Lord of the Rings: Fellowship of the Ring | First Time Watching | Extended pt 1 of 2

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  • Опубліковано 13 гру 2024
  • Hey Everyone!
    Hey Everyone! We're back and ready to finally start our journey into The Lord of the Rings! I am so excited and have no idea what's in store. Alli know is that there is a ring!
    #thelordoftherings #lotr #reaction #firsttimewatching #firsttimereaction #extendededition #frodobaggins #frodo #bilbobaggins #gandalf
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 698

  • @NotANameist
    @NotANameist Рік тому +874

    Someone correct me if I’m wrong, but I think the reason the wraiths abandon the chase at the Brandywine is because the water is simply too deep to continue, and the reason they hesitate later is not because they’re afraid of water but because they know it’s the border of Rivendell and there is something dangerous about that for them.

    • @HarborKat
      @HarborKat Рік тому +55

      Close enough!

    • @goldenageofdinosaurs7192
      @goldenageofdinosaurs7192 Рік тому +38

      That pretty much covers it👍

    • @torbenkristiansen2742
      @torbenkristiansen2742 Рік тому +148

      From memory, it is said that Khamul, the only named Nazgul ( After the Witch King ), had a fear of water ( Unfinished Tales ). They rightfully should respect the realm of Ulmo though, as he is known to take a very protective stance against evil in the stories of Tolkien. This is not a correction. It is supplemental information.

    • @matthoward5429
      @matthoward5429 Рік тому +23

      They also know they are tracking four bumbling hobbits. There is perhaps on overconfidence to wait for them to be out in the wild. Also why they withdraw at weathertop.

    • @SixFour0391
      @SixFour0391 Рік тому +68

      So many UA-camrs come to the conclusion that the wraiths are afraid of water! That never entered my head when I watched these, 20 years ago!
      My natural thought was…the horse will break its legs by trying to land on that raft, or be slowed down by the water, depending on how deep it was…I mean, they’re using a damn raft!!! Lol

  • @Lethgar_Smith
    @Lethgar_Smith Рік тому +543

    Every couple of days there's another one.
    Cant get enough of watching people react to these movies.
    The extended versions are definitely worth it.

    • @horseshoe2blah201
      @horseshoe2blah201 Рік тому +45

      Me too! Peter Jackson has turned us into the old men that fall in love with a painting at the museum. They sit there and watch other people experience that painting for the first time allowing them to relive their own moment.

    • @torbenkristiansen2742
      @torbenkristiansen2742 Рік тому +11

      Well. It is good to see new people discovering the world. But it is not truly discovered before they find the books. In my most humble opinion.

    • @iamjuststef
      @iamjuststef  Рік тому +64

      It was quite a movie. I love these types of series so I’m excited to see the rest of Frodo and Sams journey with the ring!

    • @rmroch
      @rmroch Рік тому +12

      @@iamjuststef :) :) :) We're all glad to hear it! This movie came out 22 years ago, and won 4 Oscars. The second movie of the LOTR trilogy won "only" 2 Oscars, whilst the third, and final movie won 11 Oscars, more than any other movie in existence.

    • @SiriProject
      @SiriProject Рік тому +8

      I find very hard to believe that all these people in UA-cam have apparently never seen LOTR, Star Wars, Harry Potter, Jurassic Park, The Matrix and what have you before opening a UA-cam channel, but I feel ya.

  • @SharonLathanNovelist
    @SharonLathanNovelist Рік тому +58

    A no spoiler mini-explanation to help fully appreciate The Lord of the Rings.
    The author is JRR Tolkien, who was an Oxford professor, a linguist and historian. He literally spent his entire life creating the world of Middle-earth. His purpose was to write a mythology history for England, including a creation story inspired by his devout Catholic faith. The languages heard in the movie were created, completely, by Tolkien. Several dialects of Elvish, the dwarf language, and the Black Speech of Mordor.
    In Tolkien’s world, Eru Ilúvatar is the Creator. Aiding in fulfilling his purpose are the Valar (think archangels) and Maia (angels). Some (not all) of the Valar and Maia have significant roles through the ages. Also, a few Valar and Maia are evil. The events in LOTR take place in the Third Age, with the forging of the great rings and battle seen in the prologue occurring in the Second Age.
    Sauron, the Dark Lord, is a Maia. Gandalf and Saruman are also Maia, and they (along with three others) were sent by Eru Ilúvatar to Middle-earth to aid in the fight against Sauron. They are called the Istari, or Wizards. Their magical powers are limited but they are still very powerful, and the “old man” appearance was to appeal as wise men but does not directly translate to being aged as they are literally ageless beings. They were sent to guide, instruct, and impart wisdom, not to be warriors or solve problems. Incidentally, the Balrog is also a Maia (one of the evil ones), hence why Gandalf had to confront it.
    Elves are immortal. They can be killed in battle, but their souls return to Valinor (the Undying Lands), the dwelling place of the Valar, and are given a new body. Valinor is separated from Middle-earth, reachable only by ships built by the elves at the Grey Havens. You will often see some calling it "heaven" as a simplistic way to describe it, but this is wrong. Valinor is called the Undying Lands because immortal flesh-and-blood elves dwell there in harmony with the Valar, who are spirit beings with a bodily form. Valinor is not an after-death spirit realm like heaven. Aside from a handful of notable exceptions, elves are the only race to ever set foot on Valinor.
    There have been only two other elf and human unions, so Arwen and Aragorn are very unique. In all cases, the elf maiden had to choose mortality to be with the human man she loved. This is a BIG deal, just keep that in mind. Lord Elrond of Rivendell is the child of one such union. He was also faced with a choice, deciding to be an elf. His twin brother, Elros, chose to be human, becoming the King of Númenor. Directly from his line came Elendil and Isildur, and then much later Aragorn.
    Side note: The vial of starlight that Galadriel gave to Frodo is captured light from the star of Earendil (very long story told in The Silmarillion) who was a half-elf and the father of Elrond and Elros.
    Galadriel is by far the most powerful elf in Middle-earth, and she is wholly good and wise. She was born in Valinor in a time before the sun and moon were created, so is easily 9 thousand years old, probably much more. She is the keeper of Nenya, one of the three elven rings. It doesn’t come into the movies, but the other two rings are kept by Elrond and Gandalf, who was given his by Cirdan, Lord of the Grey Havens. The daughter of Lady Galadriel and Lord Celeborn married Elrond, so Arwen is her granddaughter.
    Legolas is an Elven prince, the son of an Elven king from another realm which does not play into this story but does in The Hobbit. He has known Gandalf and Aragorn for a very long time. Elves and Dwarves have thousands of years of bad blood between the races, hence Gimli and Legolas not liking each other in the beginning.
    I’ll end with the Hobbits. They live normally as long as humans, so Bilbo (who comes from a line of long-lived Hobbits) is old by Hobbit standards but not beyond possibility. What makes him different is that he has barely aged. Samwise Gamgee is Frodo and Bilbo’s gardener, so technically he works for the wealthy, upperclass Bagginses, hence the occasional “Mr. Frodo.” There is a slight class structure, as was common in England during Tolkien’s life. Merry (Meriadoc Brandybuck) and Pippin (Peregrin Took) are distantly related to Frodo, and are much younger. Pippin is barely out of his “tweens” which is why he tends to be the most foolish. Give him time!
    Great reaction! You will LOVE this wonderful ride. The next two movies get better and better. And speaking as a Tolkien fan for close to 50 years, what Peter Jackson et al did with these 3 movies is a true masterpiece in every conceivable way. While there was much left out due to time (believe it or not), and obviously changes in pacing and so on must be made when adapting to cinema, the movie barely strays from the novel by Tolkien.

    • @nemesis4852
      @nemesis4852 Рік тому +7

      Great job Sharon!

    • @dinodasbunce6224
      @dinodasbunce6224 Рік тому +9

      I too am a long time fan of Tolkien. I first read the "Hobbit" and "The Lord of the Rings" in 1968 and have read them 25 to 30 times since then. I imagine that like me, you waited impatiently for someone to turn these great works of fantasy into movies. How disappointing were those early attempts by Ralph Bakshi and Rankin/Bass. Thank you Peter Jackson for doing justice to these great books.

    • @r.e.tucker3223
      @r.e.tucker3223 10 днів тому

      Well done!

  • @newton617
    @newton617 Рік тому +310

    The sword being sharp was impressive because that battle happened over 3000 years before that point, so it goes to show the phenomenal craftsmanship

    • @baddodo72
      @baddodo72 Рік тому +26

      Valid point, but the real reason Boromir said it is because it´s a Sean Bean thing to say this line in his movies. He was the lead character in a film series called "Sharpe", the adventures of a soldier in the napoleonic war. Very worth watching if i may add.

    • @newton617
      @newton617 Рік тому +14

      @@baddodo72 oh that’s an interesting take, deep cut Easter egg lol

    • @jonrolfson1686
      @jonrolfson1686 Рік тому +4

      @@baddodo72 Sean Bean always does outstanding work, even with an un-winking call-back (“Still sharp”) to his earlier role as 'Sharpe' and to his Wilkinson sword razor blade commercials.

    • @petarpopov629
      @petarpopov629 Рік тому +1

      Weapon made by high elf is the best blade you can get, so yes its stay sharp for a very very long time

    • @newton617
      @newton617 Рік тому +1

      @@petarpopov629 not true the best weapons and armor ever made were usually Dwarven Elves are a close second true. But yes they definitely last longer than typical human weapons.

  • @alexkats30
    @alexkats30 Рік тому +87

    OMG, a young newcomer to the amazing Tolkien world, what a treat! There's a lot going on for someone new, so here's a few things:
    1)The Ring does have a will of its own and affect things and people around it. It speaks to people close to it and corrupts them with visions of power and fame. Like Gandalf said, you may begin using it from a desire to do good, but it clouds your judgement and turns you obsessed and evil, serving its own purposes. The scene where Bilbo let it go was deliberately slow, showing Bilbo's immense struggle to let it go, then it falling very heavily on the ground, unlike a normal ring. Also, when Frodo fell inside the Inn, the ring followed an unnatural path in the air to fall onto his open finger, showing this was no accident.
    2)The Nazgul, the Ringwraiths are the Nine, Saruman spoke of, also the nine leaders of men who accepted nine rings of power from Sauron in the movie intro. They were corrupted and turned into this.
    3)The Elvish language they speak in the movie is one of the actual languages professor Tolkien invented (he was a prof. of linguistics) and he created a fantastic world around them, with people speaking them (the dark speech of Mordor etc). He kept imagining and writing down this world throughout his life.
    This series and especially the books defined my childhood as it has also defined the fantasy genre of books, games and movies all over the world. As you noticed, the characters of Gandalf, the Nazguls, the trolls, even the Ring etc all have direct crossover to later works like Harry Potter.
    I'm so glad to see you connecting with the movie, riding its emotional train along with the characters and everyone else before you. Even though the books are always better, i feel these movies are extremely well done and it is reflected by how popular and successful they have been, winning the most oscars in the history of awards. I can't wait for the next parts! Subscribed!

  • @leesweets4110
    @leesweets4110 Рік тому +3

    0:22 "I know nothing about this; never talked to anyone about any of this"
    1:33 "For some reason I thought the ring had power over people"
    Interesting how someone who has no clue whatsoever about any details because they knew literally nothing about it, could have any preconceptions at all.

  • @Jedicake
    @Jedicake Рік тому +238

    Arguably (inarguably in my opinion) the greatest trilogy ever made. Glad you're watching the extended editions and hope you enjoy em!

    • @snake0911
      @snake0911 Рік тому +38

      yeah, LOTR kicks Star Wars ass easily.

    • @JM-do6wc
      @JM-do6wc Рік тому +1

      Hopefully she will watch the extended versions from here on but she is watching the theatrical version

    • @SliderFury1
      @SliderFury1 Рік тому +10

      The more time passes, the more I'm convinced these are the best movies ever. Infinitely rewatchable (given enough time between sessions).
      There are movies with better things about them (incredible performances, outstanding scripts, etc.) but I don't know of another movie that combines all the best aspects of filmmaking together at such a high level for the complete package this trilogy provides.

    • @JM-do6wc
      @JM-do6wc Рік тому +2

      Sorry I'm wrong in my comment. It is the extended version after all. I realized my mistake when I re-watched it and saw when Gimli says never see the ring in the hands of an elf. In the theatrical version snot comes out of his nose when he says that hahaha

    • @iamjuststef
      @iamjuststef  Рік тому +20

      Incredible beginning, excited and a bit nervous to see what’s next for them 😭

  • @reasonforge9997
    @reasonforge9997 Рік тому +65

    6:45 Gandalf had known for years that Bilbo had a magic ring, but he did not suspect it might be the "One Ring" until he saw how hard it was for Bilbo to give it up. The sudden suspicion compelled him to ride down to Gondor (The Kingdom Isildur, who cut the ring of Sauron's hand, became King of) to look through their old records at their capital (Minas Tirith) to see if he could find a way to be sure.

    • @goosewithagibus
      @goosewithagibus Рік тому +1

      Is it years? I think it's rather unclear, because it almost seems like just a few weeks or months.

    • @reasonforge9997
      @reasonforge9997 Рік тому +9

      Bilbo got the ring when he was 50 and Gandalf discovered he had a magic ring shortly after. Being that Bilbo was having his 111th birthday, that makes it 60 years that Gandalf knew Bilbo had the ring (pretty much the whole time he had it). He just had no idea it was the One Ring yet.

    • @goosewithagibus
      @goosewithagibus Рік тому +1

      @@reasonforge9997 I meant when he suspects it and leaves for Gondor and comes back to Frodo to tell him. The movie seems to drastically decrease how long that took from the book.

    • @darphotos55
      @darphotos55 Рік тому +8

      @@reasonforge9997 Indeed. On top of that, it was nearly 17 years from the party until he threw the ring into the fire in Bag End to see if had the markings to determine for sure if it was the One Ring or not. During most of that time, he and Aragorn were searching for Gollum. Having given up that search to Aragorn, he went to Minas Tirith to do more research. That's when Aragorn finally found Gollum. Aragorn took him to the Legolas' father for safekeeping. Gandalf went there and "interrogated" Gollum before going to the Shire. That's how he knew about Gollum being captured and tortured by Sauron. The reason Legolas was at Rivendell for the council was to inform them that Gollum had escaped.

    • @reasonforge9997
      @reasonforge9997 Рік тому +3

      @@goosewithagibus Oh yeah, the timing in the movie and the book are very different. They left out lots of details in the movie to simplify the story to fit in a movie (I don't want to mention details as it might be spoilers for those who have not read the books yet).

  • @yougoattube
    @yougoattube Рік тому +105

    Great video! Thanks!
    You speculated on whether Frodo has some "power" to keep him safe from the ring.
    My answer is, yes, partially - the ring has less sway over Frodo than over most. But here's the thing: Frodo's secret power is that he's a good, ordinary guy. He doesn't want power, he doesn't want to rule the world, he wants to have good food and drink and hang out with his buds.
    Thanks again, looking forward to the next installment.

    • @iamjuststef
      @iamjuststef  Рік тому +32

      I think that’s what also pulls me in as well. The fact that Frodo is portrayed as ordinary. It makes it all that much more special when you watch everyone’s pull with the ring!!

    • @AdamNisbett
      @AdamNisbett Рік тому +10

      There’s also the fact that Hobbits in general are pretty small and weak in comparison to other races and so don’t tend to wield a lot of power over others. But yeah, Gollum was originally very similar to a hobbit and he turned to evil connivingness very quickly. Frodo’s natural contentedness and wish to lead a quiet life help him hold out longer than most anyone else. I think perhaps Sam might actually be better in that sense, but being even more innocent the taint of the ring’s influence would perhaps be ultimately more damaging to his psyche.

    • @niccologregorutti
      @niccologregorutti Рік тому +6

      You are right even though it's not much about Frodo's desire (which still matters), it's also worth noting that the more powerful you are,the more influential the ring is on you. Frodo,a Hobbit,at the beginning of his journey has little to none strength,so the ring can at best sharpen his senses and take him to the shadow world. Also the fact that he got the ring in a "peaceful" way surely helped him in his struggle to resist it

    • @fnglert
      @fnglert Рік тому +4

      @@iamjuststef The ring preys on ambition. Frodo's ambition is not for power, or fame, or influence, but to live a quiet, peaceful life.

    • @TheH8redd
      @TheH8redd Рік тому +1

      One of the power of the One Ring is that it prays on your emotions. It will amplify them. Smeagol took the ring by murdering his friend. The ring prayed on his guilt and on his act and used it against smeagol. Smeagol was affaraid and everyone rejected him after what he has done, so he went into hiding. Gollum thought that even the Sun was spying on him. That's why he hid deep in the misty mountains.

  • @newton617
    @newton617 Рік тому +176

    Something to keep in mind is that Gandalf is NOT a man or elf. He’s one of the Istari (Wizard) who are Maiar (spirits). So basically an angel within a mortal body.

    • @PhilBagels
      @PhilBagels Рік тому +23

      And the istari are not allowed to use their full power to defeat Sauron. They are sent to help and guide the people of Middle Earth against him. If they try to match power-for-power, they would just wind up becoming alternate dark lords themselves.

    • @newton617
      @newton617 Рік тому +14

      @@PhilBagels mmm yes and no. They were given “mortal forms” to contain and lessen their powers because the Valar believed it would intimidate and confuse the children of Illuvatar and their entire purpose was to guide them and counsel them against the forces of Sauron. The Valar had already tried matching force with force in the War of Wrath and won against both Morgoth AND Sauron, but that created its own issues which is why they chose a different approach.

    • @Pokeysaurus
      @Pokeysaurus Рік тому +4

      @@newton617 Another big factor is the relationship between the Valar and Free Will, and how much they felt that they could do for the Children before it became counter-productive.

    • @petarpopov629
      @petarpopov629 Рік тому +3

      Gandalf the white cannot use full power in middle-earth, its forbidden

    • @CrankyGrandma
      @CrankyGrandma Рік тому +3

      Good explanations! Many view Gandalf likes dungeons and dragons wizard. But his Maia powers are not magic as we would think of it. There is more to it but that’s enough for this story.

  • @Wirmish
    @Wirmish Рік тому +30

    Written in stages between 1937 and 1949, The Lord of the Rings is one of the best-selling books ever written, with over 150 million copies sold.
    The first book in the Harry Potter series was written in 1997.

  • @blackdragon227
    @blackdragon227 Рік тому +86

    I love how much pain Gandalf shows when Frodo first calls out that he will take the ring.

  • @08Derrock
    @08Derrock Рік тому +8

    *** Dumbledore is like Gandalf. *** the Dementors are like the Nine. Gotta remember what came first ;)

  • @TheDerpp
    @TheDerpp Рік тому +35

    ive never seen someone look so perpetually confused while watching a movie lmao

    • @NanaOwusu-Achaw
      @NanaOwusu-Achaw 5 місяців тому +6

      Right?her head would explode watching the matrix,smh never found this movie confusing at all

    • @maximilianohernandez5878
      @maximilianohernandez5878 5 днів тому

      If you focus more on the movie and less on Trying: predict, foreshadow, augur, predict, sponsor, prophesy and forecast!!!!!!!!
      I think you will enjoy it more. ♥

  • @geminicricket4975
    @geminicricket4975 Рік тому +68

    Regarding the importance of the ring. One of the things the film doesn't mention is that there were many more rings made than the ones they talked about. The rings mentioned here were the created at the pinnacle of their craft, but prior to this, many thousands of rings were made while the elves learned how to create them. Initially, Gandalf thought Bilbo's ring was a simpler more common magic ring. He had believed that "the One" had been ultimately washed out to sea after thousands of years.

    • @SapSapient
      @SapSapient Рік тому +12

      And the reason Gandalf believes the One Ring is irretrievably lost is because his fellow wizard, Saruman, told him as such. Saruman is the foremost expert on the workings of Sauron. When he says that the Ring was washed down into the sea after being lost by Isildur, everyone believed him. But Saruman was lying. He's long desired the ring for himself.

    • @RobinSteeden
      @RobinSteeden Рік тому +4

      I would think "thousands of rings" is out of the question, but there were indeed "many" lesser rings certainly, perhaps dozens, unlikely there would be hundreds. However many were crafted, many would have been taken by Sauron during the war with Eregion. And those rings may have been distributed to his followers - so many would have gone east or south to lands outside the usual map of Middle Eaeth. And of the remainder, many (most?) would have been taken out of Middle Earth by Elves who went west, others might have been destroyed, ended up in dragon hordes etc. so I expect that by the late third age it's not like you'd be tripping over magic rings or even finding them in treasure hordes regularly.
      I believe the description of the lesser rings given by Gandalf is "The lesser rings were forged by the elves as essays in the craft of ring-making." Sauron is in Eregion for 2-3 hundred years but it would take him time to earn the elves' trust. And once he did, I doubt he would have the patience or interest to help the Elves craft thousands. I would expect that he would have them make only as many as was needed to get them enough skill and experience to craft the 16 rings of power.

    • @Pokeysaurus
      @Pokeysaurus Рік тому

      @@RobinSteeden It even could have been one of the Dwarven Rings of Power. Of the ones that werent destroyed, it was assumed that Sauron had captured the remaining ones but no one knows for sure.

    • @geminicricket4975
      @geminicricket4975 Рік тому

      @@RobinSteeden It really depends on how many elves produced how many rings for how long, doesn't it? Even with the number of years you listed, 3 elves producing 1 ring a year for 3 hundred could approach that number, could they not? That said, I don't really know the numbers, so, yes, it was speculation on my part but... which creates more uncertainty? The less rings made, the greater likelihood that Bilbo's was "the One". Two cents.

    • @rollomaughfling380
      @rollomaughfling380 Рік тому

      Doesn't matter. It's a reaction to a film, not your geek obsessions.

  • @appk5721
    @appk5721 Рік тому +2

    24:22 "I will take it" & Grandalf's face
    That scene was a very emotional scene! ...I'm glad you put that scenes on this editing, because many react's channel don't.

  • @jessyca1804
    @jessyca1804 Рік тому +3

    The sword being still being sharp was a big deal because the battle was at least 3000 years before.

  • @kageshira
    @kageshira Рік тому +1

    My favorite part of these kind of reactions is how many people draw comparisons with Harry Potter, Game of Thrones, Star Wars, etc because it's true but those came later and paid homages to tolkien. lord of the rings is the precursor to modern fantasy and everybody purposely or inadvertedly draw inspiration from it. It's an amazing world based on Saxon, Skandinavian, Finnish and Norse mythology you'll find similarties to Sigurd, King Arthur, etc too. And the trilogy is easily the best adaptation ever to tolkien works, I don't think it will ever be topped or even matched, so far everything that came after failed.
    Hope you keep enjoying it.

  • @JonseyWales
    @JonseyWales Рік тому +21

    The Ring amplifies the powers and abilities that you already possess, especially the desire exert control over others (even if that desire was originally to use your power and abilities to create good). Given time, it will turn your good ambitions towards domination and darkness. This is why Gandalf with his great power, as he explains, dare not take the ring!
    'Hobbits' however, tend to be especially resistant to the corrupting influence of the ring because they generally have very little desire for much outside of an easy life of food, drink, good company and love of the simple things.They have very little desire to influence the Big events of the world for the Ring to work on.
    It will of course eventually corrupt them but it will take MUCH longer than, say, a man ("who above all else desires power over others")

    • @Kjf365
      @Kjf365 Рік тому +4

      And more than that, the less you want the ring, the less power it has over you. Later on, when Sam offers to carry the ring for Frodo, it would have corrupted him. Simply because he wanted to hold it for Frodo. He wouldn't be able to give it back.

    • @JonseyWales
      @JonseyWales Рік тому

      @@Kjf365 Yes you make a good point🤔

  • @BilboTav
    @BilboTav Рік тому +9

    About the heir - Isildur was ancient king 3000 years ago, who cut the Ring of Sauron's hand and later kept it and refused to destroy it. His sword Narsil was broken under Sauron stepping on it (the scene in the prolog). He founded two kingdoms in Middle-Earth - Arnor in the North (which is destroyed at the time of LOTR, only ruins left, like the watch tower where Frodo was stabbed) and Gondor at the South (where Boromir came from).
    Elves like Elrond who survived (they do not age) kept the pieces of Narsil safe for a long time until Isildur's heir at right time show up - that being Aragorn.
    There is much more too it, but those are just the basics without spoilers to future movies.

  • @tlk889
    @tlk889 Рік тому +45

    It's always delightful to watch people experience LotR for the first time, but your reaction is very entertaining and I really like how inquisitive you are about the story. This is not a simple plot by any means, and the names and places get really confusing at times 🙂 Hopefully you'll have your favorites by the end you'll never forget

    • @iamjuststef
      @iamjuststef  Рік тому +15

      Thank you!! Yes I try to indulge myself in the story, just gotta keep up a bit with all the names to fully understand everything so I will be rewatching this one before my second one 🥹 Part 2 is going up today!!

    • @Wirmish
      @Wirmish Рік тому +4

      @@iamjuststef A serious and conscientious woman. I tip my hat to you, lady. 🎩

    • @actionalex3611
      @actionalex3611 Рік тому +4

      @@iamjuststef One way to help yourself follow the story line is to write stuff down, like names of characters and areas. You could also have a map of middle earth close by. Great reaction, loving it.

    • @ozymandias1758
      @ozymandias1758 Рік тому +1

      Watching Stef fighting back tears and trying to keep it together made me recall how I felt watching this in the theater.. watching as Frodo's companions fell away, one after another, as the Fellowship broke. I had forgotten how utterly alone Frodo must have felt, carrying a terrible burden, and then Sam insisted on accompanying him, faithful to whatever bitter end awaited them. Stef's tears made me remember.. I haven't gotten that from other reactors. I salute your sensitivity, keep up the good work Stef!

    • @TomorrowWeLive
      @TomorrowWeLive Рік тому

      Yes it is a very simple plot, she's just dumb lmao

  • @Earendel84
    @Earendel84 Рік тому +26

    Possibly my favorite part in many of these reactions is in the "part 1" videos of the Fellowship, when the viewer says something like "I'm stressed!" I just can't help but think to myself "You are in for it! Just you wait!"

  • @modtec1209
    @modtec1209 Рік тому +2

    "They are like Dementors"
    Oh gee, what a coincidence xD
    The Lord of The Rings books, written between 1937 and '49 and published in '53 are one of the great works that kind of sparked the fantasy genre as we have it in film, print and (video-)games today. JKR was by no means the only one who took inspiration from Tolkien. You can trace back at least some sliver of inspiration in basically all modern fantasy stories to this his stuff.

  • @BobBlumenfeld
    @BobBlumenfeld Рік тому +11

    Gandalf already knew Bilbo had a magical ring, he just didn't suspect that it was the One Ring.

  • @torbenkristiansen2742
    @torbenkristiansen2742 Рік тому +9

    Interesting reaction. Tolkien is considered the father of modern fantasy. The Sword is still sharp, because it is not an ordinary sword. It was forged in the first age by a Dwarf ( Telchar of Nogrod ), so we are talking about cutting edge technology here.

  • @HalkerVeil
    @HalkerVeil Рік тому +1

    I wish more reactors would rewatch parts they didn't fully get like she does. Makes the whole thing far less frustrating.

  • @leesweets4110
    @leesweets4110 Рік тому +1

    Your bedroom lighting would make me go crazy after a while.

  • @emersonol28
    @emersonol28 Рік тому +1

    hi from brazil, there is something special about this trilogy, something magical, it's like it has its own soul, something heavenly, it makes me want to move forward, everything that frodo went through, without retreating and with faith is admiring.

  • @CChissel
    @CChissel Рік тому +5

    I like how dedicated she is to understanding the story in detail, it’s a rare thing and I appreciate it as I adore these movies and the books, the lore is all so very cool. But it can be a bit overwhelming for someone new to it watching it for the first time, but once you’ve grasped everything it’s just a fantastic story and world.

  • @Applecornflakes
    @Applecornflakes Рік тому +9

    I like how Stef doesn't laugh at "I don’t know half of you half as well as I should like; and I like less than half of you half as well as you deserve", but she DOES laugh at Gollum giving info on the Baggins' and the riders heading out to find him at full speed 🤣😂

  • @illomens2766
    @illomens2766 Рік тому +1

    17:55 In many mythologies across the world it's a common theme that supernatural evil cannot pass flowing sources of water

  • @Shibby75
    @Shibby75 Рік тому +30

    So excited to watch you take this journey, this is by far one of the best stories ever told! I watch the extended version of this trilogy at least once a year lmao

    • @iamjuststef
      @iamjuststef  Рік тому +8

      I’m excited!! Thank you!! It’s quite an adventure watching them, I’m a bit nervous but definitely in awe!!

  • @auxaus4613
    @auxaus4613 Рік тому +3

    Hobbits by nature have no real interest in outside affairs, great ambitions or a lust for power. Essentially their pure nature and complete innocence is why the ring is slower to exploit them emotionally.
    Gandalf recognises that Frodo is the safest candidate to transport the ring.

  • @SixFour0391
    @SixFour0391 Рік тому +6

    6:40 Nobody at this point knew which magical ring it was. All anyone (Hobbits or Wizard) knew was that it tuned you invisible.

  • @hewiex
    @hewiex Рік тому +11

    Gandalf doesn't look like Dumbledore, Dumbledore looks like Gandalf. Just sayin'
    And the Ringwraiths/nazgul doesn't look like dementors, dementors looks like them... hehee ;)

    • @iamjuststef
      @iamjuststef  Рік тому

      That’s very true haha, I watched a bit of HP growing up so it’s my direct connection!

    • @mikkolaine4883
      @mikkolaine4883 Рік тому

      @@iamjuststef This is not just a coincidence either. Guess twice where Dumbledore and dementors got their inspiration ;)

  • @oskarprotzer3000
    @oskarprotzer3000 Рік тому +2

    you gonna cry like a baby in this trilogy and I love it. Nothing better than seeing someone being emotional in the emotional parts. Best Trilogy ever!

  • @DamonNomad82
    @DamonNomad82 Рік тому +3

    As a lifelong fan of the books (which I was introduced to at age 6) and of the movies as long as they've been around (I was a freshman in college when the this movie was first released), I always enjoy seeing other people discover the story for the first time! It is quite a complicated plot, especially if one is only going off the movies, which are wonderfully made but still have to shorten the story immensely to get it down to movie length. I will try to explain some key parts of the story as simply as possible up to the point in the movie that this review covered, but it is likely to still be a "great wall of text".
    - Isildur was the ruler of two kingdoms of men after he defeated Sauron. Gondor in the south, which he gave to his brother's son to rule, and Arnor in the north. Isildur was traveling north to Arnor when the Ring betrayed him to his death, as seen in the movie. Isildur had a son already in the north, who was the ancestor of Aragorn, many centuries later. That is why Aragorn is called "Isildur's heir". The servants of Sauron gradually destroyed the Kingdom of Arnor over hundreds of years. The "Rangers" are the last descendants of the people who lived there. In Gondor, the line of kings died out, but the kingdom itself survived, ruled by the Stewards. Boromir is the oldest son of the current ruling Steward of Gondor, and doesn't like the idea of Gondor having a king again because it would displace his father as ruler.
    - The Ring was lost in the river, where it had fallen when Isildur died, for about 2,500 years. It was found by two hobbit-like fishermen, one of whom got possession of it and was corrupted, gradually turning into the creature known as Gollum.
    - Gollum had the ring for 500 years, before it abandoned him and was found by Bilbo. Bilbo had the ring for 60 years, during which time the Ring kept him from aging physically.
    - The movie doesn't really show it, but there was a long time (17 years to be exact) between Bilbo's birthday party and Frodo setting out for Rivendell. During that time, Frodo chronologically aged from 33 to 50, but stayed the same physical age because of the Ring.
    - The Ring gives power to the one who holds it based on how much innate power they have. Thus, it is much safer for a not-very-powerful being like Frodo to possess it than for a very powerful being like Gandalf to do so. It also has an easier time corrupting powerful beings.
    - The Ringwraiths (or "black riders") aren't afraid of water in general, but were balked by the Brandywine River (where the hobbits crossed on the ferry raft) because it was too deep for their horses, and were hesitant to cross the much shallower Ford of Bruinen (where Arwen confronted them) because they were worried (rightly, as it turned out) that she might have power over the river.
    - The Ring draws any servant of Sauron to some degree, but draws them much more strongly when someone puts it on, which is why the Riders reacted the way they did when the Ring landed on Frodo's finger.
    - When Frodo put the Ring on during the fight against the Riders on Weathertop, it put him on the same plane of existence as the Riders, which is why he could see them in their true forms. They could also see him (which they normally couldn't, hence the reason that they usually sniffed the air for his scent).
    - Aragorn and Arwen have been in love since they first met, over 60 years before the scene takes place. Aragorn was brought to Rivendell for safekeeping as a child, along with his mother, after his father was killed in a battle against some orcs. Arwen was away on a long visit to her grandmother, who lived far away, until Aragorn was 20. The first time he saw her, he mistook her for a mythical Elvish princess and called her by that princess's name, "Tinuviel".
    - The narrator of the opening scenes of the movie is Arwen's grandmother, Galadriel. She briefly appears as the golden-haired lady Elf who receives one of the three rings that were given to the Elves.

  • @averagejoe845
    @averagejoe845 Рік тому +5

    "The Ring wants to be found", that's why the Ringwraiths can sense where it is. I read the books several times before the movies were made (yes, I am that old), the books are wonderful and these adaptations to film are the best of any books I've read. Seeing a younger generation enjoy this story is very pleasing.

    • @outspokenguy3834
      @outspokenguy3834 Рік тому

      It is and PJ didn't follow the books like a slave, but the transformed the book into a from that could work in movie form. Sure he made some mistakes and added some idiotic scenes. But he also cared and didn't force the story to be something different. Like ROP.

  • @Makkaru112
    @Makkaru112 Рік тому +1

    The song heard when the elves were spotted in the forest by Frodo&Sam near the beginning of the movie: here is the song the Elves were singing & chanting a very beautiful Hymn along their journey:(English translation too)
    * Á Elbereth Gilthoniel
    “o Elbereth who lit the stars”
    * silivren penna míriel
    “from glittering crystal slanting falls with light like jewels”
    * Ò menel aglar elenath
    “from heaven on high the glory of the starry host”
    * na-chaered palan-díriel
    “to lands remote I have looked afar”
    ò galadhremmin ennorath
    “from tree-tangled middle-lands”
    * Fanuilos, le linnathon
    “and now to thee, Fanuilos, bright spirit clothed in ever-white, I will ... sing”
    * nef aear, sí nef aearon
    “here ... beyond the Sea, beyond the wide and sundering Sea”
    * Ã Elbereth Gilthoniel²
    “o Elbereth who lit the stars”
    * Ò menel palan-diriel
    “from heaven gazing far”
    * le nallon sí di’nguruthos
    “here overwhelmed in dread of Death I cry”
    * Á tiro nin, Fanuilos
    “o guard me, Elbereth”
    (Elbereth is one of the main Valar who are of the main group of entities known as the Ainur who sang the world into being and helped shaped it further from within after some entered into the young world. She is most loved & honoured by the elves for many reasons)
    It’s very important as regarding the elves history that spanned over 40,000+ years. Because even one of the three high kings within Valinor was 30,000 years old well before the third age. Galadriel is his granddaughter just do you know. Yeah. She’s very important throughout the entire histories. They are passing away with what’s left of their kin to the undying lands. Many thousands had their home in middle earth just like the high kings ancestors that woke to the stars. Their birth is shrouded in mist as is their entire existence itself. That in itself is a whole story. You’d love to react to the immersive and entertaining lore videos like moviejoob & OmarioRPG have done. It’s ever vast and rewarding to let touch your soul.❤❤❤❤

  • @1969mackychan
    @1969mackychan Рік тому +3

    Gandalf didn't know at first that this was the One Ring. He actually scolds Bilbo for his invisibility party trick, by telling him that "there are many magic rings in this world and none of them should be trifled with'.'

  • @Mantis_Toboggan_MD.
    @Mantis_Toboggan_MD. Рік тому

    8:24 - To answer some of your questions
    There are several magic rings and a few them had been lost over the years. So yes Gandalf knew about Bilbo's magic ring but he didn't know it was THE ring.
    He started having his suspicions about the ring when he saw that Bilbo hadn't aged at all and that Bilbo seemed to becoming obsessed with the ring just like Golum was.
    So Gandalf went off to research the ring and then when he discovered the truth, he also began making plans to get the ring out of the Shire.
    When Gandalf returns to the Shire, a full 17 years had passed by. The films don't really do a good job explaining all of this and they kind of assume the viewer has read the books and will just automatically know all of this.
    The reason Gandalf doesn't want to take the ring is, as he says, it would corrupt him and he is a powerful wizard. His power would increase hugely with the ring but it would be used for evil.
    The ring doesn't effect Frodo as much (although it will eventually corrupt anyone who has it for long enough) because Frodo isn't a powerful wizard or even a great warrior (like Boromir for example). So the only effect it has on Frodo (and Bilbo before) is it can make them go invisible. So of all the beings in middle earth, it would appear that Hobbits are the most immune to the ring's influence because Hobbits are such simple & wholesome creatures.

  • @jaysinjaymesbrown7819
    @jaysinjaymesbrown7819 Рік тому +6

    These are amongst the very best movies ever made. Trust that your questions will be answered in due time.

  • @DaimonAnimations
    @DaimonAnimations Рік тому +1

    10:54 The sword is 3 thousand years old. A regular sword realistically would have rusted to dust. Remember when Isildur cut Sauron's finger to the current time its been 3 thousands years since those events.

  • @Makkaru112
    @Makkaru112 Рік тому +3

    Firstly: All 16 rings were meant to go to the elves (300-500years world of infiltration & deception down the drain) but Mairon of the Maiar(primordial angelic beings in laments terms as they are sort of beyond angels) disguised as a high elf named Annatar when he came to the elves pretending to be an emissary from Valinor on behalf of the Valar so it makes sense how alluring the ring is and how strong it’s pull on people is. (A bit too instant in the movies though) Galadriel soon saw right through him and especially when after speaking with him regarding not remembering him when in Valinor long ago where she learned from all the Valar thanks to being dominantly Vanyar/Teleri side over her Ñoldorin side where she gleaned from that encounter that she did not study under Aulë the Vala with any elf named Annatar ! But later named Sauron by the elves meaning deceiver! After all of this, The three elven rings were made in secret without Saurons touch upon them thanks to Celebrimbor! Remember Gandalf before he became Gandalf was the same species of entity Sauron used to be!! Wow hey? The Rings, in this case, would have lost their powers eventually due to the lack of the One Ring and possibly because they were designed to defeat evil, and evil, in the form of Sauron, had been defeated. The Three Elven Rings served their purpose for a long time. Two out of three of them had several different bearers Unlike the other Rings, the main purpose of the Three is to "heal and preserve", as when Galadriel used Nenya to preserve her realm of Lothlórien over long periods. The Elves made the Three Rings to try to halt the passage of time, or as Tolkien had Elrond say, "to preserve all things unstained". I can expand upon this based on any further statements and questions you have for me as a reply to this comment ! ❤
    There is problem here with the Rings, the Three were supposed to be never touched by Sauron and that's why they were not corrupting…Sauron had not taken part in their making which made the Three more 'pure' unsullied by his dark power, unlike the Nine and Seven Rings! But Sauron in the show touched the very material they were made of!!! So technically he could have tainted them and corrupted!
    Even appendices of Lot tell us the order of making the rings, so they didn't even need the righs to more detailed writings in UT or Silmarillion:
    1200
    Sauron endeavours to seduce the Eldar. Gil-galad refuses to treat with him; but the smiths of Eregion are won over. The Númenoreans begin to make permanent havens.
    c. 1500
    The Elven-smiths instructed by
    Sauron reach the height of their skill.
    They begin the forging of the Rings of Power.
    c. 1590
    The Three Rings are completed in Eregion.
    c. 1600
    Sauron forges the One Ring in
    Orodruin. He completes the Barad-dûr. Celebrimbor perceives the designs of Sauron.
    1693
    War of the Elves & Sauron begins.
    The Three Rings are hidden."
    'Did you not hear me, Gloin?' said Elrond. 'The Three were not made by Sauron, nor did he ever touch them.
    But of them it is not permitted to speak. So much only in this hour of doubt I may now say. They are not idle. But they were not made as weapons of war or conquest: that is not their power. Those who made them did not desire strength or domination or hoarded wealth, but understanding, making, and healing, to preserve all things unstained.
    These things the Elves of Middle-earth have in some measure gained, though with sorrow. But all that has been wrought by those who wield the Three will turn to their undoing, and their minds and hearts will become revealed to Sauron, if he regains the One."
    The One Ring’s power over people explained here:As for the rings given to these groups:They were all meant to go to the elves but Mairon of the Maiar disguised as a high elf named Annatar when he came to the elves pretending to be an emissary from Valinor on behalf of the Valar so it makes sense how alluring the ring is and how strong it’s pull on people is. (A bit too instant in the movies though) Galadriel soon saw right through him and especially when after speaking with him regarding not remembering him when in Valinor long ago where she learned from all the Valar thanks to being dominantly Vanyar/Teleri side over her Ñoldorin side where she gleaned from that encounter that she did not study under Aulë the Vala with any elf named Annatar ! But later named Sauron by the elves meaning deceiver! After all of this, The three elven rings were made in secret without Saurons touch upon them thanks to Celebrimbor! Remember Gandalf before he became Gandalf was the same species of entity Sauron used to be!! Wow hey? The Rings, in this case, would have lost their powers eventually due to the lack of the One Ring and possibly because they were designed to defeat evil, and evil, in the form of Sauron, had been defeated. The Three Elven Rings served their purpose for a long time. Two out of three of them had several different bearers Unlike the other Rings, the main purpose of the Three is to "heal and preserve", as when Galadriel used Nenya to preserve her realm of Lothlórien over long periods. The Elves made the Three Rings to try to halt the passage of time, or as Tolkien had Elrond say, "to preserve all things unstained". I can expand upon this based on any further statements and questions you have for me as a reply to this comment ! ❤ Aside from the three Elven Rings Made In Secret Without Saurons presence or touch upon them through Celebrimbor!

  • @Byrvurra
    @Byrvurra Рік тому +4

    It's notable that the sword is still sharp, because at this point it's literally thousands of years old. Metal swords don't typically last that long, let alone stay sharp. The point is, it's a good sword. It's fine if everything's not clear, the lore of Middle Earth is deep and there are some things that are barely touched on in the movies just because there isn't enough time. It's good that you are watching the extended versions. Nice reaction looking forward to the second part and the future films.

    • @iamjuststef
      @iamjuststef  Рік тому

      I appreciate it!! Thank you for answering and being kind about it. Excited to continue ♥️

  • @juanserna6322
    @juanserna6322 Рік тому +1

    Fun fact. Jk rowling "borrowed" an extremely unsettling amount of ideas and concepts from lord of the rings.

  • @a5cent
    @a5cent Рік тому

    Q:
    "So hobbits have an inherit power to resist the ring?"
    A:
    It's actually about what hobbits "don't have". Hobbits do not seek power or wealth in the way humans, elves or dwarves do. In hobbit society, cooks and gardeners are highly esteemed, not warriors or nobility. That gives the ring less to work with, but nobody is immune forever. Given enough time and hobbits are also corrupted, but even then the results are different, as exemplified by Gollumn, who was once a river hobbit.
    I read the books multiple times. The first time when I was 12 years old, almost 40 years ago. It's crazy that these films are now also 20 years old. Great to see people fall in love with it all over again.

  • @Makkaru112
    @Makkaru112 Рік тому +1

    The movies are masterpieces but they do Isildur some injustice. In the books, while he does succumb to the seduction of the ring later on; he spends his time being a fair ruler who practically gave some power away instead of being power hungry. He comes to realize that he is not powerful enough to truly bend the ring to his will. That it will eventually overcome him. Isildur resolves to give the ring to Elrond but is killed on the way to Rivendel. It's a tragic story of a man that tries to right his wrong but ultimately fails.
    In the books isildur literally repented and was about to bring the ring to Rivendell and apologize as he recognized it was beyond him even for a great numenorean connected to the faithful line of the mighty Elendil

  • @alejandroyava
    @alejandroyava Рік тому +1

    14:36 "Like Dementors"
    You are closer than you think! The books say that Nazgul wore capes because they are invisible spirits, they were always surrounded by an aura of fear, and their moans caused desperation and terror.
    I do not think Rowling would invent the concept of Dementors with so many attributes like this ones without a little inspiration.

  • @seregrian5675
    @seregrian5675 Рік тому +2

    Welcome to Middle-earth, young lady!
    You are about to get blasted by lore - no cause for alarm, that's what we Tolkien fans do. We want to answer all your questions and share the marvelous stories we love. You are in for one heck of a ride, and we'll be right here with you!

    • @iamjuststef
      @iamjuststef  Рік тому +1

      Thank you!! I appreciate you!! 🥹 I’m so excited

  • @morothane1
    @morothane1 Рік тому +12

    From the start you seem to find the deeper meaning in things, and I’m excited to watch you experience these films with you keen ability to see the fine print. If I could experience one thing for the first time again, it’d be these films.
    Thanks you for tackling the Extended Editions. There’s so much more information that helps someone first venturing to Middle Earth more fully grasp things in detail.
    May the Blessings of Elves, Men, and Free Folk go with you, cheers :)

    • @iamjuststef
      @iamjuststef  Рік тому +4

      I love this and appreciate it!! Thank you for being here ♥️

  • @martinacusetti8002
    @martinacusetti8002 Рік тому +4

    The nine Ringwraiths are the nine Kings of Men you see in the prologue. Accepting Rings of Power from Sauron is never a good idea... They don't like water, but in the Ford of Bruinen scene they are also attracted by the power of the One Ring.

    • @artbagley1406
      @artbagley1406 Рік тому

      The Ringwraiths are also reticent to enter the Elves' realm at the river.

  • @BobBlumenfeld
    @BobBlumenfeld Рік тому +2

    "I'm stressed out." Good! Too many reactors don't get into the story enough to feel for the characters. They think, instead, that they have to keep up a running commentary, often poking fun at what is a very serious movie. There are a bunch of Tolkien nerds like me who watch for LOTR reactions such as this one, and we're here hoping you get entranced by his story as interpreted by Peter Jackson.

  • @TheMinarus
    @TheMinarus Рік тому +2

    Discovering this amazing franchise is also how we get to discover amazing new people and in this case Reaction channels...So many people have reacted to this as an early rite of passage and it never get's old and those three movies are absolutely flawless from beginning to end and get better all the time- glad to embark on the journey with you!

  • @samking9971
    @samking9971 Рік тому

    Im so privileged that i got to watch these films in the cinema. I love the books! And love these films. Even now they are incredible. But back then they just took your breath away. Absolute masterpieces

  • @blakewalker84120
    @blakewalker84120 Рік тому

    20:45 "Why does it matter if the broken blade Narsil is still sharp?"
    It's been 3,000 years.
    Metal corrodes, loses its edge.
    After about 10 years, a normal blade would no longer be razor sharp.
    After a hundred, you would have a hard time chopping lettuce.
    After 3,000 years, it should be a fancy steel club with no edge at all.
    So, maybe somebody keeps it sharp like any soldier would sharpen his own sword from time to time.
    But, do that every few years for 3,000 years and you'll grind it down to a toothpick.
    This blade has obviously not been sharpened a thousand times.
    The only time it was ever sharpened was the day it was made and it has kept its edge for 3,000 years.
    That's a special blade.
    A magical blade.
    In a world where those exist but are very, very rare.
    Side note: We learn that Bilbo has a magical blade and so does Gandalf, so that makes three in this movie alone.
    That doesn't seem very rare.
    But this one is so priceless that, even broken, it's in a museum.
    Gandalf is an ageless wizard with lots of surprises.
    And Bilbo is the luckiest SOB in the entire world, without a doubt.
    Also, regarding Boromir's reaction:
    3,000 years ago, Gondor (a big country in this world) had a king, Isildur.
    This was Isildur's sword.
    It is said that whoever wields that blade is the true king of Gondor, but it's broken and worthless, sitting on a shelf in a museum, so that doesn't mean much.
    Isildur was the LAST king of Gondor.
    For 3,000 years Gondor has had no king, so there is a "steward" running the kingdom.
    For all intents and purposes, the steward has the full powers of being a king, but doesn't have the title. Still, he's the guy running the kingdom.
    Boromir's father, Denethor, is the current steward of Gondor and when he dies, Boromir will be the next steward.
    That's a ton of power to have, and it's all his.
    But this broken sword is a symbol that any day, the rightful king could appear and take over as king and Boromir would lose all that power.
    Boromir isn't a bad man.
    But like many men throughout real history, the chance to be king (or at least run a country with the full power of a king) is a very tempting thing.
    It turns out that Aragorn there IS the rightful king but Boromir doesn't know that during this scene - he does find out a few minutes later and he doesn't like it; Aragorn is the threat to Boromir's ultimate power.

  • @xtealz1993
    @xtealz1993 Місяць тому

    Props to you, you're the first one to quickly have a feel for how the nazgul and the shadow realm (almost like a second demension) work.

  • @christinerobinson9372
    @christinerobinson9372 Рік тому +19

    Gandolf suspected Bilbo had one of the rings, but he did not know which ring. Once Bilbo put it on and disappeared, Gandolf knew for sure that Bilbo did have one of the rings of power, and he suspected that it was the one ring.

    • @iamjuststef
      @iamjuststef  Рік тому +5

      Ahhh okay, thank you!! I kept questioning why Gandalf seemed skeptical about bilbo and that makes sense :) thank you again!

    • @Pokeysaurus
      @Pokeysaurus Рік тому +1

      @@iamjuststef In addition, the ring is initially *subtle* in how it manipulates people, so he's looking for any little thing that might be off.

  • @jean-paulaudette9246
    @jean-paulaudette9246 Рік тому +1

    Elendil was the leader of the men who came out of the Western ocean, and founded two realms (originally meant to be one, but Sauron's forces separated them). Arnor was the area in the northwest, and Gondor the south region. Each was controlled by one of Elendil's sons, Isildur and Anarion. Sadly, both Elendil and Anarion were slain in the battle of the Last Alliance, as we saw in the opening moments of the film.

  • @ruKUSS_.117
    @ruKUSS_.117 Рік тому +7

    I’m sure someone has said this but Frodo has no desire except to enjoy an adventure, not for power or any form of desire. He represents common folk, like normal people who go through life, day to day. Tolkien loves to emphasize that normal people can change the course of the world in a positive way by good actions, either lesser or greater, with either intentional or unintentional. What makes Frodo special is he takes this journey and responsibility regardless on what he feels about it, even when felt his need for adventure was satiated after his close encounter with death.

  • @jamesdemarco7161
    @jamesdemarco7161 Рік тому

    Great reaction!! To make it maybe a little easier, I would say two things;
    1) Aragon is the heir to the kingdom of Gondor, but he has turned away from his rite to the throne because he fears he shares the same weakness as his forefather. In place of a king, Gondor has a steward who runs things until a king is crowned. Boromir is the son of the steward. In order for Aragon to take the throne, Boromir's family must turn over its rule of the kingdom. Boromir's family has to lose its influence and power... that is why he said "Gondor has no king. Gondor needs no king". Boromir has a great deal of animosity for Aragon.
    2) In case you missed it, the Ring Wraiths or dark riders are the nine kings of men that were given rings at the beginning. They were taken under the spell of the rings they were given.

  • @M.H.I.A.F.T.
    @M.H.I.A.F.T. Рік тому +3

    'He looks like Dumbledore' 'They're like Dementors' - every reaction, someone says this and it makes me facepalm enough to leave a mark.

  • @lorcanabbot4614
    @lorcanabbot4614 Рік тому +4

    The broken sword, Narsil, was forged in the First Age by an incredible Dwarf mastersmith named Telchar. So it is at the very least 6000 years old, which is insane...

  • @newton617
    @newton617 Рік тому +1

    Before anyone says something snarky the lord of the rings is pretty much the grandfather of modern fiction so it’s completely natural for you to see parallels between it and other fiction like Harry Potter. Tolkien himself took from original lore and fairytales, Dumbledore was influenced by Gandalf who was influenced by Merlin.

    • @TheDanEdwards
      @TheDanEdwards Рік тому

      "lord of the rings is pretty much the grandfather of modern fiction " - hardly all fiction. The dungeon and dragons type of fantasy for sure depend upon LOTR, but the world of literature is much larger than that.

    • @newton617
      @newton617 Рік тому

      @@TheDanEdwards never said “all of fiction” I said of MODERN fiction which is completely true if you know what you’re talking about, making this reply both false and irrelevant. Go be a contrarian on someone else’s comment goofy.

    • @TheDanEdwards
      @TheDanEdwards Рік тому

      ​@@newton617 Dude, you're just being juvenile. And you still don't seem to know that the realm of fantastical fiction is much larger than the narrow field in which you've immersed yourself.

  • @lazerx1828
    @lazerx1828 Рік тому +2

    The guy who cut his hand is Boromir. Since there has been no king for thousands of years (remember the guy who got an arrow in the back in the beginning, he was the last king), Boromir's father is now the Steward, which is someone taking care of the kingdom in the place of the king. Aragorn is the true heir to the throne, but Boromir feels that his family doesn't need to be replaced by a mere "ranger".

    • @sourstuff
      @sourstuff Рік тому +1

      No, Isildur was definitely not the last king. His youngest son Valandil became king. There were many more kings of Arnor before the kingdom went to crap and the line became the Dunedain Rangers. And Gondor is of the line of Anárion, Isildur’s brother. They were brother kings. Though After the death of Elendil, Isildur was the high king of both realms. You’re right about Boromir’s thoughts tho 👍🏻

    • @lazerx1828
      @lazerx1828 Рік тому +1

      @@sourstuff apologies and thanks for clarifying, I was just trying to give her a quick understanding of why Boromir was bitter.

    • @sourstuff
      @sourstuff Рік тому +2

      @@lazerx1828 very true. I could of just said “nah there were many more kings after he died” but i went on a little lore tangent. Sorry lol

    • @lazerx1828
      @lazerx1828 Рік тому +3

      @@sourstuff Don't be sorry, I honestly appreciate the correction! I haven't read the books in many years and forgot many of the details, I'm glad I understand it better myself!

    • @torreyholmes7205
      @torreyholmes7205 Рік тому +2

      A good deal of complex history. There was a south kingdom (Gondor) and a north kingdom (Arnor, the senior of the two kingdoms). Over time, the north kingdom split into three realms and all were eventually destroyed by the Witch King (Nazgul). The king in the north no longer had a kingdom but wandered in the wild as Chief of the Rangers. Meanwhile the south kingdom carried on, but the line of kings there ended (a childless king was killed by the Witch King). So the north had a king with no kingdom and the south had a kingdom with no king. The obvious solution was not taken because of human pride. All of this took place over thousands of years.

  • @20ecupirate13
    @20ecupirate13 Рік тому

    Hobbits are a specific race of halflings. They are simple folk who live simple lives and do not desire excess. The temptations of the One Ring will take a toll on any living creature but Hobbits by their very nature are most resilient. I love this story so much :D

  • @vincentvancraig
    @vincentvancraig Рік тому

    These films are so wonderfully adapted & written that in the first 45 minutes, or whatever, every single reactor asks 50 billion questions a minute, but always gets an enlightening answer within 1 to 5, maybe 10 minutes at the most....its part of what piques pppl’s interest & draws them in, & hooks them, & engages them.....anyway, by somewhere during the first quarter of two towers ppl stop asking questions, & are knowledgeable enuf & trust the writing by that point, & then they are just along for the insane ride of it all.

  • @musicisakindofloving1081
    @musicisakindofloving1081 3 місяці тому

    Watching this trilogy is known to make you a better person. Priceless

  • @ChairThrowingTime
    @ChairThrowingTime 9 місяців тому +1

    20:47 It's only really talked about considering the blade is well over 1000 years old and still retained it's edge even after all that time had passed. Not many weapons can boast being so resilient

  • @cjwiesner
    @cjwiesner Рік тому +1

    Boromir is surprised the blade is still sharp as the sword is over 2000 years old at that point in time. It has not dulled, rusted, or otherwise been blemished

  • @msl1689
    @msl1689 Рік тому +1

    It was said in the intro that the existence of The Ring had faded from history to legend to myth. It had been so long that most didn't even know of it's existence.

  • @Makkaru112
    @Makkaru112 Рік тому +3

    A lot was missed without the extended including epic Gandalf moment at the council of Elrond as well as major character building for Boromir before a climax of that character’s arch and showing more of the worldbuilding from the books themselves. My bad. Looks like three extended with the Gandalf scene but I wanted to see your reaction to the passing of the elves lol

  • @johns1625
    @johns1625 Рік тому +2

    18:54 "Welcome to Rivendell.... Mr. Anderson." 😂😂

  • @DarkMajava
    @DarkMajava Рік тому +1

    This whole journey with you across the whole trilogy was best thing for a long time! The want to understand these movies and Tolkien is so refreshing to see! Thanks Stef ❤ I now have new hope for the youngings

  • @iwd8921
    @iwd8921 Рік тому

    Re-the confusion about verifying the Ring. Sauron did a test run basically and made a bunch of lesser Rings of Power before he made the 19 and the One Ring. So if Bilbo just had a random magic ring then that's a huge sigh of relief
    If that had been the One though? Then that was a very bad thing. It meant the ring was washed out into the ocean like Elrond and Co thought but that it was still around and that meant Sauron could reclaim it.
    Gandalf spent 60 years thinking Bilbo had one of those lesser rings. Hence his knowledge that it's a ring but doubt as to which one and subsequent panic.
    Amazing reaction by the way! Look forward to the rest of this journey.

  • @joaosoares-rr5mj
    @joaosoares-rr5mj 6 місяців тому

    thank you for watching the extended version, the only version that should ever be watched

  • @blakewalker84120
    @blakewalker84120 Рік тому +1

    Nope, Gandalf does not look like Dumbledore.
    Dumbledore looks like Gandalf.
    And not just looks like; both wizards serve the same role in their respective stories, the wise old mentor who knows everything and guides the hero without ever really telling him the things he knows.
    Tolkien wrote these books before JK Rowling was born.
    Her imagination of Dumbledore was influenced by Gandalf and a hundred other wizards in movies, books, and fantasy pop culture - and all those other wizards also looked like Gandalf too because those writers read these books.
    JK Rowling is just one of the most recent Gandalf impersonators.

  • @matthoward5429
    @matthoward5429 Рік тому +1

    You are correct in how the ring is an active agent! It has a will and acts of its own accord.... Indeed the ring should be seen as the chief villain in the series!

  • @twelvecatsinatrenchcoat
    @twelvecatsinatrenchcoat 3 місяці тому

    2:25 it's interesting that Andy Serkus saying "My Precious" is so iconic that it's always the one thing all the reactors know about before they see the movie.

  • @jjack-zm4sr
    @jjack-zm4sr Рік тому

    The Lord of the rings still to this day holds #1 for every single movie known to the movie industry. No movie have to pass the amount of awards for money that this movie has made,

  • @Makkaru112
    @Makkaru112 Рік тому +2

    Actually the dwarves are rather immune to the rings power as when they had the 7 of what was meant to be the 16 elven rings redistributed to them it had no effect on them. Especially due to the fact their forefathers were created by the hands of Aulë of the Valar. And they are not greedy! They are highly noble and strong. Their ancestors could take out dragons. You can go into detail in reactions like moviejoob did. She’s the only one aside from a few channels that’s making it popular and it’s working as hundreds more are falling in love with it all. ❤️❤️❤️❤️

    • @RobinSteeden
      @RobinSteeden Рік тому

      Dwarves had a lust for gold and jewels - not the greed of owning it, but the desire to have it to craft it into beautiful objects - they were after all created by Aule the smith, crafter of the Valar so they share his interests and some portion of his gift of crafting. But the rings of power are made to tempt the wearers, to give them in some way what they want while twisting their desires in order to weaken them and bring them under Sauron's power. The dwarves were not interested in power as such, so they were resistant in some ways to Sauron's plans, but they did have that weaknes that the rings could exploit.
      The "greed of the dwarves" is (at least for the 7 dwarf leaders who got them) possibly caused, or certainly increased by the influence of the rings. "Dragon sickness" as presented in the Hobbit trilogy is a Peter Jackson interpretation. Which is a pity as it obscures a more interesting explanation - that the greed of dwarven kings and the wealth the rings bring them only causes the eventual fall of most of the dwarven realms. Except for Moria whose downfall comes from a different cause, the Dwarven realms are mostly destroyed dragons who do have a "Dragon sickness" - their lust for gold and gems which causes them to seize the Dwarf hordes one by one.

  • @harleyhunt6073
    @harleyhunt6073 Рік тому

    Not sure if you read the comments, but the gist of it is that Sauron made rings for the 9 kings of men, 7 dwarves & for the 3 elven lords. The idea is when he created the one ring, and would wield it's power, it'd basically overtake & control the minds of the men, dwarves & elves who wear their rings. The 9 men got turned into the Nazgul, while you'll see the effect of one of the rings on an Elf soon enough. Essentially, it's a deceptive take over of power without fighting, as Sauron knew he couldn't defeat his enemies through warfare (which was correct as the battle that opens the movie shows!)

  • @Cheezeblade
    @Cheezeblade Рік тому +1

    Narsils blade still being sharp after 3 THOUSAND years is sort of wild. It literally cut off the hand of an extremely powerful source of evil and almost infinite darkness. Dark magic like that leaves traces.

  • @ScotsmanDougal
    @ScotsmanDougal 8 місяців тому

    I'm so envious, I wish I could go back and see this trilogy again for the first time. It's a shame there is so much in the movies which isn't explained at all. For example, when Gandalf leaves Frodo and says "keep it secret, keep it safe" he goes away to find out about the ring. The movie makes it seem as if he isn't away for all that long but in reality (the book), he's gone for 17 years. When Samwise is discovered "not dropping no eaves" he was there because Merry (or Pippin, I forget) already knew Frodo was going to leave The Shire and had told Samwise about the plan. It's also implied in the book that the Ring Wraiths didn't actually try to kill the 4 Hobbits but they gpot someone else to do it. There is so much missed, it's crazy.

  • @blakewalker84120
    @blakewalker84120 Рік тому

    At the Council of Elrond, where they are deciding what to do with the ring and who must do it, there's a few things to note:
    1. Remember that the ring manipulates the minds of people near it.
    2. It particularly likes people who love money, fame, or most of all, power. It uses these weaknesses to manipulate them.
    So during the Council, the ring i slooking into the minds there and trying to find the weakest minds to twist them for its own purpose: to be found.
    It's also twisting everybody's mind, at least a little, making them angry and argumentative - if it can create enough chaos, maybe it can get somebody to grab the ring, put it on, disappear, and then bring it back to Sauron.
    Frodo stopped it before that happened.
    I don't think he knew it was doing that; he's just a good guy, didn't like the fighting, and spoke up to volunteer a peaceful solution.
    He doesn't want the ring, he doesn't want money, fame, or power. Not even a tiny bit.
    That's how he resists the ring.
    Frodo volunteered to go on a deadly mission into the scariest place on the planet, surrounded by hundreds of thousands of enemies who want to kill him. He doesn't know how to get there or how to defend himself, and he has exactly zero skills that are useful on a dangerous journey like this.
    He did it anyway, because hobbits are the most amazing, selfless, fearless, creatures on the planet and he's one of the best of them, though he doesn't know it yet.
    And he's not alone.
    EVERY hobbit here in Rivendell volunteered to go with him except the one who is way, way too old to go.
    It's a truly amazing thing to do.
    The look of pain on Gandalf's face says it all: Frodo volunteered for an impossible mission that will surely kill him and Gandalf knows it.

  • @AdeptusRetardes40k
    @AdeptusRetardes40k Рік тому +1

    oh boy i know what im watching for the next few hours

  • @rmroch
    @rmroch Рік тому +1

    Those who claim that this is arguably the best trilogy of all times, are woefully mistaken. Even the "Academy" (AMPAS) awarded 17 Oscars (!!!) to The Lord of the Rings Movie Trilogy (they might have been "forced" to do so for various reasons) - MORE THAN ANY MOVIE SERIES (trilogy, or otherwise). The final movie of the LOTR trilogy won 11 oscars - obviously, no movie had ever gotten more. So, bottom line, The Lord of the Rings is INARGUABLY the best trilogy of all times, whilst its final part is likewise INARGUABLY the best movie of all times :) No question about it.

  • @goldenageofdinosaurs7192
    @goldenageofdinosaurs7192 Рік тому +2

    Boromir was just surprised the sword was still sharp because the sword is 3,000 years old.

  • @andrewbird7364
    @andrewbird7364 Рік тому +23

    the reason why Narsil (the sword) still being sharp is significant, is because just over 3,000 years have passed between the ring being cut from Saurons hand and that scene where Boromir picks it up.

    • @iamjuststef
      @iamjuststef  Рік тому +3

      Ohh okay, thank you!! Excited to rewatch again before the second movie

    • @andrewbird7364
      @andrewbird7364 Рік тому +2

      @@iamjuststef Don't need to rewatch anything, as perfect a job as Peter Jackson did translating Tolkien's works to film, the one thing that doesn't seem to translate is that thousands of years pass between the creation of the ring to Frodo's journey, so just keep in mind, Elrond, Galadriel, Gandalf, they're old as shit...also Aragorn is around 80...

    • @andrewbird7364
      @andrewbird7364 Рік тому

      @@iamjuststef but you should just enjoy the films, Tolkein was such a writer that anyone can love it, from a kid like I was reading it for the first time, to the nerd I became understanding the nuance of his storytelling...Envious of someone discovering it for the first time.

    • @AngelusBrady
      @AngelusBrady Рік тому +1

      @@andrewbird7364 Which is weird that the thousands of years don't translate to some viewers when Galadriel says so in the beginning that the Ring was lost for 2,500 years until Gollum picked it up. Then later in the movie Elrond says that "I was there 3000 years ago."

    • @andrewbird7364
      @andrewbird7364 Рік тому

      @@AngelusBrady Think it's because not many films tend to have opening scenes set thousands of years before the rest of the story, with characters like Elrond in both periods in time. Stef is one of the few who actually seem interested in understanding the nuance in lore to better enjoy the story..So props to her!

  • @toakreon
    @toakreon Рік тому +10

    Thank you for your reaction.
    I am someone who grew up with Lord of the Rings. I read the books while still young, and that story (and everyone in it) is so utterly familiar to me that I almost find it difficult to understand not being familiar.
    It's refreshing, from my point of view, to see the reaction of someone completely new to it.

    • @iamjuststef
      @iamjuststef  Рік тому +4

      It exciting and nerve wracking to begin them. I feel the need to rewatch the movie again before starting the second one to fully grasp all its trajectories!! :)

    • @toakreon
      @toakreon Рік тому +3

      @@iamjuststef
      It's complex. There's a hell of a lot going on and, if anything, it will get even more complex and involved once you get into the second movie (Two Towers), but it really is worth it.
      These are extraordinary movies of an extraordinary story. They'll make you work to follow and understand, they'll make you think, but they are genuinely masterpieces. I suspect you will really enjoy them.

    • @mikelarsen5836
      @mikelarsen5836 Рік тому +1

      @@iamjuststef to fully understand the movies you need to read Tolkien.

  • @OceanHedgehog
    @OceanHedgehog 3 місяці тому

    The significance of the sword staying sharp is symbolic - everyone is saying that humans are weak, and Boromir says how Gondor doesn't need a king. But the sword of Aragorn's ancestors remaining sharp symbolizes that the strength of humanity is represented in Aragorn himself, that he will restore a new age of glory for mankind.

  • @JDH_MUSIC
    @JDH_MUSIC Рік тому +1

    youngsters always comparing this to harry potter, when rowling actually took a lot of ideas from lord of the rings.

  • @meenH
    @meenH Рік тому

    I remember that i saw this great movie when i was 8 years old 😊 And i rewatch it from time to time until today. What a series!! I’m glad you liked it and thanks to you that you reminds me a good memory of first watching this film.

  • @scalefree
    @scalefree Рік тому +1

    the amount of Lore Tolkien wrote about Middle Earth is positively VAST. it took him 50 years to write & rewrite parts of it & the result takes up an entire shelf of books. he was a scholar at Oxford, a professor of Language. he created a dozen or more new languages in the process. it was an act of world building that has never been matched.

  • @kubskoutz93
    @kubskoutz93 Рік тому +1

    Correct me if I’m wrong, but you come to these videos for the confusion on her face! 😂😂😂

  • @zedwpd
    @zedwpd Рік тому +1

    Haha, "they are like dementors." Don't open that can of worms, In the LOTR you will also see horcruxes, the pensieve, Dumbledore, etc. There wasnt much left that JK didnt take. Even had to use two initials for her name.

  • @thomasschroedl336
    @thomasschroedl336 Рік тому

    Love watching this again with you as someone who is trying to figure out the plot and characters like we all did watching for the first time

  • @joeldykman7591
    @joeldykman7591 Рік тому

    To explain the Aragorn linage thing. Way back prior to the war of the ring the Kingdoms of Gondor and Arnor were held by King Elendil, on his death during the final battle of the Last Alliance siege of Barad Dur his titles passed to his sons Isildur and Anarion, Anarion also died during the Seige, so all titles were supposed to fall to Isildur. However, Isildur died on his way back to Arnor so he couldn't press his rightful claim to the dual thrones upon coronation, so what happened is that the rule of Arnor fell to Isildur's son and subsequent lineage and Gondor fell to Meneldil, Anarion's son. At that point the kingdoms were separate, but technically Isildur's dynasty had a legitimate claim to the throne of gondor, but was never in a position to claim it. Even more time passes and eventually the Kingdom of Arnor falls to a mixture of civil conflict and outside invasion by the Witch-King of Agmar, and for a separate reason and event, the King of Gondor Earnar went off to dual the Witch-King and died without an heir, leaving the Throne vacant and transferring the rule of gondor to the house of the Stewards of Gondor, Boromir's family. The stewards of Gondor are supposed to be retainers of Gondor, merely being placeholders until a legitimate heir to the throne could be named, but in practice, became de facto regents of the land and would likely not give up their standing in Gondor over to a mere ranger that Aragorn is.

  • @TheDanEdwards
    @TheDanEdwards Рік тому +1

    You picked the right series to grow your subscription base. Many commenters will try to give you all sorts of background but for the first time watching it is best to not burden yourself and just let yourself enjoy the movies as screen masterpieces. On second viewing you can pick the story apart and get into the weeds of Tolkien's ideas that Peter Jackson adapted for screen.

  • @anewhopedawn6676
    @anewhopedawn6676 Рік тому

    i already like ur reaction to this the most out af any one i watched, cause ur really good at absorbing all the small things that movie is throwing at you at some of the conclusions u make about the ring are just impressive. im leaving a like