![]() ![]() evil, you know?”įor Han, it’s not the filmmakers’ treatment of the action scenes that stands out but their handling of the relationships “and the very beautiful and ornate way that they rendered the world, which I think doesn’t mean that it doesn’t appeal to men, but definitely is more open to more people of more backgrounds finding something to love within it.” “I didn’t notice any lacking gender or race analysis in it because this story is so old and generic good vs. “It’s just kind of beyond critique for me because I think I consumed it so young and because I see it, even if the movies happened recently, as like such an old, immovable work,” said Sara David, 32, an editor at Vice Media and union organizer. That these female characters and many of their male counterparts are white (as are most characters in the film) hasn’t diminished the trilogy’s staying power, even for those who now hold Hollywood to a much higher standard. “That whole scene just makes me have goose bumps, and baby feminist Chelsea just ate that up.” 1 scene is ‘I am no man,’” said McCurdy, referring to the pivotal scene in which Eowyn kills Sauron’s most terrifying servant, the Witch-king of Angmar. Twenty years later, McCurdy remains especially moved by the female characters - Arwen, Galadriel (Cate Blanchett) and Eowyn (Miranda Otto) - whose roles were enhanced in the screenplays by Fran Walsh, Peter Jackson’s longtime partner, and their writing collaborator Philippa Boyens. They’re stabbed in the back and impaled (Saruman), shot with arrows (Grima Wormtongue), or fall to their deaths after setting themselves on fire (Denethor). Indeed, the films’ most toxic male characters often meet satisfying ends. And there’s no rape, there’s nothing that makes you feel uncomfortable as a woman in the entire trilogy.” McCurdy, who is married to a transgender man and estimates that they watch at least one of the films every two to three weeks, said her fascination went beyond being “a horny teenager,” adding, “Nothing feels unsafe because the good guys are all actually good. “That definitely did heighten my sense that there was a specifically female interest in these movies that I hadn’t necessarily thought of before because I think the world of ‘Lord of the Rings’ is sort of thought of as a nerdy male interest.” “We all loved ‘Lord of the Rings,’” said Gabriella Paiella, 32, a culture writer for GQ and former staff writer at The Cut. “What of the Boromir Woman?” “I’m Always Horny for Sauron.” “The Greatest Christmas Movie Is ‘The Lord of the Rings.’” Then a few years ago, I began to notice the articles on The Cut and elsewhere. And, of course, there were the memes and the accompanying meme accounts. (My parents saw them with us in theaters, then never watched them again.) Through college, I met the occasional “Lord of the Rings” girl - a few friends in graduate school, and strangers on drunken nights out. In the years after the films came out, rewatching them felt like a ritual only my sister and I observed. "The Battle for Helm's Deep is Over.For a certain subset of Millennial women, the “Lord of the Rings” film trilogy occupies the same role that “Star Wars” might for those who grew up from the late ’70s into the ’80s: It’s become a treasured part of the comfort-watch genre for women in their late 20s and 30s."The Soundscapes Of Middle-Earth" Documentary."Editorial: Refining the Story" Documentary."The Flooding of Isengard animation" featurette."Warriors of the Third Age" Documentary.The Appendices: Part Four - The Battle for Middle-earth Begins (disc 4) " New Zealand as Middle-earth" interactive map with on-location footage."Middle-Earth Atlas: Tracing the Journeys of the Fellowship" interactive map."The Realms Of Middle-Earth" galleries with audio."The Peoples of Middle-Earth" galleries with audio."From Book To Script - Finding the Story" Documentary.Tolkien: Origins of Middle-earth" Documentary The Appendices: Part Three - The Journey Continues (disc 3) This disc is a continuation of the first disc. Special Extended Edition: Part Two (disc 2) The Production and Post-Production Team.Peter Jackson, Fran Walsh, and Philippa Boyens. ![]() The first disc contains the extended version of the film with the following audio commentaries: Special Extended Edition: Part One (disc 1)
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