Balin's Mission to Moria Explained

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 30 апр 2023
  • In Deep Geek - Insight and intelligent discussion on Lord of the Rings, Game of Thrones, The Witcher and more.
    Join me every Thursday for Live discussion on my IDG live channel:
    For merch, audiobooks, and all things In Deep Geek, explore my website - www.indeepgeek.com
    Join me on Patreon - / indeepgeek
    Follow me on Twitter - @indeepgeek
    Follow me on Instagram - indeepgeekofficial
    Follow me on Facebook - / indeepgeek
    For more merch - shop.spreadshirt.com/indeepgeek
    Or ... shop.spreadshirt.co.uk/indeep...
    Lord of the Rings playlist - • Video
    My audiobook channel: The Well Told Tale - / thewelltoldtale
    This video was brought to you with support from my amazing Patreon community - special thanks to Stephanie Frederick, Joshua Clark, Maura Lee, Rabbi Rob Thomas, Brooke Geer Person, Josh Bielemeier, Jane, Vance, Amy Southerland, Callie Summers, June Coates, Ariel Winchester, Sonia Rangel, Edward Ryan, Stephanie B, Coleen, Ben Androvich, Nana L, Brennan Barnes, Ivanka Hainzl, Howland’s Little Sister, Charis Messalina de Valence, Donna Daley, Cade Norman, Murray D, Lily Mellon, NOscar, Rick Hoppe, Leathery Wings, James Pisano, Bridget Boyle, TheStarkInWinterfell, Ellemcee, Alannah Prestayn of Braavos, Raymond Joy, Jonathan Harrison, Jared, Petyr Pebble, Hilal Yildiz, Jason Mauleon Rosario, Milton Christopher Appling, Edward Ennett, Katy Smith, 26Artgirl, Karen Thomas, Rickon, Cathrine Furseth, James Fitzpatrick, Doug Hughes, lawnduck20, Perseffanie, Emily Mole, Lady Dane, The Late Escapist, Natalie Donald, J. Gregory Henderson, Andrew Warnock, whalawitsa, Luna Cascade, Dan MacKay, Lady of Summer, Johnny Targs, Milla, Ashton DeAngrlo, Kevin Warner, TomCritoph, Julie Bernard, Demps 2002, St Jamalamington, Bear, Carolina Kley, Susan Lonergan, Bo Riley, Brad Paquin, Lyle Hammac, Taryn Giles, Alex Butter, Pam Peterson, Bettina Charlotte Nielsen, T boz, Angela Marie Young, Sarah Awesomesauce, James Horner, Stephanie Erickson, KaliKo_Jack, SeaGreenMango, GeorgeRRTolkien, Antihero Association, Richard Woodard, Jenny Smith, Caiden Timmons, Britt, ThatVBGuy, Tyler Barnhart, Daiwai, John H. Austin, Jr, NikFromNJ, Ty Farnsworth, Beesman, Mario Murray, EJ, Willow Button, Julia Kendall, Jonny Ceriani, Mary Frances Angelini, Emma Sheiman, Matthew Foley, Candide, Joseph Jones, Christine Denny, Nicholas Willey, Julien Dubois, Leland, JackieO, Max Kingdom, Tricia Brady, Julian Messner, Lahiru Dinálankára, LiK, Simen Dalstein, Scott Maraldo, Shelley J, Wildling Chef, April Cote, Karen Wennerlind, Nathan Drumm, Lauren Peterson, Martin Sjöstrand, Mae, Matt (Man of War) Rubin, Kristen H, Jimmy and King of Imps.
    Affiliate Links - (buying books from our Bookshop.org shop supports this channel and local bookshops at no extra cost to you.)
    Books for fans of Lord of the Rings:
    uk.bookshop.org/lists/lord-of...
    Other books we love:
    uk.bookshop.org/shop/indeepgeek
    Thanks for watching! (All pictures are used under fair use copyright laws. If any credits are missing or incorrect, please PM me for a credit!)
  • РазвлеченияРазвлечения

Комментарии • 467

  • @legionarybooks13
    @legionarybooks13 Год назад +681

    Sad when one realises the skeleton holding the tome Gandalf finds is Ori. 😢

    • @retro.raider
      @retro.raider Год назад +32

      Nooooo really??? That’s so sad

    • @PboiStrider
      @PboiStrider 11 месяцев назад +9

      It can't be he was killed by the watcher in the water?

    • @legionarybooks13
      @legionarybooks13 11 месяцев назад +77

      @@PboiStrider That was Oin, the one in the film who was depicted as old and nearly deaf (though he wasn't in the books).

    • @PboiStrider
      @PboiStrider 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@legionarybooks13 ahhh or course thank you

    • @deadinthebed963
      @deadinthebed963 10 месяцев назад +11

      He was irritating in hobbit film but loyal

  • @davidlewis8814
    @davidlewis8814 Год назад +659

    That’s quite something, that the orcs dammed the one side and trapped the waters with the Watcher before attacking the other gate. It really shows them far more capable of cunning and strategy than I had thought.

    • @tileux
      @tileux Год назад +131

      Orcs are very well organised and equipped. Thats clear in the books. Tolkien wrote that they made many useful and clever things, but no beautiful things.

    • @TheEvertw
      @TheEvertw Год назад +84

      Orcs are not mindless. In the snippets we overhear through Pippin and Sam & Frodo, we see them being clever and resourceful.
      That is what I like about fiction from the past: all parties involved are competent: friends and foes. In modern fiction, stupid mistakes are used as plot devices. Not so in yesteryear. Things were much more cleverly written.

    • @tileux
      @tileux Год назад +41

      @@TheEvertw its more than that. In the Two Towers they actually shout up at the defenders of Helm’s Deep. I reread it a few weeks ago and i was surprised to rediscover how much Orcs speak in the books.

    • @WardenWolf
      @WardenWolf Год назад +16

      @@tileux Though in the book, the Battle of Helm's Deep wasn't nearly as hopeless as it was in the movie. They'd already basically won by the time Gandalf and party arrived.

    • @tileux
      @tileux Год назад +5

      @@WardenWolf yep, the battle kind of rages all the way from isengard if i recall correctly.

  • @minimalrho
    @minimalrho Год назад +584

    For whatever reason, I really liked Balin when I first read The Hobbit. It was really quite sad reading about his ultimate fate in FotR.

    • @EndOfSmallSanctuary97
      @EndOfSmallSanctuary97 Год назад +52

      Still, he died in a heroic and worthy cause, trying to reclaim his people's homeland despite being massively outnumbered, similar to Thorin in a way. His final adventure in Moria is one of the coolest and most interesting bits of lore of LOTR.

    • @velkonemriam1935
      @velkonemriam1935 Год назад +40

      Balin, Gandalf, and Bilbo together at the end of the Hobbit is still one of my favorite endearing book endings ☺️

    • @christiangraff5236
      @christiangraff5236 Год назад +5

      What is Fotr?

    • @tubehugger
      @tubehugger Год назад +14

      @@christiangraff5236 Fellowship Of The....

    • @paulsarnik8506
      @paulsarnik8506 Год назад +14

      I liked Balin the best because he was closest to Bilbo and the rest of the reasons the video stated!🤓😎🖖🏻

  • @magalengo
    @magalengo Год назад +137

    "The end comes soon. We hear drums, drums in the deep. They are coming." Those words often haunt me. When your ambition turns against you.

  • @istari0
    @istari0 Год назад +172

    Balin forgot what Dain had said to Thrain at the end of the Battle of Azanulbizar: "Beyond the shadow it waits for you still: Durin's Bane. The world must change and some other power than ours must come before Durin's Folk walk again in Moria." It was a fatal mistake.

    • @Wolfeson28
      @Wolfeson28 Год назад +34

      Very true. Although, going along with what Robert pointed out here, from the time of that quote to the point where Balin set out, the dwarves had good reason to feel like the world *had* changed for the better for them. They had reclaimed one homeland from a seemingly impossible foe, so why not another? Ultimately a mistake, of course, but a more understandable one.

    • @istari0
      @istari0 Год назад +14

      @@Wolfeson28 Still, the Dwarves knew Smaug was dead. They didn't know that about Durin's Bane. Khazad-dûm fell in T.A. 1981. The Battle of Azanulbizar was in 2799, almost 800 years later, when Dain saw Durin's Bane was still there. It was a little under 200 years later that Balin led the expedition to Moria. A terrible lapse in judgement by an otherwise very wise dwarf.

    • @Wolfeson28
      @Wolfeson28 Год назад +18

      @@istari0 I was thinking from the perspective of before the Quest of Erebor even got started. Smaug would have seemed almost as impossible of an obstacle as the Balrog initially, yet somehow in the end they managed to reclaim Erebor. If somehow luck and fate could deliver them one homeland from such an enemy...couldn't it happen again? It's an understandable, if ultimately tragic, thought process.

    • @siriusczech
      @siriusczech Год назад +9

      @@Wolfeson28 This. And also what it stated above - Sauron probably played his role in it. He had forces and intelligence to plan and he wanted to divide dwarves as much as possible for the upcoming "war of the ring" he had in plan. So when "rumors abour wealth being left there practically unguarded in Moria" started to spread around Erebor and Dale, it could have definitely be of Sauron´s doing. And Balin with many other dwarves listened and went for a try, leading to their demise as well as weakening Erebor before what was to come.
      Propaganda, misinformations, delusions and such are always a good tool to use in weakening enemies unity, resolve, strength and numbers, today in our world or in books. And Sauron was definitely making his schemes as well, as did Gandalf with his plan.

    • @unclenogbad1509
      @unclenogbad1509 Год назад +9

      @@Wolfeson28 Agree. After all, it was a fairly small band of dwarves that regained Ereborn (plus a wizard and hobbit, of course) so why couldn't a large party do the same in Moria? Plus, you can imagine Balin, with all the misfortunes of his people during his long lifetime, feeling compelled to make that one last try. And also, maybe, if he was going to die, that's where he wanted it to happen.
      I can imagine the dwarves who went with him having a similar motivation, aware of the dangers, but needing to try.

  • @Uncle_Fred
    @Uncle_Fred Год назад +220

    Balin's quest to reclaim Moria was noble and ambitious but ultimately short-sighted. With so few, it would have been absolutely vital to maintain safe passage from the eastern gate to friendly territories, along with at least one other secret exit. The Western gate was just too far away to be continuously watched and not designed to be defended. There's the endless stair, but it's not known if Balin discovered that or if there's any way to access it outside the Under-deeps. Balin was smart enough not to attempt that journey.
    Moreover, to protect the eastern gate, they'd need to pacify the surrounding hills and mountain areas, which they clearly didn't have the numbers to accomplish. The dwarves very unwisely entered a trap and allowed their enemies to creep in from the shadows and surround them.

    • @WardenWolf
      @WardenWolf Год назад +14

      There's also no real way down from the peak of the mountain aside from that stairway. Gandalf was taken down by an eagle.

    • @timnikolaev6707
      @timnikolaev6707 5 месяцев назад +3

      SHOOOOOORT?

    • @IskandarTheWack
      @IskandarTheWack 4 месяца назад +3

      I mean they took down 100's if not 1000's of orcs with their smallish group, not like 12 guys and a hope was going to take it from the dwarves with all their defensive positions and dwarf swoleness.

    • @landonletterman831
      @landonletterman831 4 месяца назад +11

      Think about it, though. After his small company did all that they did taking back the Misty Mountain, all that they survived, this had to have had a profound effect on what the dwarf thought he could do with just a small company (factoring in dwarven hubris)
      I like to think his last thought was, _"If only we'd brought a thief and a wizard!"_

  • @dragonlordskater5028
    @dragonlordskater5028 Год назад +118

    I never made the connection between Ori of the Hobbit and the bookskeep of Moria. The fact that Gabdalf knew him makes the scene so much more tragic.

    • @cchavezjr7
      @cchavezjr7 Год назад +8

      The only thing that still made me wonder is how could nobody know what happened. Once communication was lost, it's hard to believe nobody was sent to investigate or that nobody made it out to seek reinforcements, etc.

    • @kerim.peardon5551
      @kerim.peardon5551 Год назад +7

      And there he was, pulling the book away from his corpse.

    • @InhabitantOfOddworld
      @InhabitantOfOddworld 11 месяцев назад +8

      ​@@cchavezjr7
      Communication isn't much of a thing in Middle Earth - the Shire has a postal service, but that's the best they have.

    • @cchavezjr7
      @cchavezjr7 11 месяцев назад +4

      @@InhabitantOfOddworld Communication between a kingdom and it's colonies would most definitely be a thing. There should be messages and at times, supplies and production from the mines, etc.

    • @InhabitantOfOddworld
      @InhabitantOfOddworld 11 месяцев назад +14

      @cchavezjr7
      Yes, but not on expeditions. This has real life precedent. Look at the various lost expeditions throughout history. Look at Franklin's lost expedition. Look how even in 2023, with all our modern tech, it took days to find what happened to an imploding sub.
      You're missing the point, because it's not about communication between a kingdom and it's colonies. This isn't a case of sending a letter from Erebor to the blue mountains.
      This is a small group of dwarves undertaking a perilous mission to Moria - a ruin, not a colony - and not a single one making it out alive. *NONE* of them had the means of producing a letter, sending a raven, or whatever medieval means of communication exists in Middle Earth. That's assuming they even have that, considering Gandalf travels around everywhere for his messages instead of using any communication whatsoever, it can be safely assumed that there basically is no communication.
      You could maybe ask "should Erebor have sent a search party to look for them?", but as per real life examples, it takes years before people start to think something went wrong. It took 2 years before anyone realised the Franklin expedition wasn't coming home.
      Besides, every dwarf knew that Durin's Bane was there. Gandalf knew, prior to the Fellowship choosing that way. Even if the dwarves considered a search party, they'd know exactly what doomed them and the answer would be "fuck that".

  • @briantneary2248
    @briantneary2248 Год назад +607

    To me, this is the best LOR lore channel PERIOD

    • @YrnehLrak
      @YrnehLrak Год назад +47

      This, and nerd of the rings

    • @briantneary2248
      @briantneary2248 Год назад +8

      @@YrnehLrak absolutely

    • @MihanTheNoob
      @MihanTheNoob Год назад +4

      LOtR* xdd

    • @chasingmoonlightfarm
      @chasingmoonlightfarm Год назад +16

      I think him having a British accent makes it even better.

    • @briantneary2248
      @briantneary2248 Год назад +6

      @@chasingmoonlightfarm ALWAYS. Even every audiobook I listen to has to have an English narrator. Lol
      I'm American, btw. Haha

  • @augustineliyanda1465
    @augustineliyanda1465 Год назад +44

    Balin is a beloved Tolkien character, but perhaps the love we have for him as a character can cloud our judgment on what his true intentions were when he took up the quest to reclaim Moria. Balin's quest was fueled by the rumors of the riches left in Moria. The haste at which he was quick to declare victory and declare himself Lord of Moria even with Orcs still present in Moria is indicative of a very desperate man with a limited time frame. Balin was royalty, he had a slim legitimate claim to the throne and he must have thought of his quest as his last chance to prove his royalty. His death is somehow poetic because he visited the Mirrormere Lake that the first Durin gazed into and saw a crown of stars on his head that signified his right to rule and set up his kingdom there. Balin must have been weighed down by thoughts of his illegitimate rulership and visited the lake to seek any signs that can prove he is indeed a legitimate ruler of Moria. His death at the lake, however, was the outcome. A fitting end to a beloved character. I would like to believe when he gazed into the lake he saw the doom that awaited his quest and accepted his fate.

  • @kaoofdeath1659
    @kaoofdeath1659 Год назад +244

    The reason behind Balin's colony was actually bit more complicated. Sometime after return to Ereborn, rumors or whispers started to spread among dwarfs. Those rumors remind them about riches they left behind in Moria, and told that they would be strong enough to return. However, king Dane the second dismissed them, probably due fear of Durin's Bane. Balin however listened the whispers and started to prepare for expedition to Moria. While Dane refused to support or fund it, he let it happen. Source of rumors was unknown, which leaves room to speculation, that it was trap designed by Sauron to weaken the dwarfs of Ereborn and potentially even lead king Dane II himself to his demise.

    • @legionarybooks13
      @legionarybooks13 Год назад +45

      It's definitely feasible, given Sauron's greatest weapon is deception. That his emissaries also came to Erabor (possibly either the Nazgul or Mouth of Sauron, it's never confirmed) this adds credence to the theory. With both King Dane and King Brand of Dale killed by the Easterlings, and Erabor under siege, the dwarves were essentially eliminated from the War of the Ring.

    • @chriscooper654
      @chriscooper654 Год назад +36

      Exactly. Sauron knew the desire to retake Moria would lure at least some of Dain's folk away from Erebor, weakening the Dwarves in the upcoming war. Sowing division among his enemies was one of his oldest, best tactics.

    • @Marin3r101
      @Marin3r101 Год назад

      That is bs. People seem to have this fascination about dwarves being greedy.... IDG has already spoken on dwarves and their perceived "greed." Short of it is, they were not greed driven. They mined and dug deep. That is all. With that came corrupted dwarves who were greed driven.
      Balin has proven again and again, he did not suffer from that. But people love their fan-fiction.

    • @erikthomsen4768
      @erikthomsen4768 Год назад +9

      It would not be the first time he had pulled such a trick: Thorin's grandfather had suffered the same fate in Moria and Thorin's father would be ambushed in route to reclaim the Lonely Mountain by Sauron.
      By tempting Dain to campaign in Moria he might be able to decapitate the leadership of the Kingdom of Durin's Folk and by extension divide the lesser Dwarven kings.
      Perhaps even weakening the Ererbor Garrison enough to take the strategic fortress.

    • @harveywallbanger3123
      @harveywallbanger3123 Год назад +6

      That was literally the extent of all the power Sauron wielded over the dwarves: their rings of power only make them isolated and myopic, and only within the framework of their preexisting fixations. Sauron thus could distract and sideline the dwarves with insular selfishness, but he could never turn their hearts to his cause as he did so easily with men.

  • @kondrikov
    @kondrikov Год назад +133

    This story links two movies so well,really adds depths to it. Thank you for making this peace of lore so accessible and moving!Beautiful job

    • @Storm-Fury56
      @Storm-Fury56 Год назад

      F*ck the movies. They had very little to do with the books. Jackson stole and plagiarized Tolkien's work.

    • @Valsorayu
      @Valsorayu 11 месяцев назад +4

      *Books

  • @donweatherwax9318
    @donweatherwax9318 Год назад +54

    Notice that when Roäc the Raven responds to Thorin's summons, the old bird only greets two Dwarves by name: Thorin... and Balin.

  • @TheDeadlyKnight
    @TheDeadlyKnight Год назад +81

    Biggest reason it was doomed: even if the dwarf pilgrims withstood the numerous prospecting goblins, & avoided the Watcher creature, Durin’s Bane still very much haunted the stronghold. They never encountered Him during their 5 years, but inevitably they would have

    • @rikk319
      @rikk319 Год назад +37

      It shows how huge a volume of space Moria took up, that the dwarves could live there and search through it for 5 years, and yet never come upon the balrog's haunts.

    • @evilsharkey8954
      @evilsharkey8954 Год назад +23

      And it wasn’t something that could be defeated with anything they had. It took another Maia with an enchanted Elven sword and help from the gods to defeat it.

    • @YounanPhoto
      @YounanPhoto 5 месяцев назад

      You know it’s also doomed because there’s a balrog in there 😂

    • @tph951
      @tph951 4 месяца назад +7

      ​@@YounanPhoto that's what Durins bane is 😂

    • @MatildaV1980
      @MatildaV1980 3 месяца назад +2

      @@tph951Thank you!🙏🏻 I’ve always felt too stupid to ask what Durin’s Bane was. I thought it was a curse or something. It was the Balrog!

  • @tom-vf1xv
    @tom-vf1xv Год назад +48

    the map of khazad dum is neat, hadn't seen that before

    • @telerumkins6605
      @telerumkins6605 Год назад +7

      its from lord of the rings online game, quested there many a time :)

    • @bryanrhodes369
      @bryanrhodes369 Год назад +4

      Lord of the Rings Online did a fantastic job with the Moria regions

  • @neildaly2635
    @neildaly2635 Год назад +28

    Balin also went to Moria hoping to find Thror’s ring of power, not knowing he gave it to Thrain before entering Khazadum. Closed mouthed were Durin’s folk.

  • @IDPhotoMan
    @IDPhotoMan Год назад +18

    The "Drums in the Deep" scene in the movie was arguably the most gripping scene in the whole Trilogy. I read the books many times before the movies came out, and that was the one part i was looking forward to, and i wasn't let down.

  • @Neenerella333
    @Neenerella333 Год назад +37

    I love that you showed the Rankin and Bass drawing of him. I own an illustrated book of that movie and it ignited my interest in Tolkien as a 10 year old.

    • @crusher0427
      @crusher0427 Год назад +2

      I have that same book. I think it weighs about 10 lbs.

    • @ringofasho7721
      @ringofasho7721 Год назад +4

      The Rankin Bass movies are underrated. "Where there's a whip there's a way" is still one of my favorite songs

  • @Kessira26A
    @Kessira26A Год назад +12

    The maps of Moria gave me such a flashback moment to playing LOTRO and wandering Moria and the experience of playing as one of those doomed dwarves. One of my favorite quests from the area.

    • @iyaoyas2969
      @iyaoyas2969 4 месяца назад +1

      Around 15 years ago, you would probably find me at the AH in the 21st Hall waiting for others in my Kin to log-in.

  • @williampoole1742
    @williampoole1742 Год назад +47

    Jackson should have done a limited run series on this exact thing right after finishing The Hobbit, this is an extremely compelling and relatable story.

    • @Altherot
      @Altherot 5 месяцев назад +3

      It could tie The Hobbit with Lotr closer together through the theme of Durin's Bane, Mordor orcs going in to help goblins of Moria, Balin searching for Thror's ring.. and while Lotr was a "high fantasy" and The Hobbit more of a traditional family adventure, this could be a fantasy horror, as they venture into deeps of Moria with goblins attacking from the darkness.

    • @mikesmovingimages
      @mikesmovingimages 4 месяца назад

      After f-ing up The Hobbit, we are all better off that Jackson stopped. Not everything needs to be turned into a movie.

    • @mvmlego1212
      @mvmlego1212 3 месяца назад

      I, too, have been killed by monsters in an attempt to reclaim my ancestral homeland.

    • @CreationBrosZone-km5be
      @CreationBrosZone-km5be 16 часов назад

      Don't give Amazon any ideas -- they'll have Oin as a black disabled lesbian dwarf wheeling herself towards the West Gate...and she'll beat the Watcher anyway --you go girl!!!

  • @jamesplunkett8912
    @jamesplunkett8912 3 месяца назад +2

    Knowing Balin from the film of the Hobbit and seeing his tomb in the Fellowship of the Ring has saddened me. Balin was a kind and loveable character in the book and films. It is hard to believe he is dead and gone in the one place he wanted to restore to all dwarves as a permanent home. His death is caused by being assassinated, taken out by an orc archer with one arrow 🏹. Truly tragic and a grim fate. 💔
    RIP Balin, Son of Fundin. Lord of Moria. Durin be with you.

  • @Batkoku
    @Batkoku Год назад +22

    Balin was my favorite of the Dwarves.

  • @williamoliveira-cz5dj
    @williamoliveira-cz5dj Год назад +11

    The lotro maps and images gives it a nice touch.
    The lake out of moria reflects the stars, don't remember if all the lakes do it in the game

    • @rikk319
      @rikk319 Год назад +1

      It was unique to Mirrormere.

  • @ChrisVillagomez
    @ChrisVillagomez Год назад +15

    When I was younger I didn't know that the company that Balin (who I didn't know who he truly was until I read the Hobbit in middle school) led also had Oin and Ori, Oin being killed by the Watcher and Ori dying in the Chamber of Mazarbûl with that book in his hands. It makes me sad to know that that super cool dwarf died to a poisoned goblin arrow deep within Moria, with his remaining friends trapped inside Moria already

  • @MasterTSayge
    @MasterTSayge 8 месяцев назад +7

    Ori is the reason why we have the most epic line from Gandalf.
    "THEY ARE COMING!" 😮

  • @mvmlego1212
    @mvmlego1212 3 месяца назад +3

    Thank you. When watching the movies I'd wondered why Balin was buried in an ornate tomb, since I assumed that he died in a last stand with the rest of the party.

  • @fjccommish
    @fjccommish Год назад +5

    Such a nice video without rotten background music. Terrific!

  • @mattwilkinson5858
    @mattwilkinson5858 18 дней назад +1

    Absolutely loved how they portrayed the mines of Moria in the movie. Easily my favourite area

  • @billmiller4972
    @billmiller4972 Год назад +24

    The dwarves are my favorite people in Tolkien's work.

  • @johnparish6566
    @johnparish6566 Год назад +7

    Thank you. I didn't know much of anything about Balin's time at Moria.

  • @klearmynd
    @klearmynd Год назад +8

    I love that you use LOTRO in your images :)

  • @justrusty
    @justrusty Год назад +20

    Maybe I've been under a misconception but I was always under the impression that no one actually knew that Durin's Bane was a Balrog (at least up until Gandalf battled it), though they knew it was something bad and powerful. Did Dain actually know it was a Balrog when he saw it, or did he just know it was something dangerous?

    • @EndOfSmallSanctuary97
      @EndOfSmallSanctuary97 Год назад +8

      You're right, I don't believe they knew it was a Balrog. I mean, not even Gandalf knew a Balrog lurked in Moria until he saw it, and it's hard to believe that it would be common knowledge among one of the Free Peoples that a Balrog existed there and yet Gandalf wouldn't know about it.

    • @istari0
      @istari0 Год назад +5

      A balrog hadn't been seen in Middle-Earth since the end of the 1st Age over 5000 years before Durin's Bane drove the Dwarves from Khazad-dûm. Only some of the remaining Elves in Middle-Earth would have seen one. Dain probably recognized the creature as matching the description from Dwarven records made after the fall of Khazad-dûm but he wouldn't have known what it truly was.

    • @rikk319
      @rikk319 Год назад +8

      @@istari0 Legolas knew what it was when he saw it, and he wasn't old enough to have lived in the 1st Age, so he must have been told about balrogs growing up. Interesting for a Moriquendi.

    • @harveywallbanger3123
      @harveywallbanger3123 Год назад +2

      One has to assume when you encounter a giant flaming boss monster in an ancient complex that it's supernaturally powerful.

  • @billyponsonby
    @billyponsonby Год назад +26

    My 10yr old daughter and I absolutely love Andy Serkis’ The Hobbit on Audible.

    • @legionarybooks13
      @legionarybooks13 Год назад +6

      He also narrated Lord of the Rings on Audible. It's equally spectacular. 😊

    • @bwrochat7564
      @bwrochat7564 Год назад +3

      @@legionarybooks13 absolutely. So true! Such a great voice actor (great physical/live actor too). He does such a great job of capturing and reanimating the voices of all of the actors and characters from the films, with his own additions and attributes. Given the additional character depth of the books, I prefer the emotional fluctuations he adds to Sam, Mary and Pippin in The Twin Towers and Return of the King

    • @EternamDoov
      @EternamDoov 2 месяца назад +1

      Serkis's *
      You only omit the s for plurals.

  • @loduke3905
    @loduke3905 Год назад +6

    Love this topic! Moria and the Balrog are one of my favorite topics

  • @isleiff
    @isleiff Год назад +4

    Ah, the images from Lord of the Rings Online bring back AWESOME memories 😊

  • @IDPhotoMan
    @IDPhotoMan Год назад +4

    “It is grim reading’, he said. ‘I fear their end was cruel. Listen! We cannot get out. We cannot get out. They have taken the Bridge and second hall.... Then there are four lines smeared so that I can only read went 5 days ago. The last lines run: the pool is up to the wall at Westgate. The Watcher in the Water took Óin. We cannot get out. The end comes, and then drums, drums in the deep. I wonder what that means. The last thing written is in a trailing scrawl of elf-letters: they are coming. There is nothing more.’ Gandalf paused and stood in silent thought.”

  • @laura-ann.0726
    @laura-ann.0726 10 месяцев назад +4

    There is a question that has bothered me for decades, since I first read LOTR in the 1970's: Balin and his companions re-took Khazad-dum in TA 2989, and for the next 5 years, messages were sent to Erebor, until Balin's death on November 10, TA 2994. The orcs, who vastly outnumbered the dwarves, then began an all-out assault, and within a few days, the colony was completely wiped out; there were no survivors to transmit news of the disaster back to Erebor. The next reference to Balin's attempt to re-take Moria, comes on October 25, TA 3018, at the Council of Elrond, when Gloin reports that Dain II has sent him to Elrond to try and get any news of Balin that Elrond might have. At least 23 years passed since the last messages from Balin reached Erebor, before Gloin sets out to make the journey to Imladris. Now here's the question: Why didn't Dain send someone to check up on Balin sooner? Like within 2 or 3 years after the messages stopped? I've never read anywhere, of an explanation for this seeming lack of concern on the part of Dain. Maybe this question is a plot element that JRRT never thought of, or didn't think important enough to write about. Or is there some answer to this question in his letters and notes that I've not read?

    • @bullgravy6906
      @bullgravy6906 День назад

      I always take it as time is quite a bit different for them. For us not hearing anything from a relative for 23 years is a literal lifetime; for them 23 years is like finally having a toddler. No clue what was in Balin’s writings but he could’ve said all is well and then things got quiet for a bit.

    • @CreationBrosZone-km5be
      @CreationBrosZone-km5be 16 часов назад

      Dain already suspected and did not want to risk anymore precious Dwarven lives...perhaps.

  • @MudPig6110
    @MudPig6110 Год назад +17

    It is comforting to think he had 5 years of peace as the Lord of Moria. The feeling of monumental victory on behalf of his kind and the re-establishment of their true homeland. If that’s not worth dying for then nothing is. Rest easy my Lord, the hammers can now be heard once more in the deep, the rock bows before the sons of Durin in the halls of Moria. You were right to re-claim your heritage and your kin have finished the great task. The Men of the West salute you.

  • @InternetzVideoz
    @InternetzVideoz Год назад +7

    I have always seen Balin's attempt for Moria as a reflection of the dwarf rings.
    The rings promoted pride and greed.
    This becomes rooted in their culture.
    So only naturally he feels the need to retake Moria.

  • @MST3Killa
    @MST3Killa 11 месяцев назад +2

    I've never heard a real answer, and the text doesn't have one except for Gimli stating that he is sure the sound is that of a hammer, but I've always thought the tapping sound in Fellowship might have been the spirit of Balin warning them.

  • @midimusicforever
    @midimusicforever Год назад +12

    Balin was the best of the 13 dwarves in the Hobbit!

  • @c.w.simpsonproductions1230
    @c.w.simpsonproductions1230 Год назад +31

    Balin’s expedition to Moria has a similar feel to Theon Greyjoy’s capture of Winterfell. Capturing their objective was one thing, but holding it was another matter entirely.

    • @evilsharkey8954
      @evilsharkey8954 Год назад +4

      Even with thousands of orcs, creatures literally created to inflict pain and suffering, he enjoyed a gentler fate than Theon.😬 Nobody would trust an orc, but an evil man can wear a good face.

  • @johnosborne1873
    @johnosborne1873 4 месяца назад +1

    This was SO cool - the additional context is awesome!

  • @Wyxill
    @Wyxill Год назад +2

    I appreciate the use of Lord of the Rings Online Moria map

  • @LaserRanger15
    @LaserRanger15 4 месяца назад

    The artwork in your vids is fantastic. Nice job closing the loop of this story.

  • @matthewchard4360
    @matthewchard4360 Год назад

    This might be the best video you have ever done. Brilliant. I love the character of Balin, and have always wanted a summary of what happened to him after the events of The Hobbit.

  • @nicolasrea2185
    @nicolasrea2185 Год назад +1

    Best video to ever exist in the history of the entire known and observable universe in existence and imagination. Praise Robert

  • @delurkor
    @delurkor Год назад +20

    While not Balin, a line I like from the Fellowship: at the Rivendale meeting, Bilbo says he will take the ring to Mordor, Boromir starts to laugh but stops when he sees the looks given by the others, "Only Gloin smiled, but his came from old memories."

    • @EndOfSmallSanctuary97
      @EndOfSmallSanctuary97 Год назад +8

      I like moments like that, showing the subtle connections back to The Hobbit.

    • @moodyowlproductions4287
      @moodyowlproductions4287 Год назад

      Errrrr...dude...it's frodo who says that...not Bilbo..unless is this from the books or the film?

    • @delurkor
      @delurkor Год назад +1

      @@moodyowlproductions4287 Yes, the books not Jackson's version. Bilbo was not at the council in the movie.

    • @mikesmovingimages
      @mikesmovingimages 4 месяца назад

      @@moodyowlproductions4287 The films are a perversion. The books are the real story.

  • @scottjackson1420
    @scottjackson1420 Год назад +3

    Of course, the strange thing was that the dwarves would have thought that they could reclaim Khazad-dum in the first place. As I recall it, after the final battle in the war with the orcs, Dain himself warned that Durin's Bane was still inside. And their own folk were in such small numbers that even a bunch of orcs with no special help were able to kill them all. Why wasn't Balin's expedition considered a suicide mission?

  • @PedroG78
    @PedroG78 Год назад

    I can't believe so many years after reading the books and many years after watching the films, I'm still learning new things and having new topics to think about. Thank you

  • @josephbingham1255
    @josephbingham1255 2 месяца назад

    Good research. Puts many of the pieces together.

  • @mortanos8938
    @mortanos8938 Год назад +5

    You are a gifted narrator, and your presentation is very professional. I thought at first that you are none other than Martin Freeman because your voices sound highly similar. Either way, it was very immersing listening to you. Good job.

  • @monsierlemaire8282
    @monsierlemaire8282 Месяц назад

    Always love your documentaries. :)

  • @warrenpowers108
    @warrenpowers108 Год назад +9

    I will never understand why they insisted on making Thorin and Kili just typical short handsome men. Even being a huge Tolkien nerd I had to constantly remind myself that they were supposed to be Dwarves lol

  • @GerardHammond
    @GerardHammond Год назад

    Oh thanks. That explains a lot of stuff I was confused about. Excellent!

  • @ssymck
    @ssymck Год назад +1

    Love your work!!

  • @virgnthermostat5928
    @virgnthermostat5928 Год назад +2

    Been waiting for this video for awhile.

  • @slabbyfatback2272
    @slabbyfatback2272 Год назад

    That was awesome!! Great job!

  • @seth1371
    @seth1371 Год назад

    Man I’m so glad to see your stuff again. For some reason RUclips wasn’t notifying me of your videos.

  • @ZzaphodD
    @ZzaphodD Год назад +2

    Yeah, the Balin expedition really need a bit of suspension of belief to make sense.

  • @etienneporras7252
    @etienneporras7252 Год назад +5

    Tolkein has said that there is a strong "jewishness" about the dwarves, them being both native and foreigner simultaneously in their own land. The Dwarf Language is heavily inspired by Hebrew.
    The undying hope that the dwarves feel and their incessant hope that they might reclaim their home certainly rings true of the Jewish Hope for a reclaimed Holy Land, and perhaps Tolkein's eventual decision to indeed return Khazad-Dûm to the Dwarves is itself a hope of the return of the Hebrews to their own true home.

    • @mvader7188
      @mvader7188 Год назад

      Wondering the wilderness. I can see it.

    • @joshsemo4214
      @joshsemo4214 Год назад +3

      Also.... Jews love their gold. 😂

    • @TalynDerre
      @TalynDerre Год назад +1

      Next year, in Khazad Dum.

    • @etienneporras7252
      @etienneporras7252 Год назад

      @@TalynDerre ❤️❤️❤️

    • @pegpelvispete
      @pegpelvispete Год назад +1

      Funny you should say that. The physical depictions of Balin and some of the other dwarves I find faintly discomforting

  • @davidpretorius
    @davidpretorius Год назад

    Loved this, thank you

  • @_BrunoSouza
    @_BrunoSouza Год назад

    Thank you Robert.

  • @mcdonaldsfreewifi7262
    @mcdonaldsfreewifi7262 Год назад

    I’ve been waiting on this!!!!

  • @billedefoudre
    @billedefoudre 5 месяцев назад +1

    This amazing video raises a new question for me : what or who was behind the orcs attack on balin ?
    Because they seemed to be insanely numerous and organised, for just a raiding party wandering around and trying to pay a visit to their moria depths' friends.
    Why so much orcs came invading back ?
    Also : why and how did the goblins and orcs from the depths of moria stood so still for such a long time, while balin was claiming it back, after the first skirmishes ?
    Did the Balrog just asked them to do a big big long nap until a Touque comes disturbing their collective sleep ?
    And last one : why did Gimli truly believed balin took back moria, if he just hadn't heard of him since decades ?
    Did balin sent back some emissaries, before the orcs came invading back, to spread the word his expedition was "successful" ?

  • @eKizify
    @eKizify Год назад +4

    Its weird that I cant see this video in your channels videos but only when I navigate here from subscriptions

  • @Out_of_My_Head
    @Out_of_My_Head Месяц назад

    Learning of Balin’s death saddened me greatly.

  • @chriscooper654
    @chriscooper654 Год назад +7

    A tragedy, but I agree: it laid the foundation of later triumph.

  • @tom-vf1xv
    @tom-vf1xv Год назад +3

    The fellowship of the ring picture with Boromir's eyes closed was kinda funny, but also symbolic i suppose.

  • @ErroTheCube
    @ErroTheCube Год назад +4

    My dude was just Balin'

  • @ApplePi3.
    @ApplePi3. 8 месяцев назад +2

    I quite like hearing about the orcs strategizing and being smart about their actions. Not attacking when the dwarves first entered, making the damn etc Not just mindless monsters.

    • @RuSosan
      @RuSosan 4 месяца назад

      Indeed, that's what people often underestimate about Orcs and even more so Goblins: _Their devious intellect for wicked works._
      Then again it is easy to see why.
      Before the Shadow of Mordor and Shadow of War-games there wasn't much to see from their perspective.
      Maybe something in LOTRO but I've never played it.
      In the books, movies, games etc. they're always the chasing and attacking "enemy force" and that easily colors people's view of them and their capabilities.
      They used ambushes and there were scant few instances of orcs/goblins talking or others talking about them but mostly they're encountered as the army of Sauron, brutishly executing the orders of their "betters" and smarters.

  • @Aaron-nm1ob
    @Aaron-nm1ob Год назад

    Thank you for this video

  • @robertalba4863
    @robertalba4863 Год назад

    This was a great video!

  • @DazednConfused0
    @DazednConfused0 4 месяца назад

    A nice bit of backstory that I imagine many of us only vaguely knew of. Thanks

  • @chuchulainn9275
    @chuchulainn9275 4 месяца назад +1

    "The world is grey, the Mountains old.
    The forge's fire is ashen cold.
    No harp is rung no hammer falls, the darkness dwells in Durin's Halls.
    The Shadow lies upon his tomb, in Moria, in Kazzad'Dum.
    But still the the sunken stars appear in dark and windless Mirrormere.
    There lies his crown in water deep, 'till Durin wakes again from sleep."

  • @Sarge80
    @Sarge80 5 месяцев назад +1

    You forgot one of the reasons why Balin went to Moria, Balin was still convinced that Thror's great ring was still somewhere at Moria, it is not untill later that Gandalf reveals to the dwarves at the council of Elrond that Thror had given it to his son Thrain who was captured by the enemy hence that ring was lost. But this was at the time of Balin's expedition not known too the dwarves.

  • @dogdog2635
    @dogdog2635 Год назад +8

    Damn Balin’s life story is really sad

  • @charlesminckler2978
    @charlesminckler2978 Год назад +1

    Having read both the Hobbit and Lotr, and done the quests in LOTRO in Moria, I never put the 2 together. I had thought the Dwarves that died had done so long ago, not so recently.

  • @maddoghoek4286
    @maddoghoek4286 Год назад +1

    lol i've always thought Balin and party was shockingly stupid. robert, you make many excellent points - all *was* going well for the dwarves. but like, where'd the balrog go? LOL did he just wander off? and the WitW? how'd that conversation with dain go? "yo son, i wanna go retake moria." / "ummmmmmmmmmm the balrog though? and the watcher in the water?" / "EH." / "alright have fun then." :)

  • @darkhighwayman1757
    @darkhighwayman1757 Год назад +1

    I love that ya used the LOTRO map

  • @johntiggleman4686
    @johntiggleman4686 5 месяцев назад

    Balin is one of my favorite characters.

  • @ilyakats54
    @ilyakats54 Год назад +3

    I love Balin in The Hobbit trilogy. The actor did a wonderful job.

    • @JenMaxon
      @JenMaxon 11 месяцев назад

      Yeah, Ken Stott is great

  • @splibmore
    @splibmore Год назад +1

    Balin's favorite song is Ballin' by Mustard and Roddy Richh!

  • @EpicTrev7
    @EpicTrev7 Год назад +1

    This would be a really cool one-off movie

  • @Cross-xm2fr
    @Cross-xm2fr Год назад +6

    Balin like hopefully balrog asleep 🤞🤞🤞

  • @snieves4
    @snieves4 Год назад

    I want that book!

  • @oscarstainton
    @oscarstainton Год назад +9

    Balin is one of my favourite Dwarves after Gimli, by his supportive manner and resilience throughout the Quest for Erebor. While inspired by Thorin's successful (if fatal) reclamation of Erebor, it is a true shame that the expedition to Moria ended in calamity. Simply put, a Balrog is a much less easily goaded or thwarted beast than a dragon.

    • @siriusczech
      @siriusczech Год назад

      I am not sure, but nowhere in records about Balin´s fall in Moria is even a record of a Balrog, they were simply overloaded with orcs (and probably mountain trolls). Balrog may have been playing from behind (it is a fckin deamon equal to Sauron and Gandalf in powers and nature, so surely has a capacity for such actions), but is imho not directly involved.
      What amasses Balrog in FotR is probably his sense of magic, he might feel a presence of another really strong magical user and/or holy being and he probably really doesn´t like it, so he follows his minions (orcs and goblin worships him) into battle. Probably for the sole reason of crushing anyone entering "his territory", as he is there for thousands of years and it is his home. He wants to stay there and defend it.
      Dwarfes haven´t possesed such threat during those 5 years of occupation, nor they ever wielded a magic capable of conquering him, so he probably doesn´t care and let it be resolved "by the way", though he might mind control some orc-followers to send message and guard mirrormere and be ready for ambushes.

    • @vksasdgaming9472
      @vksasdgaming9472 4 месяца назад +1

      Smaug was driven by greed and pride. It likes to be flattered and playing. Balrog was beast of rage and hatred. It thinks, it plans and it hates everything personally.

    • @bullgravy6906
      @bullgravy6906 День назад +1

      @@siriusczechpretty good take on that. He’s just chillin in the depths then suddenly there are 2 rings of power nearby, 1 being the One Ring but the other being Gandalf’s ring of the sacred fire. And if I’m not mistaken Aragorn’s ring also possessed some magical properties as well

  • @KlaxontheImpailr
    @KlaxontheImpailr 3 месяца назад

    I just thought of something, Bali's story reminds me of the Franklin expedition. In that while they failed, they paved the way for others to finish the job.

  • @chasingmoonlightfarm
    @chasingmoonlightfarm Год назад

    I love your work it's absolutely wonderful.
    Do you think you will ever do a character study on Mablung the elf?

  • @paulsarnik8506
    @paulsarnik8506 3 месяца назад

    Balin was my favorite 🤓😎✌🏻

  • @MrGforce52
    @MrGforce52 8 месяцев назад

    Great video with lots of detail. Balin put himself in a position to be trapped. Should secured the east gate inside and the area outside, not stray too far from it, and have larger forces of dwarves come to reinforce, support, build fortifications, and a secret escape route, perhaps a secret passage around the east gate to slip behind any orcs attacking them?

  • @rbloomquist69
    @rbloomquist69 11 месяцев назад

    Great episode. Yes, these people's livelihoods should not be encroached upon

  • @JohnBloggart
    @JohnBloggart Год назад +4

    I’d love to see a video on what happened to Bilbo’s fortune. They make such a big deal of it in Fellowship, but then it doesn’t really seem to get resolved.

    • @Mathemagical55
      @Mathemagical55 Год назад +6

      Bilbo abandoned his claim to a fourteenth share of the dwarves' profits when he purloined the Arkenstone for Bard to use as a bargaining chip. Although he was later reconciled with Thorin, he never got paid, which was pretty much what Smaug predicted. Gandalf did make Bilbo take a couple of chests of gold and silver from the Trolls' hoard on his way home. When Merry asked Frodo how much of it was left, Frodo replied "None at all. Bilbo gave it all away. He told me he did not feel it was really his, as it came from robbers."

    • @MrOgyny
      @MrOgyny Год назад +1

      He never had that big of a fortune. Just the mithril vest and sting. But those are quite the fortune.

    • @martinfunk4855
      @martinfunk4855 Год назад +1

      Wasnt the armor more worth than the whole shire?

    • @vksasdgaming9472
      @vksasdgaming9472 4 месяца назад

      ​@@martinfunk4855That was Gandalf's view, but for hobbits it was not much.

    • @martinfunk4855
      @martinfunk4855 4 месяца назад

      @@vksasdgaming9472 he makethe biggest Fortune of All. Friends and experience.

  • @eseholmes4592
    @eseholmes4592 Год назад

    good use of Lotro

  • @masamune2984
    @masamune2984 4 месяца назад

    Literally the only part of this video I didn’t like was being forced to watch both Jimmy Fallon and then “Pirates: Sea of Conflict” ads before it. That’s on RUclips. The video itself was amazing, as always 🙂

  • @Intreductor
    @Intreductor Год назад +3

    About the council in Rivendell; are most of the characters present random and nameless or were they important companions to the representatives? Did Tolkien write anything about them?

    • @rikk319
      @rikk319 Год назад +2

      Tolkien never explained just how many people were present at the Council of Elrond. Those who spoke were all named--aside from Elrond, Glorfindel, Erestor, and the members of the Fellowship, there was Gloin and some other dwarves from Erebor, and Galdor was a representative from the Grey Havens. Boromir seems to be the only human from Gondor, and there was no mention of humans from Breeland, Dale, Rohan, or the Beornings.

  • @TheLastAshbringer
    @TheLastAshbringer Год назад

    Very cool video

  • @wallabing
    @wallabing 4 месяца назад

    All the Dwarves were legendary badass, they fought til the end for home, and they were friendly and caring.

  • @39zack
    @39zack 5 месяцев назад

    For all the bad choices that was done in the Hobbit movies, Balin was great! Loved how he was portrayed.

  • @ColinoDeani
    @ColinoDeani 4 месяца назад

    such a sad story.. they were Both sweet dwaves... Balin' was such a good guy...

  • @Limubi1
    @Limubi1 Год назад +1

    Very good work, as ever. I recently reread Journey in the Dark aloud to a friend while listening to the applicable soundtrack of the film. We were pinging our tits off and it was great.