I staunchly disagree with the thought that Sam is like a father figure in the movies. I don't see that at all. Just a steadfast, loyal friend, and I never noticed any age difference in them.
Indeed, I never thought about an age difference between Frodo and Sam. I'd suggest that Frodo behaved in a more mature manor even though he looked younger.
That sounds like an impression that probably came from someone watching the films as a very young child and just stuck, unexamined rigorously, until adulthood.
Regarding Frodo's age, a 33 year old hobbit is the equivalent of a 21 year old human and Frodo came into possession of the ring on his 33rd birthday, and like Bilbo barely aged afterwards. So even though he was fifty, he looked like a young man.
This is how I interpreted the book. A hobbit's 33rd birthday was his "coming of age". And since Frodo received the ring on that occasion, he would have stopped aging. So he would actually look younger than his friends but act older (50 years old in the book). The Old Took lived for 130 years, presumably without magical help. An age of 102 is described as "ripe but disappointing". I think we can say hobbits don't age the same way as humans.
@@sheert This makes sense. As a bit of a side note, in the movie we see Frodo keep the ring hidden in an envelope for the years that Gandalf is away. So that would make me think its power shouldn't affect him as much. In the book however, he keeps it on a necklace around his neck, which would support your theory best.
@@caleschley Well it is shortly mentioned in the book that Frodo has aged well and looked like a hobbit barely older than their aged of maturity. And the fellow hobbits thought that to be a bit weird.
Agreed. It looks like Jess this time forgot to read the material properly regarding aging. I, however, took issue with how weak Frodo seemed and how strong the ring appeared to be, giving strong visions, etc far away, which would have made it impossible to stand any chance close to Mount Doom.
On Frodo's age: (1) Hobbits can live as old as 144, so they're generally longer-lived and slowed to mature. Hence the references to the irresponsible "tweens" (20s) before coming of age at 33. So a 33 year old Hobbit would appear younger than a 33 year old human. (2) Frodo received the Ring at 33 from Bilbo. Given its anti-aging effect, it would be reasonable to assume his appearance wouldn't change by the time he was 50. From "The Shadow of the Past": "As time went on, people began to notice that Frodo also showed signs of good 'preservation': outwardly he retained the appearance of a rebust and energetic hobbit just out of his tweens" Thus Elijah's youthful appearance is entirely plausible, both the Long-Expected Party and later when he leaves the Shire. Of course, Sam, Merry and Pippin absolutely should have all aged by 17 years, though given that's the change from young adulthood to middle-age, it's not obvious how much even that duration would show.
Even though I loved the movies, after decades of reading the LOTR, Frodo in the movie has never sat right with me. Wood's acting is amazing but Frodo was so special to me from the books I can't accept the difference.
Funny how views are different. From movie point I got the impression that Frodo and Sam are peers, almost brothers. No father-son-relationship. They look about the same age, they drink together, they party together. And before Bree, Frodo is definitely the leader and the most mature. And Sam looks up to him. The shift in that relationship comes later.
Elijah Wood actually celebrated his 18th birthday on set. He also jokingly commented that it was his first time playing a 50 year old. So although Frodo's age may not have been specifically mentioned in the movies, the actor was at least aware of it.
I had no idea he was that young for those movies, I thought he was one of those actors that is in their mid/late 20s that always played a teenager, like Michael J Fox
I also think that the ring not being actually destroyed until Frodo grabbing Sam’s arm, signaling that he finally LETS the ring go, feels satisfying for the movie.
I reread the books recently. One thing that bothers me with Frodo & Sam in the movies is that they are so naive regarding Gollum, especially Frodo. In the books, they have no choice but to follow him but they discuss all the time about how they distrust him. They aren't surprised that this evil creature is evil, Frodo doesn't have the syndrome of "I can fix him".
This is just about the change in medium. There is no conflict or drama in Frodo and Sam never trusting Gollum. Gollum in the film is used as a device to externalize Frodo's struggle carrying the ring.
Frodo trying to "fix" Gollum also plays into a subplot Jackson was trying to play with in the films where Frodo was unsure if he could ever return home after the journey, not just physically but emotionally. Frodo in the films needed to believe that Gollum could be good because he related to Gollum since they were both hobbits (sort of) and were both ringbearers. This subplot is kind of a film original, but if you can pick up on it you understand why Frodo treats Gollum the way he does. The books and the movies are largely different stories with different themes and messages, and that's okay, one doesn't have to be exactly like the other to be good.
I once had a mini debate with someone who thought Frodo from the movies was useless, and all his friends were dope rock stars in comparison. I had to remind them that it's revealed that Frodo is writing this story as a framing device in the movies, and as such is sacrificing his own glory for theirs out of love and humility.
One thing to note is that Frodo doesn’t actually tackle Gollum off the cliff. They fight over the ring on the edge, and they both fall off in the struggle. But Gollum, who is single-mindedly obsessed with the ring, holds onto it and falls into the lava, whereas Frodo abandons the ring, and grabs the ledge to save himself, demonstrating that Frodo was not completely lost to the allure of the ring
I liked that the movie scene really made it seem like the greed caused by the ring ended up being it's own destruction, rather than Gollum just tripping after getting it
@@crusaderforchrist I find Gollum tripping much better, because Gollum swore on the Ring to Frodo, and Frodo told him the Ring would betray him if he didn't keep his promise. I don't even think by Tolkien's logic, Frodo could have let go of the Ring. So at that point, by book logic they would have both gone down with the Ring. That's also I think why Tolkien said it had to happen exactly like this, that's the only ending that made sense. Gollum tripping, I mean. Tolkien wrote in a letter once: you cannot mean to destroy it, throw it away, or neglect it. So there is no "deciding against the Ring" choice in the books. Not even Elrond, who hated Isildur & humans for 3000 years could have destroyed it. I still think this confusion is caused by Gimli hitting the Ring with an axe. That's just not possible. At best he would have swung, realized the Ring is too beautiful to destroy, and stopped. That's the power of the Ring, if PJ wants to demonstrate it.
@@Squagglimole But there’s clearly a decision of “not taking the ring”. Gandalf, Galadriel and Faramír do so. When Frodo hangs on to the cliff, he’s not longer wearing the ring around his neck, so he’s already departed from it. There’s no destroying to do, the ring already fell into the fire, so the only thing he has to do is resist its last call. Which is still incredibly hard to do, since that thing manipulated him for so long and is and its greatest power in Mount Doom. But I don’t see any rule breaking here.
@@Натал20 you don't see rule breaking because you apparently didn't read the book: He claimed the ring before Sauron. As he says "It belongs to me". It doesn't matter if he is wearing it, it's HIS at this moment. So no, he can't let it fall. The whole Gollum & Frodo hanging on to it scene is just dumb - and it takes away from Gollum actually being held accountable for his deceit by the Ring.
It interesting I feel like the removal of the Scouring of the Shire does rob movie Frodo of something. I think the removal of the SotS was the right call for the movie, but without it the movie doesn't really have the time or ability to display Frodo's hard won wisdom and growth like the book does. When Frodo stop Sam from slaying Saruman in the Shire and tells him he will be released in the hopes he might one day find his way back to what he once was, Frodo fully embraces and embodies the lessons of Pity and Mercy that Gandalf taught him. That part, and Frodo refusing to draw a weapon during the fighting in the Shire, also starts to give you a view into a Frodo who is just so damn TIRED. Tired of the violence, the pain, the evil in the world.... the Frodo that will ultimately have to sail West for a chance at peace.
Here you see the difference between a work written on its own terms, and a work made to please people. The Scouring is an anticlimax that by every rule of Hollywood should not be (and already people complain about the "multiple endings" in the film...) But it has something profound to say about the nature of evil and the constant fight against it. Just as the Old Forest episode is there to present elements of the world as perils (awakened trees, the restless dead) that eventually will become allies.
To use the military metaphor, I would posit that the dynamic between Frodo and Sam in the movie would be more like that between a newly-commissioned second lieutenant and a relatively more experienced sergeant.
In the military terminology of Tolkien's day, the proper term comes with some unfortunate baggage, when transposed into the context of modern popular culture. It's "batman". Sam was like Frodo's batman. The term stems from an archaic word for the gear stowed on a pack horse. All the more appropriate, given how Gandalf loads Sam up, when he and Frodo leave Bag End. The close relationships forged in war, between usually upper or upper-middle class officers and their working-class batmen, had a effect on post-WWI attitudes towards class and the boundaries it imposed. Many officers (if they were lucky enough to survive the war) retained the services of their wartime batman, into civilian life. I think it served both parties to have a close companion who had shared in the traumatic experiences and could understand what their friends and families, who hadn't served at the front, never could. The result was often a very deep, profound, lifelong friendship, that transcended the normal societal boundaries of the day. As is seen between Frodo, a member of the local gentry, and Sam, his gardener.
By the story's end, Sam has developed into more of a leader in his own right. This parallels the change of how officers were selected over the course of the Great War: from mostly public schoolboys (private schools in the US) who would mostly have had cadet training, to more broad selection of veteran soldiers who have shown leadership.
From the 1977 movie "A Bridge Too Far": Colonel Frost (Anthony Hopkins) in conversation with his batman right before parachuting into combat: CF: "Where are my golf clubs?" B: "They're coming in the staff car sir." "And what about my dinner jacket?" "Are you sure you'll be needing that, sir?" N.B. the quotes are not exact.
Adding conflict between Frodo and Sam for the film externalizes Frodo's internal struggle with the ring itself. It's near impossible to *show* that struggle, so for the film they show it by way of Frodo's changing behavior towards his best friend.
i know this is a year old video... BUT I was just on a lotr binge (yet again) and i found this video. i have to add: Movie Frodo (have not read the books) is my ultimate hero. *BECAUSE* i see his character being kind of a metaphor for someone going through depression/anxiety/ ptsd/grief7mental illness etc... and how people like that, who has an invisible scar, and a heavy burden they carry, often gets overlooked how strong they actually are. because you can't see the strength in the same way, as we can with Sam. because it's all inside. yet, he has the strength to keep walking. he even runs up the mountain the last bit. He had a will to see this through, even though it nearly took his life, and in one way, it did. he tried to heal, but years later he still had that burden. the wound. the scar. and he had to leave and die peacefully. the inner strength it takes to just get up, and not die or fall into the void, when you have all the things listen above, it requires the biggest strength. yet, so many in the fandom, gives frodo sh!t for being "weak" or failing once he is inside mount doom. ONE weak moment does not undo your character. Just mirroring the real world, of how people treat someone who is sick with something they can't see, vs maybe someone who broke their leg or has cancer, or something easy to SEE. you are treated with respect and help, but NOT if you carry PTSD or grief or mental illness. so in this way, frodo is a huge inspiration to me. i don't see him as weak at all. The ring could represent being hit with depression. and naturally the person carrying this "ring" will look weaker, than the friend walking beside you, not having the ring, and just watching you fall into the rings power - depression. is the friend then stronger ? is sam stronger bc he is beside the ringbearer? no. but he gets all the credit sometimes. must must must pull myself together and read the books one day soon 🌺
This is really well said, and as another commenter mentioned, book Frodo supports what you’re discussing here in even more depth adn more ways than film Frodo can
Ive always loved the simplicity and lack of drama in gollums falling in the book. Its a reminder of how anticlimactic that life is. Things simply... happen...then its onto the next thing.
I feel the climactic scene occurs right before when Frodo tells Gollum to “back off or he’ll die.” And because Gollum didn’t listen, he tripped and fell.
I always saw Frodo’s age being completely appropriate in the movie. In the book it is stated that hobbits are considered to come of age at 33. And age 50 would be considered early middle age. So despite the fact that the ages themselves are older than a corresponding human, I always assumed that we were supposed to read Frodo as very very young. Also, despite the fact that Billy Boyd is older than Elijah wood, I always read the four hobbits as similar in age.
@cronchycatmom, if I remember correctly, their ages at the start of their journey are: Frodo 50, Sam 38, Mery 36, and Pippin 29. I could be wrong though.
Now, I must say that Jackson's version does show evil destroying itself--the evil of the Ring made Gollum and Frodo into beings that at that moment would recklessly and instantly fight each other to the death in that extremely dangerous place, not even trying to move somewhere less perilous. The evil in Frodo and Gollum, fostered by the Ring, destroyed the Ring. JMHO
I was just about to comment this. Instead of Gollum destroying himself because of evil's self-destructive nature, it's the ring itself that causes its own destruction. I think it delivers the same message very well, but with the added feeling of Gollum being a *victim* to the corruption of the ring *and* Frodo almost suffering the same fate, but getting saved by his friendship with Sam.
@@Tuub1as. The main issue is that it removes the idea of divine providence and it also fails to make the connection that this was Gollum's punishment for breaking his oath to Frodo. But those things are more deeper themes that suit a literary work much more than a movie. Sam helping Frodo is shown in him carrying him up Orodruin.
I think I appreciate movie frodo more each time I watch. He is certainly a flawed character but it's hard for me to see him as annoying or incompetent given the enormity and isolation of his task. I really appreciated this breakdown and how the changes made in the new medium affect his character arc.
I first read The Hobbit then the Lord of the Rings in junior high and multiple times through my life, decades before the movies. I love the movies. I agree with your assessment. But the thing that shocked me is how the movies have re-written the story in my mind. I’ve watched the movies multiple times, so when I most recently re-engaged with the written story, I was shocked at how my memory of the story has been changed. I am concerned that the original story, along with so many others, will be lost if people don’t read.
One thing that modern readers don't really understand about Frodo and Sam's relationship in the books is that their love for each other isn't sexual. Tolkien was born in the 1890s. Relationships between people of the same sex were seen differently back then. Young women would share a bed on a regular basis, sisters and close friends. Young men seem to have done similar things. A man expressing love for another man was common, and purely platonic. Homosexuals were frowned on by society. Oscar Wilde was taken to court by a wealthy family for allegedly corrupting their son into a homosexual relationship. Besides the fact that Sam was married to a Hobbit lass named Rose Cotton, Sam spoke of his deep love for her when he expressed to Frodo his confusion over whether to move in with Frodo or marry Rosie. When Frodo said that he could just marry Rosie and both could move into Bag End together, Sam said it was exactly what he was thinking of doing. In some ways, Peter Jackson's portrayal of Frodo may have watered that down, in an attempt to avoid confusing people as to their sexual orientation.
@@CynthiaWarren Ah I didn't know, it makes sense that it's happening in that context. Those people would ship anyone, regardless of whether it fits the canon or not (like Draco/Harry or other weird HP ships) xD I think they just like the characters and the idea of lovers that are also really good friends makes them feel warm and fuzzy inside. But it's just a distortion of Tolkien's story.
@@deanog2577 I'm actually not sure about the first one. I've never seen a gay main character in a blockbuster intended for all audiences (especially fantasy/adventure, which would draw children as well). If they did, it would be vaguely implied but never specifically stated or shown. They would say it as part of their marketing in order to attract LGBT audiences and cause controversy, because this is Hollywood hypocrisy: they only care about money. But they would definitely have a few women and people of other races in the fellowship. And the white male characters would be weak and unable to accomplish anything on their own...
I used to think that Gollum's/the Ring's end was (not bad, but definitely) anticlimactic, until I realised, that Gollum doesn't fall because he oopsies, but he falls, because Frodo, on the way up the side of Mt. Doom curses Gollum to "be cast into the fiery depths himself" (not sure I have the wording correct) if he ever again goes against Frodo and his mission. And because Gollum swore on the Ring, and Frodo invoked the Ring to make this order/curse, as soon as Gollum gets the Ring, the curse takes effect and makes him fall. So the Ring (in a very Tolkien fashion) destroyed itself by fulfilling Frodo's curse. And I just love this. It makes me adore the end of the quest so much.
Thanks for this analysis. It explains to me why my wife hated Frodo. She saw the movies before I read her the books and she saw Frodo as a whiny child.
I loved the movies, but I really didn't like how they both nerfed Frodo, making him more inept and dependent, while buffing other characters like Legolas. I get that Hollywood has spent decades crafting a certain image of what is "realistic", but that's a Hollywood, problem, not an audience problem. Life is not a series of X-game moments with superhero dismounts, and at least in part that was Tolkein's point - Frodo did it because he did it, and normal boring Frodo accomplished a task that the mythic figures surrounding him could not.
Hobbits do not age at the same rate as humans. Hobbits frequently lived to be well over a hundred, for which reason Pippin still looks like a child in Minas Tirith. Since coming of age is 33 in the Shire and in England where Tolkien grew up, coming of age is 21, so my conjecture is a 7:11 ratio. With this in mind, I think everyone's ages makes a lot of sense. Pippin would be around seventeen, Sam and Merry in their early to mid-twenties, and Frodo in his earlier thirties. I think they could have conveyed him well in aspects such as the conversation at the Stairs of Cirith Ungol and other conversations both with Sam and Gandalf. I feel like they kind of destroyed his mercy and, in the words of the book "confused kindness with blindness". Frodo and Sam do not need conflict. There is something very encouraging about stable relationships-relationships as they should be. One of my favorite aspects of the movie "Captain America: The Winter Soldier" is the relationship between Captain America and Falcon, for instance, because it just looks like a solid, even admirable friendship between two men, which you rarely see in media. I felt it mostly made Frodo come off as a total jerk, in my mind, because he told Sam to go home-where he obviously couldn't since it was too far. I'm sure they could convey the book relationship in the movies because there is enough intrigue as Frodo keeps on trying to persevere and Sam keeps on being obliged to help him. At the same time, they both have conflict with their third member of their party-namely Gollum. In my mind, the main thing about Peter Jackson's Frodo is basically Frodo if they took away almost all his likable qualities, that is, his mercy, his strength, and his appreciation of his friends. As for Gollum slipping and falling, I think there is a fair argument that in the book that Frodo, while overcome by the Ring, cursed him in this scene: *Then suddenly, as before under the eaves of the Emyn Muil, Sam saw these two rivals with other vision. A crouching shape, scarcely more than the shadow of a living thing, a creature now wholly ruined and defeated, yet filled with a hideous lust and rage; and before it stood stern, untouchable now by pity, a figure robed in white, but at its breast it held a wheel of fire. Out of the fire there spoke a commanding voice.* *'Begone, and trouble me no more! If you touch me ever again, you shall be cast yourself into the Fire of Doom.'* I know the interpretation of this scene is controversial, but I still think conveying this would be more book-loyal than Frodo tackling him.
Hobbits are the only other human race for which we have a lot of information, and they live an average of 97 years. which is considerably longer than the ordinary average human age of 80. So they definitely age slower than us. And that's counting the effects of the Ring, which stop your aging. Frodo stopped aging at the human equivalent of 21.
OMG. I absolutely HATED the scene where Gollum falls into the abyss in the movie!!! For me, that scene in the BOOK (which I read back in May of 1967!) was so cathartic I had to actually put the book down and walk away for a while to gather myself, as I had been so caught up in the moment where Frodo turns to Sam and says he has decided not to destroy the ring after all. OMG. Then Gollum appears, wrestles with the invisible Frodo on the edge of the abyss, suddenly Frodo appears again, minus a finger which Gollum has bitten off ...a moment of Gollum teetering on the brink in triumph ...then he falls.... What a moment. What an absolutely incredible, unlooked-for moment. So inherently dramatic it didn't need any melodrama at all. It deserved a moment of total silence except for the background roar of flames. Instead, the movie scene was so totally NAFF. A literal, melodramatic cliffhanger. Aaargh! AARGH!!! Don't get me started. I think that was the worst scene in the entire movie, mainly because it should have been the best one. It shouldn't have been about Sam rescuing Frodo ...he'd already done that many times...or about the audience going 'oh no, will he fall, won't he fall'. It should have been all about Gollum. It should have brought back Gandalf's words-way back in The Fellowship of the Ring-where he tells Frodo that Gollum would likely have his part to play in the events, and that he should not be killed. And how. The fact that GOLLUM was the one who (inadvertently) destroyed the ring-a plot twist that I guarantee NOBODY saw coming-gets totally lost in this horrendously over-egged, anti-climactic movie scene. I want to weep, watching or thinking about it. Aaargh....
When I first saw the films even I thought that Frodo was a whiny cry-baby. But as a grown-up, movie Frodo feels more relatable and believable because he is shown how a normal person, completely unprepared for such a task, would truly act if thrust into it. It's beautiful that it's the constant support of his friends and their unwavering faith in him is what ultimately helps in reaching his goal.
Despite the age issue, I loved Elijah Wood as Frodo and the casting for the Hobbits was perfect. I found Frodo probably got the worst treatment in the movie, compared to the book Frodo. All of the remarkable actions by Frodo in the face of the enemy, up until the breaking of the Fellowship, were either taken by other characters or diminished. It makes a Frodo that cannot be trusted to carry on the quest alone or just with Sam as a companion. He doesn't make a stand at the ford vs the Nazgul. He doesn't stab the cave troll in Moria. In the movies, when Aragorn decides that Frodo is up to the job, it makes me say: "Based on what?".
But Frodo remains a courageous person also in the films with all the psychological suffering he undergoes and which is rather well shown in the films. His battle is mainly psychological and that alone makes him brave. Personally, I didn't need to read the books to understand that Frodo deserved to be mentioned as a hero as much as Sam. People see Frodo in the movies as someone weak because Frodo doesn't fit the stereotypes you expect to see from a hero but that doesn't make him weak, well on the contrary.
I wouldn’t want to diminish Sam’s heroic role. But to me Frodo is the greater hero. Frodo goes into the darkness with his eyes open; the others follow due to their love for Frodo. The other three hobbits “bounceback“. They make full recoveries. Not Frodo - he has given everything. He and Boromir sacrifice themselves. And I think that Frodo knew what he was doing.
I think Peter Jackson's version of the ring's destruction still works with Tolkien's themes. The ring's defining attribute, it's ability to make people mindlessly squabble over it, is what caused its destruction in the end. That's a perfect example of evil being a self-sabotaging force.
Frodo looking younger, than he's supposed to, makes perfect sense in light of the ring's powers. Since he received it relatively young (at least the Hobbits would call him young at 33) it makes sense that super youthful Elijah Woods played him.
Young in appearance but not in personality. Frodo was the oldest and wisest of the 4 Hobbits and most competent. This does not translate well into the films at all. Elijah Wood's acting was excellent but I think it was a poor casting choice at the time.
The film not showing any of Frodo's good scenes, but instead inventing new scenes where he looks like a total boob, is hardly the fault of Elijah Wood.
I think it is important to mention that in the books it really is the ring itself that causes its own destruction along with Frodo and Gollum. Before heading into Mount Doom when Gollum attacked Frodo, Frodo said to Gollum while holding the Ring, "Begone, and trouble me no more! If you touch me ever again, you shall be cast yourself into the Fire of Doom". That was really the Ring speaking through Frodo. So when Gollum bit the Ring from Frodo's finger, the Ring fulfilled its promise and cast Gollum along with itself into the fires. As you said, Tolkien had way more nuance than the film.
The way the book was split and you had to read the entire slog of Frodo and Sam in one go; was brilliant. I always equated the ring as like a drug addiction. Reading page after page was tiring... just like Frodo's ordeal. Amazing that Tolkien was able to imbue feeling into the text in an extra dimension. At the end of the day. I enjoyed the book. I enjoyed the movie. Two distinct story telling approaches. Much like Jo Rowling's books and the movies. Two different experiences. Both satisfying... just different. Don't even get me started on the Frodo and Sam relationship. That must have been so challenging for Peter Jackson to portray. I think modern viewers look at a male-male relationship as either friendship or sexual. I think the books portrays a relationship in the middle. Deeper than friendship. ... Hard to put into words. I'll digress. Great video!
Brilliant job! One deviation from the book in the movies that truly bothered me was the encounter between Frodo and Faromir. When Faromir points out Gollum hunting for fish in the pool, he asks Frodo if he knows who/what the creature is. In the book, Frodo was a true gentleman (exemplifying his role as a hobbit as opposed to "men" in the trilogy) and would never lie. In the books he admits his relationship to Gollum to Faromir, but in Peter Jackson's version he lies about it! Frodo would never lie! And BTW: love the Frodo of the book over the Frodo of the movies any day - but I still understand the liberties Mr. Jackson had to make (in most cases)
I wanna note about the Cirith Ungol scene that it doesn't taint their relationship at all. All we saw untill that point was them being very loving friends, Sam being willing to drown for Frodo. The scene is a display and testement to just how powerful and corrupting the ring is. We've seen how it corrupted a stranger in Boromir who did not share the bond that Frodo and Sam had. We've seen it corrupt Smeagol and what it turned him in to, and how he nearly instantly strangled Deagol the second they found the ring. But I think it was important to show both the burden of the ring and how hevay it was, and how it corrupted a holder who tried to resist it's temptation, who tried to avoid putting the ring on. How it corrupted him even to the point where his mind was easily tricked, and messed with, and to the point where he would discard a friend whom he shared that kind of bond with. And I think it was just important for their journey to show what the ring was doing to Frodo, and probably the best way to create tention, drama and excitement broadly for Frodo and Sam's story to be interesting enough to follow as well. And not make their story the "boring part"
I think I say it on every video of yours, but man is this a super underrated channel. I love your insights, and even though I sometimes disagree with your points, I always appreciate the way you present them. If I could make one change to the ROTK film, it would be to remove the conflict between Sam and Frodo on the stairs. Focus more on Gollum foreshadowing Shelob. Oh and add the Watchers back in.
I really appreciate your kind words! I love when people respectfully disagree, it makes fruitful dialogue possible! I definitely see your point, as it may draw emphasis away from what was really important. And the watchers would have made an incredible addition! It's unfortunate that so much has to be lost in adaptation, but I suppose that's the curse of a changed medium.
Ever time when I watch LOTR I will fast forward past that Sam and Frodo stairs conflict. Issue solved and it makes it a more enjoyable movie without that cringe-worthy scene.
As a kid I never understood why people didn’t like Frodo. He was always one of my favorite characters! Overall I think movie Frodo is a very misunderstood character, athough I do wish he was given more courageous moments in the movies.
Love your Videos. But Hobbits do not age like humans. Frodos 33rd Birthday is his coming of age day, so he should look like a Human of 18-20. From there he has the Ring and doesn't age (which is made quite explicit in the book). So actually Elija Wood looks as Frodo should. You are perfectly right about the other points :) keep on doing these great analysis!
I really liked the betrayal of Sam on the stair. To me it was a great depiction of the corrupting influence of the Ring. Evil can be hard to really get across, so the fact that it (through Gollum) was able to tear these friends apart showed that beautifully.
Great video and a great point about how Frodo and Sam might seem dull intercut with all the other characters, battles, etc. While admitting that that's a thorny problem, I'm still going to defend the book's way of showing the Ring's malign influence on their friendship vs. the movie's. In the book, the scene that shows the Ring coming between Frodo and Sam is in the Tower of Cirith Ungol, when Sam offers to keep the Ring for a while (because Frodo is weak and also because... the Ring) and Frodo demands it back and cusses him out for it really cruelly. Honestly, I don't remember exactly how the movie played that, but I remember finding it very watered down. The difference between this conflict and conflict over Gollum saying Sam ate the lembas is that the former makes sense and the latter doesn't. In the book, Frodo is separated from the Ring (which would make any Ringbearer antsy) and Sam not only has it but has suggested he should keep it for a while, which, of course, makes Frodo snap. With the Ring's influence so strong, it wouldn't make sense if he *didn't* snap. Bonus, it shows the more minor influence of the Ring on Sam too. In the movie, the idea that Sam--I mean *Sam*--would eat the last of their food is absurd. Frodo is certainly influenced by the Ring but he's not so influenced that he would believe about the least believable lie about his best friend, coming from a sometime serious enemy. If he were that far gone, he'd just be an insane bundle of paranoid raving, and he's not. I find both those scenes really painful, the scene in the book because it rings so true (no pun) and the scene in the movie because it rings so false.
I love Peter Jackson's tension between Sam and Frodo until the sending away part, I know that gollum needs to separate them, but I I don't understand why Sam really seemed to be going home, I think it would've been more compelling if Sam went away just far enough and then steadfast as ever turned around and looked for an opportunity to save Frodo, even from a distance.
I’ve only just discovered your channel. This was around the fourth of your presentations I’ve watched. As a lover of Tolkien and the Lord of the Rings, both in book and movie form, I’m fascinated and impressed with your analyses and insights. You have made me think about some of the characters and dynamics in new ways. I’m happy to have discovered you. For what it’s worth, while acknowledging that Jackson did an incredible job of translating the tale to cinema (to my pleasure and relief) I totally favor the literary form and its greater scope and depth. I look forward to viewing many more of your clips. Hats off to you.
I like how you broke down the many differences between Frodo's character in the film and book. Many fans including myself viewed Frodo as cowardly in the film's and I always preferred his book character as he felt like a character who literally stood up till he couldn't anymore. His film version seemed less equipped to be the Ring bearer than his book self. They also leave out exactly how Frodo changed in a spiritual sense and how he was " broken down into something quite different." Like the scene where Frodo commanded Gollum to be gone with the power of the Ring. "And before it stood stern untouchable now by pity a figure robed in white and at it's breast it held a Wheel of Fire. Out of the Fire there spoke a commanding voice, BEGONE AND TROUBLE ME NO MORE IF YOU TOUCH ME EVER AGAIN YOU WILL BE CAST YOURSELF INTO THE FIRE OF DOOM!" Or the scene in the emin muil when Sam sees frodo as "A tall stern Lord who hid his light in grey cloud". Also how Sauroman commented in the scouring of the shire on how he'd " grown". Frodo wasn't just merely traumatized as he seemed to be in the film's. He saw the Rings true form as a Wheel of Fire. Felt it's true weight on his mind and soul. And understood it's evil in a way nobody on earth could've. That coupled with his wounds gave him knowledge, wisdom, and foresight into that which was beyond an ordinary Hobbit. But also broke him. Curiously I think the Hobbit film's do the exact opposite with Bilbo that the LOTR film's did with Frodo and made him too much of an action hero.
I don't like the movie version, I think Elijah wood gave a bad performance that was way to melodramatic....the face he makes when he is stung by Shelob is a perfect example...this version of this face is pretty much all Elijah wood does for the Return of the King
Lovely to share the stories with you; I enjoy your insights to a book I first read 50 years ago and which I have re-read many times with greater understanding.
Really loved your analysis and how open-minded you are about the changes even if you didn't necessarily agree with them. A couple things regarding the movie criticism though: 1) It wasn't the lembas bread bait that got Frodo to finally snap and send Sam away. It was Sam suggesting to "share" the ring with him right after. The exact thing he was most paranoid about thanks to the Ring and Gollum whispering in both of his ears. I never liked this scene, to be frank, but it wasn't about the bread. The bread was just the catalyst in a sense. I consider it like a compositing of the book scene where Sam takes the ring after Shelob and Frodo snaps at him. 2) I have never seen anyone who considers him and Sam's relationship in the movies paternal, like you suggest. They're presented as friends around the same age and Sam directly tells Faramir he's Frodo's gardener. The class difference between Sam and the other 3 was definitely watered down a lot though. 3) Frodo doesn't tackle Gollum off the cliff. Not intentionally anyway. He wrestles him for the ring and they both accidentally slip. This isn't the same as the book and does add a bit more drama, but it still keeps the "evil will destroy itself" message quite clear in my opinion. It was the Ring's own corruption of both Frodo and Gollum that caused it's downfall. And from a cinematic viewpoint, the scene where he's hanging off the ledge is actually beautifully done because the ring doesn't fully fall into the lava until Frodo completely lets go of it to stay with Sam (the directing and Elijah Wood's acting choices make you think he might intentionally let go to go down with it like Gollum did). - I can definitely understand why movie!Frodo might frustrate people, but for me, I find him inspiring in his own way. He's weak and he's carried by his friends, he can barely walk on his own towards the climax because the burden is so heavy, but he still keeps going anyway. He still fights back against Sauron's will mentally in whatever way he can. He still keeps his compassion and he still succeeds in surviving. He was ultimately just Some Guy being corrupted by the literal embodiment of evil and I think Jackson showcased that realistically. I do wish he was a little more proactive like in the books, but Peter Jackson had Elijah Wood's huge, blue puppy eyes and he used them to their full effect lol.
The other point of Gollum slipping into the fire is given at the beginning of the Silmarillion when Eru explains to Melkor that no one can thwart His plans and all of the actions against His plans are just incorporated into His plans. That is why Gandalf tells Frodo that him being meant to have the ring is an encouraging thought, and why Gandalf is certain Gollum has a part to play. When I read LOTR again after reading the Silmarillion, it all just fell into place.
Tolkien's message at mount doom was not diluted at all. It was just a bit different, you have to remember that Frodo finally fell for the ring, and Gollum dropped because both of them were fighting for the ring, meaning evil destroyed itself.
Gollum didn't destroy himself though, he went back on his word & he suffered the curse that Frodo swore he would. I loved Frodo in the book, he was always aware that Gollum couldn't be trusted & Frodo only took the ring for himself when it came to actually throwing it the volcano, same as Isildador
It's great that you can enjoy the books and the movies in different ways. As I got older and rereading the books, I started to understand the dynamic from Frodo's point of view. While before it was from Sam's.
I think you're spot on about Frodos and Sam's relationship not translating interestingly to a wide "non-fan" audience of movie-goers. Considering to most of the audience, the movies were their only exposure to Tolkiens work, and they probably would not have enjoyed the nuanced relationship as opposed to a more exciting take. Enjoyed the video, first time viewer, keep up the quality content!
Welcome to the channel, and thanks so much for the comment! They had to adapt so many things for the films, I'm just glad they maintained the heart of so many parts of it.
I'm not certain the film Frodo was quite as weak as some think. He did, after all, volunteer to carry the Ring to Mordor. After Boromir's betrayal, Frodo also opted to go on alone rather than to risk another of the Fellowship being corrupted by the Ring, which shows considerable strength of character. Je knows going alone will significantly increase the danger, but does it to protect his friends. I think much of his perceived weakness came from not really understanding exactly what would be required of him, both physically and mentally. Think about it: a scholarly, largely sedentary individual is tasked with taking the single most dangerous item on their world halfway across that world. The Ring, metaphorically (and perhaps literally) got increasingly heavy as Frodo got closer to Mordor.
I was suspicious of frodo volunteering to take the ring to Mordor. It could be looked at as Frodo trying to get the ring back. I was also suspect of Bilno when he volunteered for the task. They were both already in the ring's grasp maybe?
@@deanog2577 I doubt it. Frodo understands the importance and difficulty of the task at hand, but accepts it because someone has to do it and he doesn't want the burden to fall to anyone else's shoulders. He is willing to sacrifice whatever life and future he might've had in order to get this done. It's a very pure and noble act. It would've been morally wrong (and made Elrond unlikable) if Elrond had forced the burden upon Frodo and said "you HAVE to do it, whether you want to or not." The essence of Frodo is revealed by his choice to willingly bear the burden. The Ring is always a burden, but it doesn't start to seriously affect him until they are on the outskirts of Mordor (when he lashes out at Sam in the tower, that's when you know that his breakdown is starting). And Bilbo volunteered out of guilt for finding the Ring in the first place; he didn't know what it was prior to the Council, and felt terrible that he'd unknowingly left such a burden in Frodo's lap, so he wanted to redeem himself for his perceived sin.
This was really beautiful to watch. I should stop postponing reading the books, the book Frodo version and relationship with Sam sounds lovely! Like you explained it I also understand why they changed it a bit for the movie. Thanks again for the beautiful video!
My favorite characters from the movies were Frodo and Gollum. Gandalf rightly teaches Frodo to not feel disgust, but pity for Gollum, consumed by ultimate evil. Gollum was Frodo’s and Bilbo’s future, 5 centuries ahead, and yet they fought back. Sure, Sam was loyal and heroic, but Frodo faced the greatest battle of all, the one someone faces within their heart against evil. He was the one to volunteer to bring the ring to Mordor. He was ultimately the only inconspicuous being who defeated Sauron. Even in Jackson’s movies, he’s as much of an hero as he is in the books.
Re: Gollum on the precipice in Orodruin: there's also the school of thought that Eru Ilúvatar gave Gollum a tiny nudge to facilitate his fall - which aligns with Tolkien's Catholic perspective that God can and will directly intervene in the direst of circumstances, even though His children might not realize or understand His actions (but that doesn't negate your point about evil being ultimately self-destructive in Tolkien's worldview!)... Also, your comment about Frodo (figuratively) falling over and over again reminded me that someone on RUclips did a supercut with a counter of every time Frodo (literally) fell in the films; I can't remember the total number, but it was high... It was very high 😄
I think I read something about that! It's a super interesting idea, and really speaks to the way that Tolkien weaves divine intervention with fate in his world. It's just another great example of the way that he integrated his personal worldview into mythic storytelling tropes. And I am going to have to look for that supercut, it sounds excellent!
I think the book intent to carry the notion 33 is the hobbit considered the age at which you reach adulthood, so that would be the equivalent of reaching 18 for a human by modern standard: “At that time Frodo was still in his tweens, as the hobbits called the irresponsible twenties between childhood and coming of age at thirty-three.” So I think it's fair to say that 50 is actually the equivalent of 30.
I haven't read the books, so some of these differences I'm hearing for the first time. It's pretty fascinating. The falling out between Frodo and Sam in the movie was always something that jumped out at me as out-of-character, and now that I know it's not part of the book I like it even less. I understand the idea behind it, but it always came across as a plot device that didn't really need to be there. As far as the ending, I much prefer your explanation of the book event - the idea of evil destroying itself - but I also understand the mediums of storytelling are different and that something like that works much better in print than in film. Thanks for doing these videos. They are really interesting.
Outside of the “which character is better” arguments, the nuances of which you articulate beautifully, I argue that the movie’s version holds an incredibly important message. Rather than being the classic protagonist, Jackson’s version has a crystal clear dichotomy: evil and industry are individualistic while goodness lies in community and love. Every member of the Fellowship supports each other, and that is why they succeed. The peoples of Middle Earth must come together to defeat the great evil. Frodo needs Sam (and even Gollum) to complete his task because that’s what goodness is: strength through love.
In the old Ralph Bakshee cartoon Frode is shown to be braver, like when he is followed by the Nasguul to Rivendale. What a wasted moment to show that Frodo could stand up for him self, just to use it so that Arwen could have a sceen.
The cartoon was far more true to Tolkien than Peter Jackson's live action trilogy. Just a shame it didn't have the budget and studio backing to have been a trilogy, that would have been something to see.
Admission? I turned off the video of Fellowship when Arwen stole Frodo's moment at the Fords of Bruinen--I'd been so looking forward to "You shall have neither the Ring nor me!" that I determined at that point that clearly, the movies didn't get the character. I didn't bother with the rest until more than a decade later.
I would argue that we still get a message about evil destroying itself in the movie version. I always assumed that Frodo tackeled Gollum in an attempt to get the ring back and out of rage towards Gollum for taking it. Thus, the ring ends up failing into the lava because it got people to fight over it.
I always felt that the fallout with Sam and frodo was done to show how much the ring had corrupted him, it always made sense to me because just like bilbo getting suspicious and combative towards gandalf because of the ring, frodo wasn't in his right mind completely by that point
Neat discussion topic - it is interesting seeing the variation in the Frodo we get in the books through to the movies. I think the BBC Radio Play adaptation is closer to the books in giving us that more forthright Frodo but I understand why they made the changes for the sake of a different medium. I think if helps Samwise shine though and that's a great thing. Would love to see more contrasts between the book and movie characters :) There are some who get a little hard done by at times!
I really appreciate the effort and thought you put into your discussions, and feel that your analysis are always solid and sometimes insightful (not an insult, it's just that people have been discussing this stuff for 60+ years). But a few things you said didn't work at all for me. The age of the actors - I've seen the movies multiple times and didn't know there was a ten year age gap. I've always assumed that for purposes of the movie they were about the same age. The "like a father figure" comment, based on a ten year age difference of the actors, came off as an extreme stretch for me. I've also read discussions of the age topic, and I've never seen anyone think that there was supposed to be an age/experience difference between the movie characters of Frodo and Sam. IMO, yours is a very personal take on this. I'm not saying your take is wrong, but for me, it's unconvincing. The other issue is what Frodo's (book) age means. As another commenter mentioned, coming of age for a Hobbit is 33. It may be a cultural (rather than bio) function, but it also means that 19 is a good fit for where Frodo is supposed to start in terms of maturity. IIRC, Merry and Pippin were essentially teenagers in the book (in terms of maturity), and this was another thing that Jackson translated for the movie, though from what I've seen most people assume they're all about the same bio age. Anyway, I might just be griping. I don't think these differences of opinion derail most of your points or matter that much, but they bothered me enough to say something. Thanks for the video!
Frodo at 33 was still a pretty youthful-looking hobbit. Hobbits frequently lived to a hundred or so and, bear in mind, that is *with* Middle-earth's lack of modern medical care, so it scales more to a human expectation of... dying at sixty or seventy. One of the things about this though is that Frodo continued to *look* like a youthful hobbit just out of his "tweens" until the end of the novel, due to the Ring's influence, so even in the book he still looked pretty much like a nineteen-year-old. That's probably why Elijah Wood was cast at nineteen to begin with: he very much looked the part. That youthfulness was always an aspect of how Frodo was portrayed in illustrations and the like, as well as in the Bakshi film. It's more the psychological aspect of his character that was changed by the timeline-contraction in the film, since in the book Frodo was characterized as being torn between loving the Shire and wanting to go on adventures, an aspect of his personality that was acknowledged and then not really used in the film. Of course this also means that, even in the books, Frodo had a slightly more youthful appearance than Sam, Merry, and Pippin, despite them being his juniors by a number of years: almost two decades passed between the party and their departure, after all, so Frodo stopped aging... but the others didn't. This is a pretty interesting aspect of the Ring's influence on its bearer that the movies kind of lose, even with Bilbo, who they cast an older actor to play than he actually needed based on the book.
13:20 - Adding Frodo tackling Gollum off the edge also helps compensate for something they *cut,* in fact. In the book, there's a scene not present in the film that very, very explicitly shows Frodo (or the Ring through him) pronouncing doom upon Gollum, that he would be cast into the fire if he tried to take the Ring again. That this curse was fulfilled while Gollum *held* the Ring is one of the great ironies of the tale, as the curse was strongly implied to have come from the Ring's own will and cruelty. Effectively, the Ring destroyed itself. That point tends to be missed as people focus on Gollum "accidentally" tripping and falling. They didn't include that in the movie, but in a way, a Ring-crazed Frodo wrestling Gollum off the edge serves the same purpose: the Ring's own corruption led to its downfall.
My biggest problem with the casting is that Wood has this congenital puppy-face and a voice to match. Frodo, in Gandalf's description to Butterbur, is "a stout little fellow with red cheeks, taller than some and fairer than most, and he has a cleft in his chin; perky chap with a bright eye."
I think the movie still upholds the theme because Frodo and Gollum fighting over the ringing being the thing that pushes the Ring over the edge is still showing how Evil is destroyed by the discord and violence it engenders.
In my imagination, Frodo looks like Sir Alec Guinness in “Bridge Over The River Kwai”. Hugo Weaving, however, looks EXACTLY like I picture Elrond. I was spooked when I first saw movie! I love Bernard Hill’s portrayal of Theoden. I just wish they had aged him appropriately. It makes his actions even more heroic. I love your channel!
I would argue that the film's still captures that theme of the power of evil being self-destructive. Instead of golem dancing off the edge, the movie has the ring through its influence on frodo push golem off the edge of the cliff and into the lava
also gollum’s accidental slipnfall in the book was important to highlight the ring’s power. it’s impossible to intentionally destroy the ring, the power becomes overwhelming to literally anyone who gets close. that’s why frodo couldn’t even after coming all that way. so an “accident” (which tolkien often uses to mean the will of illuvatar) is the only way the ring could have ever been destroyed. but i totally understand why that would be very hard to convey in 12 hours of movie so i like the movie version too.
Never thought that much how what might be seen as a minor change, changing the age of characters, can have an impact on the relationship of the characters in the story. I still feel the essence of the characters is kept, although in the books Frodo is more courageous and decisive, while in the movies he can be more afraid or faltering and indecisive, which I never linked it with the change of his younger age, but it makes sense! By the end of the journey the movie and book Frodo merge for me, as you can see the ring clearly being a burden that has gotten a hold of him and Sam has to rise to the occasion and push him to finish the task! Wonderful discussion and comparison!
I honestly prefer when adaptations choose to make changes like that. For better or worse, it allows us to see a different angle of the character, and opens up new explorations within the story. A "perfect" adaptation would be a photocopy of a book, its the imperfections and changes of an adaptation that truly make it work, in my opinion. I think Peter Jackson definitely did find the character's legs towards the end, especially in Frodo and Sam's relationship. It's truly a beautiful thing to behold. Thanks so much for sharing your thoughts!
I think the scene that really encapsulates the differences between movie Frodo and Sam Frodo is when they first find and subdue Gollum. In the books its a very revealing scene as we see Frodo in all his wisdom and power and understand for the first time the way he has grown as a character. In the books he's sort of just a wishy washy Good Samaritan that can't stand Gollum's crying.
A very thoughtful analysis of the stark differences between book Frodo and movie Frodo. Watching the movies made me cringe when I saw how they portrayed Frodo as week and helpless. And I really wish that Peter Jackson had filmed Frodo singing “The Cow Jumped Over the Moon” in Bree. It would have made a much better scene than what was filmed.
The jar of water was in your hands long enough for me to start imagining that it was your microphone. I was building a mini narrative of the WaterMic. It’s the little things in life
Perhaps it's my familiarity with the source material, but the "break up" between Frodo and Sam simply came across as unbelievable to me. Out of character for the canon, but also for the film characters and situation. Plus I liked the how in the book Sam was so close to Frodo in Shelob's Lair, but because he specifically wasn't fast or strong enough to immediately fight off Gollum, Frodo was poisoned. Emphasizing how Sam failed at helping Frodo at that crucial moment, when he was so nearby, is more of a gut punch than Sam deciding he doesn't want to walk home alone. Regardless, I appreciate your gracious analysis of what the film was attempting to convey.
Book Frodo was great. Not a fan of movie Frodo. Book Frodo also would not have made it to the crack of doom without Sam. And he even said that much in the chapter, "The Stairs of Cirith Ungol." But on the flip side, neither would Sam have made it. They both needed each other to make it to the end. I think book Frodo's insufficiencies were enough. In the book, Frodo was originally a strong character, and in fact, a stronger character than Sam. And Frodo remained stronger up until the encounter with Shelob, when he was incapacitated when Shelob ambushed him from behind. That only changed when the ring weakened Frodo to a very severe extent. I prefer the Stronger Frodo, as it places a greater emphasis on Sam's growth as a character at the end.
It is so fascinating getting these book versus movie perspectives from someone who grew up on the films before reading the books. I read and reread the books obsessively from around age 6 onward and the films didn't come out until I was in high school. So like, my first impression of the films was largely to be affronted by the Hollywood-ness of it all -- where is the subtlety and nuance? the realism? the relatively still moments to pause and reflect? why the hell is Legolas a blond now, and why did they age down the entire fellowship except Boromir and Sam?? -- and it took me a long time to appreciate the films for what they are.
Great video. The book explanation of Gollem's fall is listed in Frodo's curse against Gollem: 'Begone, and trouble me no more! If you touch me ever again, you shall be cast yourself into the Fire of Doom." A lot of LOTR fans think that Frodo actually uses the Ring's power in this curse, so Gollem's fall is actually directly caused by the Ring. So, same idea of evil destroying itself, but a bit more laid out.
I recently read the Lord of the Rings again. One thing that struck me very odd was the way, Frodo was always described as all so noble, kind and brave by others, mostly Sam. And although he shows bravery and kindness, he doesn't seem to live up to the image others have of him. Sometimes I thought that Tolkien wanted the readers to admire Frodo by force. And while the movies take away much of his agency and bravery, they did something very valuable - they gave him weakness and made him therefore more relatable and because of the weakness his perseverence is much more impactfull. Until I saw your video I never even considered the possibility that movie Sam could be a father figure despite the age difference. Even now I think of him as a devoted servant and loving friend, loyal till the end.
Jackson's Frodo has blue eyes, makes strange faces, has bitten nails, and squeals like a pig when he screams. And of course, that abominable rift with Sam.
Jess, excellent job verbalizing my feelings about the relationship between the books and the movies. The books are the best, but I appreciate the movies both as art AND how they attracted new audiences. You have wonderful insight for an infant child and give me hope for your generation! :-D!
Having not read the books and not ever planning too the movies are all I really knew of the latter part of the third age. It's quite striking hearing these differences as they sound quite major! But indeed, this is potentially the nature of adaptations.
I think I may have enjoyed movie-frodo more without having read the books, so you may be in luck, haha! Just curious though, what do you think of his character without book context?
@@Jess_of_the_Shire Interesting. As for what I thought from the movies, he wasn't a favourite character of mine. Apart from that I really couldn't tell you much about him. And maybe that's the point given that, as you say, the story is more about those around him. I do have a terrible memory though 😂
I only discovered your channel last week, and after about 4 videos, I really enjoy your content! I am both an avid reader and a movie buff. In the case of both book and movie versions of Lord of the Rings, I consider them similar stories, but fairly different. One of the key differences, is the movies were made to interest as many people as possible, especially those that, while the may have heard of LotR, really didn't have the inclination to read it. And while it makes for a great written story for those with the desire to read it, it ultimately is very pat throughout. As you pointed out, conflict and tension in a movie are fascinating. If you keep an audience guessing, wondering what pitfalls the characters will find next, that's part of movie going. There are a few places that Jackson goes that are only hinted at in the books, like the fight between the Balrog and Gandalf, that were awesome deviations. And some things, like the warg attack, that were gratuitous, although kind of cool at the same time. There are many fans of books, not just LotR, that will usually be disappointed when any story that they loved is translated for the screen. I tend to try to keep them separate, especially in the case of an effort such as the LotR movies, because of what ended up on the screen being every bit as epic as the book is, even considering the deviations the directors and screenwriters may have made. Anyways, loved your getting to the nuts and bolts of both, and I'm looking forward to more!
Regarding Frodo and Sam’s relationship being believable, it’s important to understand that many of the people watching the films have been through the horrors of war and might not understand the bonds that are forged with brothers in battle. Tolkien had experienced this, and he lost best friend in battle. I would imagine that readers in his generation could relate to such a relationship more than today when close relationships among men aren’t as common or accepted.
The main thing this changed was that people tend to hate Pippin and Merry, specially Pippin, because they don't understand that comparatively, Pippin was supposed to be a teen and Merry supposed to be not of age yet (20) and Sam in his young twenties while Frodo is 30 something.
They see them as stupid instead of just as young as they are, because Frodo seems mature while looking like a teenager, and they seem childish while looking like grown men.
I staunchly disagree with the thought that Sam is like a father figure in the movies. I don't see that at all. Just a steadfast, loyal friend, and I never noticed any age difference in them.
Yeah, always saw Frodo and Sam's dynamic as two brothers.
They're definitely more equals in the movies. Like best friends you grew up going to school with.
Indeed, I never thought about an age difference between Frodo and Sam. I'd suggest that Frodo behaved in a more mature manor even though he looked younger.
If anything, more a slightly older brother vibe - but definitely not a father figure.
That sounds like an impression that probably came from someone watching the films as a very young child and just stuck, unexamined rigorously, until adulthood.
Regarding Frodo's age, a 33 year old hobbit is the equivalent of a 21 year old human and Frodo came into possession of the ring on his 33rd birthday, and like Bilbo barely aged afterwards. So even though he was fifty, he looked like a young man.
This is how I interpreted the book. A hobbit's 33rd birthday was his "coming of age". And since Frodo received the ring on that occasion, he would have stopped aging. So he would actually look younger than his friends but act older (50 years old in the book). The Old Took lived for 130 years, presumably without magical help. An age of 102 is described as "ripe but disappointing". I think we can say hobbits don't age the same way as humans.
@@sheert This makes sense. As a bit of a side note, in the movie we see Frodo keep the ring hidden in an envelope for the years that Gandalf is away. So that would make me think its power shouldn't affect him as much. In the book however, he keeps it on a necklace around his neck, which would support your theory best.
@@caleschley Well it is shortly mentioned in the book that Frodo has aged well and looked like a hobbit barely older than their aged of maturity. And the fellow hobbits thought that to be a bit weird.
Agreed. It looks like Jess this time forgot to read the material properly regarding aging.
I, however, took issue with how weak Frodo seemed and how strong the ring appeared to be, giving strong visions, etc far away, which would have made it impossible to stand any chance close to Mount Doom.
@@MrKarlMANno1 I would prefer the ring feel powerful than weak
On Frodo's age:
(1) Hobbits can live as old as 144, so they're generally longer-lived and slowed to mature. Hence the references to the irresponsible "tweens" (20s) before coming of age at 33. So a 33 year old Hobbit would appear younger than a 33 year old human.
(2) Frodo received the Ring at 33 from Bilbo. Given its anti-aging effect, it would be reasonable to assume his appearance wouldn't change by the time he was 50. From "The Shadow of the Past": "As time went on, people began to notice that Frodo also showed signs of good 'preservation': outwardly he retained the appearance of a rebust and energetic hobbit just out of his tweens"
Thus Elijah's youthful appearance is entirely plausible, both the Long-Expected Party and later when he leaves the Shire. Of course, Sam, Merry and Pippin absolutely should have all aged by 17 years, though given that's the change from young adulthood to middle-age, it's not obvious how much even that duration would show.
Even though I loved the movies, after decades of reading the LOTR, Frodo in the movie has never sat right with me. Wood's acting is amazing but Frodo was so special to me from the books I can't accept the difference.
Funny how views are different. From movie point I got the impression that Frodo and Sam are peers, almost brothers. No father-son-relationship. They look about the same age, they drink together, they party together. And before Bree, Frodo is definitely the leader and the most mature. And Sam looks up to him. The shift in that relationship comes later.
Elijah Wood actually celebrated his 18th birthday on set. He also jokingly commented that it was his first time playing a 50 year old. So although Frodo's age may not have been specifically mentioned in the movies, the actor was at least aware of it.
Thank you! I don't know what folks are going on about with the ages.
He did say 19th birthday on Graham Norton, though.
@@edithengel2284 yes, but with production lasting 18 months, he did celebrate 2 birthdays on set. There are pictures of both.
I had no idea he was that young for those movies, I thought he was one of those actors that is in their mid/late 20s that always played a teenager, like Michael J Fox
I also think that the ring not being actually destroyed until Frodo grabbing Sam’s arm, signaling that he finally LETS the ring go, feels satisfying for the movie.
I reread the books recently. One thing that bothers me with Frodo & Sam in the movies is that they are so naive regarding Gollum, especially Frodo. In the books, they have no choice but to follow him but they discuss all the time about how they distrust him. They aren't surprised that this evil creature is evil, Frodo doesn't have the syndrome of "I can fix him".
This is just about the change in medium. There is no conflict or drama in Frodo and Sam never trusting Gollum. Gollum in the film is used as a device to externalize Frodo's struggle carrying the ring.
Frodo trying to "fix" Gollum also plays into a subplot Jackson was trying to play with in the films where Frodo was unsure if he could ever return home after the journey, not just physically but emotionally. Frodo in the films needed to believe that Gollum could be good because he related to Gollum since they were both hobbits (sort of) and were both ringbearers. This subplot is kind of a film original, but if you can pick up on it you understand why Frodo treats Gollum the way he does. The books and the movies are largely different stories with different themes and messages, and that's okay, one doesn't have to be exactly like the other to be good.
Frodo absolutely tries to redeem Gollum, and he only fails because of Sam's aggressiveness. Tolkien talks about this in Letter #246
@@andresrecchia3600 He does try to help Gollum, but he's always fully aware of Gollum's capacity for treachery.
They needed to give all the Frollum shippers something to work with.
I once had a mini debate with someone who thought Frodo from the movies was useless, and all his friends were dope rock stars in comparison. I had to remind them that it's revealed that Frodo is writing this story as a framing device in the movies, and as such is sacrificing his own glory for theirs out of love and humility.
One thing to note is that Frodo doesn’t actually tackle Gollum off the cliff. They fight over the ring on the edge, and they both fall off in the struggle. But Gollum, who is single-mindedly obsessed with the ring, holds onto it and falls into the lava, whereas Frodo abandons the ring, and grabs the ledge to save himself, demonstrating that Frodo was not completely lost to the allure of the ring
Good point.
I liked that the movie scene really made it seem like the greed caused by the ring ended up being it's own destruction, rather than Gollum just tripping after getting it
@@crusaderforchrist I find Gollum tripping much better, because Gollum swore on the Ring to Frodo, and Frodo told him the Ring would betray him if he didn't keep his promise.
I don't even think by Tolkien's logic, Frodo could have let go of the Ring. So at that point, by book logic they would have both gone down with the Ring. That's also I think why Tolkien said it had to happen exactly like this, that's the only ending that made sense. Gollum tripping, I mean.
Tolkien wrote in a letter once: you cannot mean to destroy it, throw it away, or neglect it.
So there is no "deciding against the Ring" choice in the books.
Not even Elrond, who hated Isildur & humans for 3000 years could have destroyed it.
I still think this confusion is caused by Gimli hitting the Ring with an axe.
That's just not possible. At best he would have swung, realized the Ring is too beautiful to destroy, and stopped. That's the power of the Ring, if PJ wants to demonstrate it.
@@Squagglimole But there’s clearly a decision of “not taking the ring”. Gandalf, Galadriel and Faramír do so. When Frodo hangs on to the cliff, he’s not longer wearing the ring around his neck, so he’s already departed from it. There’s no destroying to do, the ring already fell into the fire, so the only thing he has to do is resist its last call. Which is still incredibly hard to do, since that thing manipulated him for so long and is and its greatest power in Mount Doom. But I don’t see any rule breaking here.
@@Натал20 you don't see rule breaking because you apparently didn't read the book: He claimed the ring before Sauron. As he says "It belongs to me". It doesn't matter if he is wearing it, it's HIS at this moment.
So no, he can't let it fall. The whole Gollum & Frodo hanging on to it scene is just dumb - and it takes away from Gollum actually being held accountable for his deceit by the Ring.
It interesting I feel like the removal of the Scouring of the Shire does rob movie Frodo of something. I think the removal of the SotS was the right call for the movie, but without it the movie doesn't really have the time or ability to display Frodo's hard won wisdom and growth like the book does.
When Frodo stop Sam from slaying Saruman in the Shire and tells him he will be released in the hopes he might one day find his way back to what he once was, Frodo fully embraces and embodies the lessons of Pity and Mercy that Gandalf taught him. That part, and Frodo refusing to draw a weapon during the fighting in the Shire, also starts to give you a view into a Frodo who is just so damn TIRED. Tired of the violence, the pain, the evil in the world.... the Frodo that will ultimately have to sail West for a chance at peace.
Here you see the difference between a work written on its own terms, and a work made to please people. The Scouring is an anticlimax that by every rule of Hollywood should not be (and already people complain about the "multiple endings" in the film...) But it has something profound to say about the nature of evil and the constant fight against it. Just as the Old Forest episode is there to present elements of the world as perils (awakened trees, the restless dead) that eventually will become allies.
I think that one of the reasons, if not the primary reason, that Gollum falls, in the books, is that oath he swore on the Ring.
To use the military metaphor, I would posit that the dynamic between Frodo and Sam in the movie would be more like that between a newly-commissioned second lieutenant and a relatively more experienced sergeant.
Nailed it.
In the military terminology of Tolkien's day, the proper term comes with some unfortunate baggage, when transposed into the context of modern popular culture.
It's "batman".
Sam was like Frodo's batman.
The term stems from an archaic word for the gear stowed on a pack horse.
All the more appropriate, given how Gandalf loads Sam up, when he and Frodo leave Bag End.
The close relationships forged in war, between usually upper or upper-middle class officers and their working-class batmen, had a effect on post-WWI attitudes towards class and the boundaries it imposed.
Many officers (if they were lucky enough to survive the war) retained the services of their wartime batman, into civilian life.
I think it served both parties to have a close companion who had shared in the traumatic experiences and could understand what their friends and families, who hadn't served at the front, never could.
The result was often a very deep, profound, lifelong friendship, that transcended the normal societal boundaries of the day.
As is seen between Frodo, a member of the local gentry, and Sam, his gardener.
Tolkien actually meant Sam to be a homage to the common british soldier he met in WW1. So very apt comparison l.
By the story's end, Sam has developed into more of a leader in his own right. This parallels the change of how officers were selected over the course of the Great War: from mostly public schoolboys (private schools in the US) who would mostly have had cadet training, to more broad selection of veteran soldiers who have shown leadership.
From the 1977 movie "A Bridge Too Far":
Colonel Frost (Anthony Hopkins) in conversation with his batman right before parachuting into combat:
CF: "Where are my golf clubs?"
B: "They're coming in the staff car sir."
"And what about my dinner jacket?"
"Are you sure you'll be needing that, sir?"
N.B. the quotes are not exact.
Adding conflict between Frodo and Sam for the film externalizes Frodo's internal struggle with the ring itself. It's near impossible to *show* that struggle, so for the film they show it by way of Frodo's changing behavior towards his best friend.
i know this is a year old video... BUT I was just on a lotr binge (yet again) and i found this video. i have to add:
Movie Frodo (have not read the books) is my ultimate hero. *BECAUSE* i see his character being kind of a metaphor for someone going through depression/anxiety/ ptsd/grief7mental illness etc... and how people like that, who has an invisible scar, and a heavy burden they carry, often gets overlooked how strong they actually are. because you can't see the strength in the same way, as we can with Sam. because it's all inside. yet, he has the strength to keep walking. he even runs up the mountain the last bit. He had a will to see this through, even though it nearly took his life, and in one way, it did. he tried to heal, but years later he still had that burden. the wound. the scar. and he had to leave and die peacefully. the inner strength it takes to just get up, and not die or fall into the void, when you have all the things listen above, it requires the biggest strength. yet, so many in the fandom, gives frodo sh!t for being "weak" or failing once he is inside mount doom. ONE weak moment does not undo your character. Just mirroring the real world, of how people treat someone who is sick with something they can't see, vs maybe someone who broke their leg or has cancer, or something easy to SEE. you are treated with respect and help, but NOT if you carry PTSD or grief or mental illness. so in this way, frodo is a huge inspiration to me. i don't see him as weak at all. The ring could represent being hit with depression. and naturally the person carrying this "ring" will look weaker, than the friend walking beside you, not having the ring, and just watching you fall into the rings power - depression. is the friend then stronger ? is sam stronger bc he is beside the ringbearer? no. but he gets all the credit sometimes.
must must must pull myself together and read the books one day soon 🌺
i completely agree!! movie frodo was a huge inspiration for me when I was struggling
Please, please do read the books.
I think your points or even more valid from book Frodo
Amazing.... ❤❤❤ I love your opinion. Same as I think.
This is really well said, and as another commenter mentioned, book Frodo supports what you’re discussing here in even more depth adn more ways than film Frodo can
@@AlexCrean imma have to read it this winter! 💗
Ive always loved the simplicity and lack of drama in gollums falling in the book. Its a reminder of how anticlimactic that life is. Things simply... happen...then its onto the next thing.
I feel the climactic scene occurs right before when Frodo tells Gollum to “back off or he’ll die.” And because Gollum didn’t listen, he tripped and fell.
I feel like it needs to be noted that the term for the servant to a military officer was "Batman." Samwise Gamgee is the Batman.
I always saw Frodo’s age being completely appropriate in the movie. In the book it is stated that hobbits are considered to come of age at 33. And age 50 would be considered early middle age. So despite the fact that the ages themselves are older than a corresponding human, I always assumed that we were supposed to read Frodo as very very young. Also, despite the fact that Billy Boyd is older than Elijah wood, I always read the four hobbits as similar in age.
Frodo was the oldest of the 4, if I recall. Sam and Merry were probably 30s-40s and Pip was explicitly stated to be under 33 and considered a minor.
@cronchycatmom, if I remember correctly, their ages at the start of their journey are: Frodo 50, Sam 38, Mery 36, and Pippin 29. I could be wrong though.
@@tamakunminnip2117 You are almost perfect, Pippin being 28. He was born in 1390. Good memory!
Now, I must say that Jackson's version does show evil destroying itself--the evil of the Ring made Gollum and Frodo into beings that at that moment would recklessly and instantly fight each other to the death in that extremely dangerous place, not even trying to move somewhere less perilous. The evil in Frodo and Gollum, fostered by the Ring, destroyed the Ring. JMHO
I was just about to comment this. Instead of Gollum destroying himself because of evil's self-destructive nature, it's the ring itself that causes its own destruction. I think it delivers the same message very well, but with the added feeling of Gollum being a *victim* to the corruption of the ring *and* Frodo almost suffering the same fate, but getting saved by his friendship with Sam.
@@Tuub1as.
The main issue is that it removes the idea of divine providence and it also fails to make the connection that this was Gollum's punishment for breaking his oath to Frodo. But those things are more deeper themes that suit a literary work much more than a movie.
Sam helping Frodo is shown in him carrying him up Orodruin.
@@Tuub1asThank you to you and the OP for making these comments 9 months ago and saving me from having to say the same things a full year late.
I think I appreciate movie frodo more each time I watch. He is certainly a flawed character but it's hard for me to see him as annoying or incompetent given the enormity and isolation of his task. I really appreciated this breakdown and how the changes made in the new medium affect his character arc.
That's definitely reasonable! Apparently as a 5 year old I had incredibly little empathy haha. Thanks for the comment!
I first read The Hobbit then the Lord of the Rings in junior high and multiple times through my life, decades before the movies. I love the movies. I agree with your assessment. But the thing that shocked me is how the movies have re-written the story in my mind. I’ve watched the movies multiple times, so when I most recently re-engaged with the written story, I was shocked at how my memory of the story has been changed. I am concerned that the original story, along with so many others, will be lost if people don’t read.
One thing that modern readers don't really understand about Frodo and Sam's relationship in the books is that their love for each other isn't sexual. Tolkien was born in the 1890s. Relationships between people of the same sex were seen differently back then. Young women would share a bed on a regular basis, sisters and close friends. Young men seem to have done similar things. A man expressing love for another man was common, and purely platonic. Homosexuals were frowned on by society. Oscar Wilde was taken to court by a wealthy family for allegedly corrupting their son into a homosexual relationship. Besides the fact that Sam was married to a Hobbit lass named Rose Cotton, Sam spoke of his deep love for her when he expressed to Frodo his confusion over whether to move in with Frodo or marry Rosie. When Frodo said that he could just marry Rosie and both could move into Bag End together, Sam said it was exactly what he was thinking of doing. In some ways, Peter Jackson's portrayal of Frodo may have watered that down, in an attempt to avoid confusing people as to their sexual orientation.
Definitely. Do people really say that they're gay or that anything sexual is going on between them? I only heard it as a joke.
@@RebecaDogaru slash fics are very popular in the Lord of the Rings fandom. Frodo/Sam shippers are very prevalent.
@@CynthiaWarren Ah I didn't know, it makes sense that it's happening in that context. Those people would ship anyone, regardless of whether it fits the canon or not (like Draco/Harry or other weird HP ships) xD I think they just like the characters and the idea of lovers that are also really good friends makes them feel warm and fuzzy inside. But it's just a distortion of Tolkien's story.
If Hollywood or disney remade this today they definitely would have had Frodo and Sam gay. And they would've cast Aragorn as a woman.
@@deanog2577 I'm actually not sure about the first one. I've never seen a gay main character in a blockbuster intended for all audiences (especially fantasy/adventure, which would draw children as well). If they did, it would be vaguely implied but never specifically stated or shown. They would say it as part of their marketing in order to attract LGBT audiences and cause controversy, because this is Hollywood hypocrisy: they only care about money. But they would definitely have a few women and people of other races in the fellowship. And the white male characters would be weak and unable to accomplish anything on their own...
it is a nice turn around in the movies that at the end of the first movie Frodo pulls up Sam while at the end of movie 3 Sam pulls up Frodo.
Nice!
I used to think that Gollum's/the Ring's end was (not bad, but definitely) anticlimactic, until I realised, that Gollum doesn't fall because he oopsies, but he falls, because Frodo, on the way up the side of Mt. Doom curses Gollum to "be cast into the fiery depths himself" (not sure I have the wording correct) if he ever again goes against Frodo and his mission. And because Gollum swore on the Ring, and Frodo invoked the Ring to make this order/curse, as soon as Gollum gets the Ring, the curse takes effect and makes him fall. So the Ring (in a very Tolkien fashion) destroyed itself by fulfilling Frodo's curse.
And I just love this. It makes me adore the end of the quest so much.
I was waiting for a big blue eyes joke, and was glad to find it took less than 2 minutes
Thanks for this analysis. It explains to me why my wife hated Frodo. She saw the movies before I read her the books and she saw Frodo as a whiny child.
I agree with your wife!
@@somniumisdreamingyikes.
I loved the movies, but I really didn't like how they both nerfed Frodo, making him more inept and dependent, while buffing other characters like Legolas. I get that Hollywood has spent decades crafting a certain image of what is "realistic", but that's a Hollywood, problem, not an audience problem. Life is not a series of X-game moments with superhero dismounts, and at least in part that was Tolkein's point - Frodo did it because he did it, and normal boring Frodo accomplished a task that the mythic figures surrounding him could not.
Hobbits do not age at the same rate as humans. Hobbits frequently lived to be well over a hundred, for which reason Pippin still looks like a child in Minas Tirith. Since coming of age is 33 in the Shire and in England where Tolkien grew up, coming of age is 21, so my conjecture is a 7:11 ratio. With this in mind, I think everyone's ages makes a lot of sense. Pippin would be around seventeen, Sam and Merry in their early to mid-twenties, and Frodo in his earlier thirties.
I think they could have conveyed him well in aspects such as the conversation at the Stairs of Cirith Ungol and other conversations both with Sam and Gandalf. I feel like they kind of destroyed his mercy and, in the words of the book "confused kindness with blindness". Frodo and Sam do not need conflict. There is something very encouraging about stable relationships-relationships as they should be. One of my favorite aspects of the movie "Captain America: The Winter Soldier" is the relationship between Captain America and Falcon, for instance, because it just looks like a solid, even admirable friendship between two men, which you rarely see in media. I felt it mostly made Frodo come off as a total jerk, in my mind, because he told Sam to go home-where he obviously couldn't since it was too far. I'm sure they could convey the book relationship in the movies because there is enough intrigue as Frodo keeps on trying to persevere and Sam keeps on being obliged to help him. At the same time, they both have conflict with their third member of their party-namely Gollum.
In my mind, the main thing about Peter Jackson's Frodo is basically Frodo if they took away almost all his likable qualities, that is, his mercy, his strength, and his appreciation of his friends.
As for Gollum slipping and falling, I think there is a fair argument that in the book that Frodo, while overcome by the Ring, cursed him in this scene:
*Then suddenly, as before under the eaves of the Emyn Muil, Sam saw these two rivals with other vision. A crouching shape, scarcely more than the shadow of a living thing, a creature now wholly ruined and defeated, yet filled with a hideous lust and rage; and before it stood stern, untouchable now by pity, a figure robed in white, but at its breast it held a wheel of fire. Out of the fire there spoke a commanding voice.*
*'Begone, and trouble me no more! If you touch me ever again, you shall be cast yourself into the Fire of Doom.'*
I know the interpretation of this scene is controversial, but I still think conveying this would be more book-loyal than Frodo tackling him.
Agree 💯
Exactly this
Yep
Absolutely spot on.
Hobbits are the only other human race for which we have a lot of information, and they live an average of 97 years. which is considerably longer than the ordinary average human age of 80. So they definitely age slower than us. And that's counting the effects of the Ring, which stop your aging. Frodo stopped aging at the human equivalent of 21.
OMG. I absolutely HATED the scene where Gollum falls into the abyss in the movie!!! For me, that scene in the BOOK (which I read back in May of 1967!) was so cathartic I had to actually put the book down and walk away for a while to gather myself, as I had been so caught up in the moment where Frodo turns to Sam and says he has decided not to destroy the ring after all. OMG. Then Gollum appears, wrestles with the invisible Frodo on the edge of the abyss, suddenly Frodo appears again, minus a finger which Gollum has bitten off ...a moment of Gollum teetering on the brink in triumph ...then he falls.... What a moment. What an absolutely incredible, unlooked-for moment. So inherently dramatic it didn't need any melodrama at all. It deserved a moment of total silence except for the background roar of flames.
Instead, the movie scene was so totally NAFF. A literal, melodramatic cliffhanger. Aaargh! AARGH!!! Don't get me started. I think that was the worst scene in the entire movie, mainly because it should have been the best one. It shouldn't have been about Sam rescuing Frodo ...he'd already done that many times...or about the audience going 'oh no, will he fall, won't he fall'. It should have been all about Gollum. It should have brought back Gandalf's words-way back in The Fellowship of the Ring-where he tells Frodo that Gollum would likely have his part to play in the events, and that he should not be killed. And how. The fact that GOLLUM was the one who (inadvertently) destroyed the ring-a plot twist that I guarantee NOBODY saw coming-gets totally lost in this horrendously over-egged, anti-climactic movie scene. I want to weep, watching or thinking about it. Aaargh....
When I first saw the films even I thought that Frodo was a whiny cry-baby. But as a grown-up, movie Frodo feels more relatable and believable because he is shown how a normal person, completely unprepared for such a task, would truly act if thrust into it. It's beautiful that it's the constant support of his friends and their unwavering faith in him is what ultimately helps in reaching his goal.
Despite the age issue, I loved Elijah Wood as Frodo and the casting for the Hobbits was perfect. I found Frodo probably got the worst treatment in the movie, compared to the book Frodo. All of the remarkable actions by Frodo in the face of the enemy, up until the breaking of the Fellowship, were either taken by other characters or diminished. It makes a Frodo that cannot be trusted to carry on the quest alone or just with Sam as a companion. He doesn't make a stand at the ford vs the Nazgul. He doesn't stab the cave troll in Moria. In the movies, when Aragorn decides that Frodo is up to the job, it makes me say: "Based on what?".
But Frodo remains a courageous person also in the films with all the psychological suffering he undergoes and which is rather well shown in the films.
His battle is mainly psychological and that alone makes him brave.
Personally, I didn't need to read the books to understand that Frodo deserved to be mentioned as a hero as much as Sam.
People see Frodo in the movies as someone weak because Frodo doesn't fit the stereotypes you expect to see from a hero but that doesn't make him weak, well on the contrary.
I wouldn’t want to diminish Sam’s heroic role. But to me Frodo is the greater hero.
Frodo goes into the darkness with his eyes open; the others follow due to their love for Frodo.
The other three hobbits “bounceback“. They make full recoveries. Not Frodo - he has given everything.
He and Boromir sacrifice themselves. And I think that Frodo knew what he was doing.
I think Peter Jackson's version of the ring's destruction still works with Tolkien's themes. The ring's defining attribute, it's ability to make people mindlessly squabble over it, is what caused its destruction in the end. That's a perfect example of evil being a self-sabotaging force.
Movie Frodo drives me a little nutty.
Movie Frodo is just an Elijah Wood plushie, carried around by whoever else is with him.
Frodo looking younger, than he's supposed to, makes perfect sense in light of the ring's powers. Since he received it relatively young (at least the Hobbits would call him young at 33) it makes sense that super youthful Elijah Woods played him.
Young in appearance but not in personality. Frodo was the oldest and wisest of the 4 Hobbits and most competent.
This does not translate well into the films at all. Elijah Wood's acting was excellent but I think it was a poor casting choice at the time.
The film not showing any of Frodo's good scenes, but instead inventing new scenes where he looks like a total boob, is hardly the fault of Elijah Wood.
frodo is wisest hobbit of 4 young hobbits. the movies didnt show it better@@Thraim.
I think it is important to mention that in the books it really is the ring itself that causes its own destruction along with Frodo and Gollum. Before heading into Mount Doom when Gollum attacked Frodo, Frodo said to Gollum while holding the Ring, "Begone, and trouble me no more! If you touch me ever again, you shall be cast yourself into the Fire of Doom". That was really the Ring speaking through Frodo. So when Gollum bit the Ring from Frodo's finger, the Ring fulfilled its promise and cast Gollum along with itself into the fires. As you said, Tolkien had way more nuance than the film.
The way the book was split and you had to read the entire slog of Frodo and Sam in one go; was brilliant. I always equated the ring as like a drug addiction. Reading page after page was tiring... just like Frodo's ordeal. Amazing that Tolkien was able to imbue feeling into the text in an extra dimension. At the end of the day. I enjoyed the book. I enjoyed the movie. Two distinct story telling approaches. Much like Jo Rowling's books and the movies. Two different experiences. Both satisfying... just different.
Don't even get me started on the Frodo and Sam relationship. That must have been so challenging for Peter Jackson to portray. I think modern viewers look at a male-male relationship as either friendship or sexual. I think the books portrays a relationship in the middle. Deeper than friendship. ... Hard to put into words. I'll digress.
Great video!
Brilliant job! One deviation from the book in the movies that truly bothered me was the encounter between Frodo and Faromir. When Faromir points out Gollum hunting for fish in the pool, he asks Frodo if he knows who/what the creature is. In the book, Frodo was a true gentleman (exemplifying his role as a hobbit as opposed to "men" in the trilogy) and would never lie. In the books he admits his relationship to Gollum to Faromir, but in Peter Jackson's version he lies about it! Frodo would never lie! And BTW: love the Frodo of the book over the Frodo of the movies any day - but I still understand the liberties Mr. Jackson had to make (in most cases)
I wanna note about the Cirith Ungol scene that it doesn't taint their relationship at all.
All we saw untill that point was them being very loving friends, Sam being willing to drown for Frodo.
The scene is a display and testement to just how powerful and corrupting the ring is.
We've seen how it corrupted a stranger in Boromir who did not share the bond that Frodo and Sam had. We've seen it corrupt Smeagol and what it turned him in to, and how he nearly instantly strangled Deagol the second they found the ring.
But I think it was important to show both the burden of the ring and how hevay it was, and how it corrupted a holder who tried to resist it's temptation, who tried to avoid putting the ring on. How it corrupted him even to the point where his mind was easily tricked, and messed with, and to the point where he would discard a friend whom he shared that kind of bond with.
And I think it was just important for their journey to show what the ring was doing to Frodo, and probably the best way to create tention, drama and excitement broadly for Frodo and Sam's story to be interesting enough to follow as well. And not make their story the "boring part"
I think I say it on every video of yours, but man is this a super underrated channel. I love your insights, and even though I sometimes disagree with your points, I always appreciate the way you present them.
If I could make one change to the ROTK film, it would be to remove the conflict between Sam and Frodo on the stairs. Focus more on Gollum foreshadowing Shelob. Oh and add the Watchers back in.
I really appreciate your kind words! I love when people respectfully disagree, it makes fruitful dialogue possible!
I definitely see your point, as it may draw emphasis away from what was really important. And the watchers would have made an incredible addition! It's unfortunate that so much has to be lost in adaptation, but I suppose that's the curse of a changed medium.
Ever time when I watch LOTR I will fast forward past that Sam and Frodo stairs conflict. Issue solved and it makes it a more enjoyable movie without that cringe-worthy scene.
As a kid I never understood why people didn’t like Frodo. He was always one of my favorite characters! Overall I think movie Frodo is a very misunderstood character, athough I do wish he was given more courageous moments in the movies.
Love your Videos.
But Hobbits do not age like humans. Frodos 33rd Birthday is his coming of age day, so he should look like a Human of 18-20. From there he has the Ring and doesn't age (which is made quite explicit in the book). So actually Elija Wood looks as Frodo should. You are perfectly right about the other points :)
keep on doing these great analysis!
I really liked the betrayal of Sam on the stair. To me it was a great depiction of the corrupting influence of the Ring. Evil can be hard to really get across, so the fact that it (through Gollum) was able to tear these friends apart showed that beautifully.
Great video and a great point about how Frodo and Sam might seem dull intercut with all the other characters, battles, etc. While admitting that that's a thorny problem, I'm still going to defend the book's way of showing the Ring's malign influence on their friendship vs. the movie's.
In the book, the scene that shows the Ring coming between Frodo and Sam is in the Tower of Cirith Ungol, when Sam offers to keep the Ring for a while (because Frodo is weak and also because... the Ring) and Frodo demands it back and cusses him out for it really cruelly. Honestly, I don't remember exactly how the movie played that, but I remember finding it very watered down. The difference between this conflict and conflict over Gollum saying Sam ate the lembas is that the former makes sense and the latter doesn't. In the book, Frodo is separated from the Ring (which would make any Ringbearer antsy) and Sam not only has it but has suggested he should keep it for a while, which, of course, makes Frodo snap. With the Ring's influence so strong, it wouldn't make sense if he *didn't* snap. Bonus, it shows the more minor influence of the Ring on Sam too.
In the movie, the idea that Sam--I mean *Sam*--would eat the last of their food is absurd. Frodo is certainly influenced by the Ring but he's not so influenced that he would believe about the least believable lie about his best friend, coming from a sometime serious enemy. If he were that far gone, he'd just be an insane bundle of paranoid raving, and he's not. I find both those scenes really painful, the scene in the book because it rings so true (no pun) and the scene in the movie because it rings so false.
I love Peter Jackson's tension between Sam and Frodo until the sending away part, I know that gollum needs to separate them, but I I don't understand why Sam really seemed to be going home, I think it would've been more compelling if Sam went away just far enough and then steadfast as ever turned around and looked for an opportunity to save Frodo, even from a distance.
I’ve only just discovered your channel. This was around the fourth of your presentations I’ve watched. As a lover of Tolkien and the Lord of the Rings, both in book and movie form, I’m fascinated and impressed with your analyses and insights. You have made me think about some of the characters and dynamics in new ways. I’m happy to have discovered you. For what it’s worth, while acknowledging that Jackson did an incredible job of translating the tale to cinema (to my pleasure and relief) I totally favor the literary form and its greater scope and depth. I look forward to viewing many more of your clips. Hats off to you.
You did a nice job with this. Thanks for sharing it... I feel less alone thinking what I think. (despite disagreement in the other comments).
I like how you broke down the many differences between Frodo's character in the film and book. Many fans including myself viewed Frodo as cowardly in the film's and I always preferred his book character as he felt like a character who literally stood up till he couldn't anymore. His film version seemed less equipped to be the Ring bearer than his book self. They also leave out exactly how Frodo changed in a spiritual sense and how he was " broken down into something quite different." Like the scene where Frodo commanded Gollum to be gone with the power of the Ring.
"And before it stood stern untouchable now by pity a figure robed in white and at it's breast it held a Wheel of Fire. Out of the Fire there spoke a commanding voice, BEGONE AND TROUBLE ME NO MORE IF YOU TOUCH ME EVER AGAIN YOU WILL BE CAST YOURSELF INTO THE FIRE OF DOOM!" Or the scene in the emin muil when Sam sees frodo as "A tall stern Lord who hid his light in grey cloud". Also how Sauroman commented in the scouring of the shire on how he'd " grown".
Frodo wasn't just merely traumatized as he seemed to be in the film's. He saw the Rings true form as a Wheel of Fire. Felt it's true weight on his mind and soul. And understood it's evil in a way nobody on earth could've. That coupled with his wounds gave him knowledge, wisdom, and foresight into that which was beyond an ordinary Hobbit. But also broke him.
Curiously I think the Hobbit film's do the exact opposite with Bilbo that the LOTR film's did with Frodo and made him too much of an action hero.
I don't like the movie version, I think Elijah wood gave a bad performance that was way to melodramatic....the face he makes when he is stung by Shelob is a perfect example...this version of this face is pretty much all Elijah wood does for the Return of the King
Lovely to share the stories with you; I enjoy your insights to a book I first read 50 years ago and which I have re-read many times with greater understanding.
Really loved your analysis and how open-minded you are about the changes even if you didn't necessarily agree with them. A couple things regarding the movie criticism though:
1) It wasn't the lembas bread bait that got Frodo to finally snap and send Sam away. It was Sam suggesting to "share" the ring with him right after. The exact thing he was most paranoid about thanks to the Ring and Gollum whispering in both of his ears. I never liked this scene, to be frank, but it wasn't about the bread. The bread was just the catalyst in a sense. I consider it like a compositing of the book scene where Sam takes the ring after Shelob and Frodo snaps at him.
2) I have never seen anyone who considers him and Sam's relationship in the movies paternal, like you suggest. They're presented as friends around the same age and Sam directly tells Faramir he's Frodo's gardener. The class difference between Sam and the other 3 was definitely watered down a lot though.
3) Frodo doesn't tackle Gollum off the cliff. Not intentionally anyway. He wrestles him for the ring and they both accidentally slip. This isn't the same as the book and does add a bit more drama, but it still keeps the "evil will destroy itself" message quite clear in my opinion. It was the Ring's own corruption of both Frodo and Gollum that caused it's downfall. And from a cinematic viewpoint, the scene where he's hanging off the ledge is actually beautifully done because the ring doesn't fully fall into the lava until Frodo completely lets go of it to stay with Sam (the directing and Elijah Wood's acting choices make you think he might intentionally let go to go down with it like Gollum did).
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I can definitely understand why movie!Frodo might frustrate people, but for me, I find him inspiring in his own way. He's weak and he's carried by his friends, he can barely walk on his own towards the climax because the burden is so heavy, but he still keeps going anyway. He still fights back against Sauron's will mentally in whatever way he can. He still keeps his compassion and he still succeeds in surviving. He was ultimately just Some Guy being corrupted by the literal embodiment of evil and I think Jackson showcased that realistically. I do wish he was a little more proactive like in the books, but Peter Jackson had Elijah Wood's huge, blue puppy eyes and he used them to their full effect lol.
The other point of Gollum slipping into the fire is given at the beginning of the Silmarillion when Eru explains to Melkor that no one can thwart His plans and all of the actions against His plans are just incorporated into His plans. That is why Gandalf tells Frodo that him being meant to have the ring is an encouraging thought, and why Gandalf is certain Gollum has a part to play. When I read LOTR again after reading the Silmarillion, it all just fell into place.
Tolkien's message at mount doom was not diluted at all. It was just a bit different, you have to remember that Frodo finally fell for the ring, and Gollum dropped because both of them were fighting for the ring, meaning evil destroyed itself.
Gollum didn't destroy himself though, he went back on his word & he suffered the curse that Frodo swore he would. I loved Frodo in the book, he was always aware that Gollum couldn't be trusted & Frodo only took the ring for himself when it came to actually throwing it the volcano, same as Isildador
It's great that you can enjoy the books and the movies in different ways. As I got older and rereading the books, I started to understand the dynamic from Frodo's point of view. While before it was from Sam's.
I think you're spot on about Frodos and Sam's relationship not translating interestingly to a wide "non-fan" audience of movie-goers. Considering to most of the audience, the movies were their only exposure to Tolkiens work, and they probably would not have enjoyed the nuanced relationship as opposed to a more exciting take.
Enjoyed the video, first time viewer, keep up the quality content!
Welcome to the channel, and thanks so much for the comment! They had to adapt so many things for the films, I'm just glad they maintained the heart of so many parts of it.
I'm not certain the film Frodo was quite as weak as some think. He did, after all, volunteer to carry the Ring to Mordor. After Boromir's betrayal, Frodo also opted to go on alone rather than to risk another of the Fellowship being corrupted by the Ring, which shows considerable strength of character. Je knows going alone will significantly increase the danger, but does it to protect his friends.
I think much of his perceived weakness came from not really understanding exactly what would be required of him, both physically and mentally. Think about it: a scholarly, largely sedentary individual is tasked with taking the single most dangerous item on their world halfway across that world. The Ring, metaphorically (and perhaps literally) got increasingly heavy as Frodo got closer to Mordor.
I was suspicious of frodo volunteering to take the ring to Mordor. It could be looked at as Frodo trying to get the ring back. I was also suspect of Bilno when he volunteered for the task. They were both already in the ring's grasp maybe?
@@deanog2577 I doubt it. Frodo understands the importance and difficulty of the task at hand, but accepts it because someone has to do it and he doesn't want the burden to fall to anyone else's shoulders. He is willing to sacrifice whatever life and future he might've had in order to get this done. It's a very pure and noble act. It would've been morally wrong (and made Elrond unlikable) if Elrond had forced the burden upon Frodo and said "you HAVE to do it, whether you want to or not." The essence of Frodo is revealed by his choice to willingly bear the burden. The Ring is always a burden, but it doesn't start to seriously affect him until they are on the outskirts of Mordor (when he lashes out at Sam in the tower, that's when you know that his breakdown is starting). And Bilbo volunteered out of guilt for finding the Ring in the first place; he didn't know what it was prior to the Council, and felt terrible that he'd unknowingly left such a burden in Frodo's lap, so he wanted to redeem himself for his perceived sin.
This was really beautiful to watch. I should stop postponing reading the books, the book Frodo version and relationship with Sam sounds lovely! Like you explained it I also understand why they changed it a bit for the movie. Thanks again for the beautiful video!
Thank you so much for the kind words! And if you do get around to the books, I hope that that you find their relationship as enriching as I do :)
My favorite characters from the movies were Frodo and Gollum. Gandalf rightly teaches Frodo to not feel disgust, but pity for Gollum, consumed by ultimate evil. Gollum was Frodo’s and Bilbo’s future, 5 centuries ahead, and yet they fought back. Sure, Sam was loyal and heroic, but Frodo faced the greatest battle of all, the one someone faces within their heart against evil. He was the one to volunteer to bring the ring to Mordor. He was ultimately the only inconspicuous being who defeated Sauron. Even in Jackson’s movies, he’s as much of an hero as he is in the books.
Re: Gollum on the precipice in Orodruin: there's also the school of thought that Eru Ilúvatar gave Gollum a tiny nudge to facilitate his fall - which aligns with Tolkien's Catholic perspective that God can and will directly intervene in the direst of circumstances, even though His children might not realize or understand His actions (but that doesn't negate your point about evil being ultimately self-destructive in Tolkien's worldview!)... Also, your comment about Frodo (figuratively) falling over and over again reminded me that someone on RUclips did a supercut with a counter of every time Frodo (literally) fell in the films; I can't remember the total number, but it was high... It was very high 😄
I think I read something about that! It's a super interesting idea, and really speaks to the way that Tolkien weaves divine intervention with fate in his world. It's just another great example of the way that he integrated his personal worldview into mythic storytelling tropes. And I am going to have to look for that supercut, it sounds excellent!
I think the book intent to carry the notion 33 is the hobbit considered the age at which you reach adulthood, so that would be the equivalent of reaching 18 for a human by modern standard:
“At that time Frodo was still in his tweens, as the hobbits called the irresponsible twenties between childhood and coming of age at thirty-three.”
So I think it's fair to say that 50 is actually the equivalent of 30.
I haven't read the books, so some of these differences I'm hearing for the first time. It's pretty fascinating.
The falling out between Frodo and Sam in the movie was always something that jumped out at me as out-of-character, and now that I know it's not part of the book I like it even less. I understand the idea behind it, but it always came across as a plot device that didn't really need to be there. As far as the ending, I much prefer your explanation of the book event - the idea of evil destroying itself - but I also understand the mediums of storytelling are different and that something like that works much better in print than in film.
Thanks for doing these videos. They are really interesting.
I'm amazed by you clear enunciation in every video
Outside of the “which character is better” arguments, the nuances of which you articulate beautifully, I argue that the movie’s version holds an incredibly important message. Rather than being the classic protagonist, Jackson’s version has a crystal clear dichotomy: evil and industry are individualistic while goodness lies in community and love. Every member of the Fellowship supports each other, and that is why they succeed. The peoples of Middle Earth must come together to defeat the great evil. Frodo needs Sam (and even Gollum) to complete his task because that’s what goodness is: strength through love.
Beautiful!
In the old Ralph Bakshee cartoon Frode is shown to be braver, like when he is followed by the Nasguul to Rivendale. What a wasted moment to show that Frodo could stand up for him self, just to use it so that Arwen could have a sceen.
The cartoon was far more true to Tolkien than Peter Jackson's live action trilogy. Just a shame it didn't have the budget and studio backing to have been a trilogy, that would have been something to see.
Admission? I turned off the video of Fellowship when Arwen stole Frodo's moment at the Fords of Bruinen--I'd been so looking forward to "You shall have neither the Ring nor me!" that I determined at that point that clearly, the movies didn't get the character. I didn't bother with the rest until more than a decade later.
I would argue that we still get a message about evil destroying itself in the movie version. I always assumed that Frodo tackeled Gollum in an attempt to get the ring back and out of rage towards Gollum for taking it. Thus, the ring ends up failing into the lava because it got people to fight over it.
I always felt that the fallout with Sam and frodo was done to show how much the ring had corrupted him, it always made sense to me because just like bilbo getting suspicious and combative towards gandalf because of the ring, frodo wasn't in his right mind completely by that point
Bilbo went there and back again. Frodo went to and fro. Now Gandalf... he's been places.
Neat discussion topic - it is interesting seeing the variation in the Frodo we get in the books through to the movies. I think the BBC Radio Play adaptation is closer to the books in giving us that more forthright Frodo but I understand why they made the changes for the sake of a different medium. I think if helps Samwise shine though and that's a great thing.
Would love to see more contrasts between the book and movie characters :) There are some who get a little hard done by at times!
I'll have to check the radio play out, I am intrigued. And I am definitely already planning the next one in this series!
I really appreciate the effort and thought you put into your discussions, and feel that your analysis are always solid and sometimes insightful (not an insult, it's just that people have been discussing this stuff for 60+ years). But a few things you said didn't work at all for me.
The age of the actors - I've seen the movies multiple times and didn't know there was a ten year age gap. I've always assumed that for purposes of the movie they were about the same age. The "like a father figure" comment, based on a ten year age difference of the actors, came off as an extreme stretch for me. I've also read discussions of the age topic, and I've never seen anyone think that there was supposed to be an age/experience difference between the movie characters of Frodo and Sam. IMO, yours is a very personal take on this. I'm not saying your take is wrong, but for me, it's unconvincing.
The other issue is what Frodo's (book) age means. As another commenter mentioned, coming of age for a Hobbit is 33. It may be a cultural (rather than bio) function, but it also means that 19 is a good fit for where Frodo is supposed to start in terms of maturity. IIRC, Merry and Pippin were essentially teenagers in the book (in terms of maturity), and this was another thing that Jackson translated for the movie, though from what I've seen most people assume they're all about the same bio age.
Anyway, I might just be griping. I don't think these differences of opinion derail most of your points or matter that much, but they bothered me enough to say something. Thanks for the video!
Frodo at 33 was still a pretty youthful-looking hobbit. Hobbits frequently lived to a hundred or so and, bear in mind, that is *with* Middle-earth's lack of modern medical care, so it scales more to a human expectation of... dying at sixty or seventy. One of the things about this though is that Frodo continued to *look* like a youthful hobbit just out of his "tweens" until the end of the novel, due to the Ring's influence, so even in the book he still looked pretty much like a nineteen-year-old. That's probably why Elijah Wood was cast at nineteen to begin with: he very much looked the part. That youthfulness was always an aspect of how Frodo was portrayed in illustrations and the like, as well as in the Bakshi film. It's more the psychological aspect of his character that was changed by the timeline-contraction in the film, since in the book Frodo was characterized as being torn between loving the Shire and wanting to go on adventures, an aspect of his personality that was acknowledged and then not really used in the film.
Of course this also means that, even in the books, Frodo had a slightly more youthful appearance than Sam, Merry, and Pippin, despite them being his juniors by a number of years: almost two decades passed between the party and their departure, after all, so Frodo stopped aging... but the others didn't.
This is a pretty interesting aspect of the Ring's influence on its bearer that the movies kind of lose, even with Bilbo, who they cast an older actor to play than he actually needed based on the book.
13:20 - Adding Frodo tackling Gollum off the edge also helps compensate for something they *cut,* in fact. In the book, there's a scene not present in the film that very, very explicitly shows Frodo (or the Ring through him) pronouncing doom upon Gollum, that he would be cast into the fire if he tried to take the Ring again. That this curse was fulfilled while Gollum *held* the Ring is one of the great ironies of the tale, as the curse was strongly implied to have come from the Ring's own will and cruelty. Effectively, the Ring destroyed itself.
That point tends to be missed as people focus on Gollum "accidentally" tripping and falling. They didn't include that in the movie, but in a way, a Ring-crazed Frodo wrestling Gollum off the edge serves the same purpose: the Ring's own corruption led to its downfall.
My biggest problem with the casting is that Wood has this congenital puppy-face and a voice to match. Frodo, in Gandalf's description to Butterbur, is "a stout little fellow with red cheeks, taller than some and fairer than most, and he has a cleft in his chin; perky chap with a bright eye."
It would be really interesting to see what image Tolkien had in his head whenever he thought about Frodo and Sam.
I think the movie still upholds the theme because Frodo and Gollum fighting over the ringing being the thing that pushes the Ring over the edge is still showing how Evil is destroyed by the discord and violence it engenders.
In my imagination, Frodo looks like Sir Alec Guinness in “Bridge Over The River Kwai”. Hugo Weaving, however, looks EXACTLY like I picture Elrond. I was spooked when I first saw movie! I love Bernard Hill’s portrayal of Theoden. I just wish they had aged him appropriately. It makes his actions even more heroic.
I love your channel!
If Sam in the films reads to you as a father figure, I can only conclude that you saw different films than the ones I saw.
I would argue that the film's still captures that theme of the power of evil being self-destructive. Instead of golem dancing off the edge, the movie has the ring through its influence on frodo push golem off the edge of the cliff and into the lava
'The rest is left for you, Sam...'
also gollum’s accidental slipnfall in the book was important to highlight the ring’s power. it’s impossible to intentionally destroy the ring, the power becomes overwhelming to literally anyone who gets close. that’s why frodo couldn’t even after coming all that way. so an “accident” (which tolkien often uses to mean the will of illuvatar) is the only way the ring could have ever been destroyed. but i totally understand why that would be very hard to convey in 12 hours of movie so i like the movie version too.
Never thought that much how what might be seen as a minor change, changing the age of characters, can have an impact on the relationship of the characters in the story. I still feel the essence of the characters is kept, although in the books Frodo is more courageous and decisive, while in the movies he can be more afraid or faltering and indecisive, which I never linked it with the change of his younger age, but it makes sense! By the end of the journey the movie and book Frodo merge for me, as you can see the ring clearly being a burden that has gotten a hold of him and Sam has to rise to the occasion and push him to finish the task! Wonderful discussion and comparison!
I honestly prefer when adaptations choose to make changes like that. For better or worse, it allows us to see a different angle of the character, and opens up new explorations within the story. A "perfect" adaptation would be a photocopy of a book, its the imperfections and changes of an adaptation that truly make it work, in my opinion.
I think Peter Jackson definitely did find the character's legs towards the end, especially in Frodo and Sam's relationship. It's truly a beautiful thing to behold. Thanks so much for sharing your thoughts!
I think the scene that really encapsulates the differences between movie Frodo and Sam Frodo is when they first find and subdue Gollum. In the books its a very revealing scene as we see Frodo in all his wisdom and power and understand for the first time the way he has grown as a character. In the books he's sort of just a wishy washy Good Samaritan that can't stand Gollum's crying.
"I'm only 19 but my mind is older"
I literally got up, and unplucked my phone from charging, just to give this a like. Had to chuckle pretty hard😂❤❤❤
@Jody-yr9jl Thanks
"We don't get to see the full original nuance of the trilogy, but honestly that's kind of just what adaptation inherently is". Indeed.
A very thoughtful analysis of the stark differences between book Frodo and movie Frodo. Watching the movies made me cringe when I saw how they portrayed Frodo as week and helpless. And I really wish that Peter Jackson had filmed Frodo singing “The Cow Jumped Over the Moon” in Bree. It would have made a much better scene than what was filmed.
I never saw Sam as a father figure in the movie to Frodo. He always came across as younger, less educated and more innocent to me.
The jar of water was in your hands long enough for me to start imagining that it was your microphone. I was building a mini narrative of the WaterMic. It’s the little things in life
Perhaps it's my familiarity with the source material, but the "break up" between Frodo and Sam simply came across as unbelievable to me. Out of character for the canon, but also for the film characters and situation. Plus I liked the how in the book Sam was so close to Frodo in Shelob's Lair, but because he specifically wasn't fast or strong enough to immediately fight off Gollum, Frodo was poisoned. Emphasizing how Sam failed at helping Frodo at that crucial moment, when he was so nearby, is more of a gut punch than Sam deciding he doesn't want to walk home alone. Regardless, I appreciate your gracious analysis of what the film was attempting to convey.
Book Frodo was great. Not a fan of movie Frodo.
Book Frodo also would not have made it to the crack of doom without Sam. And he even said that much in the chapter, "The Stairs of Cirith Ungol." But on the flip side, neither would Sam have made it. They both needed each other to make it to the end.
I think book Frodo's insufficiencies were enough.
In the book, Frodo was originally a strong character, and in fact, a stronger character than Sam. And Frodo remained stronger up until the encounter with Shelob, when he was incapacitated when Shelob ambushed him from behind. That only changed when the ring weakened Frodo to a very severe extent. I prefer the Stronger Frodo, as it places a greater emphasis on Sam's growth as a character at the end.
he gets more interesting by The Two Towers in the books. it's nice when he's not about to faint. "Oh, Sam! I have the vapors again!"
I fully appreciate your insights on this topic
It is so fascinating getting these book versus movie perspectives from someone who grew up on the films before reading the books. I read and reread the books obsessively from around age 6 onward and the films didn't come out until I was in high school. So like, my first impression of the films was largely to be affronted by the Hollywood-ness of it all -- where is the subtlety and nuance? the realism? the relatively still moments to pause and reflect? why the hell is Legolas a blond now, and why did they age down the entire fellowship except Boromir and Sam?? -- and it took me a long time to appreciate the films for what they are.
Great video.
The book explanation of Gollem's fall is listed in Frodo's curse against Gollem: 'Begone, and trouble me no more! If you touch me ever again, you shall be cast yourself into the Fire of Doom."
A lot of LOTR fans think that Frodo actually uses the Ring's power in this curse, so Gollem's fall is actually directly caused by the Ring. So, same idea of evil destroying itself, but a bit more laid out.
I recently read the Lord of the Rings again. One thing that struck me very odd was the way, Frodo was always described as all so noble, kind and brave by others, mostly Sam. And although he shows bravery and kindness, he doesn't seem to live up to the image others have of him. Sometimes I thought that Tolkien wanted the readers to admire Frodo by force.
And while the movies take away much of his agency and bravery, they did something very valuable - they gave him weakness and made him therefore more relatable and because of the weakness his perseverence is much more impactfull.
Until I saw your video I never even considered the possibility that movie Sam could be a father figure despite the age difference. Even now I think of him as a devoted servant and loving friend, loyal till the end.
1:20 oh dear - this only gets worse with time
Best make peace with it 😂
The book ages of Frodo and Sam and the master servant dynamic explains why to Sam he's always "Mr. Frodo".
Jackson's Frodo has blue eyes, makes strange faces, has bitten nails, and squeals like a pig when he screams. And of course, that abominable rift with Sam.
Jess, excellent job verbalizing my feelings about the relationship between the books and the movies. The books are the best, but I appreciate the movies both as art AND how they attracted new audiences. You have wonderful insight for an infant child and give me hope for your generation! :-D!
Having not read the books and not ever planning too the movies are all I really knew of the latter part of the third age. It's quite striking hearing these differences as they sound quite major! But indeed, this is potentially the nature of adaptations.
I think I may have enjoyed movie-frodo more without having read the books, so you may be in luck, haha! Just curious though, what do you think of his character without book context?
@@Jess_of_the_Shire Interesting. As for what I thought from the movies, he wasn't a favourite character of mine. Apart from that I really couldn't tell you much about him. And maybe that's the point given that, as you say, the story is more about those around him. I do have a terrible memory though 😂
You should read the book! It is so much better.
I only discovered your channel last week, and after about 4 videos, I really enjoy your content! I am both an avid reader and a movie buff. In the case of both book and movie versions of Lord of the Rings, I consider them similar stories, but fairly different. One of the key differences, is the movies were made to interest as many people as possible, especially those that, while the may have heard of LotR, really didn't have the inclination to read it. And while it makes for a great written story for those with the desire to read it, it ultimately is very pat throughout. As you pointed out, conflict and tension in a movie are fascinating. If you keep an audience guessing, wondering what pitfalls the characters will find next, that's part of movie going. There are a few places that Jackson goes that are only hinted at in the books, like the fight between the Balrog and Gandalf, that were awesome deviations. And some things, like the warg attack, that were gratuitous, although kind of cool at the same time. There are many fans of books, not just LotR, that will usually be disappointed when any story that they loved is translated for the screen. I tend to try to keep them separate, especially in the case of an effort such as the LotR movies, because of what ended up on the screen being every bit as epic as the book is, even considering the deviations the directors and screenwriters may have made. Anyways, loved your getting to the nuts and bolts of both, and I'm looking forward to more!
Regarding Frodo and Sam’s relationship being believable, it’s important to understand that many of the people watching the films have been through the horrors of war and might not understand the bonds that are forged with brothers in battle. Tolkien had experienced this, and he lost best friend in battle. I would imagine that readers in his generation could relate to such a relationship more than today when close relationships among men aren’t as common or accepted.
Dwight’s (the office) password is Frodo
This was shown during the extended scenes of season 1 ep 4 “The Alliance”
The main thing this changed was that people tend to hate Pippin and Merry, specially Pippin, because they don't understand that comparatively, Pippin was supposed to be a teen and Merry supposed to be not of age yet (20) and Sam in his young twenties while Frodo is 30 something.
They see them as stupid instead of just as young as they are, because Frodo seems mature while looking like a teenager, and they seem childish while looking like grown men.