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Old 12-06-2004, 01:43 AM   #1
jerseydevil
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Nazgul

Quote:
Originally Posted by Elemmire
You sure know how to ruin the movie for me, JD... I'm never going to be able to watch that part of it again without trying desperately not to burst out laughing...
No problem - it's good to laugh at jackson's hack movies.
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I liked your list, btw. And yes, the shoes were silver in the book.
I thought they were. We studied Wizard of Oz in American history class when I was in high school.
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Old 02-22-2005, 08:10 AM   #2
Beren3000
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An obvious Lotr copy-cat is Book 1 of The Wheel of Time for the following reasons:

-The whole sleepy, insulated village motif
-A stranger coming to the village to sweep the heroes off their feet
-Nazgul/ Myrddraal
-For those of you conspiracy theorists out there: Merry and Pippin / Mat and Perrin
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Old 02-22-2005, 12:11 PM   #3
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Yeah, when thinking about it, I've come across more things from Lotr and Tolkien in the WoT books, though I don't remember them now. But I suppose, you can't read a book like that and then write a in some ways similar book, without taking abit from Tolkien.
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Old 03-23-2005, 03:37 PM   #4
Lenya
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Yip, totally agree. I have also seen some striking resemblenses in the to and can unfortunately not think of any at the moment but I remember something about a few names on the map that bothered me.
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Old 01-06-2008, 01:27 PM   #5
Thehoundsofdeath
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"Oz" was published in 1900

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Originally Posted by ItalianLegolas View Post
Okay, in school my class had to watch "The Wizard of Oz", and me and my fellow LoTR nerds noticed some very obvious very much alike/stolen portions of the movie that were very much like the LoTR books! One such example is the "object of power", in the Wizard of Oz, the ruby slippers, in LoTR, the ring. Another one, would be a a huge gate where all the witches minions(which are orc look-alikes) march through, you guessed it, an enormous BLACK GATE, very much like the one that is the entrance to Mordor! My final such copy-cat is the appearance of short people, in the Wizard of Oz, the munchkins, in LoTR, the Hobbits!

I guess my point is, has anyone else noticed such LoTR look-alikes, or am i the only one?
Rather late in the thread to point this out, but the film of "The Wizard Of Oz" was originally a book that was written in 1900, so could not have been influenced by Tolkien, who did not publish anything until many decades later.
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Old 01-07-2008, 09:39 AM   #6
Lefty Scaevola
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Even the 1939 movie (which made the Muchkins small people, which they were not in the liturature) predated the the publication of LoTR, and the screen play was largely written before the Hobbit was released.
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Old 06-02-2010, 01:27 PM   #7
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People have probably already said this, but POTTER.
I mean, Voldemorts massive cave-lake thing? Moria.
The Dark Lord? THE DARK LORD.
Dementors? Black Riders.
Dumbledore? Gandalf.
Harry's scar "getting heavier when the enemy is near"? THE RING.
Harry's sidekicks? Frodo's sidekicks.
Need I say more?
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Old 06-11-2010, 06:24 PM   #8
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i did notice that in some of them. Particularly the dementors and the Nazgul - the dementors in the book were described as looking EXACTLY the way Peter Jackson had the Nazgul looking, if only de-cartoonified.
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Old 08-11-2010, 10:52 PM   #9
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I don't want to call anyone a copycat as we all build our own ideas on the ideas that came before us. I prefer to think of this thread as a place to identify similar themes...

That said, I do note that there are some notable similarities between Gurthang and Stormbringer (A cursed black sword wielded by an antihero, Elric of Melniboné, in several Micheal Moorcock books). Stormbringer ends up killing everyone close to Elric. There are many more similarities which I won't go in to here.

The weird part is that Moorcock was certainly not out to copy JRR as the first novel with Stormbringer in it was published in 1963. The Silmarillion was released in 1977. I don't believe Tolkien copied Moorcock either.

Ultimately, I believe both authors took their inspiration (directly or indirectly) from an old Finnish tale (Kullervo).
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Old 08-12-2010, 06:45 AM   #10
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Originally Posted by Wilhelm View Post
Ultimately, I believe both authors took their inspiration (directly or indirectly) from an old Finnish tale (Kullervo).
I am unfamiliar with the Kullervo tale (the Kalevala is on my to-read-list), but I am fairly convinced that Tolkien modelled Gurthang on Tyrfing, the cursed sword central in the Hervarar saga. Interestingly enough the saga also includes a shieldmaiden.
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Old 08-12-2010, 08:36 AM   #11
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Hi Eärniel,

Kullervo is a character in Kalevala whose situation closely parallels Turin's (accidental incestuous relationships, a sword that agrees to take it's wielder's life, the sister throwing herself into a gorge/river...)

Tryfing is certainly a possible source as well.
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Old 08-12-2010, 11:42 AM   #12
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Wilhelm View Post
Hi Eärniel,

Kullervo is a character in Kalevala whose situation closely parallels Turin's (accidental incestuous relationships, a sword that agrees to take it's wielder's life, the sister throwing herself into a gorge/river...)

Tryfing is certainly a possible source as well.
I made this post in the UT discussion (Tuor/Gondolin) thread with a link to Kalevala.

Quote:
Kullerwoinen, wicked wizard,
Grasps the handle of his broadsword,
Asks the blade this simple question:
"Tell me, O my blade of honor,
Dost thou wish to drink my life-blood,
Drink the blood of Kullerwoinen?"
Thus his trusty sword makes answer,
Well divining his intentions:
Why should I not drink thy life-blood,
Blood of guilty Kullerwoinen,
Since I feast upon the worthy,
Drink the life-blood of the righteous?"
There may be similar swords in other sagas as well ...
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Old 08-12-2010, 12:31 AM   #13
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(hello, everyone! I'm sorry to have missed most of this debate-I was traveling through Italy for a couple weeks and internet was scarce )


So, we've taken a specific thought and made it general, and the main question now is, "are fictional stories really copycats of each other?" (correct me if I'm reading completely outside the lines)

As I've written about in numerous essays, I think fiction is so well-liked because it reflects reality, without being real. It illustrates the rights and wrongs of our world by putting them in a different light: when we step into someone else's shoes what we originally saw ends up looking much different. The differentiating element in fictional stories is what specific idea, problem, etc. the story is illustrating. On the other hand, they all seem to be copycatting each other because they are all "copycatting" the same thing. There is such a place as hell ruled by Satan, and fictional stories reflect hell in their own way...Harry Potter has the huge cave-like structure controlled by Voldemort, LotR has Moria ruled by Sauron. In this way, HP isn't copycatting LotR-and the same applies to most other examples.
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