• Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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    4 months ago

    It’s an almost perfectly accurate analogy.

    So, JRR Tolkien wrote The Hobbit for his school age children. It’s a novel that is designed to be read to children one chapter a night as a series of bedtime stories. It tells the tale of Bilbo Baggins, a hobbit enjoying his quiet life in the suburbs, being swept along on a quest along with some dwarves and a wizard to slay a dragon that stole some treasure. Along the way a series of adventures ensue, one of which involves Bilbo finding a handy magic ring that turns anyone who wears it invisible.

    Several years later, Tolkien decided to write an epic trilogy of novels that tell a much more mature story in the same setting. See it turns out that the fun invisibility ring Bilbo found is an all powerful evil artifact hand crafted by the setting’s equivalent of Lucifer as part of a jewelry-based ploy to take over the world in the name of evil, and the only place the ring can be destroyed is in the fires of the volcano in which it was forged in the first place. It falls on Bilbo’s nephew Frodo Baggins to carry the ring from the suburbs to this volcano to destroy the ring and defeat evil once and for all.

    Tolkien made it sound cooler than I just did.

    • CptEnder@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      jewelry-based ploy to take over the world in the name of evil

      That might be the single greatest description of LOTR I’ve ever seen lmao.

      Also don’t forget, if it wasn’t for some old wizard who had an affinity for getting high with little people, no one would’ve saved the world.

      • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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        4 months ago

        Yeah, that’s the biggest tell that The Hobbit wasn’t designed to have the sequels it did. If Tolkien had had The Lord of the Rings in mind when he wrote The Hobbit, Gandalf would have recognized the One Ring when he saw it.

        • Danquebec@sh.itjust.works
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          4 months ago

          Not necessarily. There were several lower rings out there in the world. The One Ring had been lost since thousands of years. I don’t remember what Saruman tells the wizards about it exactly, but essentially, it is probably lost for ages, and Gandalf trusted his wisdom at the time.

          When Gandalf meets Frodo at the start of LOTR, he tells him he was getting increasingly suspicious about this ring, and started doing researchs on it, until there was no doubt anymore that this was the One Ring. Tossing it into the fire is only an ultimate confirmation.

      • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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        4 months ago

        I never got through Return of the King. Twice I slogged through Fellowship and Two Towers, I got a few pages into Return of the King and I was just done with it. I didn’t care enough about these characters or this world, I couldn’t tell what was relevant or what wasn’t, so to this day I haven’t read the last book, and the events of the first two have run together in my mind as a beige DnD scented sludge.

        I sat through the first movie in the theater with some friends in like 9th grade and once again I remember it as a series of spectacular visuals and a bunch of characters I didn’t give a shit about. Without my permission this became one of only five things pop culture was allowed to care about for the rest of my life.