• @[email protected]
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    1123 months ago

    I saw the movies first. When I tell you I was shocked by tom bombadill I thought I had lost my mind or had a wrong version of the book. Maybe this was a prank. I had to google it to find out it was in fact reality

    • @[email protected]
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      903 months ago

      I read the books as a youngin’ I was so pissed that they left my favorite character out of the movies. So I kinda had the opposite experience from you.

      • @[email protected]
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        3 months ago

        I watched the movies first then read the books and was subsequently pissed when I realized what they left out lol.

        • @[email protected]
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          393 months ago

          I read the books first, and while there are plenty of omissions and outright changes from the source material that I disagree with, cutting Tom Bombadil is not one of them.

          • @[email protected]
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            503 months ago

            Bombadil was one of the most important pieces of world building in LOTR, and that’s not a joke. He’s clearly a being of great power. He holds absolute sovereignty over his domain, such that even the trees and the undead bend to his will. And there is absolutely no cogent information or backstory on him, whatsoever. At all. Bombadil is printed proof that Middle Earth has a lot more going on than is touched on in the story. If Bombadil is an unexplained Great Being then it stands to reason that there would be more, beyond Sauron and Sauruman and the characters we meet directly. Bombadil is a signpost pointing off-screen and saying “Hey, there’s more stuff over this way”.

            He may be crazy, and silly, and poorly explained, but that’s all for a reason. Tom represents the “etc.” at the end of the list of beings in Middle Earth. He is an open end implying the existence of more like him.

            • @[email protected]
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              483 months ago

              Nice interpretation but he really was just a character from unrelated stories by Tolkien he liked so much he reused him in LOTR. He’s just a remnant of the initial version of the book which had a lot of elements later editions revised like Strider being a hobbit.

              • @[email protected]
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                193 months ago

                I think that’s what makes Tolkien such a talented writer. Sure, he just wanted a nice character reference, but he managed to make it fit in such a way that truly did expand the horizons of Mordor to near infinity.

                • @[email protected]
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                  33 months ago

                  Well, objectively he’s not a very good writer. He’s a great storyteller though, maybe the best of the entire 20th century.

              • @[email protected]
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                93 months ago

                It doesn’t really matter what Tolkien said or where Tom came from, mechanically in the work. Once it’s on the page, that’s the story.

          • @[email protected]
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            233 months ago

            Tom bombadil and the scouring of the shire were just, logical omissions.

            What they did to my boy Gimli though… :'(

            • @[email protected]
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              3 months ago

              I disagree, I think the scouring of the shire is important and adheres to the themes established like home being worth fighting for even if you’re small and weak.

              I just really like Bombadil, so I accept that I’m biased.

              Gimli definitely got shafted.

              Boromir… I have never seen such a crime committed against a character before.

                • @[email protected]
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                  163 months ago

                  And honestly I think that’s ok, and an acceptable reason to leave him out. Tom really would be difficult to do justice on the big screen, and might confuse the majority of people that didn’t read the books first.

              • @[email protected]
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                123 months ago

                A whole second sturggle after the climax if the movie is unbearable and would just make it drag on. They were right to ommit it from the movies.

            • @[email protected]
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              73 months ago

              How different was Gimli in the books? I must admit I didn’t read them, but in my defense I don’t read any books.

              • @[email protected]
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                183 months ago

                Book gimli is an intelligent, articulate warrior poet.
                Film gimli is a bumbling comedic relief.

                For example when they enter Moria, in the film, most of the exposition in the film is given to Gandalf, with Gimli being reduced to gasping and awing.

                “These are not holes,” said Gimli. “This is the great realm and city of the Dwarrowdelf. And of old it was not darksome, but full of light and splendour, as is still remembered in our songs.”

                He rose and standing in the dark he began to chant in a deep voice, while the echoes ran away into the roof.

                Followed by Gimli singing a song about its former splendour

                At the tomb of Balin, instead of crying and moaning the whole scene:

                “He is dead then,” said Frodo. “I feared it was so.” Gimli cast his hood over his face.

        • @[email protected]
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          3 months ago

          I firmly believe the movies would be unwatchable if they left in one punch man and half the singing.

          Different mediums.

  • @[email protected]
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    913 months ago

    Tom Bombadil was supposed to be in the movie but he forgot to actually appear and went a galavanting elsewhere during filming

  • This is fine🔥🐶☕🔥
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    733 months ago

    Why didn’t just Tom wear the Ring as he makes passionate love with his wife, so he can force Sauron to watch.

    Sauron, who is a virgin, who never had a gf and was dismembered and reduced to a giant eye by a fucking human would realize he is nothing compared to Tom, whose girth is beyond even Eru Ilúvatar’s comprehension.

    Wishing to die but unable to kill himself as he doesn’t even have a fucking hand to pull the trigger, he would order his orc armies to piss on him, so that the flames of his eye can be extinguished and his mind can be set free of Tom’s all encompassing girth. His spirit would be released to the boundless void that ripples and contorts with Tom’s mighty thrusts and he would find no solace.

    Edit: When Tom thrusts his final thrust and shoots a billion Bombadillos deep into Goldberry’s loins, the impact would shatter Sauron’s soul into a billion Saurodillos and he would be free. When this happens, not even the wisest can tell.

  • Gnome Kat
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    493 months ago

    I love the Tom Bombadil part of the books, I don’t care what y’all haters say Tom is GOAT

    • @[email protected]
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      183 months ago

      Facts, Tommy B is the best part of LotR. I’m also glad they left him out of the movie, cause he’s the one thing that wouldn’t have translated well.

      • @[email protected]
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        133 months ago

        People complain about the movies but if they included everything the movies would be several weeks long.

        • @[email protected]
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          3 months ago

          People complain about the movies but if they included everything the movies would be several weeks long.

          LOTR fans: print it on 70mm IMAX film, grind it up into powder. And inject that shit right into my veins.

        • @[email protected]
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          03 months ago

          No it wouldn’t, you just need to cut out the stuff Jackson added to make the movie more mainstream.

          • @[email protected]
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            33 months ago

            Movie adaptations need filler, the books themselves would be the length of the Jackson movies but wouldn’t play well to audiences. That’s just how it works it’s why you have to look at movies separately from their books.

            • @[email protected]
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              13 months ago

              Oh sure, I’m only saying if the movies followed the books, the movie wouldn’t be ridiculously long. It’s only long because Jackson added extra stuff that wasn’t in the books.

  • @[email protected]
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    233 months ago

    TLDR?

    Sorry yes I only watched the movies, I read the Hobbit and gave up at LOTR 1 page 80 or so, when it was still random stuff not in the movies.

    • @[email protected]
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      3 months ago

      Lol. This might not be popular BUT there’s a reason he doesn’t make the cut in the movies or extended cut releases. Tom Bambodil is basically middle earth’s “MyStErIoUs WaYs.” This is a hot take but I would almost go so far as to say his existence in the world ruins the book, his songs/poetry are terrible and he’s just kind of there. He is meant to be a mysterious figure that lends to the overarching mystery of the world, one who has always been around and is so powerful he is basically a god, but doesn’t actually give a shit about the world outside of himself or the suffering of others. I see him as a vestige of JRRT’s catholicism seeping through, this ultimate force that could end the war but didn’t because reasons.

      Edit: grammar is hard after wine

      • Gnome Kat
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        3 months ago

        Tom couldn’t save the world. They talk about giving the ring to him at the council. He can’t leave his lands so the most he could do is to keep it and hide the ring. But tom is literally incapable of being tempted by power, that sounds like it would make him the perfect person to keep the ring but actually it would mean he would just forget about it almost immediately. Giving him the ring would be more dangerous than yeeting it into the ocean which they also discussed and deemed not a good solution because it would only delay things. The ring is magical after all and WANTS to be found, trying to hide it away in those sorts of ways will never work.

        Tom is meant to represent untamed nature of middle earth. He isn’t meant to be mysterious or even particularly powerful. He is just Tom.

        • @[email protected]
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          133 months ago

          I can appreciate this take, I know he’s a popular character and I read somewhere that Jack Black would be the only actor capable of pulling off the role which absolutely makes sense to me (and honestly does make re-reading more entertaining.) I get it, I just don’t like him. The world around him is falling to darkness and he just doesn’t care. No one really knows what he’s capable of outside of his realm because he likes his life with Goldberry and again just doesn’t care about anything else. I always saw him as representative of those apolitical people who didn’t care enough to stop fascist regimes take over their own country because they only cared about their own day to day life and couldn’t be bothered to vote or fight for anything. I’m glad they took him out of the movies, it flows better and fits the tone of everyone coming together in a fellowship to defeat evil. 🤷‍♀️

          • @[email protected]
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            3 months ago

            Brian Blessed would’ve made the best Tom Bombadil IMO. He’s got the perfect voice, appearance, mannerisms, and weird whimsical childish aloofness that Bombadil has.

            He’s too old now, though, I’m thinking of 20+ years ago when they were doing the PJ trilogy, so JB would probably be a sound bet in any new adaptation.

            • @[email protected]
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              23 months ago

              I didn’t know exactly, off hand who Brian Blessed was but immediately recognized him in a video and I totally agree with you he would have been perfect.

          • @[email protected]
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            3 months ago

            You might be right I just personally kinda had the hard opposite reaction to TB. Just thought it was such a neat and mystifying little side story. Just enriched the universe for me. But I love hearing different takes because it’s all just fun

      • @[email protected]
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        223 months ago

        his songs/poetry are terrible

        To be fair, Tolkien’s songs/poetry are terrible. He was a great writer, an amazing storyteller, and an unparalleled world-builder. But he was not a lyricist or poet by a long shot.

        The songs and poems do convey a lot of information and help build the world. But that doesn’t mean they’re good.

      • @[email protected]
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        3 months ago

        The question of giving the ring to Bombadil to take it out of the equation is asked and answered at the council of Elrond - at no point he could or would end the war.

    • @[email protected]
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      233 months ago

      Tom Bombadil is a weird character that appears early in the Hobbit’s journey in the first book.

      He lives alone in the forest with his wife and lives very carefree, despite potentially being the most powerful entity in all of Middle Earth or Arda in general. The ring has no effect over him, and he didn’t turn invisible when he wore it.

      Tom Bombadil is just sort of… A thing that happens. It has no real bearing on the story and contributes to almost nothing. He does save the Hobbits, twice; once from some grumpy tree and once more from some restless dead, but cutting him out entirely doesn’t change the story of The Lord of the Rings in any way, which is why he’s not in the movies.

      The only other mention of Tom Bombadil in all three books is Elrond hoping he would’ve accepted his invitation to his Council.

  • @[email protected]
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    113 months ago

    I know some consider this basically heresy, but I think the books would have been better off without Tom as well. I love the trilogy to bits, but the first book suffers from pacing issues and the amount of space the Tom Bombadil section takes up is a major contributing factor to that.