Return of the King Side-by-Side: Rankin/Bass ('80) & Peter Jackson ('03)
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- Опубліковано 14 лют 2018
- A side-by-side, shot-for-shot comparison between the Rankin/Bass and Peter Jackson adaptations of JRR Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King.
edited by Matt Skuta
The Hobbit (1977/2012-14): • The Hobbit Side-by-Sid...
The Lord of the Rings (1978/2001-03): • The Lord of the Rings ... - Наука та технологія
7:40 it’s interesting how they both chose very different ways of showing the last ship to valinor, with the cartoon showing it as rainy and gloomy, perhaps to show the emotions of Sam, Merry and Pippin and the great unknown of Valinor to Frodo, while the movie shows a bright setting sun, showing that though it is sad Frodo and Gandalf have to leave it is good thing
I think the sunset in the movie is more related to the end of the age of the elves.
The book mentions that it is raining when the ship reaches Valinor, too.
@@BrettWMcCoy And that, from Sam's point of view, it was dark.
1980
This is a pretty cool way of showing off each adaptation’s strengths. Both are extremely personal works by their respective directors and obvious labors of love.
I'm really glad both versions decided to give Frodo pants in the Cirith Ungol scenes
This comment is why the youtube algorithm has sent me here, so it would seem.
I haven't read the books yet, planning to. But from what I gather here, Frodo Baggins' dignity was abused by Orcs💀
@@BronzetheGolden I have read the books. The Orcs humiliated and tortured Frodo.
I just realized how important the ending with Sam and his family is.
Helmut Ouzi oh dude it’s literally everything. I mean I know you probably know this. But that was literally exactly what they all fought and died for. So guys like Sam could live in peace with their families. But of course especially Sam. Someone who devoted everything he was as a person, so his beloved friend could finish the task he set out to do. I can’t imagine anyone in the world of fiction that deserved the ending more than Sam did
Still ticks me off that they left the Battle of Bywater out of BOTH versions...also in my opinion the truest ending is the one proposed in Clerks II, lol! 😆
@@JohnnyProctor9 dude, I just saw you complaining that Jackon put too many long and boring fight scenes. Make up your mind bruh 😂
Both films miss the revenge of white wizard on the shire. There wasn't anything to go back too. Just like when Tolkien got back from war, no jobs, massive poverty, rations, disease. Films like to finish on a happy note.
Too bad they left out the Scouring of the Shire. On the book you really see them changed when they came back and fought the Men and kicked out Saruman. Everything was put to order led by Merry and Pippin, and Sam planted trees and even a Mallorn (from Galadriel) in place of the party tree. Though Frodo really needed to go and find healing in the Undying Lands.
Say what you want but even 20 years past this movie is one of the best ever been made. All 3 of them.
Yes. And the old animated versions are also excellent. Perfect for kids.
40 years past. Fourty. :(
The best movies ever
Preach it, dude.
@@bobcostas6272 I don't think the old LOTR from 1978 is for kids. It's pretty dark. In fact, I think they should've used the same art from The Lord of The Rings on this one.
Man did this hit me hard.
It’s the music for me man, every time I hear certain motifs I get a kick in the chest
@@IsdudeMe me too
Hi, I'm Bob Gymlan
Love the vids Bob
IsdudeMe It makes me cry every time
Peter Jackson loved the animated shows (The Hobbit, The Lord of the rings, and The Return of the King)
He used those movies as inspiration
beautiful! its soo beautiful!!!!!!!!!!!
I am glad to hear that.
That can explain why many scenes seem similar between the two.
It'd be nice if he had stuck to the source material like the animated versions did instead of messing it up so badly...
@@JohnnyProctor9 are you f*cking serious?
Eówyn in the Rankin/Bass adaptation sure was beautiful.
Anime waifu.
Like she wasn't in the Jackson version...
@@georgelinford5576 Very good point indeed
Too bad that was the only depiction they got right XD.
@@georgelinford5576 I think she was ok in Jackson version. But the way book described her was more of a monotone wild warrior in a sense. Shield maiden.. even though Eomer wasnt that happy when he found her there.. or from my short memory from the book. But Peter Jackson did much right in LOTR movies. Maybe not the hobbit movies but LOTR were amazing
fun fact, that studio that animated the rankin/bass lord of the rings was the precursor to studio Ghibli
Fun fact, every lotr movie is based on the animated ones. Knew that earlier!@
@@sabito2.075 Fun fact, the animated movies actually came first, Tolkien was just a contracted auther to write the novelization. And it was actually multiple writers, working under one Pen Name. J.R.R. Tolkien never existed. Neither does George R.R. Martin, the Game of Thrones writers used the "R.R." Middle name as a nod to the Lord of the Rings writers, when they adapted the Teleplay of the Show into a Song of Ice and Fire.
Yeah. The lord of the rings anime.
Fun fact, There is only one lord of the ring, only one who can bend it to its will. And he does not share power.
Now way! That's awesome.
Gollum gives me some serious Pepe vibes.
Same
I’m sure you mean Pepe gives you Gollum vibes.
Feels Precious, Man
Makes you feel good man
Thank you , thank you , thank you for this amazing editing! I think most people think of the songs from Rankin Bass' version and forget they got a lot of the story spot on. I saw Bakshi's movie in the theatres as a kid and was angry it didn't end. It was so wonderful when this came out on network TV a year later to finish the story, and it was great for kids like me. We didn't see a lot of theatre movies in my family- expensive- so this coming out on TV made it possible to enjoy the end of the series. People have to remember this was a low budget network TV show and they had to pick up the pieces and end the story and may not have been allowed to show certain scenes and characters from the Fellowship and The Two Towers. They also got quite gritty for a network TV show- showing Frodo's whiplash wounds in the Cirith Ungol tower and having his finger bitten off by Gollum on 1980s cartoon standards was really on the edge, especially on network TV with all their censors. While I do feel the Jackson version is the better one, this version did some things better than the Jackson version. They showed Tolkein's book scene of Sam being tempted by the Ring to accept its power and how he rejected it. They also did a better showing of the scene where Sam finds Frodo in Cirith Ungol. The emotional reaction between Sam and Frodo of finding each other was really well done and better showed the scene from the book. I also like how the sailing off in to the west was more like the gray feel of the book- the Gray Havens. Their version of Sauron's eye also was really scary to me as a kid. Even today I find it really creepy, just as frightening as Jackson's version. I think because the Rankin Bass version looks more human at first and then you see after a few seconds something is not right and then it looks horrifying. Even if the songs were corny, if you listen to the words they tell the story really well, even "Where there's a whip there's a way" shows what an orc might have been feeling in the war. I know it's not in the books, but I liked the idea that Orcs might have known they were seen as disposable and they resented it. I saw this show once again after I saw the Jackson movies, and I still like it as an adult. I realize I have the perspective of seeing this when it first came out before Jackson's amazing movies, so I can understand why people who saw Jackson's movies first would find this lacking. But if you had seen them first and realized how avant garde they were for the time, this was an amazing show. Given that perspective I hope you give it a watch and enjoy it for it is and its limitations. Also it's a nice tough that the Japanese studio that animated this and the "Hobbit" for Rankin Bass eventually became Studio Ghibli.
wow very long cooment
@@theonewithnoidentity3540 wow very worthless comment
Long comment was neat.
I’d like to add that the scene where the song “Who bears the ring, who wears the ring” during the Mt. Doom scene from the animation did a good job of replacing the scene from Jackson’s film where Elrond watches Izildur fail to destroy the ring.
I still remember almost every word to these songs. I just watched the movie on UA-cam and been stuck on lotr lore ever since LOL. This movie rocked
Why do I feel like I missed out on something significant by never seeing the Rankin Bass version growing up?
I don't know why you feel that, because it ain't that good, it's solid, and has fantastic moments, but it's not something you should feel bad about missing
Because you can usually love something more purely as a child - doesn't mater if it's that good. Then you'll maybe remember how as an adult.
I only found out about this as a cynical teen and book purist, so I thought it was awful and embarrassing, but now I love the artistic labor, the music and moments from the book.
My love for the Last Unicorn and Flight of Dragons is stronger though, because I watched those over and over as a tot.
When you're ten, like I was, and had no other film other than the cartoon versions...you were grateful that something was around.
You're not missing out, most of the dialogue is just the characters pointing out the obvious, usually stuff as it's happening.
Because you did
Lol minis tirith is flipping off mordor
^Minas
The soundtrack of Middle earth is so heavenly good, its a masterpiece. I think we would never witness this type of films again.
I think I've seen this only once when I was a kid because I distinctly remember the songs "When there's a whip, there's a way" and "Frodo and the Nine Fingers, and the Ring of Doom" and absolutely nothing else.
Smeagol the toad!
Dulmar Tovar The rarest Pepe of all...
Yes, hahaha.
Its Ducky from Land Before Time
it is wednesday, my hobbitses
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
They hired Kermit for the role
Two ways the Rankin Bass movie was superior: It had Sam's temptation by the One Ring - where he imagines himself as an all powerful gardener. It is the most adorable thing ever. Second, it had a scene where Sam and Frodo at their lowest imagine the Orcs becoming friendly. It's nice to think that the Orcs would revert to being just an ordinary race of people without the Dark Lord's influence, so it's kind of a heartwarming scene.
Ever played Elder Scrolls: Morrowind? The Orcs are the best builders there.
That´s fantasy done right (without the big bad lurking).
Oh man Rankin and Bass were Amazing, Peter Jackson 🤩🤓.
the friendly orcs scene, indeed it is a very good scene
This was great! I'm so glad you put together this side-by-side sequence.
All the other characters being shown before Eowyn made her even moooore attractive. It's like her animation/art style is out of place when compared to the rest haha
she looks anime
Thanks for this. It's neat comparing two interpretations of the same works. While I think Jackson's sense for cinematic framing is superior, neither representation is inherently better than the other. Both are quite charming.
Love the movement of the hair during the Witch King fight in the animation
I'm so emotional right now. This trilogy was the popcultural pinnacle of my youth.
That 1980 movie has been created by the same people who made "the last unicorn", right? Nearly the same style, and figure movements...
And ThunderCats...
They also did the Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer claymation film from the 60s.
Rankin-Bass farmed out their animation projects, including "The Last Unicorn" and the LotR films, to a Japanese studio called Topcraft. The director at the time was Toru Hara, but about 1982 was when Hayao Miyazaki started working on "Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind". The next film after that ("Laputa: Castle in the Sky") was when the studio changed its name to Ghibli... and the rest is history.
Rankin Bass did a fine for what they set out to achieve, but Peter Jackson did an extraordinary job. Jackson's LOTR are brilliant films, taken to the next level by Shore's score.
Yeah, but what would Jackson's version have looked like if he'd made it in 1980? It's completely unfair to compare the two as far as technical issues go.
I, for one, prefer the Rankin/Bass version. That doesn't mean I don't like Jackson's. Heck I even like Bakshi's.
man those cartoony orcs sure are cute
Thats a good song
Same basic Rankin/Bass animation model as Slythe from ThunderCats...
@@trossk - And true to the source material, the quote from the book that it's based on is "Where there's a whip, there's a will".
Sad that Bakshi never made Return of the King cartoon. His Lord of the ring movie made the orcs legit terrifying
Side-by-Side series directory here: mattskuta.com/sbs/
Comment to help me choose my next side-by-side:
Psycho (1960/1998)
Cabin Fever (2002/2016)
The Great Gatsby (1974/2013)
Open Your Eyes (1997)/Vanilla Sky (2001)
Romeo and Juliet (1936/1968/1996/2013)
Animal Farm (1954/1999)
The BFG (1989/2016)
Avatar: The Last Airbender(2003)/The Last Airbender (2010)
Cinderella (1950/2015)
Clash of the Titans (1981/2010)
Nosferatu (1922)/Nosferatu the Vampyre (1979)
The Shining (1980/1997)
Ghost in the Shell (1995/2017)
The Jungle Books (1994/2016)
Jungle Book would be awesome
Wow im the only guy who liked it. Sad
Gosh, the moment Frodo puts on the ring in the Rankin bass version 😂
"I am so happy to put this ring on!" 😁
Thanks for this, it's been awhile since I've seen the Rankin Bass version. Well done!
Why does the Witch King only have a fell beast in the animated Return of the King when the other Nazgul get horses with wings?
Sithbuster5 probably cheaper to animate.
Sithbuster5 because he Saurons favorite
Sithbuster5 because he was probably the leader of the eight Nazguls
Probably to make him stand out more.
Maybe the others decided to fight with their flying horses. Fell beast could be slower. I'm just guessing, not read the 3rd book yet.
This is awesome. Thank you for making
This was wonderfully done! Thank you 👏
It is amazing how good the 1980 animated version is. Still watchable today, with a smooth (albeit highly cut-down) story, memorable visuals, and appropriate music. It's not meant to be anything like the Jackson version. It is its own rendition, and it's fantastic.
In many ways I prefer the animated version as a single movie, Jackson's films work wonderfully as a trilogy. I'm drawn more to the amazing soundtrack and stylized visuals of the animated version, and I love how the ring truly is its own evil entity in it!
I am getting really sick of people who insist Jackson's version must be the ONLY one. I'm all for more filmmakers making their own vision of the story, unconnected to PJ's. Classic stories deserve multiple different visions. That's what mythology does - it inspires many people to retell the stories in their own way.
Yarborough made good songs. But the orc whip disco song was a travesty.
Good work, thanks for this cut!
Really fantastic job, man. Love this!
Very cool comparison and great editing work!
One of the last and best film/adaptations Rankin/Bass made! Still have the songs stuck in my head! Especially “Frodo of the Nine Fingers” and “Where there’s a whip there’s a way”. Also one of the best adaptations of Tolkien
ehm no.
The songs a catchy but cheesy as fuck.
Dave Lewis I agree, I love the music and this is the best adaptation of the animated movies!
Dave Lewis and also it had Biblical truth
Melkhiordarkblade shame on you
My most favorites are Roads Go Ever Ever On and It's So Easy Not To Try.
This is amazing! Thank you, man!
Congratulations on the beautiful work! :)
Honestly? If you're going strictly by the book, story-wise the Rankin and Bass version is more faithful, in spite of the visual creative differences. For example: In the books, Frodo doesn't push Gollum into the crater of Mount Doom, Gollum is dancing victoriously upon recapturing the ring, then slips and falls in on accident. Also, Theoden did in fact die from being thrown off his horse (not very ceremonious, but it is what it is) hence when they bury his horse, the horse's epitaph reads "Faithful Servant, yet Master's Bane, here lies Snowmane."
Actually, it's "Faithful servant, yet master's bane, Lightfoot's foal, swift Snowmane".
@@MK-fz6il that's it! Thanks for correcting me!
no gimli , legolas or shelob , thats very faithful buddy
Awesome.No words, it is brilliant. Very good job!!
Grond was scarier in the cartoon. The flying black pegasus makes it the Lol of the Rings. I saw it on tv in grade school and I remember the kids talking about how they liked it (stellar, awesome, universal thumbs ups, etc) recalling Gollum saying my precious more than anything
Rankin Bass knew what they were doing when they contracted Top-Craft (later Studio Ghibli) to make their animated films (including their LotR adaptations) :) Thanks so much for doing these! Nice to know people look back fondly on these films. Clearly Roddy McDowel's performance as Samwise went over well and Brother Theodore's Gollum is freaking creepy, like the hardcore drug addict he's meant to be. :)
Both Roddy McDowall and John Huston (Gandalf) were also great in the Planet of the Apes films...
1980
Great work!!!
Well done!!!
I watched the cartoon first and then the movie. They both hold special place in my heart.
Thank you for this, Beautiful.
Man, that Rankin/Bass version is better than I remembered it being. I'll have to dig it up and watch it now.
Tnx!! I wanted to see those together 😁👍
Just watch this again last night so it is fitting it was in my recommended.
Gollum is a lizard being? :)
Robert Hayes He wasn't very different from a hobbit once. I always saw Gollum as more of a living ghoul.
Robert Hayes
Gollum in the books is described as being frog-like. I’m paraphrasing a bit. I’d have to check the books to see exactly what term Tolkien used, but that’s why the animators made him look the way he does in the animated film.
@@hindsightpov4218 I took "frog like" to mean he spent more time on his hands and knees then standing upright
Actually, yes. In novels, Gollum was a more of a lizard or frog-like creature unlike Peter Jackson's version.
Anshuman Deshmukh I’m pretty sure he’s not described as frog or lizard like.
“Gollum is a slimy, skinny creature living in the middle of an underground lake underneath the Misty Mountains.” As Tolkien describes him, he is "dark as darkness, except for two big round pale eyes in his thin face" (5.12). He has spent so much time underground that his eyes have grown giant and protruding on account of all of his peering through murky tunnels.
Gollum: *Falls to his death.
UA-cam: * Interrupts the video for an ad about Universal's *NOPE.*
in 1977 i was 5 years old and the whole world was going crazy for Star Wars, so was i. BUT my father was a big Tolkien fan and i was crazy about that too.
Star Wars is nothing compared to LOTR
I think the thing I find most interesting is how fantastical the Orcs and Hobbits and Elves seem in the Rankin/Bass version, while the Men seem quite grounded. there's such a contrast
Amazing! Simply amazing!
Nice work!
JRR Tolkien never wanted a cartoon made of his work, he hated the idea, and the second he passed away the dumbed the cartoon version out.
I loved both Eowýn parts. Epic in both versions!
And I love the music in this one
Wow, the animation in the Rankin/Bass was much better than I remembered it!
Beautifully done! Of course I cried at the end. AGAIN. fml.
And what I love about the animated one is that it had more Biblical truth and it was actually Old English, and I love how the Warg looked and also the speech between Eówyn and The Witch King and also how Sam was briefly tempted but he resisted the Ring and also how the Voice of Sauron was drawn and also Frodo succumbed to the Ring in Orudrúin *snaps fingers* just like that, rather than staring at it for 5 seconds
"Biblical truth"? Wth?
Also, I don't think you know what Old English actually sounds like (hint: you wouldn't understand it).
Mariah Raichert what do you mean it was actually Old English? Old English is incomprehensible to modern English speakers; it's basically a different language. Do you mean the dialogue sounded old timey? Also I have no clue what you mean by biblical truth
Fernando Erbin it does have Biblical truth and I do know what old English is but hey I have no time for arguing with you
Fernando Erbin I have better things
Maddy Martin Sauron is Satan, and so is the One Ring. And Aragorn is supposed to be a picture of Jesus
Amazing
OMFG, the Rankin/Bass version of the Mouth of Sauron was hilarious. XD
If there was a Bakshi version, you'd run away crying like a child! :D
I like how the cartoon kept the classic character design tolkien had in mind, but the new ones are really good too.
Skeleton comrade
They didn't LOL. The only things which are closer in the cartoon are the dialogue and some times the plot. Otherwise it's the furthest away. Visually PJ's version is closer. On ghe cartoon the lines are delivered terribly, the Witch-King sounds like skeletor, Isengard and Barad-dûr are a joke, the Balgog looks like an orc with wings (!); Aragorn, a Dúnadan, is a native American, and Boromir, another Dúnadan, is a Hun. There's no consistency or delivery whatsoever. PJs movies, except for deliberated changes, was closer, whereas the cartoon tried to be closest and failed.
@@Thelaretuswell, probably, for me live action/movie Return of the King 2003 did made better job portraying more emotions and depths
Nice work.
Sensacional, meu irmão!
This is weird. I never knew this existed. I have watched the Bakshi film and heard about the Hobbit series, but this here is entirely new to me.
Pretty sure Rankin/Bass saw an opening for Return of the King when Bakshi failed to complete the project. =^[.]^=
This is incredible!!! This is my favorite one!!!
I wish rankin bass would come back and do do a proper 3 part lotr remake and true succesor to the mood of their Hobbit.
Aren't both Arthur Rankin and Jules Bass dead? It's a shame. And the animators went on to form Studio Ghibli, so I suppose the closest to a R/B remake would be a studio ghibli animation with a killer soundtrack.
@@JanneSala - Zombie animators, lol!!! 😆
@@JanneSala A full Studio Ghibli anime treatment of the Lord of the Rings could be a glorious thing.
Rankin Bass Gollum clearly wanted the Ring more! Great video!
Very Awesome!!
5:28 Best part for both movies, and the soundtrack really helps.
Funny how much detail is renderred nearly identically, such as rock outcroppings and camera angles (0:20 for example). They must have used a significant amount of the animation for reference material and storyboarding.
I wonder how much of the other animated features parallel the Jackson films.
Jacksoff is a plagiarist and a talentless hack...
Johnny Proctor you’re crazy if you think there’s no talent creating cities, costumes, makeup, and photography such as PJ’s LotR
@@JohnnyProctor9 did he like...bully you in school or something? 🙄
Hear you now,
a story of good against evil
An epic that has its beginning and an ending
And ends at a beginning
Listen as we speak of the fall of a lord of darkness
And the return of a king of light
Concern yourself with armies and wizards
Phantoms and Emperors
Cloud capped towers and bloody fields of our endless carnage
Consider no less the cataclysmic transformation
Of that ancient world of wonder and magic
To the world we know now, Of man
What mighty lord is hero enough to evoke such cosmic metamorphosis?
Why, no lord at all. But the littlest of fellows. Frodo the Hobbit.
And his faithful squire, Samwise.
Who, beginning at the ending, now approach Rivendell.
The Elvish home of Elrond.
There to help celebrate the 129th birthday of Frodo's aged kin.
Bilbo Baggins, renowned tormentor of dragons.
@@danielallen3454 Oh man the opening narration still gives me goosebumps
@@mckenzie.latham91 There's much in the film that still gives me goosebumps.
The rankin bass version of the hobbit was able to capture the feel of the book unlike the Jackson films
When Jackson's movies came out, I wasn't aware of the existence of the animated ones. Now I see that they were pretty good too. And so similar in many ways, especially the camera perspective, if I judge well fromy this small and edited comparison.
What is the name of the soundtrack in the beginning?
Rankin-Bass Production released an animated TV movie in 1980, JRR Tolkien's Return of the King is based primarily on the first three novels.
0:53
Someone once made me appreciate the Minas Tirith of the 1980 version more by pointing out the difference in design. Sure Jackson made the White City look vast and impressive despite falling into decay...but the Rankin/Bass one seems to have based its architecture specifically around permanently flipping the bird to Mordor.
And how Gondorian soldiers seem to panic a whole lot more in the 1980s version, like why TF did people give Peter Jackson shit for his portrayal, where they've actually been shown to stand their ground for a time before falling back instead of running around like headless chickens.
1980
That music 🥲
Damn. I don't have 12+ hours for an extended edition marathon today...
Grew up with those Rankin/Bass cartoons.
Still Same to me ! Pure Gold
It is striking how similar these are
The movies are absolute classic, that's for sure. But there is always a magical charm when it comes to the animation.
Is this from the Bluray of LotR (2003)? Pre-4k rerelease? Still looks incredible!
At least theoden had a noble death instead of just falling of his horse.
Something about this was very emottional.
the scenes on mount doom are extremely climatic and emotional
It's funny, but I never realized how much better the animation is in RB than the Bakshi one. Designs are consistent and the characters have real expressions on their faces and Sam looks like a burly little farmer, not some weird caricature
I've never seen the animation but it looks great.
Are you going to do a side-by-side with the Jackson movies and "Hobitit," the 1993 low budget Finnish LOTR miniseries? Just for the heck of it?
The Rankin Bass version looks exactly like the style of The Last Unicorn. Must be the same animation studio? Neat. It makes me feel nostalgic although I’ve never seen it.
Damn, I think the animated version would have freaked me out even more if I’d seen that as a kid.
Interesting, I never knew the 80s adaptation existed. I have seen one that covered fellowship and a bit of two towers. It was a mocap style animation movie, but as far as I know they only made the one.
Yeah, that's Bakshi's. Is also a very good adaptation for what it is. All versions have their strengths and weaknesses.
As a side note, the guys that made this 80's version of The Return of the King [Rankin/Bass] also made a version of the Hobbit in 1977, which IMHO remains the best adaptation for it to date [considering it was adapted for children, just like their tRofK one].
So, as much as nostalgia as people have for the animated trilogy, one undeniable fact is that the voice actors don't know how to pronounce Tolkien names
Lol true, Frodo pronounces Sauron as 'soarin'
well I hardly can Imagine a remake better than this
The Jackson Witch king design is decent, but I do wish the went more the way of Rankin/Bass, with the missing head and floating crown. The Jackson design is more overtly menacing and a little over the top, but the headless crown is more mysterious and magical
Funny how in the Rankin Bass version Frodo puts the One Ring on his ring finger, but in the Peter Jackson film , he puts it on his forefinger (index finger).
Weirdly, index finger is book accurate.
It may not have any bearing on LotR, but historically, rings were worn on different fingers to signify different things, for instance, a wedding ring being worn on the left ring finger in much (but not all) of the west today. I imagine hobbits had their own variations, when they bothered to wear rings at all. =^[.]^=
@@TrekBeatTK Not so. In the book, Sam specifically notes the third finger is missing. Which means, depending on where you counted from, it should be either the middle or ring finger of the right hand. Not the forefinger.
Great, now I wanna watch both versions, which means also binging all the other Jackson movies as well, there goes my day off... Eh, worth it.
Good way to spend a day off! I just finished reading the books last night. 😊😥
The Witch King in the Rankin/Bass version is much more accurate to Tolkien's description than the Jackson version is. Interesting.
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