Captain Faramir
Super Freak
Not only that, the pacing is essential to the validity of LOTR as a story. In a movie you can forego it, and don't get me wrong, I don't think there is a more masterfully created movie in the world--period.
Nonetheless, the books have a depth that the movies can't capture, the movement of time and age which can only be reflected as history. The movies are just that--movies. The books, however, reflect an imagined history of some legitimate place, and they don't move in one exciting sequence--they move in a real chronology akin to our own perception of time and space, and that's what makes them better than so much of the trite fantasy we see today. Long years have to pass before things transpire, but when they do, as happens in the books, they roll through in a few quick months. The Lord of the Rings would never have been taken seriously if it had been as succinct as the films, but because of the natural passage of time and the astute, if not astounding, attention to detail so typical of Tolkein, critics have come to regard it as one of the greatest achievements of literature in our time. Those patterns had to be followed to fit the literary molds he was using, as well as to adapt them to modern readers. Those parts have a depth rich in lore and tradition, and he couldn't have done a better job than to keep them within the story.
Now, lest you feel I'm movie-bashing, let me say that no films have ever compared to Lord of the Rings in the beauty of its design, the quality of its acting, and the magnificence of its writing. They also are unparalleled as works, not just of cinema, but of art. Tolkein's influence has become ubiquitous in both literature and cinema. Any wonder I'm such a fan?
Nonetheless, the books have a depth that the movies can't capture, the movement of time and age which can only be reflected as history. The movies are just that--movies. The books, however, reflect an imagined history of some legitimate place, and they don't move in one exciting sequence--they move in a real chronology akin to our own perception of time and space, and that's what makes them better than so much of the trite fantasy we see today. Long years have to pass before things transpire, but when they do, as happens in the books, they roll through in a few quick months. The Lord of the Rings would never have been taken seriously if it had been as succinct as the films, but because of the natural passage of time and the astute, if not astounding, attention to detail so typical of Tolkein, critics have come to regard it as one of the greatest achievements of literature in our time. Those patterns had to be followed to fit the literary molds he was using, as well as to adapt them to modern readers. Those parts have a depth rich in lore and tradition, and he couldn't have done a better job than to keep them within the story.
Now, lest you feel I'm movie-bashing, let me say that no films have ever compared to Lord of the Rings in the beauty of its design, the quality of its acting, and the magnificence of its writing. They also are unparalleled as works, not just of cinema, but of art. Tolkein's influence has become ubiquitous in both literature and cinema. Any wonder I'm such a fan?