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| The Two
Towers
The
Lord of the Rings Part 2 - The Film
Based on the work of J.R.R.Tolkien
FILM
DIRECTED BY PETER JACKSON
A
Letter to Peter Jackson
It is Wednesday night, December 18, and it is dark beyond the candle’s
flame. I have just returned from Middle Earth, and my body is heavy
with the memory of battle, my mind alight with the visions and details
of The Two Towers.
Forgive me if I assign credit to you on behalf of many (for I know the
production of a film is a collaborative process), but you were surely
the focus of all this creativity, the wizard in the centre of a web of
creative power. Thank you. You have crafted an incredible artwork, one
which shall endure, one that has enriched the world. My gratitude
extends to all those who made it come to pass.
I bow my head again as I remember it. Arwen’s heart so filled with
sadness, Elrond spelling out the consequences of her love for Aragorn:
‘There is nothing here for you but death.’ It felt as if he spoke those
words for all of Middle Earth, and for all of us in the audience. I
cried with Arwen as I saw the King Aragorn laid upon his coffin, the
body turn to stone, the leaves of the ages fall upon it as so much was
lost to Time, and there, oh Mercy! – the sweet beauty Arwen
broken-hearted in the shadows, her dream of the world-as-it-was lying
cold and dead before her, and her light is lost. Ah, the bitterness of
mortality could not have been more beautifully rendered upon the
screen. I grieved that Arwen’s time has passed, and all we know of it
is the tale passed down through Tolkien. I grieved that someone so fair
should have to bear so much sadness. I was completely swept away.
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You
have excelled at transforming the Lord of The Rings from page to
screen, and with my tears you have sealed my respect. I never cried
reading the book. You have brought a power out of Tolkien’s work which
I do not believe was fully realised in the text. Aye, the themes were
there, the words were there, but ‘some things that should not have been
forgotten’, were lost beneath the ponderous complexities, as if a layer
of dust had fallen upon many of the treasures, and dulled their
meaning. You have improved the legend, for Middle Earth is polished on
screen, authentic and bold. The Two Towers did not appear to be a
dramatisation of Tolkien’s work – rather, it transported me into those
real events which Tolkien experienced and later wrote about.
I fell with Gandalf into that dark underworld beneath Moria, dropped
into that awesome cavern with my sword against the Balrog’s ancient
face, and knew if I turned aside for just a moment, I would die.
I was there upon the walls in Helm’s Deep, looking down upon thousands
of terribly strong foes, feeling that deathly fear through all my soul
and holding only the thin blade of my defiance before me. I could feel
how weak that blade was, even though Aragorn had told me, ‘This is a
good sword.’ I knew he’d said it only to make me hold on to my courage.
I held my breath as I moved past the top of the Dark Tower, where the
‘single eye wreathed in flame was ever watchful’, one of many brilliant
cinematic moments.
I pitied the wretch Gollum, who is a complete success - living,
breathing Smeagol, more real than ever.
I laughed for joy when Aragorn’s horse found him lying wounded at the
river’s edge, nuzzled him as he was dreaming of Arwen, and took him to
safety. The horse-work throughout was truly brilliant.
I moved through the world, in awe of so much artwork and detail it
defies individual mention. The landscapes, the villages, the
battlements, the halls, the weapons, the Black Gates of Mordor, the
haunting soundtrack, everything was authentic, inspired, praiseworthy.
Your division of the narrative to weave the many concurrent threads is
as it should have been in the book – it keeps the pace fluid through a
section which lagged in the text. You have breathed new life into the
fantasy.
How very rare to witness such mastery. And how inspiring to see such
beauty created in the world of Man. If there were to be another
Fellowship, you would have my pen, and you know what they say about
pens and swords …
Many thanks,
Yours sincerely,
Greg Hamerton
Author.
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ABOUT THE REVIEWER
Greg Hamerton has been writing fantasy since 1999.
His Lifesong cycle begins with THE
RIDDLER'S GIFT. |
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