earth to fight the Noldor, Tolkien skipped some of the specifics here.
Last edited by Al Gorefiend; 2022-06-23 at 01:26 PM.


Funny enough, the bit about orcs being birthed out of mud pits si actually one of the, if the THE original creation of orcs from tolkien.
His first draft, is that orcs were created from the mud of the earth and their hearts were stone(something along this lines, i don't remember the actual wording he did use)
Then he skip this, because he came up with the idea of "evil cannot create just corrupt kind of deal, so his second draft is that he made so that orcs were actual animals, like worgs, that were given human form, which coincide of how Morgoth create some of his "monsters" like turning lizards into dragons.
Then he said orcs were Fallen Maiar, and there is actually fallen Maiar that took the form of orcs(there is like 3 or 5 of then).
then he scrap all of that, and said orcs were corrupted elves, but quickly didn't like this very much because would imply orcs would have elven souls, would be immortal, and would make some weird shenanigans, the timeline also didn't made sense, so he scrap that and start working on orcs being humans corrupted.
In the movie they used the first, to depict the creation of the hybrids of man-orc, so i guess, this will not be touched.
So you don't know that Balrogs were fallen Maiar, and that some of those took female forms? Fascinating. I guess no one should take you seriously ever again if you start complaining about the sanctity of Tolkien's work...seeing as you clearly know jack shit about it.