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Home » the Hobbit

In What Order Should You Read The J.R.R. Tolkien Books?

April 4, 2016 By Toby Isaacson Leave a Comment

J.R.R. Tolkien Books

Maybe you’ve recently watched (or re-watched) The Lord of the Rings. Maybe you’ve recently stumbled upon one of the less considerably popular works of the author. Regardless of what it is, you’re here – and that that can only mean one thing. J.R.R. Tolkien got you under his wraps, and you want to give his literature a shot. Many people do that, it’s understandable. Tolkien is one of the most influential authors in history, and he was the man who had shaped up one of literature’s greatest series of all time. But pretty much everyone has the same question, “Where do I begin?”

Without even counting the extensive works developed for the world of Middle-Earth, there are plenty of books to pick from. For instance, imagine you’re trying to get into Star Wars or Doctor Who for the first time. There’s such a long history behind both of those titles, and there are so many things that have been created under their brands that it can take forever trying to catch up to everything. In this case, there is only one thing you can do: prioritize. Start with the basics, continue reading, and if you feel like you’ve had enough, you can stop there knowing that you’ve had a taste of what was most important.

In this article, we’ll break down a big chunk of the J.R.R. Tolkien books, and we’ll offer you an insight of where to start.

J.R.R. Tolkien Books

The Hobbit

The Hobbit is the definite starting point. Despite the fact that the adaptation was turned into a trilogy, there is only one book – and it’s not lengthy, either. The book is in many ways a prequel to The Lord of the Rings, with many important elements being later tied into the storyline of the latter. It gives Bilbo a solid background, presents an intimidating appearance from Gollum, and it explains how exactly the “one ring to rule them all” ended up in Bilbo’s pocket.

All these considered, The Hobbit is also a fantastic standalone story. Written as a children’s book, it’s the very definition of a wonderful adventure – a hobbit, a wizard, a group of dwarves, a mountain full of gold, and the dragon sitting on top of it all.

J.R.R. Tolkien Books

The Lord of the Rings

When making the transition from The Hobbit to The Lord of the Rings, take note of the change in tone. The Hobbit may have been written for children, but not the same can be said about the latter. It’s essentially one big story split in three volumes: The Fellowship of the Ring, The Two Towers, and The Return of the King. It’s just like the movies. In fact, the films stayed as loyal to the source material as an adaptation could. One small word of warning, though – prepare yourself for entire pages of detailed landscape description, walking, and more landscape descriptions.

The three books are exactly what the movies were. They all begin when the movies do and also end at the same point. But, naturally, the books go into great details that couldn’t have been captured by the movies. The tale about a fellowship of humans, hobbits, elves, and dwarves trying to hurl a ring into Mount Doom will always be charming, especially with a better outline around the story.

J.R.R. Tolkien Books

The Legendarium

Most people already know about The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings, but this is where most of the confusion comes from. Tolkien crafted a whole world around the two previously mentioned books. He invented Arda’s history, geography, culture, civilizations, and even went as far as to develop the famous Elvish language.

The Legendarium is a collection of J.R.R. Tolkien books which contains pretty much every work that’s an extension of the Middle-Earth universe.

The first one of these works is The Silmarillion, which is a collection of mythopoeic works published post-mortem by Tolkien’s son. The book provides detailed information regarding the universe of Ea, host of all the lands that the events of The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings take place on. In a sense, it’s almost like reading a giant fantasy history book, so before diving into this reading, you might want to make sure that you’d actually like it. To do so, read first the Appendices of The Lord of the Rings and if they prove to be your cup of tea, then The Silmarillion is your cup of tea.

If you’re still curious about the universe but would rather not go so in-depth with it, The Children of Hurin is a great alternative. Also finished, polished, and published by Tolkien’s son, it provides a new narrative with plenty of intriguing information about the universe that fosters Middle-Earth.

J.R.R. Tolkien Books

The History of Middle-Earth

If you want more, The History of Middle-Earth is a twelve-volume extensive collection, also part of Tolkien’s Legendarium. This series basically exhibits step-by-step Tolkien’s creation process, using presentations and manuscripts as its backbone.

The first two volumes, The Book of Lost Tales Part 1 and The Book of Lost Tales Part 2, present the writer’s first go at developing the mythology of his universe. It can be considered a prototype for The Silmarillion, with a lot of its content being later rewritten in other circumstances.

The Shaping of Middle-Earth and The Lost Road and Other Writings picked up the drafted ideas from the first two volumes, reshaping them considerably more maturely. Volume V, the one latter mentioned, contains a lot of linguistic information.

 The following four volumes (The Return of the Shadow, The Treason of Isengard, The War of the Ring, and Sauron Defeated) are the ones that focus on the history of the writing and development of The Lord of the Rings. The rest of the volumes cover miscellaneous things, including the final outline of The Silmarillion and the writing process for the Appendices of The Lord of the Rings.

Short Works

Tolkien also wrote many short stories that are definitely worth giving a read too if you’re interested. He created several poems, some included titles being The Adventures of Tom Bombadil and Bilbo’s Last Song, which is supposedly written by Bilbo himself on his journey to the Havens. There are also many children’s stories and academic writings, but I’d say that, for now, there is enough material to work with.

Image sources: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5.

Filed Under: movies Tagged With: jrr tolkien, middle-earth, the Hobbit, the lord of the rings, Tolkien

5 Things The Hobbit Movies Spent Money On

September 22, 2015 By Fred Mitchell Leave a Comment

The Lord of the Rings trilogy movies were amazing, both story wise and visually. Peter Jackson did one hell of a job with these movies. I myself can say that I have watched the movies a bunch of times and still find them great and entertaining.

The Hobbit movies not that much since they were kind of milking it from only one book. Not to mention that they cost a lot.  Once you see the movies you begin to wonder on what exactly was that money spent on. Once you will see the list, you will definitely find it way too ridiculous. Here is a list of 5 things The Hobbit Movies Spent Money On.

 1. $2 million went on per Book Page

2 million dollars per page is amongst the 5 Things The Hobbit Movies Spent Money On

Ok imagine this, one book that made 3 whole movies. There were not a lot of pages, a rough number of 424 pages, this includes the book plus the appendices. The last Hobbit movie was about 144 minutes long so that means around 53 pages per hour. The difference here is that on the original Lord of the Rings trilogy we are looking at 122 pages per hour from a total of 1,137 pages.

All the three Hobbit movies had about $740 million budget so that means about $240 million per movie. Doing some simple math this will give us around $2 million spent per page. This is crazy don’t you think?

2.  Advertising

Airplane commercials are on the list of 5 Things The Hobbit Movies Spent Money On

All movies set a certain budget for advertising and they spend more if they think the movie will be a blockbuster. This is what happened with The Hobbit trilogy as well. It is estimated that they have spent around 155 million dollars only on advertising the movies. Just to make a point, it is more expensive than the whole cost of production for The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King.

The funny part is that they even shot a video for airline companies regarding safety, you can see Frodo talking about what you need to do while flying. This is way too much.

3. Unique characters

The costumes for the dwarves are on the 5 Things The Hobbit Movies Spent Money On

If you think the airline commercial was enough, think again. The budget was also spent on pimping out the dwarves. Each had highly maintenance wigs and beards made from the finest yak hair. All dwarves have used a total 547 weapon props. But hey, it’s all for the sake of authenticity. Who can forget these dwarves? I for one cannot tell them apart. They pretty much look the same to me, one uglier than the other.

4. 3D High Frames

5 Things The Hobbit Movies Spent Money On involves the 3D High Frames

The Hobbit franchise tried to approach a unique way of making movies by using 48 frames per second technology. Of course, this was pretty expensive and in reality the visual impact is not that great. Some people actually got sick and dizzy when they watched the movies in HD. I chose to watch the normal 3D version.

5. CGI Effects

5 Things The Hobbit Movies Spent Money On like Rivendell made in a green room

I have no words for how disappointed I was when I saw this CGI abomination. They forced CGI scenes to remind us how cool the scenery is in New Zeeland. Instead of the actual nature, actors were placed behind green walls. Why spend some money on the actual location when you can stay behind big green walls and spend even more for the unnatural look the CGI provided.

Lord of the Rings did a great job in transporting us to the realm of Middle Earth. The scenes, the places, just thinking about them now makes we want to watch them again. One great example is what they did for the amazing view of Rivendell. They used a miniature version and sprinkled a bit of CGI. It made the view astonishing. I wanted to move there.

On the other hand The Hobbit movies went all out to spend money on full CGI effects that looked so bad, you kind of had the impulse to look away and wait for certain scenes to be over.

Don’t get me started on the orcs. In The Lords of the Rings they were pretty scary, real and bad ass.  In The Hobbit, not that much. They received a full CGI makeover and destroyed all their appeal. Sadly these Hobbit movies can only be watched once and it is enough.

Image source: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5

Filed Under: movies Tagged With: 5 Things The Hobbit Movies Spent Money On, :ord of the Rings, movies, the Hobbit

5 Interesting Facts You Probably Did not Know about ‘The Hobbit’

December 16, 2013 By Fred Mitchell Leave a Comment

To say that Tolkien’s literary creations are a work of genius, would be an understatement. It is not every day that we encounter successful fantasy, but once we do, we never forget it. For those of you who have cherished every moment of the “Lord of the Rings” trilogy, “The Hobbit” will definitely keep you at the edge of your seats. Just a few days ago, the second part of the Hobbit, “The Desolation of Smaug” was released. The movie may have been nearly three hours long, but to me it seemed like an adrenaline-filled, fascinating and magical adventure that melted into an oh-to-short moment in time.

It is actually incredible how Peter Jackson managed to produce such a complex movie from only one book, and considering that there are only a few dozen pages left to leverage in the creation of movie number three, we might expect a few scenes from Lord of the Rings to unfold in it, to the delight of its fandom. For those of you who have already seen it, the ending was probably not what you had in mind, and the wait might feel like too much to endure, so we have decided to present you with 5 little known things about the Hobbit and LOTR, to pass the time faster.

1. Characters that Appear in Both Trilogies

thranduil

The depth of connection between the characters of Lord of the Rings and the Hobbit is incredible. Here is some fun trivia for you. Do you remember the scenes from the “Mines of Moria”? It is in that faithful place that the Fellowship of the Ring comes across Balin’s tomb. The same Balin that appears in the Hobbit (white haired, big nose). There is one more character that we see in both LOTR and the Hobbit. We are talking about Ori, the child-faced dwarf, and scribe, who wrote the book from which Gandalf reads in the mines. Thranduil, the high-elf who betrayes the dwarfs in the Hobit, is the same Thranduil who rides the giant Moose* in Lord of the Rings. Oh, and he is also Legolas’s father. Last on our list is Gimli, or more exactly his axe, which he inherits from his father, Gloin. He also has the same eyes… and eyebrows.

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*We just found out that Thranduil’s Moose is not actually a moose. According to “Middle Earth’s Biology as Shown in the Hobbit”, it is a different species of deer. 

2. The Corruption of Gollum

Tolkien decided to rewrite certain passages of “The Hobbit” to better fit his legendary “Lord of the Rings” trilogy. Initially, Gollum was a sweet and lovely creature which willingly offers to give up the ring on condition that Bilbo wins the Guessing Game. He was given a darker side, more suitable for the story, to flesh out the evil of the ring’s corruption. Poor, little Smeagol.

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3. The First Hobbit, and his Anemic Dwarf Companions

In 1969 Tolkien decided to sell the screen rights to “The Hobbit” and “Lord of the Rings”, because he had some money issues. This lead to the ecranization of a pathetic Hobbit story, where the elves had German accents, Gollum looked like some new species of toad, suspicious gnomes and a big eyed Bilbo.

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4. In case you Were Wondering about the Eagles…

Several times during the movie, I could hear people asking why the pretty birdies did not swopp in to rescue the squad. Truth be told, it would have been a lot easier to pass the corrupted forest on their backs. For those of you who were wondering where Gandalf’s eagles were during the Hobbit movie, here is a little info for you: they did not get involved because our most beloved wizard did not have them at their beck and call. Also, they’re not bloody taxis. And they’re not even eagles for that matter, because they’re anatomy is unlike any eagles, they are Aquila.

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5. Bilbo, the Dragon Slayer

Initially, Tolkien considered handing the task of killing Smaug to the leaf-smoking hobbit. He quickly changed his mind, and decided to leave the matter to more capable hands. And to be frank, Bilbo doesn’t really look like much of a dragon slayer. 

CA.1230.the.hobbit.unexpected.

Filed Under: movies Tagged With: Desolation of Smaug, dwarfs, elves, fantasy, lord of the rings, movies, the Hobbit, Tolkien

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