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[[File:lord_of_the_rings_the_fellowship_of.jpg|framethumb|350px| An epic of glaring proportions.]]
 
An [[The Film of the Book|adaptation]] of [[J. R. R. Tolkien|JRR Tolkien]]'s ''[[The Lord of the Rings]]'' into [[Movie Multipack|three films]] (directed by [[Peter Jackson]]) with great commercial and critical success. The movies were filmed together and released one year apart for the holiday seasons 2001-2003.
 
One of the biggest movie projects ever undertaken, the overall budget was around $285 million and principal filming for all three films took place over 18 months in Jackson's native New Zealand. The entire project took eight years, factoring in the early pre-production and the fact that additional pick-ups were filmed in between each films release. The trilogy was a great financial success, with the films being the 19th, 10th, and 3rd (8th, 4th, and 2nd following the third film's release) highest-grossing films of all time, respectively, unadjusted for inflation. The films were critically acclaimed, winning 17 out of 30 [[Academy Award|Academy Awards]]s nominated in total, and received wide praise for the cast and for the innovative practical and digital special effects. ''Return of the King'' is the first (and currently only) fantasy movie to ever be awarded the Best Picture Oscar.
An [[The Film of the Book|adaptation]] of [[J. R. R. Tolkien|JRR Tolkien]]'s ''[[The Lord of the Rings]]'' into [[Movie Multipack|three films]] (directed by [[Peter Jackson]]) with great commercial and critical success. The movies were filmed together and released one year apart for the holiday seasons 2001-2003.
 
One of the biggest movie projects ever undertaken, the overall budget was around $285 million and principal filming for all three films took place over 18 months in Jackson's native New Zealand. The entire project took eight years, factoring in the early pre-production and the fact that additional pick-ups were filmed in between each films release. The trilogy was a great financial success, with the films being the 19th, 10th, and 3rd (8th, 4th, and 2nd following the third film's release) highest-grossing films of all time, respectively, unadjusted for inflation. The films were critically acclaimed, winning 17 out of 30 [[Academy Award|Academy Awards]] nominated in total, and received wide praise for the cast and for the innovative practical and digital special effects. ''Return of the King'' is the first (and currently only) fantasy movie to ever be awarded the Best Picture Oscar.
 
The films were remarkably faithful in many respects, though many changes were made due to the many factors involved with adapting such a monumental work. Among the most significant changes (some of which are controversial) include the nature of Saruman's death, the characterization of Faramir, Arwen, Denethor, Gimli and the removal of various subplots to make the story as a whole more appealing to movie audiences or to streamline their remarkably nuanced events from the books. Check out the [http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/crowner.php/BiggestComplaint/TheLordOfTheRingsMovies Biggest Complaints] page to see some of the less-popular changes.
 
The films were remarkably faithful in many respects, though many changes were made due to the many factors involved with adapting such a monumental work. Among the most significant changes (some of which are controversial) include the nature of Saruman's death, the characterization of Faramir, Arwen, Denethor, Gimli and the removal of various subplots to make the story as a whole more appealing to movie audiences or to streamline their remarkably nuanced events from the books. Check out the [http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/crowner.php/BiggestComplaint/TheLordOfTheRingsMovies Biggest Complaints] page to see some of the less-popular changes.
The theatrical versions were lengthy epics (the first two clocking in around 3 hours and the third 3 1/2 hours), and the Special Editions (released before the succeeding movies) added at least another half-hour to each films running time. Unusual for such a thing, Peter Jackson has stated that the Special Editions are not an actual [[Directors Cut]] but merely a fan-friendly extension to enlarge the world of Middle-Earth and see what things they left out of the faster paced Theatrical Versions.
 
AnA three-part adaptation of ''[[The Hobbit (film)|The Hobbit]]'' isfollowed, beingreleased madeat intoone-year a two partintervals prequelin style story2012, the2013 first part of which isand set to be released winter of 20122014. Many actors (such as [[Ian McKellen]] and [[Serkis Folk|Andy Serkis]]) from the LOTR trilogy will be returningreturned to reprise their roles, even if those roles weren't in ''The Hobbit'' to begin with.
----
=== Provides Examples Of: ===
 
''[[The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring]]'' was added to the [[National Film Registry]] in 2021.
 
{{franchisetropes}}
== A through C ==
* [[Absurdly Sharp Blade]]
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*** In the extended edition, there's even a scene of him sharpening his sword while resting in Lothlorien.
* [[Accent Adaptation]]: Jackson gave his Orcs a lower-class English accent. Gimli was given a Scottish accent to mirror what in the text was simply gruff speech. (By John Rhys-Davies, who was raised in England by Welsh parents).
** Of course, by this time the Scottish accent had already been used in countless depictions of Dwarves - itDwarves—it was almost expected of him to do that. Which is interesting, as according to Tolkien, Dwarvish bears many similarities to Semitic languages, not Scottish.
** Almost all hobbits in the movie have some form of an English accent, except for Pippin, for whom Billy Boyd used his native Scottish accent. (He had attempted a more conventional English accent, [[Throw It In|but switched back to the Scottish accent because the English accent ruined his comic timing]].) It was given the justification that, in the story, the Tooks are from a different area of the Shire that is much more hilly, reflecting the terrain of Scotland, as well as the fact that the Tooks invented golf.
* [[Action Bomb]]: In ''The Two Towers'', during the battle at Helm's Deep, the Uruk-hai placed a bomb in the drainage tunnel at Helm's Deep, with an Uruk with a torch blowing himself up to set it off.
** This is actually a [[Shout-Out]] to the [[Sergei Eisenstein]] film ''[[Ivan the Terrible]]'', where Ivan uses a similar device to blow up one of his enemies' walls. If you watch the film, the shot-angles are even similar.
* [[Action Film, Quiet Drama Scene]]: The heartwarming and peaceful scenes of The Shire in ''Fellowship of the Ring'' (especially in the Director's Cut), filled with laughter, friendship and happy children (what a warrior lays down his life to protect) is what makes us actually care whether or not Frodo and the Fellowship defeat [[The Lord of the Rings]] or not.
* [[Action Girl]]: Éowyn aside, Arwen also has [[A Day in the Limelight|a moment in the limelight]] in the first film.
** [[Word of God]] reveals that Arwen was initially slated to appear at Helm's Deep to fight alongside the heroes. It was eventually realized that this may be pushing it a little too far (even Liv Tyler hated the idea), and in the end she was replaced by Haldir.
* [[Adaptational Angst Upgrade]]: Aragorn is more unsure about returning to the throne of Gondor, and must be convinced by Elrond to do so.
** Faramir is also an example. In the book he immediately recognizes the danger of the ring, thereby becoming the ''only'' "normal" Human in the entire story who isn't tempted by the ring. Of course, [[Rule of Drama]] prevailed, so in the movie he follows in his brother's footsteps and tries to get the ring to Gondor, due to massive angst over being the less-favored son. The Steward also treating Faramir as [[The Unfavorite]] also was added to justify this change.
*** Denethor could apply as well, while his actions are more or less the same, the book actually gives him reason to despair in the end while the movie manages to keep it much more ambiguous.
* [[Adaptational Villainy]]: The movie version of Denethor lacks most of the redeeming qualities that he has in the books, in which he is a [[Good Is Not Nice]] character who nevertheless was a capable leader until driven off the [[Despair Event Horizon]].
** Although never a villain, Faramir was more hostile to the hobbits in the movie than he was in the books, and is tempted by the Ring, until Samwise tells him what the ring did to Boromir.
* [[Adaptation Distillation]]: Many favored aspects of the books were taken up a notch, while much detail was glossed over.
** Most notably, the removal of the [[BigNon LippedSequitur Alligator MomentScene|Tom Bombadil]] sequence, which doesn't really add anything incredibly significant to the narrative of the books.
** The final chapters of the books, the Scouring of the Shire, were removed entirely. Even if they were somewhat anti-climactic, they gave the book a darker vibe, arguably one of Tolkien's recurrent themes.
* [[Adaptation Dye Job]]: Boromir in ''Fellowship of the Ring'' is described as having dark hair. For the movies they gave him light brown, bordering on blond. Same thing goes for Faramir.
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*** Although Pippin was mentioned by Tolkien to have blonde hair
** Some fans argue that this applies to Legolas. While his hair color is never mentioned in the book, one scene at night apparently describes his head as "dark", so it can be argued if this applies to his hair color.
* [[Adaptational Angst Upgrade]]: Aragorn is more unsure about returning to the throne of Gondor, and must be convinced by Elrond to do so.
** Faramir is also an example. In the book he immediately recognizes the danger of the ring, thereby becoming the ''only'' "normal" Human in the entire story who isn't tempted by the ring. Of course, [[Rule of Drama]] prevailed, so in the movie he follows in his brother's footsteps and tries to get the ring to Gondor, due to massive angst over being the less-favored son. The Steward also treating Faramir as [[The Unfavorite]] also was added to justify this change.
*** Denethor could apply as well, while his actions are more or less the same, the book actually gives him reason to despair in the end while the movie manages to keep it much more ambiguous.
* [[Advantage Ball]]: Rather than worry about such things as [[Hollywood Tactics|tactical realism]], advantage in battle seems to be principally a matter of who makes the most [[Big Entrance|badass entrance]], regardless of such matters as numbers and equipment.
* [[Age Cut]]: Averted in the ''Fellowship Of the Ring'' when Elrond talks to Gandalf about an incident thousands of years in the past. We cut to a shot of Elrond in the past and he looks exactly the same, since [[We Are as Mayflies|elves are immortal]].
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* [[All There in the Manual]]: While not necessary to understand the movies, reading the books can provide valuable background information that just couldn't be fit into the films.
** Particularly ''[[The Hobbit]]'', the events of which are recapped in less than a minute. If you haven't read it, quite a few of the little [[Continuity Nod|continuity nods]] will go right over your head. And seeing an aging Bilbo leaving Middle Earth won't be nearly as emotional.
* [[Always a Bigger Fish]]: In the ''Fellowship of the Ring''. The goblins have the party surrounded in the mines of Moria -- untilMoria—until the Balrog makes its first appearance. They run for it. So, needless to say, does everyone else.
* [[Exclusively Evil]]: Orcs and Uruk-Hai.
* [[And This Is For]]: Samwise Gamgee, the [[Let's Get Dangerous|normally]] non-threatening gardener, even did this, dedicating Orc kills: "This is for Mr. Frodo! (stab) And this is for the Shire! (slice) And this is for my old Gaffer!" (thrust)
* [[The Apple Falls Far]]: When the hobbits almost tumble into a pit in Moria, Boromir drops a torch, which is followed by a long tracking shot of it falling into the abyss.
* [[Armor Is Useless]]: There are many instances of [[Mook|mooksmook]]s and [[Red Shirt|redshirts]] dying from a single blow despite being encased in armor. Most notably, orcOrc and goblins tend to wear particularly heavy-looking plate armor, yet often go down to a single swipe or arrow. Aragorn and Legolas also go without armor for a majority of the series, despite being some of the most capable fighters.
** Aragorn might be wearing leather armor the rest of the time, it's a bit hard to tell. Not the best armor out there, but someone who calls himself a "Ranger" would prefer mobility over protection.
*** Additionally, Legolas may well be be wearing mithril below his clothing, since he IS an elf.
* [[Arrow Cam]]: ''The Fellowship of the Ring'' features another "point of view" arrow shot.
* [[Army of the Dead]]: in the book, they're ghosts who accompany Aragorn to prove his kingship, inspire fear and awe, and ensure only stone cold badasses are brave enough to fight alongside him. In the film, they ''are'' the [[The Cavalry|Cavalry]].
* [[Arrow Cam]]: ''The Fellowship of the Ring'' features another "point of view" arrow shot.
* [[Ascended Extra]]: Arwen's transition from book to screen.
* [[Ash Face]]: Merry and Pippin, after setting off a firework at Bilbo's birthday party.
* [[Audible Sharpness]]: Any time a sword is pulled out of a leather scabbard, with a metal-on-metal sound effect. Lampshaded in the DVD audio commentaries: they originally wanted to do it realistically, but [[Enforced Trope|they put them in]] after [[Reality Is Unrealistic|test audiences reacted badly]], as our subconcioussubconscious is trained on and used to the trope.
* [[Award Bait Song]]: The films gave us three stellar [[Tear Jerker]] examples: "May It Be" and "In Dreams" from ''Fellowship of the Ring'' and "Into the West" from ''The Return Of The King''. "May it Be" was nominated for an for Oscar, "Into the West" was nominated and won. "Gollum's Song" from ''The Two Towers'' averts the trope by being in a minor key, having a much darker tone, and being sung in a dissonentdissonant, shrill voice.
* [[Awesome Moment of Crowning]]: ''The Return Of The King'' was pretty much all about getting to this moment, since Aragorn was the rightful ruler all along. And in the end of the movie, the coronation gets a good five minutes and a reunion for Aragorn and Arwen, which makes it an almost perfect [[Awesome Moment of Crowning]].
** With equal parts [[Crowning Moment of Awesome]] AND [[Crowning Moment of Heartwarming]] when the new king turns to the hobbits and says [[Kneel Before Frodo|"My friends, you bow to no one."]]
* [[Back-to-Back Badasses]]: In the film adaptation, during the battle of Helm's Deep, Aragorn and Gimli fought the Uruk-hai while the main gate is repaired.
* [[Badass Army]]:
** The Elven army is implied to be one of these in the films given how disciplined and co-ordinatedcoordinated they are.
*** Not because they're inherently ''better'', mind you, they've just had [[We Are as Mayflies|literally thousands of years of training and combat experience]].
** And even more so, the [[Army of the Dead]] mentioned above.
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** Gimli has a [[Big No]] when he discovers the tomb of Balin, which dissolves into mournful blubbering.
** Frodo also has one upon Gandalf's "death."
** Aragorn's scream upon thinking Merry and Pippin are dead in the second film (when he kicks them helmet) isn't quite distinct, but seems to be a [[Big No]]. [[Reality Subtext|Interestingly]], Viggo Mortensen's tremendous howl of anguish here was actually due in part to the fact that when he kicked the helmet, he broke his toe--theytoe—they [[Throw It In|kept that take in]] because it was, as such, his best.
** Right at the climax of the third film, {{spoiler|when Frodo succumbs to the lure of the One Ring while standing on the edge of the Crack of Doom.}} It's actually two smaller "no"s, then followed by what might be the biggest "NOOOOOOOOOOO!" ever heard {{spoiler|as Frodo puts on the Ring, alerting the [[Big Bad]] to his presence.}}
** Another in the third film is screamed twice by Eomer upon the discovery of {{spoiler|his uncle King Theoden dead and his sister Eowyn almost dead on the battlefield.}} Here it is one of the rare effective moments of [[Big No]].
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** When Frodo is stabbed at Weathertop, the Ringwraith reaches out, likely to grab the Ring. Cue Aragorn literally jumping in, wielding torch and sword. He fights the five of them off, setting most of them on fire.
** At Amon Hen, Merry and Pippin are surrounded by Uruk-hai; one runs in and seems to be ready to decapitate them (even though his orders say to bring them alive and unspoiled), when Boromir jumps right in between them and kills the Uruk.
** There's also a scene in The Two Towers when Merry and Pippin have been abducted and Pippin was about to be eaten by an orcOrc when they were unintentionally rescued by the surprise attack of the Riders of Rohan.
* [[Big Eater]]: All the Hobbits, but especially Pippin.
* [[Big Shadow, Little Creature]] - Sam, a hobbit, tries to scare a squad of Orc warriors this way. Unlike in the book, it doesn't really work. Also unlike the book, he kills them all easily.
** He doesn't frighten them off, no, but they're clearly apprehensive until they actually see him.
* [[Black and White Morality]]: For the most part, though {{spoiler|Boromir and Frodo are otherwise good guys who succumb to the evil temptation of the ring without meaning to}}. Aside from that, though, pretty much everyone besides Gollum is either clear-cut good (if they oppose the forces of Mordor and Isengard) or evil (Denethor, Wormtongue, and the leaders and armies of Mordor and Isengard) and {{spoiler|even Gollum falls sqarelysquarely into the "evil" category at the end of ''The Two Towers'' and stays there in ''The Return of the King''}}.
** However, many of the "evil" characters (Saruman, Wormtongue, Denethor, and even Sauron himself) weren't always evil, and that point is made very clear several times in the books. "For nothing is evil in the beginning. Even Sauron was not so."
* [[Black Knight]]: Sauron from the intro of the ''Fellowship of the Ring'' opening wears a huge suit of armor, roars monstrously, and swings a gigantic mace everywhere, sending scores of soldiers flying with each blow. He is modeled after his former master Morgoth from ''Silmarillion'', and the books ([[All There in the Manual|or at least the appendix]]) did mention him taking part in this particular battle personally, so at least it's fairly justified.
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* [[Blood From the Mouth]]
* [[Bloodless Carnage]]: Okay, some blood, but with all the hacking and slashing, they had to keep the rating from being too high.
* [[Bow and Sword Inin Accord]]: Aragorn (though he doesn't use it often). Legolas, most other elves, Faramir's rangers, and the more heavily armouredarmored Gondor archers.
** The orcsOrcs of Moria too.
* [[Boxed Set]]
* [[Brave Scot]]: Gimli may be from Middle Earth, but he comes across as this with his thick Scottish accent and habit of calling everyone "laddie".
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* [[Catapult Nightmare]]: Aragorn had one of these in ROTK.
* [[Cavalier Consumption]]: Denethor is more interested in eating his chicken and tomatoes than he is in Faramir's safety.
* [[The Cavalry]]: Minas Tirith is about to be overwhelmed by an enormous horde of Orcs--andOrcs—and then the Rohirrim appear at the top of the hill, blowing their horns.
* [[Chekhov's Gun]]: The small glass vial containing the Light of Eärendil, given to Frodo by Galadriel in the first film. [[It May Help You on Your Quest|It comes in handy]] in the third film, when {{spoiler|Frodo is lost in Shelob's lair}}. The elven rope given to Sam also comes in handy, though it's only given a bit of relevance in the extended edition. Given the length of time between the release of the film in theaters, this turned into a bit of a [[Brick Joke]].
** In the book ''all items'' received by the Fellowship in Lothlorien fit this trope (most notably the Elven cloaks and brooches). She even gives Sam a [[It May Help You on Your Quest|box of dirt]]. The movie keeps most of them with the exception of Boromir's belt (in the book it served to help Faramir realize that he indeed saw his dead brother and not just a vision).
** In the beginning of the second film, Saruman instructs his [[Mook|mooksmook]]s to dam the river. At the end of the films, the Ents break the dam, dramatically destroying Saruman's army and [[Elaborate Underground Base]] in the ensuing flood.
** If counting where Bilbo and Frodo's sword, Sting, received its name in [[The Hobbit]] {{spoiler|killing the giant spiders of Mirkwood as they attacked the ensnared dwarves}}, it's perhaps one of these or a [[Brick Joke]] that Samwise uses Sting to kill Shelob.
* [[Chewing the Scenery]]: The lure of the One Ring apparently encourages elves from Valinor to do this, if Galadriel is any indication.
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* [[Chromatic Arrangement]]: All merchandise, including the special edition DVDs, was color-coded by film. ''Fellowship'' was green, ''Two Towers'' was red, and ''Return of the King'' was blue.
** Except, irritatingly, the Complete Recordings soundtracks: ''Fellowship'' was red, ''Towers'' blue, ''King'' green.
*** These colourscolors were made to match those of the limited edition soundtracks released at the same time as the films, which were designed before the films were even released. So in a way the Complete Recordings show the original colourcolor concepts, then they went and changed them for the extended edition DVDs.
* [[Child Soldiers]]: Glimpsed in ''The Two Towers.''
** [[Fridge Horror]]: Where are they at the end of the battle? As well as all the elves that went to help them. We see ''how'' many people ride out at the end?
*** Supposedly, they all had death scenes filmed, although the battle scenes are too dark to tell.
* [[Climb, Slip, Hang, Climb]]: When Frodo and Sam are following Gollum to Shelob's lair.
* [[Collapsing Lair]]: Barad-dûr, when Sauron is finally defeated. See [[Keystone Army]].
* [[Color Wash]]: Especially noticeable in day-for-night scenes. There's even a scene in ''Return of the King'' where Pippin is searching for Merry, that appears as a daylight scene in the theatrical version but was regraded to night for the extended version.
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* [[Come with Me If You Want to Live]]: Aragorn gets introduced this way in Bree, as a wilderness expert who can outrun the Nazgûl. More so in the film, since they set out that very morning after they outwit the Nazgûl ambush. Film-Aragorn fits the trope to a T:
{{quote|'''Frodo:''' Where are you taking us?
'''Aragorn:''' [[Scarily Competent Tracker|Into the wild]].<br />
'''Merry:''' How do we know this Strider is a friend of Gandalf?<br />
'''Frodo:''' We have no choice but to trust him. }}
* [[Convection, Schmonvection]] The lava pours out of Mount Doom within feet of Sam and Frodo at the end of the movie. Then {{spoiler|the eagles swoop down and pick them up}}.
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* [[Death of a Thousand Cuts]]: How the Fellowship {{spoiler|kills the cave troll in Moria}}.
* [[Death Wail]]: Aragorn lets out one when he finds Merry and Pippin's elven belts on the Orc funeral pyre. {{spoiler|They're not actually dead though, as he later deduces from his [[Scarily Competent Tracker|Ranger tracking skills]].}} In [[Real Life]], it was because the actor had just broken his toe on the helmet he kicked.
* [[Despair Gambit]]: Sauron and his minions do a lot of this, often with considerable subtlety. Perhaps the most overt example is at the beginning of the Battle of Pelennor Fields, when the orcsOrcs start the siege by catapulting the heads of Gondorian soldiers into the city.
* [[Determinator]]: The Nazgûl; Frodo himself and Gollum to some extent.
** Sam, who believes strongly in [[My Master, Right or Wrong]].
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** Gimli grabbing his ax and attempting to destroy the Ring right at the council.
** Saruman chastising Gandalf for consorting with Hobbits.
** Lurtz chokes the first orcOrc he sees within seconds of his birth.
** Gandalf arriving in Hobbiton for Bilbo's birthday party. [[Friend to All Children|All the children are excited to see him]], while the adults look on disapprovingly.
* [[Evil Chancellor]]: Grima Wormtongue.
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* [[Evil Is Hammy]]: Saruman, Gollum, and the Witch King.
* [[Evil Tower of Ominousness]]: The (original) Dark Tower, Barad-Dûr. It's actually depicted as under construction during the first film; the completed tower itself is first seen at the end of the film, from the Seat of Amon Hen; and revealed in the second film.
* [[Exclusively Evil]]: Orcs and Uruk-Hai.
* [[Fade to White]]: Peter Jackson enjoys doing this, ''especially'' at the end of the third film.
* [[Fate Worse Than Death]]: The heroes (and the unfamiliar reader) assume Frodo suffered such a fate. Subverted, somehow, as Aragorn deduced the messenger was lying.
{{quote|'''Mouth of Sauron:''' [[To the Pain|Who could have thought one so small could endure so much pain?]] [[Ass in Ambassador|And he did, Gandalf. He did.]]<br />
'''Aragorn''': (smirks, strolls up to the Mouth of Sauron, and cuts of his head) I do not believe it. ''I will not.'' }}
** In the book, the Witch-King [[Offscreen Moment of Awesome|specifies what will happen to Eowyn]] if she "comes between a Nazgûl and his prey." Specifically:
{{quote|'''Witch-King:''' [[Monologuing|He will bear thee away to the Houses of Lamentation, beyond all darkness, where thy flesh shall be devoured, and thy shrivelledshriveled mind be left naked to the Lidless Eye.]]}}
* [[Fanfare]]: The fellowship theme.
* [[The Film of the Book|The Films Of The Book]]
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* [[Green Aesop]]: The conflict between Isengard and the Ents.
{{quote|'''Saruman''': "The old world will burn in the fires of industry. The forests will fall!"}}
** The vision Frodo sees in Galadriel's mirror is of the Shire being burnt to the ground and its inhabitants enslaved by orcsOrcs.
* [[Groin Attack]]: Happens a couple of times to orcsOrcs during battles.
** Particularly to an Uruk-Hai at Helm's Deep, Gimli hits him with an axe.
* [[Have I Mentioned I Am a Dwarf Today?]]: Gimli is extremely prone to this.
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'''Gimli:''' He fell. }}
* [[Helmets Are Hardly Heroic]]: Unless you are a Rider of Rohan, or an Elf soldier, or a Dwarf, or a soldier of Gondor.
* [[The High Queen]]: Galadriel. In a case of [[Meta Casting]], she is played by [[Cate Blanchett]], famous for portraying [[Elizabeth I (miniseries)|Elizabeth I]], a [[Trope Codifier]] of High Queendom.
* [[Hilarious Outtakes]]: While Jackson and company are saving the gag reel for the high definition [[Limited Special Collectors' Ultimate Edition]], a few bloopers have surfaced. [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DkNWF_75dWM&feature=related Sean Astin just wants a close-up].
* [[Hoist by His Own Petard]]: Sauron's demise becomes a [[Karmic Death]] when you realise it was his corruption and degradation of the innocent hobbits Smeagol and Frodo and their resulting conflict over the ring in Mount Doom that causes it to fall into the fire.
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* [[Kneel Before Frodo]]: Aragorn and a courtyard full of people bow to the hobbits during his own coronation.
* [[Lampshade Hanging]]: Performed by Sam in one of the Osgiliath scenes in ''The Two Towers'' when he whines to Frodo that "by all rights, we shouldn't even ''be'' here!" - referencing the fact that the two characters never go to Osgiliath in the book.
* [[Large Ham]]: Gandalf gets lines like "I will draw you Saruman, as poison is drawn from a wound!" and "[[ThisPunctuated! IsFor! SpartaEmphasis!|YOU...SHALL NOT...PASS!]]. Also see "Evil Is Hammy" above
* [[Leave No Survivors]]: In the films both Saruman and the Witch-king tell their minions to kill everyone in Helm's Deep and Minas Tirith, respectively.
* [[Leeroy Jenkins]]: a number of Internet parodies compared this to [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9F0yUhLJUaY Aragorn's final charge].
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*** The percussion in question is actually ''banging an opened piano's wires with chains.''
** The theme for the elves, or at least Galadriel's elves, is first heard as an ethereal, dreamy piece with generous amounts of [[Cherubic Choir]] and [[One-Woman Wail]]. In the second movie, though, it gets transformed into a [[Badass]] military march during the scene where the elven army comes to the rescue at Helm's Deep.
** "The History of the Ring," representing the power of the One Ring, especially when it changes hands or when someone tries to take it -- playsit—plays under the title card of each movie, so easily mistaken for the theme to the trilogy itself -- oritself—or perhaps it is, in a way.
** Eowyn's theme (the only theme other than Gollum's associated with one character), played usually whenever she's standing at the front of the Golden Hall.
** The March of the Ents/General Badassery about to Happen theme (can be heard [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ePIXwrL2-dE here]).
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** The Theme of the Gray Havens. Introduced rather late into ''Return'', during the most desperate moment of the siege of Gondor, when Pippin believes all is lost. "I didn't think it would end this way," he says to Gandalf. Gandalf tells him "The journey doesn't end here." Then the theme enters, soaring, majestic, and utterly beautiful, providing the musical accompiantment to Gandalf's description of the Heaven of Middle Earth. "White shores. A far, green country, with a swift sunrise." Comes to its full fruition when the last of the Elves {{spoiler|and Frodo}} leave Middle Earth for the Gray Havens.
* [[Legend Fades to Myth]]: According to the prologue, this is why things came to be as they were at the end of the Third Age: people forgot about past threats, and grew complacent. Sauron exploited that.
* [[Lethal Chef]]: Eowyn, as seen in the extended edition. She provides Aragorn with a bowl of stew--hestew—he eats one bite, and tries to pour it out as soon as her back is turned.
* [[Light Is Good]] / [[Dark Is Evil]]:Subverted and played straight.
* [[Limited Special Collectors' Ultimate Edition]]: Arguably the most infamous example.
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* [[Mr. Exposition]]: Legolas when he's not being [[Captain Obvious]]
* [[Mr. Fanservice]]: Most of the Fellowship as well as some secondary characters were targets of the [[Estrogen Brigade]] even before the books were adapted for screen. Having the characters played by [[Even the Guys Want Him|delectable-looking actors]] merely made this trope more prominent.
** From about 1969 to 1971, there was a movement among fans of [[Leonard Nimoy]] to cast him as Aragorn in a live-action film version (this is long before Bakshi). The official fan club was quite serious about this, especially after Nimoy was cast as a romantic, dramatic stage magician and master of disguise in ''[[Mission: Impossible]]''.
* [[My God, What Have I Done?]]: Several, ranging from Boromir realizing he was seduced by the Ring to Wormtongue coming to understand that Saruman's gambit isn't overthrow of Rohan (possibly involving him getting Eowyn), it's absolute genocide ''of the human race.''
** Grima seems to believe that Saruman is biting off more than he can chew and that he might be able to play both sides against the middle - right up until Saruman shows him the magically frenzied 30,000 superhumans in plate armor. The look on his face is priceless.
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* [[Nightmare Face]]: In ''Fellowship of the Ring'', when Bilbo wants to take a look at the One Ring. [[Jump Scare|Holy crap]]!
** This may be a shout-out to Jackson's past as a maker of films that make fun of horror movies. In the book, Bilbo appears briefly to turn into a Gollum-like figure.
* [[Noodle Incident]]: The [[The Hobbit (novel)|"incident with the dragon"]] is this to anyone who hasn't read the books.
* [[Notable Original Music]]: ''Lord Of The Rings'' gave certain cultures and factions their own distinctive, powerful theme that has made the music of the trilogy as much an identifying mark as anything.
** Particularly the themes that went along with Rohan, which involved a Norwegian spike fiddle for its distinctive sound.
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*** In a subversion, the orc army gets a [[Oh Crap]] when Gimli, Legolas and Aragorn get off the boats and charge at them. They [[Oh Crap]] BEFORE seeing that these three dudes brought an army of ghosts with them, at which point they simply panic.
*** Similarly:
{{quote|'''Corsair''': Boarded?! By [[You and What Army?|you and whose army?]]<br />
'''Aragorn''': ''This'' army. }}
** And then there's Gandalf giving a big speech to the Gondorians about how they can fight whatever comes through the gate. When the first thing through is three huge trolls, Gandalf gets a look on his face like, "Well, I wasn't expecting ''that''."
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* [[Onrushing Army]]: The orcs ''love'' to charge. As do any humans fighting with them. Aragorn and his army do it too at the climax of ''Return Of The King''.
* [[Orcus on His Throne]]: Sauron is a rather less sketchy figure than in the novels; he is instead a ''literal'' flaming eye, on top of Barad-Dur. Peter Jackson originally planned for Sauron to [[One-Winged Angel|take physical form]] in the battle in front of the Black Gate, but thankfully thought better of it.
* [[The Other Darrin]]: A very odd instance of this trope, as Andy Serkis plays Gollum in all three films, but the CG model used for the first film has quite a different face from that used in the other two. As Gollum is only seen in long shots (and very dark lighting) in the first film, it's not glaringly obvious, but it is noticeable.
* [[The Other Marty]]: Stuart Townsend was cast as Aragorn, but was replaced by Viggo Mortensen a few days before filming supposedly for [[Word of God|being too young]].
* [[Parental Marriage Veto]]: Emphasized a lot more in the films with Elrond's outright disapproval of Aragorn's and Arwen's relationship. In the book he is saddened, but gives the conditions not out of spite but to provide the best for his daughter.
* [[Parenthetical Swearing]]: Gandalf manages to make the word "Steward" sound... like something it's not.
* [[Phosphor Essence]]: Galadriel glows with a bluish-white light when she explains how powerful and terrible she would become were she to accept the Ring.
* [[Plot-Mandated Friendship Failure]]: Inverted. Just when he needs him most, Frodo ''sends'' ''Sam'' away due to Gollum's ploy. Moments later {{spoiler|he's paralyzed by Shelob}}. Luckily, [[The Power of Friendship]] prevails. (In the book, they're just separated in the maze of caves.)
* [[Pragmatic Adaptation]]: The removal of [[BigNon LippedSequitur Alligator MomentScene|Tom Bombadil]] and the excision of the Scouring of the Shire.
** [[Peter Jackson]] himself invoked this in his explanation as to his complete rewrite of the meetings of Faramir and Frodo's group: in the books, he lets them go free after learning of their quest and agreeing with it; in the film, he keeps them captive in order to take The Ring. Jackson said specifically this was because after the first book, the Ring's power to corrupt became an [[Informed Ability]] until it surfaced again at the tail-end of Return; in order to remind the viewer that it was basically evil incarnate, and keep with the rules Tolkien himself set, he had to have Faramir be tempted by the ring.
*** The Osgiliath detour even gets a [[Continuity Nod]]:
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* [[Sweet on Polly Oliver]]: An out-of-universe example: As revealed in the DVD supplementals, Viggo Mortenson apparently dated a female extra that was costumed as one of the (male) Rohan warriors. The other cast members never let him hear the end of it.
* [[Take the Wheel]]: In a rare medieval example, Eowyn makes Merry take her horse's reins mid-battle.
* [[Talking to Himself]]: John Rhys-Davis plays Gimli and voices Treebeard.
** Lawrence Makoare has a scene between himself as Gothmog and himself as the Witch King.
** The Gollum & Smeagol conversations are sort of this trope.
* [[Tall, Dark and Handsome]]: Aragorn is definitely this in the films. He also [[She Cleans Up Nicely|cleans up very nicely]].
* [[Technicolor Death]]: Although it's right in the prologue rather than the end of the movie, death for Sauron basically means becoming the exploding man.
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* [[This Is Sparta]]: '''''"You! Shall Not! Pass!"'''''. Then the bridge practically broke in half.
* [[Throwing Your Shield Always Works]]: Lurtz throws his shield at Aragorn during the skirmish at Amon Hen, pinning him to a tree. Aragorn gets free of the shield just in time to dodge another attack.
* [[Throw It In]]: Viggo Mortenson couldn't get the cry of grief and anger right at the scene when the trio think Merry and Pippin were killed. One shot he kicked a helmet and broke his toe. The scream actually fit the mood perfectly, and was used in the final cut.
** In a scene at the beginning of the first movie, when Gandalf visits Bilbo at Bag End, [[Ian McKellen]] inadvertently bumps his head against a wooden beam in the low ceiling. Although unintentional, the actor managed to make the little accident look perfectly natural and [[Rule of Funny|very funny]], and so it was kept in the final cut.
*** And then in Helm's Deep, the army of orcs stomping their feet and weapons before battle was entirely unscripted. It all happened because one of the actors playing the orcs got bored and began stomping his feet and weapons. Then other orc-actors took notice and began to do the same thing. Before long, they all did it, which led to Peter Jackson throwing it in.
** According the the wiki, the scene where Aragorn deflects Lurtz's thrown knife was an accident. Lurtz was apparently scripted to miss, but the actor accidentally threw the knife right at Viggo, who managed to [[Badass|deflect it with his sword.]]
*** That whole fight scene is an instance of this trope. That headbutt? Completely real. Aragorn getting punched in the ribs? That punch wasn't pulled. Aside from any stab wounds incurred, Lawrence Makaore and Viggo Mortensen were actually beating the crap out of each other. It was mainly because the make-up Makaore was wearing obscured his vision, and the punches that were supposed to be pulled ended up actually connecting. Mortensen just figured that it would be best if he just fought back just as hard rather than yelling cut.
* [[Title Drop]]: In every single film.
** -> "You shall be '''the Fellowship of the Ring'''."
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* [[Walk Into Mordor]]: It's what they do. But not simply!
* [[Weapon Twirling]]: Boromir twirls his sword a few times while waiting for the goblin horde to break into Balin's Tomb in Moria.
* [[What Could Have Been]]: Arwen was originally planned to be at Helm's Deep, giving Aragorn his sword Anduril, the Flame of the West, and also fighting alongside him.
** The idea of Sauron taking form (specifically ''[[Heavenly Creatures|Kate Winslet's]]'' form - The Eye was really [[Bishonen]] back in the day) and almost kicking Aragorn's ass at the final battle was also briefly entertained, and then mercifully abandoned in place of a troll.
** The episode with [[Magical Native American|Ghan-Buri-Ghan]] and the [[Wacky Wayside Tribe|Wood Woses]] (who were hunted and killed by the Rohirrim [[Fantastic Aesop|for sport]]) was cut out... but we have [http://www.tuckborough.net/images/ghan-buri-ghan.jpg a production still of what he would have looked like.]
*** Looks awful blue-skinned. In the book, the Gondorians were encroaching on their forest to mine it. [[Avatar|Hmmm...]] Yeah, Tolkien did it first.<ref>David Boyle wrote: "The good Woses have disappeared completely from the narrative, with their implicit message that indigenous peoples, too, are folk worthy of respect. If there are Maori experts on Tolkien..."</ref>
** The movies were originally planned as duology because Jackson thought making a trilogy was going to be a hard sell. Thankfully, when he pitched it as a duology to New Line, they responded with "why do you want to make ''two'' movies?" and just as Jackson was about to launch into his defense of why it couldn't possibly be done in one film, they continued... "this is ''three'' movies."
** Stuart Townsend was actually cast as Aragorn and in New Zealand filming. A couple of days in they realized it wasn't going to work out and called up Viggo Mortensen. [http://www.herr-der-ringe-film.de/v2/media/archiv/hdr/townsend02.jpg There's even a still of him in character.] um... Yeah.
*** Jackson didn't realize until four days into filming that Aragorn should be an older, mature type.
** Sean Astin lobbied for his father, [[The Addams Family|John Astin]], to be given the part of Gandalf.
** When Mirimax was unable to finance the original two films, they tried to get them meshed into one two-hour movie. Thankfully, Jackson understandably considered this to be "cutting out half the good stuff." Apparently it was suggested that they:
*** Shorten Rivendell and Moria
*** Cut Bree and the Battle of Helm's Deep
*** "Lose or use" Saruman
*** Merge Rohan and Gondor with Eowyn as Boromir's sister
*** As well as having Ents prevent the Uruk-hai kidnapping Merry and Pippin. Jesus.
*** Luckily, New Line was more than happy to dish out the money to finance the project as ''three films'', not just one. [[Who's Laughing Now?|Guess who has three movies that rank on the best-of-all-time list now.]]
** Frodo was originally [[What the Hell, Hero?|gonna push]] Gollum and the Ring into the lava.
*** There was also another take that was true to the book - namely, that Gollum, while celebrating getting the ring back, slips and falls off the edge. They decided to [[Take a Third Option]] and go with the take that's in the movie.
** There was going to be a river rapids scene in the first film when the Fellowship was traveling by boat. However, [[Real Life Writes the Plot|real life wrote the plot]] when the equipment the crew was going to use was washed away or ruined by flood waters.
** [http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn?pagename=article&node=&contentId=A46263-2002Dec27 The tenor of the times in 2002] compelled them to actually cut out a lot of material that mostly served to humanize the other races, such as the bit with the Southron or the conversations with orcs. (The writers said that people felt it necessary to show that the villains were "irredeemably evil").
** You know that song at the end of ''The Two Towers'' that's sung by someone who sounds an awful lot like Björk? Well, the original idea ''was'' for her to sing it, but she was pregnant at the time and declined the invitation. They used another Icelandic singer, Emilíana Torrini, instead.
** The Balrog was going to be shown after falling in the water with its fire gone out and covered in slime.
** [[Uma Thurman]] and Ethan Hawke were being considered for [[Cast Incest|Eowyn and Eomer]]. Thurman initially accepted the offer but had to cancel due to pregnancy.
** Sean Connery was originally offered the role of Gandalf, but turned it down because he didn't like the first script. (Another version of this says he "didn't understand the story".) Russell Crowe was another actor who turned down a role from this movie (as Aragorn) because he didn't like the shooting schedule.
** [[Christopher Lee]] originally auditioned for the role of Gandalf.
* [[What Happened to the Mouse?]]: Though it's somewhat justified by their presence not existing in the book, what '''happened''' to the elven army at Helm's Deep? Are they '''all''' victims of [[Death by Adaptation]]?
** The supplementary book "The Lord of the Rings: Weapons and Warfare" states that they died to a man.
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{{Tolkien's legendarium}}
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{{Best in Film: The Greatest Movies of Our Time}}
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[[Category:The Lord of the Rings]]
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