binge watching the entire *LORD OF THE RINGS TRILOGY* in one day

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  • Опубліковано 17 тра 2024
  • Watching The Lord of the Rings: Fellowship of the Ring, The Two Towers, and Return of the King in one day, and feeling EVERY emotion.
    Dazed and Confused reaction: www.patreon.com/posts/dazed-a...
    Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for "fair use" for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. NO COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT INTENDED. All rights belong to their respective owners.
    Source: Warner Bros The Lord of the Rings Trilogy
    Intro/ Outro music: Sunset by MusicByAden
    / sunset
    0:00 Intro
    3:15 The Lord of the Rings: Fellowship of the Ring
    1:19:32 The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
    2:22:43 The Lord of the Rings: Return of the King
    3:28:30 Outro

КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,3 тис.

  • @shadowcatreacts
    @shadowcatreacts  6 місяців тому +308

    This probably goes without saying, but just in case it doesn't - if you enjoyed this video, please give it a 'like'! It helps me out a lot and I'm forever appreciative 💗
    Get the uncuts to this reaction plus my next reaction to Dazed and Confused here: www.patreon.com/shadowcatreacts

    • @terrylandess6072
      @terrylandess6072 6 місяців тому +10

      Without 'The Hobbit' in your library, you're missing a small piece of why Bilbo was so antsy during his 111th birthday. Simply put - Once Bilbo got a taste of real adventure, even as a Hobbit whom prefers the quiet and amenities the Shire brings, he is the proud owner of memories which make everyday life less colorful. He has stewed in that condition to the point of boiling over and has made the decision to recapture some of that before he passes.
      Rowling's Horcrux's and Martin's Sky Cells. Tolkien influenced many and I don't fault them for it.

    • @savi_rizzo71
      @savi_rizzo71 6 місяців тому +5

      I have never been a big reader, but I have been digging in to the background of the films and the world is immense. There're books of the past before the films take place and stories after. I really enjoyed your reactions and hope you consider the Hobbit films as well.

    • @Wirmish
      @Wirmish 6 місяців тому +11

      Now you need to redo it with the EXTENDED edition....

    • @TheManPromised
      @TheManPromised 6 місяців тому +1

      are we doing The Hobbit trilogy next?

    • @seaneendelong8065
      @seaneendelong8065 6 місяців тому +1

      Boy can I relate- I thought I was up for a single viewing of even this edited time period, but I had to take 2 breaks and do real world things between.
      Now on day 2.5 and I am really enjoying your immersion and focus on such a well loved film set.

  • @davidtauro4671
    @davidtauro4671 6 місяців тому +1739

    The entire trilogy reaction in one video?
    My friend, you bow to no one.

    • @GeoffTrowbridge
      @GeoffTrowbridge 6 місяців тому +45

      Now do the Extended Editions all in one day! 🤓👍

    • @davidtauro4671
      @davidtauro4671 5 місяців тому +84

      @@GeoffTrowbridge There are few who can...

    • @MemeDictator
      @MemeDictator 5 місяців тому +84

      @@davidtauro4671 certainty of death, small chance of success… what are we waiting for?

    • @OneVoiceMore
      @OneVoiceMore 5 місяців тому +30

      @@MemeDictator I do not think that will be her fate.

    • @Makkaru112
      @Makkaru112 5 місяців тому +27

      @@OneVoiceMoreFor None Now Live Who Remember It…

  • @ZonnexNecton
    @ZonnexNecton 6 місяців тому +1190

    You’re neither late nor early to watch this trilogy. You’ve watched precisely as you mean to.

  • @stinkinhippy1724
    @stinkinhippy1724 5 місяців тому +682

    Boromir: "I tried to take the ring from him"
    Shadow Cat: "It's not your fault"
    I've never seen someone get Boromir's conflict on only their second watch. It shows your compassion and empathy. You go girl!

    • @KrazyWolf626
      @KrazyWolf626 5 місяців тому +52

      Yeah, Boromir resisted the rings call longer than Galadriel did. That’s gotta be worth something.

    • @rikk319
      @rikk319 5 місяців тому +35

      @@KrazyWolf626 Boromir wasn't as powerful as Galadriel, and the more powerful you are, the more in peril you are with the Ring.

    • @hardcoredoom5892
      @hardcoredoom5892 5 місяців тому +34

      Boromir, Faramir, and Denethor were all way more honorable in the books. The movies made them all look much, much worse than they were.

    • @molonlabe1509
      @molonlabe1509 5 місяців тому +16

      @@hardcoredoom5892 They did, but I understand why they did it

    • @paulchavez3039
      @paulchavez3039 5 місяців тому +16

      Boromir was the strongest and most honorable of us. He fought all his life to defend his people, and he was a paragon of leadership and hope. Even he could be easily corrupted by the ring, being that it is an incarnation of the concept of domination. It's an affront to free will itself and must be destroyed, and showing us it's power via boromir's fall and redemption is genius. Only Frodo can be the one to take the ring, but only the power of the ring itself can destroy it. ❤

  • @rhill49849
    @rhill49849 6 місяців тому +708

    The bond between Legolas and Gimli was so tight that when it came time for Legolas to sail into the west, Gimli was afforded the honor of accompanying him by the Valar . The only dwarf to do so.

    • @Andrew04291
      @Andrew04291 6 місяців тому +104

      I like to think he wasn’t afforded that honor, and Legolas brought him without asking, because the two of them being apart is simply absurd.

    • @80sGamerLady
      @80sGamerLady 6 місяців тому +9

      ​@@Andrew04291same!! 😂

    • @hephner78
      @hephner78 6 місяців тому +99

      Actually he WASNT "afforded the honor" , he DID bring him along without asking, and when they arrived Galadriel , who has great honor and respect among the Valar, spoke for him and THEN he was afforded the grace to stay

    • @bitterzombie
      @bitterzombie 6 місяців тому +35

      If Gandalf can bring two hobbits with him, certainly Legolas is allowed to bring a dwarf

    • @hephner78
      @hephner78 6 місяців тому +29

      A) Gandalf is a Maia and Native of Valinor B) Dwarves werent even supposed to be created C) Gandalf didnt "get permission" to bring the Hobbits, the Valar themselves granted the rights to both Frodo and Bilbo in honor of their long struggle with the Ring@@bitterzombie

  • @beren082
    @beren082 5 місяців тому +410

    people say they'd rather be a warrior in a garden than a gardener in a war, but I know of at least one gardener that did pretty damn well in a war.

    • @alexandrasloane
      @alexandrasloane 5 місяців тому +17

      haha, I'll cry right now about this

    • @wyolaskan1868
      @wyolaskan1868 5 місяців тому +20

      Mans went to the ends of Middle Earth to impress a woman who was already into him.
      Praise be to Sam

    • @bongodave13
      @bongodave13 4 місяці тому +6

      @@wyolaskan1868 Sam didn't have the courage to try to woo her. He sure did when he got back. Such a charming scene!

    • @wyolaskan1868
      @wyolaskan1868 4 місяці тому +2

      @@bongodave13 a scene to make the coldest of hearts melt

    • @pizzafacemcbride3582
      @pizzafacemcbride3582 4 місяці тому

      I'm a gardener and I'd suck in a war

  • @anniep4597
    @anniep4597 5 місяців тому +320

    When you said "What an incredible show of will" when Boromir kept fighting despite the arrows, I started to cry (again). What a lovely way to put it, particularly after the ring made him act against his will earlier. Beautiful redemption for Boromir.

    • @Makkaru112
      @Makkaru112 5 місяців тому +9

      He took way more in the books

    • @Makkaru112
      @Makkaru112 5 місяців тому +17

      Ever notice in the background “Frodo I’m sorry!” Being cried out in the distance loudly and warped by the winds of the unseen realm whirling about? It’s what makes me tear up every time.

    • @BlueDebut
      @BlueDebut 5 місяців тому +4

      I'd argue it exposed his worst side which he overcame. Makes his death even better. Shows people can overcome anything.

    • @jackthehat1093
      @jackthehat1093 4 місяці тому +4

      I only really understood Boromir after watching the extended versions. They give a lot more context for why he was even at the elven council and what his motivations and desires are. To defend his people who are the first line of defence against Mordor. Faramirs story is a lot more tragic too.

    • @jima6545
      @jima6545 4 місяці тому +2

      I was 9 when i read these. That scene crushed me then, and still does today

  • @davesilkstone6912
    @davesilkstone6912 5 місяців тому +81

    I see a lot of reactors saying "we should all have a friend like Sam". I think the world would be a lot better place if people said "We should all strive to be a friend like Sam"

    • @stellachimpson
      @stellachimpson 11 днів тому

      or better yet, instead of saying, people should just be a friend like sam

  • @persephonebasilissa5109
    @persephonebasilissa5109 5 місяців тому +180

    Our son was in 3rd grade when the first LOTR film came out. As a fantasy fan, he begged to see the movie.
    Concerned about the violence and dark themes, we told him he could see it after reading the book - thinking that would buy us a few years for him to mature.
    He got started right away and finished it within 9 months, teaching himself lots of new vocabulary on the way! He loved the film and the following two - plus their books!

    • @bhelliom3
      @bhelliom3 5 місяців тому +12

      I love this story, sounds like something I would do as a kid. I got heavy into reading as a kid because my sister said a specific book series would be “too complicated” for me and I took it as a challenge lol. I’m so glad your son loves reading and loves fantasy, he sounds great.

    • @thor1829
      @thor1829 4 місяці тому +6

      What a heartwarming story! The LOTR books are quite tough to get through, even as an adult. I assume it gave him a massive leap over his peers in English knowledge :)

    • @persephonebasilissa5109
      @persephonebasilissa5109 4 місяці тому +3

      @@thor1829 Yes, it even taught him some words we didn't know. It was quite a surprise when he used "defenestration" in a sentence and then had to tell us the definition!

    • @Styxswimmer
      @Styxswimmer 3 місяці тому +2

      After seeing the first movie I read the entire trilogy in 3 weeks. I spent so much time reading I got headaches. I was a junior in high school at the time.

    • @rfresa
      @rfresa 3 місяці тому +1

      I read it about that age too, and so did some of my siblings. I've reread it several times since then, and picked up on new depths, but I fully comprehended the story the first time. I actually think it's best to read it for the first time when you're still young and don't have many preconceptions.

  • @Andrew04291
    @Andrew04291 6 місяців тому +211

    Sam gets the job done, and only then, when he believes death is imminent, does he allow himself to be selfish. Homeboy crossed a continent and made himself a legend just to work up the courage to ask out a girl who was already into him.

    • @Muck006
      @Muck006 6 місяців тому +38

      Great summary of the trilogy/story ... "It is a movie about a guy who accompanies his best friend to a volcano to toss something into it ... to get the courage to ask a girl out".

    • @CliffSedge-nu5fv
      @CliffSedge-nu5fv 6 місяців тому +21

      Every story is a love story.

    • @rikk319
      @rikk319 5 місяців тому +15

      It's Rosie's comment to Sam in the book, in The Scouring of the Shire, that's so crazy. She says something to him during a moment of tension, in effect, "Well, you're not going to go and leave Frodo now, are you?", having absolutely no clue what Sam went through with Frodo to destroy the Ring over the last year or so. Sam's internal monologue is that he either has to tell her everything then, or save it all for later...and he chooses to take care of the immediate problem and tell her later.

    • @stephentg1
      @stephentg1 3 місяці тому +4

      "just to work up to courage to ask out a girl who was already into him." It really is that way sometime.

  • @Orieni
    @Orieni 6 місяців тому +197

    Tolkien was a veteran of WWI, and fully understood the costs of war. He also understood the costs of not fighting evil, and the balance between those drives much of the story.

    • @Muck006
      @Muck006 6 місяців тому +18

      Yes ... sometimes the cost of peace and avoiding bloodshed is greater than suffering and death. Neville Chamberlain proved it later.

    • @Spartan1312
      @Spartan1312 6 місяців тому +30

      He also understood that while you may survive, there is no going home again as you were. You will never be at peace again and will always carry the wounds both mental and physical.

    • @Orieni
      @Orieni 6 місяців тому +7

      @@Spartan1312 can confirm.

    • @coffeemachtspass
      @coffeemachtspass 2 місяці тому

      While writing LoTR, he was sending chapter drafts to his son who was enlisted during World War II.

  • @VinciGlassArt
    @VinciGlassArt 6 місяців тому +484

    Its funny. I read LoTR when I was 12 and 13 in 1984, 85. And back then, the swords and magic were all that mattered to that young boy. Now, long into adulthood and the loss that comes with it, i can't NOT tear up with gestures of friendship and fellowship. I think it hits us because good people value friendship and the good in small things. It was that virtue that saved the world in this story.

    • @shadowcatreacts
      @shadowcatreacts  6 місяців тому +104

      It's so interesting how the way we appreciate things changes as we age, huh? I love media that can work on multiple layers

    • @Bear78420
      @Bear78420 6 місяців тому +30

      Reading these books as a young boy had a huge impact on the type of man I wanted to be. There are many values and moral lessons taught in this wonderful story ☺️

    • @positivelynegative9149
      @positivelynegative9149 6 місяців тому +6

      I read it about the same time. 🙂👍

    • @richardlaswell463
      @richardlaswell463 6 місяців тому +10

      You have described my multiple encounters with this extraordinary story so well.
      The adventure story I read as a youth, the allegory as an adult, and the true friendship and camaraderie in my later years.

    • @LordEriolTolkien
      @LordEriolTolkien 6 місяців тому +7

      I have a similar history with the text, with the added connection in that I was born in an actual (York)Shire, and lived during Tolkiens life, in England. Additionally, I had/have a deep affection for the English language, and language as an abstract concept [why yes I am a Nerd, thanks fer askin], and Middle Earth is perfect for such a boy/man. The movies came into existence decades and many readings after that first encounter.
      And that is before any consideration of subject or themes.

  • @shawnkelly1531
    @shawnkelly1531 6 місяців тому +206

    The trilogy won lots of accolades and awards, but as for the Oscars: "Fellowship" won several Academy Awards for effects (and was nominated for Best Picture/Director but didn't win); "Two Towers" had a similar fate; but "Return of the King" finally hit the motherlode - it won every Academy Award it was nominated for (11), including Best Picture and Director, and tied "Titanic" and "Ben Hur" for the most number of Oscar wins in history. It was the first fantasy film to ever win Best Picture, and is widely considered to be one of the best films ever made (and best trilogies as well).

    • @MysterX79
      @MysterX79 6 місяців тому +17

      I use to phrase it that way:
      "Where other perfect movies have their rating at 5 out of 5 ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
      The 'Lord of the Rings' trilogy is that one impossible case with a
      6 out of 5 ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐"

    • @jamesshelton308
      @jamesshelton308 5 місяців тому +18

      Not to mention Bernard Hill acted in 2 of those movies that got the most Oscars ever, Titanic (the captain) and RoTK (Theoden)

  • @joedirt688
    @joedirt688 6 місяців тому +147

    Frodo never fully healed from his wounds, which means he could never stay happy in Middle-Earth. He, Gandalf, Bilbo, and the rest are going to the undying lands (Elf heaven essentially), where mortal beings usually aren't allowed. An exception is made for Frodo and Bilbo because they were ring bearers. In the appendices we learn that Sam becomes mayor of the Shire and lives a long and happy life. After his wife dies, he also sails west to the undying lands because he was briefly a ring bearer. So Frodo and Sam do meet again. Merry and Pippin spend their days with Aragorn in Gondor, and when they die they are buried next to Aragorn's grave. Legolas and Gimli remain friends, and their friendship heals the rift between Dwarf and Elf. When they reach their end, they also sail to the undying lands together. It's a massive honor for Gimli, being a dwarf, and never a ring bearer. Once they leave, the fellowship is gone from Middle Earth forever.

    • @Makkaru112
      @Makkaru112 5 місяців тому +4

      Can’t be heaven. The first elf death and murders happened there. The whole world was to be “heavenly” until Morgoth’s Ring, aka the poisoning the world and sinking his very being into the very earth itself. Causing magic to slowly bleed from the world called the long defeat.

    • @Makkaru112
      @Makkaru112 5 місяців тому +7

      Frodo went to Tol-Eressea… next to Valinor. In view of it. Effected by it.

    • @mischr13
      @mischr13 4 місяці тому

      if middle earth is europe, is america elf heaven? 🤔

    • @joedirt688
      @joedirt688 4 місяці тому +6

      i think America is MORDOR lol@@mischr13

    • @mischr13
      @mischr13 4 місяці тому

      @@joedirt688 I can see that XD

  • @narotic6133
    @narotic6133 6 місяців тому +205

    Respect to you for the dedication this took

    • @Mrfailstandstil
      @Mrfailstandstil 6 місяців тому

      yes< it's very hard to sit in your home and watch tv wow! such! a! de di ca ti on!!!

    • @Fougeredu38
      @Fougeredu38 5 місяців тому +2

      sorry but i saw the word took so i must say it "fool of a took !"

    • @randomiscellaneousness1483
      @randomiscellaneousness1483 5 місяців тому +1

      @@Fougeredu38 beat me to it.

  • @SgtWicket
    @SgtWicket 6 місяців тому +119

    The scene when Frodo puts on the ring at Mount Doom and declares that it is his is one of my favorites. It is more clear in the book but it never even occurred to Sauron that someone would destroy the ring. Until that point he had been operating on the assumption that someone - probably Aragorn - would claim its power and become a rival to Sauron because it’s what Sauron himself would have done in their position. At the moment that Sauron senses the ring in Mount Doom he realizes exactly how badly he miscalculated and how close to defeat he is.

    • @rikk319
      @rikk319 5 місяців тому +14

      Self-centered people like Sauron have a hard time with empathy--being able to put yourself in someone else's shoes. If Sauron had even a touch of empathy, he would have realized his peril. Of course, if he'd had any empathy, he probably wouldn't have turned out to be a villain, either...

    • @themammoth67
      @themammoth67 4 місяці тому +4

      He was probably like: oh fuck thats what he was doing

    • @kylebryant8613
      @kylebryant8613 3 місяці тому +2

      "It was at this moment that Sauron knew: he ***up."

    • @tamarleigh
      @tamarleigh 2 місяці тому +2

      Frodo: The ring is mine.
      Sam: Nooooooo!
      Sauron: WHAT

  • @renediffie
    @renediffie 6 місяців тому +192

    I always thought the second movie is kind of weird in how it portrays Theoden. The movie obviously wants us to think that he's blatantly wrong all the time. But he's not. They are vastly outnumbered by an army they would be annihilated by in an open battle. Their only chance of even making it a fight is Helm's Deep. Had they followed the advice of the Fellowship they would have perished.
    Later when Aragorn and Gimli almost mocks him for being confident I don't even know what they want from him. He obviously is putting up a front to give his men some hope when they badly need it.
    Justice for Theoden!

    • @Crazy_Diamond_75
      @Crazy_Diamond_75 6 місяців тому +41

      In fact, in the books, Gandalf and co are all in on getting Rohan to the fortress. It just makes sense? Jackson, Walsh, and Boyens rewrote it for the conflict angle, same as Faramir.

    • @thamasdk8727
      @thamasdk8727 6 місяців тому +5

      Yeah Theoden did the right thing

    • @MARYWTHER
      @MARYWTHER 5 місяців тому +12

      I agree, I never really understood how it would make sense for Theoden to stay at Edoras to face Saruman lol and what Gandalf was so pissy about. Like it's literally not Theoden's fault if all his men are out of reach. And facing them on open-fields like Aragorn suggests would have been a TERRIBLE idea given the number.

    • @AndreLuis-gw5ox
      @AndreLuis-gw5ox 5 місяців тому +10

      Everybody said it already, but an aditional context is that in the books Theoden wanted to fight Saruman head on (like Aragorn and Gandalf want in the movies) but the army of an vassal of his that they were suposed to link up was destroyed. It is then that Theoden decides to retreat to Helms Deep, as their only hope of winning a field battle was lost.

    • @fredwin
      @fredwin 5 місяців тому +23

      It's weird but I think you have it backwards. I'm pretty sure it was done to give Theoden more agency as a character. Since he is only introduced in the second film, he needs to show some sort of independence as a sovereign, and not just immediately fade into the background behind Aragorn, etc.

  • @krissuyx
    @krissuyx 5 місяців тому +69

    The only thing I like more in the theatrical edition is how you don't see if the army of the dead accepts Aragorn's proposal until they actually show up in battle. It's a great way to build suspense and then pay off with the reveal.

    • @leonking9953
      @leonking9953 5 місяців тому +13

      Agreed. The extended boromir scenes are all essential. Including the last stand. A lot of the return of the king extenders scenes felt unnecessary. Like the witch king vs Gandalf and denethor seeing boromir. Otherwise I love the first two extended versions. Third theatrical. Oh yeah and I forgot the nervous system one where Gimli and Legolas had their final counts, wish that wasn’t in there. There’s no way they had that low of a kill count

    • @Gutslinger
      @Gutslinger 5 місяців тому +5

      I can see it building suspense, but I still much prefer the extended editions.
      I enjoy those extra scenes too much. And I like how they dash your hopes of recruiting that army, and then bringing it back again with the "We fight!"

    • @eddielong8663
      @eddielong8663 5 місяців тому +1

      It would've been cool for the extended edition to have a long and intense silent pause where the King of the Dead orders his army to hold the three Fellowship members at knife point, and is second guessing whether he should just kill them on the spot, or if he should grudgingly accept the deal afterall and trust that Aragon will keep his word. And the scene cuts away right there without us knowing what he decided on. It would've made things even more suspenseful as it's unclear if the three of them even got out of that place alive.

    • @drawfull
      @drawfull 4 місяці тому

      The only thing for me as well.

    • @LawlTwins
      @LawlTwins 4 місяці тому

      I thought something like that would have made more sense. Or a different ghost comes out says "the king has been surplanted, we fight!" Put more eloquently ofcourse haha. Made no sense he was like fuckoff and then comes out anyway​@@eddielong8663

  • @J4ME5_
    @J4ME5_ 6 місяців тому +120

    Everyone cries like you did at the end. We all did. Thank you for appreciating this

    • @theConquerersMama
      @theConquerersMama 5 місяців тому +7

      I don't trust people who do not tear up.

    • @Elendil513
      @Elendil513 5 місяців тому +5

      Probably seen these movies about 50 times by now and I react if anything more than she does still haha

    • @jip5889
      @jip5889 5 місяців тому +5

      No, I don’t tear up. It’s just the onion ninjas jumping around.

    • @pappapata
      @pappapata 5 місяців тому +4

      Tolkien been with me now for fifty years...I still tear up every time, at all the sweet moments. 🙏😀❣

    • @J4ME5_
      @J4ME5_ 3 місяці тому

      The extended version is really a must

  • @Bear78420
    @Bear78420 6 місяців тому +51

    No joke. A reactors reaction to LOTR is my litmus test as to whether or not I enjoy them as a reactor. The fact that you binge watched LOTR made me instantly like you 😁

  • @Scottoest
    @Scottoest 6 місяців тому +86

    Gandalf the White was essentially Gandalf being 'resurrected' by the God of Tolkien's setting - a vanishingly rare direct intervention in the affairs of the world.

    • @zardify_
      @zardify_ 5 місяців тому +20

      There's a bit more to that :) It wasn't actually that rare as far as I understand - because the wizards are angelic beings - they're semi-regularly sent to middle earth with a specific purpose. If they were to not be able to fulfill that purpose in a lifetime, they'd be sent back again for another. Their colors are assigned based on that purpose. The grey wizard is the "helper of men (/people of middle earth)" who guides and lift the spirits of people. The white wizard - who Saruman was supposed to be - is "the enemy of Sauron". When Gandalf was sent back, he was sent back with the purpose that Saruman had, which is why he said "I am Saruman, or rather what he was supposed to be". Which (if you pay attention) is so well acted by Ian McKellen it's insane. It's subtle, but he seems much more purpose driven as Gandalf the white. At least that's how I interpret the Istari after a lot of research without having read the books.

    • @Makkaru112
      @Makkaru112 5 місяців тому +4

      @@zardify_much love to you. I’ve read all 25 of his books and I still watch and participate with GirlNextGondor, Men Of The West, Tolkien Untangled, CluelessFanGirl, Tolkien Lore(The Tolkien Geek.), The Red Book, Gormy, Tales Of The Rings, Voice Of Geekdom. ❤

  • @danielgalvez5652
    @danielgalvez5652 6 місяців тому +53

    In ONE DAY?!? Are you CRAZY?!?!
    Of course I’m watching this in its entirety!!!

  • @TheYopogo
    @TheYopogo 5 місяців тому +55

    Amazing how instantly you really "got" it.
    All your little observations and thoughts about it are the sorts of things it normally takes people multiple watches to notice.
    It's very clear from this that you're a very insightful, thoughtful person.

  • @captainKbobkeeshan
    @captainKbobkeeshan 6 місяців тому +97

    BTW, I think you are one of the few reactors I've seen who appreciate and acknowledge that Frodo got a raw deal with this task and how much it takes to go through a journey like this. I'm not sure people really can imagine it as it's not real. But, I think you are able to truly put yourself into the world of Middle Earth and understand the perils involved and what is at stake personally for Frodo and the world at large.

    • @dearthofdoohickeys4703
      @dearthofdoohickeys4703 4 місяці тому +6

      Agreed. I find Sam gets all the love, which don’t get me wrong he’s a great character, but Frodo is the one who took the world on his shoulders when nobody did.

    • @maczack87
      @maczack87 3 місяці тому

      Froto definitely got a raw deal but he was the only one who could complete the mission, him or possibility another Hobit with strong will. Habits were one of the few creatures who were resilient to the corruption of the ring.

  • @mon_moi
    @mon_moi 6 місяців тому +42

    4:49 Sauron is a Maia, or angel essentially in the mythology of Middle Earth. Gandalf and Saruman are also angels like him, but without the long history of being evil. The Balrog in the mines is a corrupted Maia, while Aragorn's distant ancestor is a Maia too.
    1:55:37 The elves were always supposed to belong in the West with the Valar (archangel/gods), but many of them stayed in Middle Earth and some others willingly came back from the West in the past (for example, Galadriel). By the end of the Third Age, most of them migrate to the West and those who stay behind will one day lose their physical forms and become invisible, folkloric creatures. Elrond wants Arwen to leave with him so that she may spend eternity with her family rather than stay alone in Middle Earth

    • @LizardMcGuire
      @LizardMcGuire 5 місяців тому +9

      Perfect description! To add to this - Tolkien combined the “one God & angels” from Christianity and the “Greek/Roman/Norse gods” in his mythology. There is the “one true god” Eru Iluvatar, and lesser gods (Valar) for all the fundamental pieces of the world (Winds, Waters, Forests, etc).
      The “angels” of middle earth (Maia) serve those lesser Greek-esque gods. The lesser gods were also allowed to design creatures of middle earth in their own image (eagles for wind, ents for forest, dwarves for smithing, etc.), but only Eru could breathe life into these creations. Eru himself made elves and humans in his own design. Elves have the gift of immortality, but men return to Eru when their mortal life is over. Many in middle earth consider mortality a gift!
      Sauron served the god of smithing, until his corruption by another evil god Morgoth. Morgoth was the original dark lord, and had multiple Balrogs, dragons, orcs, trolls, and so on in his service. He was never able to create life like the “one true God” Eru Iluvatar, but he could corrupt other beings to evil. Trolls are a mockery of Ents, orcs are a mockery of elves, and so on!

  • @PonchoBull
    @PonchoBull 5 місяців тому +40

    Whenever tears are spilled with the phrase "You bow to no one" I instantly get my faith in humanity restored. Thanks for sharing your reaction with us!❤

  • @mikankitsune0440
    @mikankitsune0440 5 місяців тому +6

    One of my favorite stories from the set is when Sauruman's actor, Sir Christopher Lee was pretending to be stabbed in the back, he was asked to do it again, because the sound he made seemed unauthentic.
    Sir Christopher Lee then said: *"Do you know what a man being stabbed in the back sounds like? Cause I do."*
    He was a spy for the allied forces during WWII and infiltrated Nazi camps. He spoke several languages fluently, was a stage actor as well as a film actor, was present for the last execution via guillotine and also recorded a heavy metal record at the age of 91. ✨️ *Sir Christopher Lee is the main character* ✨️

  • @jennyhacking1289
    @jennyhacking1289 6 місяців тому +93

    I am so happy you did the viewing in one sitting, to me, these are not three films but one film and so the only way to watch them is all together. Thank you for your great reaction.

    • @shadowcatreacts
      @shadowcatreacts  6 місяців тому +16

      You're very welcome!! Thank you for watching, Jenny 🤗

    • @hkpew
      @hkpew 6 місяців тому +3

      It's definitely true that the films (and the books they are adapted from) are really a single story and can't be appreciated separately nearly as well as they can together. Those who go into it not knowing that are often confused and surprised at the way Fellowship ends. But let's not set the bar too high for first time watchers - there are many who are interested but haven't watched these movies because they are daunted by the length of the individual movies, let alone the complete set. It's perfectly okay to give yourself a day, or a week, or even longer when necessary between movies. I'm not sure I've ever watched them all in a single day myself - that takes some real commitment and stamina, not to mention planning to get an entire day free from other obligations. I'm not sure it's even possible to read all three books in a single day. I can't really imagine anyone who enjoys these movies half as much as I do voluntarily waiting longer than they need to between movies, but for most of us an all day marathon is not really in the cards. For those who find the length daunting, I actually use the fact that they are all a single story as a reason to tell them that they don't really have to watch each of the parts in a single sitting. Fellowship, in particular, has a pretty good break point about halfway through that can be used as an intermission or a place to stop for the day.

    • @_starfiend
      @_starfiend 5 місяців тому +2

      @@hkpew I consider myself a fairly fast reader and I took three days, about twenty hours all told, to read the full LOTR books. Including the appendices. Interestingly it took me almost as long to read The Silmarillion, while The Hobbit I read in about four or five hours.

    • @thor1829
      @thor1829 4 місяці тому +2

      ​@@_starfiendYou are very fast then, haha. It took me about three months to get through the entire trilogy (I read a chapter a day). It did give me a valuable skill: patience to read long texts!

  • @tracisr
    @tracisr 5 місяців тому +45

    The fact that Gandolf sent 3 eagles to get them bc he knew Gollum was with them gets me every time 😭

    • @hotmonkeyfilms
      @hotmonkeyfilms 2 місяці тому +5

      Good point.

    • @annakali8540
      @annakali8540 2 місяці тому +2

      I didn’t notice that, I got emotional now

    • @AC-ov5ny
      @AC-ov5ny Місяць тому +1

      ima be honest idk if that was the intention by tolkien or Jackson but if so that’s very meaningful

  • @jayvdub5390
    @jayvdub5390 6 місяців тому +17

    "You bow to no one" tears me up to this day.

  • @rhudoc3745
    @rhudoc3745 6 місяців тому +29

    A very ironic fact:
    1 - Ring to rule them all
    9 - Rings for Mortal Men
    7 - Rings for the Dwarf Lords
    3 - Rings for the Elves
    JRR Tolkien passed away in '1973'

    • @subsume7904
      @subsume7904 5 місяців тому +1

      This is crazy

    • @morcjul
      @morcjul 3 місяці тому +3

      Even the original order 3-7-9-1 is his death year exactly reversed

  • @StanleySuperX
    @StanleySuperX 6 місяців тому +15

    After his wife's passing, Sam entrusted the Red Book of Westmarch to Elanor. According to Elanor, Sam went to the Grey Havens and sailed to the Undying lands to be reunited with Frodo. As Sam was also a Ring-bearer (although only for a brief time) he was granted passage to sail into the West

  • @chrisburke1111
    @chrisburke1111 6 місяців тому +70

    Binge the entire Trilogy in one day!? You're my kinda people! I mean, I already knew that based on all the other great reactions you do, but this solidifies it. I can't wait to watch this when I get off work tonight.

    • @shadowcatreacts
      @shadowcatreacts  6 місяців тому +14

      😆😆 I hope you enjoy it!!

    • @chrisburke1111
      @chrisburke1111 6 місяців тому +6

      ​@@shadowcatreactsI thoroughly enjoyed it. I'm glad you did as well

    • @EatonRon
      @EatonRon 5 місяців тому +2

      Way back, I also spent a whole day back to back with the trilogy once. It was a long day of sorts, but very rewarding. We forget most days, but that was a very memorable day in my life all these years later. Appreciated, and great reaction thx, get a new chair if possible, subbed xx. thx again.

  • @knowingjake
    @knowingjake 4 місяці тому +6

    I remember when I was younger, watching "Return of the King", I simply couldn't understand why Frodo had to leave, and felt cheated that everyone didn't get a happy ending after so much struggle. It took me rewatching these as an adult to understand that Frodo's happy ending came BY leaving, because he wouldn't have found it otherwise. Which is just beautifully bitter-sweet.

  • @mosovanhe
    @mosovanhe 6 місяців тому +12

    "One does not simply watch all three LoTR movies in one day.." 👏

  • @dennisswainston411
    @dennisswainston411 6 місяців тому +21

    The 20 minutes of credits at the end of "Fellowship" included everybody that had been involved in the fan website that was launched when the movie series was announced. Anyone that took part in online discussions was given the opportunity to have their name listed. I was one of those fans. I won tickets to the Fellowship premiere in Orlando,Fl. I have a 18" replica statue of Gandalf that I won on-line. I have a replica "Sting" sword that looks like and is as heavy as a real sword. But when you slide a switch, it glows blue and hums! My wife an I attended a LOTR marathon when the "Return of the King" was released. It included the Extended editions of the first two movies as well. It started @ 9:30 am, included meals & breaks between the movies and movie related giveaways. It ended the next morning at 1:30 am... and 10 years later we did the "Hobbit" movies at the same theater the same way!!!

    • @ericwallace3175
      @ericwallace3175 4 місяці тому

      That's only on the extended editions. She didn't watch those

  • @phillipoutzen3234
    @phillipoutzen3234 5 місяців тому +2

    Sam and Rosie have 13 children, and Sam becomes mayor for 6 terms. When Rosie died on a midsummer's eve, Sam gave the Red Book to his oldest daughter and is never seen again. It is told in her family, that he went to the Grey Havens and took a ship, the last of the ring bearers to cross over the sea.

  • @lucidf8
    @lucidf8 5 місяців тому +27

    Yes, in fact, the books were popular long ago. I read them as a teen more than 50 years ago! Imagine all that time I had to wait to see them enacted on film in theaters! It was really impressive in that format with great visuals, sound, and the audience reaction. I’m glad you enjoyed the films, this was an excellent reaction!

  • @richardlaswell463
    @richardlaswell463 6 місяців тому +31

    2:55:52 In the book, Denathor also has access to a seeing stone [like the one Pippin looked into] so his mind was also subtley poisoned by Sauron.

    • @eXpriest
      @eXpriest 5 місяців тому +2

      It was not subtle, sauron turned an absolute paragon of men into a nihilistic doomer.

    • @Radonatorr
      @Radonatorr 5 місяців тому +1

      @@eXpriest We have to give Denethor the credit when credit is due tho. Despite using the Palantir in vain attempt to foil Sauron's plans for many, many years, Denethor still ressisted Sauron stronger and longer than Saruman, an Astari

  • @CrownlessKing88
    @CrownlessKing88 6 місяців тому +32

    It’s definitely worth watching the extended editions at some point on your own

    • @kregmaffews
      @kregmaffews 6 місяців тому +2

      These are extended

    • @LockeDemosthenes2
      @LockeDemosthenes2 6 місяців тому +8

      ​​​@@kregmaffewsthey aren't. Fellowship didn't have the "concerning Hobbits" part and ROTK didn't have the scene with Saruman and Wormtongue, so it had to have been the theatrical versions.

    • @kregmaffews
      @kregmaffews 6 місяців тому +1

      @@LockeDemosthenes2 that she included in this reaction. The scene of the lament of Gandalf gives it away tho

    • @sckmyunity
      @sckmyunity 5 місяців тому +3

      @@kregmaffews "The Fellowship of the Ring" title card appears when bilbo is writing the "Concerning hobbits" part in the extended edition. In the video, it shows up with Frodo sitting by a tree along with "The Shire 60 years later" which is from the theatrical cut.

    • @lavinder11
      @lavinder11 5 місяців тому

      ​@kregmaffews They aren't. The death of Saruman was completely cut out and no scenes of Boromir/Faramir

  • @LeBatteur
    @LeBatteur 4 місяці тому +6

    The first ringwraith encounter is absolutely iconic. The sense of scale, distortion of surroundings, unnatural evil, even the insects flee from this creature. It’s genuinely scary, and gives one a real sense of the level of danger to come.
    -Edit: LMAO That small, aggressively Canadian speech about snow in movies.

  • @vitaemins4527
    @vitaemins4527 3 місяці тому +3

    1:17:28 - GRRM actually said in an interview that Gandalf's death in Fellowship shocked him so much as a kid that it made him realize how effective a meaningful main character death *could* be in a story. I mean, if Gandalf could die, then truly anything could happen and no one was safe. It's part of the reason why he's so comfortable killing main characters in his stories. Because when done right, it can add so much to the story.

  • @jb5546
    @jb5546 6 місяців тому +39

    17:56 It's funny you mentioned that. J.K. Rowling was a huge J.R.R. Tolkien fan. She even fashioned her pen name syntax after him! And yes The One Ring is exactly what gave her inspiration for the horcruxes. The Slytherin ring was one after all :)

    • @berengustav7714
      @berengustav7714 6 місяців тому +4

      Then there's Liches from Dungeons & Dragons. And Slavic Folklore has Koschei The Deathless.

    • @rikk319
      @rikk319 5 місяців тому +6

      @@berengustav7714 Soul objects like the One Ring, horcruxes, and lich phylacteries from D&D are taken from mythology, yes...though I have read a whole lot of mythology, I can't remember right now which specific mythology birthed the idea of soul objects. Maybe someone else knows?

    • @mischr13
      @mischr13 4 місяці тому +1

      yes, she ripped off a lot of other artists and got a ton of mythology wrong cuz she couldn't be bothered to do two seconds of research (for example, how does she seriously not know grims are guardian spirits lmao?? "one of the darkest omens of our world" my ass). it's so ironic she picked a pen name that would intentionally hide her gender only to make her entire personality bitching about other peoples gender.

    • @jb5546
      @jb5546 4 місяці тому +2

      @@mischr13 you seem very upset about traditional "mythology".. but you really just answered your own grievance. "in OUR world".
      last I checked it was her world and a grim is whatever she likes.
      and as for your identity politics: no one cares!

    • @mischr13
      @mischr13 4 місяці тому

      @@jb5546 clearly she cares lol she made it her entire identity. if she wanted to make a dark omen she could just make up her own thing, but she has so little creativity she couldn't think up a new idea if her life depended on it. so she steals from other writers and does it badly. keep idolizing the shitty author of the one book you've read lmao

  • @sylvanaire
    @sylvanaire 5 місяців тому +4

    At one point, you mentioned that you thought Aragorn didn’t really want to be king. That was a central belief of J.R.R. Tolkien himself. He felt that if someone wanted to be a leader, they couldn’t be trusted. Only those who didn’t want to lead should govern. Just a small tidbit. 😄

  • @phoenixxcore
    @phoenixxcore 5 місяців тому +10

    "You bow to no one" gets me every single time, no matter how many times I've watched 😭

  • @restoredtuna8264
    @restoredtuna8264 5 місяців тому +12

    Pretty much sums up courage when you realize Sam had the courage to take Frodo to Mordor but it wasn’t until he got back from that that he had the courage to ask out Rosie.

  • @JustTiffers
    @JustTiffers 5 місяців тому +9

    Saw the trilogy when it originally came out in theaters. The whole family went every year for the release. Fell in love instantly. I think it helped that I grew up watching rich fantasy stuff like Star Trek, Star Wars, Babylon 5, Farscape, etc. I was never turned off or bored and I rewatch the extended versions a lot

  • @brianlafrazia8237
    @brianlafrazia8237 6 місяців тому +70

    Awesome! Was waiting for you to get to LOTR! Didn’t disappoint! And the way you reacted to Aragorn bowing to the Hobbits is how we ALL felt.
    “My friends…you bow to no one.”

    • @shadowcatreacts
      @shadowcatreacts  6 місяців тому +35

      That scene was truly perfect. I'm glad I watched it all in one sitting even if only to fully feel how impactful that moment was 🥹

  • @shinyagumon7015
    @shinyagumon7015 6 місяців тому +44

    Just finished the first movie and I can already tell this is a great reaction.
    Also I really loved how you kinda came around on Boromir at the end. I personally think he's a very interesting character since he isn't the kind of flawless hero you often see in that kind of fantasy but more of a deeply flawed human just trying his best and of course him accepting Aragon as his king with his last breath always breaks my heart.😢

    • @Iam_Stu
      @Iam_Stu 6 місяців тому +9

      I read the hobbit and LOTR as a kid in the 90s and Boromir was the character that stuck with me the most. A lesson that you are more than your mistakes, that you can be better than you were at your weakest.

    • @ChrisBrown-or8ky
      @ChrisBrown-or8ky 6 місяців тому +6

      I wouldn't quite call Boromir "deeply" flawed. He's a human, and incidentally the only human (full blooded) in the fellowship. He's been at war for years, and, as a soldier has been sent on a mission simply to bring the ring to Gondor. He has used heroism and valour to cover up his despair at the doom he believes his homeland will endure. He has duelling duties which become torments: his commitment to Gondor, and honouring his word to protect Frodo.
      It's that internal conflict that the ring seizes upon. He's the first of the fellowship to break because the ring preyed upon his sense of duty (a usually positive trait), but they all would've broken, including Gandalf

    • @jayfe86
      @jayfe86 6 місяців тому

      I don't know where the idea of Boromir being "full blooded man" comes from. He's of Numenorean stock through both his father Denethor and his mother Finduilas. I guess you could argue Aragorn is more noble...but Boromir is definitely not just "a man".

  • @lgkf1126
    @lgkf1126 6 місяців тому +64

    Only the nine men fell under Sauron's power. The elves realized what he was up to as soon as he put on the Ring and started to recite the encantation written on it. So they took theirs off and hid them. One was guarded by Elrond, one by Galadriel and one by Gandalf, to whom it was given by its former guardian. The dwarves were not affected eighter. They were just too stuborn for the Ring's magic. But their rings were eighter destroyed or retrieved by Sauron

    • @shadowcatreacts
      @shadowcatreacts  6 місяців тому +9

      Ooh okay. Thank you for explaining this!

    • @Fred-vy1hm
      @Fred-vy1hm 6 місяців тому

      Either*

    • @blazednlovinit
      @blazednlovinit 6 місяців тому +16

      The 7 dwarven rings gave them a great lust for hording treasure, which attracted dragons, which killed a few of them. So, while resistant to the negative effects of their rings, they became victims of their own success from the positive effects

    • @blissfull_ignorance8454
      @blissfull_ignorance8454 6 місяців тому +1

      None of the Rings were meant to be wielded by any mortal, originally. Sauron intended giving all the Rings for the Elves, whom he saw as his most powerful opponents in Middle Earth. When that plan failed, he turn to lesser races, hoping that Rings would work better for them than the Elves. With Men, the effect of the Nine Rings was almost too perfect.

    • @chrisnorris7527
      @chrisnorris7527 6 місяців тому +1

      I think the 3 rings you are referring to are not of saurons creation, but were the 3 that the elf (faenor?) Created under saurons teachings. Such as narsil that Gandalf is in possession of.

  • @alberttaylor2754
    @alberttaylor2754 6 місяців тому +16

    Hi Shadow,
    If you notice Gandalf will NEVER touch the ring with his bear hand. At the start of The Fellowship of the Ring, Gandalf does not KNOW that the ring IS The ONE ring but he does SUSPECT that it is one of the GREAT rings.
    I first discovered the works of J.R.R. Tolkien while in high school in the 1970's and I have loved them ever since. I have read The Hobbit and each of the Lord of the Rings books every couple of years sine then. If you REALLY want to dive DEEP into the story may I politely suggest that you also read the books, there are a small number characters and events that were left out of or altered from the books. That being said I think Peter Jackson did an OUTSTANDING job of bringing this story to film.

    • @ThisLoveIsSweet
      @ThisLoveIsSweet 6 місяців тому

      🐾

    • @MoriKitsune
      @MoriKitsune 3 місяці тому

      I think he does immediately suspect that it is the One, because he's also a ringbearer, and all the other rings were accounted for.
      Gandalf bears one of the Elven rings; Narya, the ring of fire. He references this when he calls himself the weilder of the Flame of Arnor, and you can see the ring at the end of the third movie when he's holding his staff in front of him. Galadriel bears Nenya, the ring of water, and Elrond bears Vilya, the ring of air.
      The nine rings of Men were obviously all accounted for with the nazgûl.
      The seven Dwarven rings were accounted for as well- four were eaten by dragons, as Gandalf tells Frodo in the first book, and three were recovered by Sauron.
      (Gloin later informs everyone at the Council of Elrond that the three Dwarven rings recovered by Sauron were offered along with the realm of Moria to King Dain II Ironfoot in exchange for info about the recovery of the One (which he denied ofc.))
      I also don't think Gandalf would've been as wary of a Dwarven ring as he was of Bilbo's ring, since the Dwarven rings were on the same tier as the ring he already wore.
      Gandalf immediately riding for Minas Tirith's library and looking for accounts of the One also points to him immediately suspecting that it was the One ring, and not just a Dwarven ring.

  • @samkarvonen8803
    @samkarvonen8803 6 місяців тому +32

    Shadowcat, you're such a trooper! Well done! Marathon completed with honours. 🎉
    But more importantly I want to say your reaction not only moved me and many other viewers. It also showed what a gem of a deeply kind-hearted and compassionate person you are. It's such a beautiful thing to be moved by justice -- the recognition and appreciation of the amazing greatness, even superiority, of those that have been historically under-appreciated and even downright ridiculed.
    You're a lovely person armed with a keen wit and the biggest of hearts. ❤ And you were all dolled up and pretty too! Thank you for such a great reaction!

    • @shadowcatreacts
      @shadowcatreacts  6 місяців тому +18

      Wow, thank you for such a kind comment 🥹 that means a lot

  • @druciferDMA
    @druciferDMA 6 місяців тому +6

    Your a legend for this shadowcat

  • @MisterHPlays
    @MisterHPlays 6 місяців тому +4

    I love that its actually thematically appropriate to snack and smoke while watching these

  • @blackeyedlily
    @blackeyedlily 5 місяців тому +12

    You are right to compare the One Ring to a Horcrux. J.K. Rowling was a big fan of the book trilogy the movies are based on and it is definitely one source of her inspiration. I am sure that the One Ring was an inspiration for Horcruxes. Sauron literally poured much of his essence into the Ring, as the prologue of the first movie explained. I also think that the Nazgûl, or Ringwraiths helped to inspire the Dementors.

    • @yourspookygay
      @yourspookygay 5 місяців тому

      She plagiarized the idea bc she is a brainless transphobe!

  • @makani9004
    @makani9004 6 місяців тому +15

    It's crazy how I can know everything that's going to happen and still tear up like a baby, how music, visuals, and performances can come together to make something so enduring. Tolkien was a master storyteller.

  • @liamfitzsimmons2691
    @liamfitzsimmons2691 5 місяців тому +5

    Notice the title of each film of the trilogy is mentioned in them. Elrond: You shall be the fellowship of the ring, Sauroman: the union of the two towers, Gandalf: authority is not given to you to deny The return of the king

  • @Mubiki
    @Mubiki 6 місяців тому +46

    I do wish people reflected more on Isildur. He kind of gets shafted, because he is presented in a mostly negative light, and it really isn't until the very end that you realize that he could never have destroyed the ring. It was never going to be possible. Neither could Elrond, who held a grudge against men for 3,000 years, in part because of Isildur and his inability to destroy it.

    • @nortons7040
      @nortons7040 6 місяців тому +6

      Neither could Frodo. It is interference of Gollum that led to destruction of the One Ring.

    • @Mubiki
      @Mubiki 6 місяців тому

      @@nortons7040 Lol. Yeah we know, it's the literal plot of the movie...

    • @nortons7040
      @nortons7040 6 місяців тому

      @@Mubiki Yet you've failed to mention it due to lack of underxstanding.

    • @Mubiki
      @Mubiki 6 місяців тому +2

      ​@@nortons7040 I didn't "fail" to mention anything. I said exactly what needed to be said and nothing more.
      There is nothing to "understand". It is literally shown to us. It's a comment on a lack of retrospect, not understanding.
      Quit trolling and go touch grass.

    • @nortons7040
      @nortons7040 6 місяців тому

      ​@@Mubiki What a lame of an excuse. Just admit that you are lacking perception and intelligence to comprehend narrative, glacing only on surface of things.

  • @goldsteingoldstein3512
    @goldsteingoldstein3512 5 місяців тому +9

    so glad you watched the theatrical version for your first watch. the extended version adds many excellent scenes (extended galadriel gift-giving scene, the boromir flashback, etc), but adds a few that needed another look from the editor, such as the extended cave troll scene or the merry and pippin height comparison scene. overall i feel like the best version of LOTR would be a combination of the two, but the theatrical is typically fantastic for first-timers.

    • @Cole-ossalReviews
      @Cole-ossalReviews 4 місяці тому

      Just start out with the extended editions. She's doing herself a disservice by not watching them. The beginning in the Shire Is better in those versions as well

  • @sanityisrelative
    @sanityisrelative 6 місяців тому +5

    I can definitely confirm that Legolas said at least 4 words in Fellowship: "you have my bow." Genuinely don't remember if he said anything else.

    • @MyEverythingBurrito
      @MyEverythingBurrito 5 місяців тому +2

      he also says “goblins!” when they enter Moria and see all the dwarves have been killed.

    • @molonlabe1509
      @molonlabe1509 5 місяців тому +2

      He is Aragorn, son of Arathorn. And you owe him your allegiance

    • @kaboom7208
      @kaboom7208 5 місяців тому +1

      That is, however, the only line he says to frodo

  • @user-im2ex9zw6j
    @user-im2ex9zw6j 6 місяців тому +3

    oh damn all three at once lets go

    • @user-im2ex9zw6j
      @user-im2ex9zw6j 6 місяців тому +1

      you brought a notepad to a movie marathon, i love it

  • @larrybell726
    @larrybell726 5 місяців тому +12

    Number one, Professor Tolkein gave us this wonderful story using his knowledge and imagination, number two, Peter Jackson took the story and created a marvelous , beautiful, almost perfect movie, number three you experienced the (long!) movie and shared with us the discovery of this tale. Thank you so much!

  • @ohifonlyx33
    @ohifonlyx33 5 місяців тому +2

    The reason you cry at the end is catharsis. You've lived through the war for middle-earth, seen the depths of despair and seen hope win out. You've seen the grand, epic journey of a hero and his return to the quiet comfort of a peaceful ordinary life. But in between, you've witnessed him lose a piece of his soul in the fight for good and evil. Frodo fights so hard and still loses to temptation, but--through the relentless courage of flawed men, the unbreakable bonds of fellowship, and perhaps even Divine Providence--evil is defeated. And Frodo is hailed a hero, but he's also so broken. And so now he must say farewell to his dearest friend Sam to go find peace. It's the cost of saving middle-earth. The weight that sits in your chest forever. It's an ache and a longing to return to something that can never be satisfied because it can never exist again. The loss of innocence.
    So much of these films are practical. The orcs, the horses, the props (so many rubber skulls), the scenery, the architecture (bigature sets and on-site constructions), pyrotechnics, forced perspective shots on a moving track with special sets. So when they DO actually use CGI, they can make it good, hide it better, and even if it's a little dated it still gets a pass without ruining the whole movie. And then there's the way they pioneered mo-cap technology with Andy Serkis to create Gollum.

  • @ricktreat
    @ricktreat 6 місяців тому +9

    Lord of the Rings was pretty much a precursor to all of fantasy literature since it was first published.
    I highly recommend that you watch the extras that came with the extended version of this film. I think you'd really enjoy all the background of how these films were made. Of course, I recommend the books themselves even more.

    • @rikk319
      @rikk319 5 місяців тому +1

      It was the progenitor of high fantasy literature, but not all fantasy literature. Robert E. Howard wrote Conan stories decades before The Lord of the Rings, and other sword & sorcery stories were published before Lord of the Rings, too. Lord Dunsany, a fantasy author who inspired Tolkien, wrote in the late 19th century. Alice In Wonderland, The Wizard of Oz...these are also fantasy stories, but of a different kind, but were written before Tolkien was even born.
      Now, if you want to say that The Lord of the Rings is the BEST of fantasy literature, you've got a firmer foundation to stand on, though it's still a matter of opinion, though I'd tend to agree with you on that.

    • @ricktreat
      @ricktreat 5 місяців тому +1

      ​@@rikk319 Perhaps you missed the words "since it was first published."

  • @elbandido14
    @elbandido14 6 місяців тому +6

    the lore is so rich that no matter in which direction you dive into, you 'll find treasure troves of stories, adventures, tragedies and even ideas which makes you wonder!

  • @Ajonr
    @Ajonr 6 місяців тому +2

    Boss level, shadowcat, boss level.

  • @Sagitarria
    @Sagitarria 6 місяців тому +2

    my understanding is that it is the ring influencing Bilbo in that it was ready to be picked up by Frodo and taken back to Mordor

  • @ChrisJaanes
    @ChrisJaanes 6 місяців тому +13

    These films will stay with you forever now that you've seen them. Just hearing some of the soundtrack from certain points is enough to make me tear up at times. Very enjoyable reaction! :)

  • @oldben6086
    @oldben6086 5 місяців тому +4

    As far as the popularity of the books, Tolkien has the number one and number two fiction best sellers of all time. Virtually every fantasy trope in modern fantasy was taken from The Lord of the Rings. Every language in the books was invented by Tolkien (with the exception of the Common tongue, English).
    He was also great friends with C.S. Lewis, the author of The Chronicles of Narnia. They challenged each other to see who could write the better books.

  • @SolidKore
    @SolidKore 6 місяців тому +2

    "If you live forever, I feel you like you should have as little regrets as possible..."
    Hell that hits hard, and easily shows why the Elves are so straightforward with their intentions...

  • @houdin654jeff
    @houdin654jeff 6 місяців тому +9

    So you’re going to ask lots of questions throughout. Fortunately (or unfortunately depending on how much you like long explanations about lore) pretty much all of them will have answers. At one point you asked about the seven and the three rings. The reason Sauron made the One ring was to try to control the bearers of the other rings. The elves sensed this trickery when he first put in the One and managed to remove them before the could be controlled. After his destruction, the resumed using them. By the time of the movies/books, the three are held by two elves (Galadriel, who shows hers to Frodo, and Elrond), both of them use their rings to maintain the elvish kingdoms they oversee. The other was gifted to Gandalf as the elf who gave it to him saw his need would be greater.
    The seven dwarfish rings didn’t function in the same way on dwarves as they did on men. Dwarves minds work more like clockwork than human minds do, so Sauron couldn’t manipulate them into serving him. However, the rings given to them allowed them to gain immense wealth, which attracted dragons to their gold hordes. Four of the seven were lost in dragon fire and Sauron’s agents managed to reacquire the remaining three. The reason Gimli comes to the Rivendell is to warn people that an agent of Sauron came to the mountain he lived in offering the return of the three remaining dwarfish rings in exchange for information about Bilbo’s ring. They refused, knowing Sauron was not to be trusted.

  • @lordflashheart3680
    @lordflashheart3680 6 місяців тому +23

    Wow Shadow, very impressive watch! Glad you loved it, it is a classic story with broad appeal and it was crafted with much love.

  • @aubryellaotero1064
    @aubryellaotero1064 5 місяців тому +10

    Girl you bet I’m watching all three hours of this with you!

  • @Harbringe
    @Harbringe 6 місяців тому +4

    The moment they all bowed to the hobbits is the perfect movie moment. It all started with the hobbits who are the smallest among us and in that moment the largest bow to the smallest. Just perfect.

  • @cindimonks5661
    @cindimonks5661 6 місяців тому +1

    When they were done filming, the "Fellowship" all got tattoos written in Elvish, "nine companions".

  • @dearthofdoohickeys4703
    @dearthofdoohickeys4703 4 місяці тому +4

    Boromir has always been….difficult for me. He’s something of a fan favourite, and intellectually I understand why. The thing is I was 6 when I first saw the movie, and his assault on Frodo was _deeply_ disturbing to me. When I started going to school and my parents taught me of stranger danger and child predators, Boromir was always who I imagined.
    Obviously I’m older now and have a different perspective, but I was never able to shake that feeling.

  • @katieryan1188
    @katieryan1188 5 місяців тому +4

    if it makes you feel better, Sam also sailed to the undying lands later on as he was also a ring bearer for a short amount of time. so he saw frodo again 😊

  • @custardflan
    @custardflan 5 місяців тому +2

    Frodo's parents drowned in a boating accident. Thus it takes a lot of courage for a hobbit to get into a boat, especially for Sam.

  • @JedWhitten
    @JedWhitten 6 місяців тому +2

    4:48 Sauron is one of the Maiar, a kind of angel or demigod. Gandalf and the other wizards, and the Balrog, are all Maiar as well.

  • @custardflan
    @custardflan 5 місяців тому +3

    The "incident with the dragon" is a reference to The Hobbit, the prequel to the Lord of the Rings. That's also a trilogy you could watch in one sitting. 😊

  • @markmartineau1015
    @markmartineau1015 6 місяців тому +4

    Always thought that there was a lot of negative on Borimeer, the ring using his desire to protect his people to try to sway him. But even Gandalf was afraid to take it knowing the ring would use his desire to do good to corrupt him.

  • @Perktube1
    @Perktube1 6 місяців тому +2

    The greatest trilogy ever filmed.

  • @dapeach06
    @dapeach06 3 місяці тому +2

    Viggo Mortensen is just incredible in these films, portraying a paragon of healthy masculinity, and a character who I think transcends his book counterpart. In the books, Aragorn is more sassy, but also more imperious. He doesn't undergo the personal journey that Viggo's Aragorn does, he just always knows he should be king and expects to be.

  • @mgsg50
    @mgsg50 6 місяців тому +10

    You held out pretty good, but there is NO ONE who can get through "you bow to no one" without breaking lol. Really glad you enjoyed the series. It truly is a one of a kind piece of media. I don't think anything like this will ever be done again.

  • @miropecovic3876
    @miropecovic3876 6 місяців тому +19

    Impressive reaction! I commend you for sitting through it all in one go! I'm glad you liked it!

  • @quinns4560
    @quinns4560 6 місяців тому +1

    Literally waited from the moment i clicked this video for you to see Denethor bite the tomato in ROTK, your reaction is all of us in that moment 🤣🤣🤣

  • @randomly-genrated
    @randomly-genrated 5 місяців тому +2

    Nice to see someone who actually keeps track of the story.

  • @richardzinns5676
    @richardzinns5676 6 місяців тому +10

    You have joined the happy fellowship of those who have watched The Lord of the Rings! I really appreciated your doing it all as a single reaction. Next time you rewatch these movies, though, please watch the extended editions - I know that makes a very long journey even longer, but it also gives you essential material that is missing from the theatrical versions (the final resolutions for Saruman and Grima, for one thing).

    • @jb5546
      @jb5546 6 місяців тому +2

      Sort of! I wish it had concluded the real story of Sauraman and his ventures in The Shire after the War ended... Or shall I say Sharkey :)

    • @richardzinns5676
      @richardzinns5676 6 місяців тому +1

      @@jb5546 And if you don't understand this reply, Shadowcat, it refers to the fact that the end of the Saruman plot line in the movies is different from what it was in the novel.

  • @WolffQuam
    @WolffQuam 5 місяців тому +3

    Sam is just pure wholesomeness and courage. Everyone just love him so much

    • @kylebryant8613
      @kylebryant8613 3 місяці тому +1

      Especially Rosie😉(they had 13 kids)

  • @custardflan
    @custardflan 5 місяців тому +1

    You are to be congratulated. I love these movies and the books most of all, but have never watched them back to back to back.

  • @benpowersguitar
    @benpowersguitar 6 місяців тому +8

    That is serious watch time. Still my favorite way to watch them. Glad you liked them. They get better with every watch.

    • @louginko4432
      @louginko4432 6 місяців тому +2

      I've watched them countless times and each time I understand something new about those characters and stories. There is so much to see and so many layers !

  • @Makkaru112
    @Makkaru112 5 місяців тому +5

    The current ages of the characters: Frodo Baggins is 53. Samwise Gamgee is 38. Meriadoc Brandybuck (Merry) is 36. Peregrin Took (Pippin) is 28. Gandalf (Olòrin) - is 15,000 (in his current form. Aragorn is 87. Legolas is 2,931. Gimli is 139. Boromir son of Denethor II is 41!
    Elves aged differently than men and dwarves. They did not suffer from old age or disease, and their lives were not limited by a fixed number of years. Instead, they aged very slowly, remaining youthful and vigorous for much longer than mortals. Though they could voluntarily leave their bodies and the ultimate thing that can kill them is grief or Sorrow that’s palpable enough for them to just not wish to live anymore.
    Here are the ages of some of the main Elves of the Third Age, as of the War of the Ring:
    1. Elrond Half-elven - over 8,586 while his daughter is 3,777 old!
    2. Galadriel - around 20,000
    3. Celeborn - 20,000; (he may have been alive before her birth or around the same time as his lineage that he lived amongst his forefathers and kin might suggest he is older but they are both very ancient.)
    4. Glorfindel (replaced scenes with Arwen in the movies but it helped prop up Aragorn’s Film character progression. I still think they could have incorporated them both in the scenes somehow and included the other important stuff that went on in that forest meeting Glorfindel and his company of elves)- he’s over 2,000 (although he had been re-embodied after dying in the First Age which means his Fëa {spirit} is far older than 2000.)
    5. Thranduil - over 8000, (as he was born in the First Age and lived in Doriath with his father Oropher; Thranduil is also the father of Legolas. (As Haldir mentioned him when speaking to Legolas in Lothlòrien during the first movie’s extended scene. He shares the same kindred elven clan as to Celeborn(Galadriel’s husband).
    It's worth noting that Elves could choose to die voluntarily, usually when they grew weary of life or when they had fulfilled their purpose in the world. However, their spirits would then depart to the Halls of Mandos and could eventually be re-embodied in a new
    body
    I meant to add that Frodo was 51 when he left due to the whole Gandalf coming back to the shire after many years. that explains why his youthful appearance didn’t change much throughout the entire film!

    • @TallisKeeton
      @TallisKeeton 5 місяців тому

      Frodo Baggins is 53
      53 and not 50? AFAIR he was 50 in the book.

  • @k8rip
    @k8rip 5 місяців тому +2

    It strikes me that, while there are certainly heartbreaking moments in these films, the moments that make people (myself included) cry the most are moments of love/joy/hope. It says so much about the heart of this story.

  • @fredharvey6525
    @fredharvey6525 5 місяців тому +2

    You asked "did these movies make kotr popular? Yes absolutely. Still doesn't change the fact that this was the first fantasy story and still the best fantasy story.

  • @PixarShark
    @PixarShark 6 місяців тому +3

    I was 12-14 when these movies came out, and I loved them! But as I’ve grown older, I’ve realized just how deep and wonderful and epic of a movie trilogy it is. The little things the story and artistry is doing without you even realizing it. And honestly in the light of losing my sister this year, who was a huge fan of it and a big part of my introduction to it, I’ve leaned into its messages even more. 💖

  • @jaylesworth12
    @jaylesworth12 6 місяців тому +9

    Thank you, you are legendary for doing this in one sitting, I do this once or twice a year, great trilogy!!

    • @shadowcatreacts
      @shadowcatreacts  6 місяців тому +3

      You're very welcome! I hope you enjoyed 🤗

  • @JimJack-ng9yi
    @JimJack-ng9yi 5 місяців тому +1

    This movie still today hold all the records and awards won and money made, nothing has beaten it since

  • @Tolandruth
    @Tolandruth 2 місяці тому +2

    you passed the vibe check if you dont cry during the "you bow to no one" scene we dont vibe.

  • @elessardan
    @elessardan 6 місяців тому +10

    2:51:03 might be one of my favorite moments in the trilogy just for its backstory. "Ónen i-Estel Edain, ú-chebin estel anim."
    One of Aragorn's names, and the one he went by when he was being raised in the house of Elrond, was Estel, which means "Hope" in Elvish. That quote was previously said by his mother as she was dying, and might be more accurately be translated as, "I give Hope to Men, I keep no hope for myself." That name, Estel, gives an extra layer of meaning every time Aragorn is mentioned as giving or providing or being the hope for the future of humanity.
    One of his other names is Elessar, meaning "Elfstone," which has extra meaning in the book (in the movies, it kind of got replaced by the Evenstar, the necklace/jewel Arwen gives him, but it kind of fills a similar role, just without the history, even though Evenstar itself would be "Undomiel" in Elvish, one of Arwen's names). When he became King, he took the name of King Elessar (of the house of Telcontar, which means "Strider" in High Elvish; he had a sense of humor), but that's where my username comes from.
    There's so much detail involved with really the entire film trilogy that you would only really get with a reading of not just Lord of the Rings but also the Hobbit and especially the Silmarillion. For example, Shelob's hatred/fear of the light of Eärendil (as she is descended from Ungoliant, and the light from the star of Eärendil is really the light from one of the Silmarils, which I understand means absolutely nothing to someone who hasn't read the source material but it is kind of mind-blowing every time I think about it, that there are literally thousands and thousands of years of history involved and interconnected through an entire legendarium).

  • @sfodd1979
    @sfodd1979 6 місяців тому +6

    The Lord of the Rings books were as popular and loved a series as you were likely to find, even before the movies. Tolkien spawned the fantasy genre, everyone has been copying him for around a hundred years. It was definitely mainstream, many a kid had the Hobbit read to them.