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This is to announce a special Oscar for the best moments in the Lord of the Rings movie trilogy. Brought to you by
Moonballs from Planet Earth. The nominees are:
-
Minas Tirith. The seven-circled white city on a hill, topped with the Tower of
Ecthilion glimmering like a spike of pearl and silver, whose fighting men wore breastplates wrought with the White Tree of
Gondor
-
Lighting the beacons. The bonfire relay across the snowy mountain-tops that brought the Rohirrim thundering south to fight alongside
Gondor
-
Edoras. The setting for
Meduseld, hall of
Theoden son of
Thengel, Lord of the Mark of
Rohan.
"Before the mountains of the south: white tipped and streaked with black...a tumbled mountain-mass with one tall peak stood like a sentinel a lonely height...set upon a green terrace, there stands aloft a great hall of men. And it seems to my eyes that it is thatched with gold. The light of it shines far over this land..."
-
Faramir's charge on Osgiliath. The futile cavalry charge
Faramir led on an occupied
Osgiliath, while Pippin sang at Lord Denathor's sumptuous lunch
-
Escape from the mines of Moria. The vaulted, crumbling staircase through flaming nothingness that led the Fellowship to the Bridge of Khazad Dum, where Gandalf battled the Balrog
And the Oscar goes to...
Faramir's charge on Osgiliath. Thunderous applause.
All the nominations, the value-add in going from the book to the movie, are about visualization. The film stayed faithful to
Tolkien's words, and yet visualized these scenes with a vividness and beauty that is far beyond my own imagination, even as a committed Tolkien fan.
The unsung heroes of the film are probably
Alan Lee and
John Howe, two artists who have been visualizing scenes from Tolkien for decades, long before this film was even conceived. Peter Jackson had the good sense to collaborate with these outstanding old pros.
Faramir's charge on Osgiliath wins the Oscar for being more than visualization. This scene is implied rather than described in the book. The movie takes this raw material, and builds it up into an emotional
crescendo so intense that I almost dare not imagine it. By rights, it should have crumbled under its own weight. And yet, it works. Well done. Thanks
PJ.
Blog readers and Tolkien fans, please do chip in with your own Oscar nominees.
3 comments:
I agree wholeheartedly ... but I am afraid that I always return to 'that only counts as one' from Gimli when Legolas kills the olephaunt. Doesn't lift the spirit in the way the scenes you picked do, but a one liner in the old school tradition, and yet not out of place.
that's my clear favourite as well. it gives me goosebumps just to think of it.
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