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The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power - Potato Review

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ash2-03.9 K3 years agoPeakD7 min read


You know the feeling when you eat some foods that leave a bad taste in your mouth, but the dessert makes it worthwhile and leaves a long-lasting impression. You may be wondering why I am talking about food in this community. Well, I didn’t have any other way to explain how I enjoyed this particular series. When the first trailer dropped, I was like, "Damn, this is going to be good. Another month to pass well. At least for me. But when I saw the first episode, it was like, "meh!" What is this garbage?


I am a kind of movie person. You could say a lazy one. I would watch rather than read. I once tried to read a book named "Hobbit". Well, I read 4 chapters in a month. but lost interest. Not because of the book, because I was lazy. OK, don’t worry. I won't brag about myself any longer. I just wanted to let the book's readers know that my entire review is based on movies and TV shows. I know nothing is better than reading books. All this aside, here I go for my first review.


This part is for those who just watched The Rings of Power. You can skip this part if you are not new to this saga. Well, if you are, don’t worry, you are in here for a treat. This series is the beginning of the Lord of the Rings series. And "Hobbit" is the middle one, and The Lords of the Rings is the ending. You don’t know how much I wish to be in your place to enjoy this again in first to last order. Even though this series isn’t finished yet, I think you will get the general idea. So if you just finished watching this, start watching "Hobbit". It has 3 parts, then the Lord of the Rings. That’s just a recommendation; you can watch them in any order you like. These three sagas are made in such a way that you will enjoy any one of them without watching the other two. And it will definitely leave you with questions like what happened before or what happened after. Food for the brain, I think. And it will provide you with the drive to finish other movies and series. Well, it was like this for me. I hope you will enjoy watching it. Moving onto the next part.




Based on J.R.R. Tolkien’s "The Lord of the Rings" and developed by J.D. Payne, this was an extraordinary and ambitious project, I think. The events of this series are thousands of years before "TLOTR". To tap into the J.R.R. Tolkien universe and to visualize it into reality is something to praise. Even thinking about it gives me chills. Even though this series has bad reviews around the world, I personally think it's not perfect but good. About the cast: I think it's perfect. The similarity between "The Lord of the Rings" and "The Rings of Power" is uncanny. You can trace them back to the "Lord of the Rings" characters. To me, the Stranger was the most confusing character of this entire series.


SPOILER


From the beginning, I couldn’t connect with any of the episodes. It felt so dull and boring. I thought there were two different timelines, both running on the same screenplay. and especially the first 4 episodes All the events were so separate that it was hard to understand. I mistook the "Theo" in the Southlands for the "Halbrand" . If you watched the series, you would’ve thought the same. The raids of the Southlands by orcs and the intro to "Hallbrand" were subsequent. In later episodes, it all becomes much more clear as it all comes together. After Episode 6, everything makes sense. And Episode 8 was a slap in Elon Musk's face. Every episode is connected to episode 8 and still different on their own. As I said, Episode 8 is the dessert of the whole series. I was like, damn Now it's interesting. And immediately thought I would rewatch from the beginning.


The evil you can't see or recognize is more dangerous than known evil. I thought Adar was Sauron, but at the end of the series it clearly shows that he wasn't really a bad guy. All he tried was to seek a home for his kind. But young Galadriel took him for evil and judged him. When the true evil grew right under her. When "Halbrand" said, "Do you remember what you did to me?" Even Adar couldn’t recognize him. That means Adar freed Orcs from Sauron’s grasp and tried to give them land where they could live. So, from a point of view, Adar is good.


Words that I liked

"Numenor" – Don’t know why , this word is stuck in my ear like a worm. Not annoying, but elegant in human terms, like royalty. Why human? you may ask. Let me explain. Words like Lindon, Valinor ring like elvish ,wise ,alien and "Khazad-Dum" is like strong, grumpy. "Southlands"- plain word and "Mordor"—feels like death, evil, and orkish. Maybe you think I'm crazy. But in truth, I really differentiate those words like this. Now back to Numenor. It's a little bit like Elvish. And as it sounds, "Numenor", the city is exactly the same. Proudly human with Elf technology, wiser than other human kinds. much more like an elf city on a beginner's level XD.


The most beautiful scenes of the series:

The Three Witches

Elanor “Nori” Brandyfoot

Galadriel

Erruption

Numenor

Galadriel's horse ride


Mordor

Eye of Sauron

Numenor boats



My own theories
As I said, all my comments and reviews are based on only movies and TV series. If I am wrong, please feel free to correct me.


I couldn’t place him as Sauron or Gandalf. Through the entire series, he is the most mysterious character. Even after the end of this season, I am not sure who he is. But I crossed out Sauron from the list XD.



So, here's my thoughts about the relations of hobbits with Gandalf. If the stranger is Gandalf, it become much more clear that why he prefers the company of hobbits. Especially with the "Baggins". When he fell, the first person to help him was Nori Brandyfoot. As we know the Harfoots are the ancestor of hobbits. Nori set him on a good path and he thinks that adventures is only good with Harfoots. So, he looks after the descendants of Elanor “Nori” Brandyfoot. That is just one my mad theories😅.
The Stranger and Nori Harfoot

This is my first review. Never done this before. Thanks to @sarashew for nagging me to write and @riz
for giving tips how to write. Let me how it was in the comments. I would love to read your thoughts on my review.
Thank you for reading.

Namárië






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