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by Roberto Rivera
Three rings for the Elven -
kings under the sky,
Seven for the Dwarf - lords in their halls of
stone,
Nine for Mortal Men doomed to die,
One for the Dark Lord on his dark throne
In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.
One ring to rule them all, One ring to find
them,
One ring to bring them all and in the darkness
bind them
In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows
lie.
J.R.R. Tolkien The Lord of the
Rings
When the most awaited film since The
Phantom Menace opened yesterday in
more than 3,500 theaters across the country, I
couldn’t miss it. That film, of course, was
The Lord of the Rings: the Fellowship of
the Ring.
As you likely know, the film is an adaptation of
J.R.R. Tolkein’s book by the same name.
John Ronald Reuel Tolkien was a professor
of Anglo-Saxon studies and English literature
at Oxford from 1925 to 1959. While at Oxford,
he made the acquaintance of a young don
named Clive Staples Lewis — Jack to his
friends. As C.S. Lewis writes in his biography
Surprised by Joy, Tolkien was
instrumental in Lewis’ conversion from
atheism to theism and then to Christianity.
In 1937, Tolkien published a novel called
The Hobbit. In it, Tolkien depicted a
fantastic (in its literal sense) world known as
"Middle Earth." The "middle" describes not so
much geography as an imaginary epoch. It’s a
world where men, whose time has not yet
come, live alongside wizards, elves, dwarves
and hobbits. The latter are, in Tolkien’s
memorable description of "halflings," no more
than 3 feet tall and quite content to live their
lives out in their beloved Shire. They love good
food, good drink, good stories and a good
pipe.
The Hobbit served as a prequel to
something much bigger — both in terms of
length and impact. For the next decade,
Tolkien worked on Lord of the Rings, a
three-part story about a ring that gave its
bearer the power to enslave all of Middle
Earth. After being lost for many generations,
the ring eventually came into the possession
of Frodo Baggins, a hobbit. Much to his
dismay, he learns that he must leave the Shire
and embark on a quest to destroy the ring by
returning to the fires from which it was forged.
The first part of that story, The Fellowship of
the Ring, was published in 1954, with the
other parts, The Two Towers and
The Return of the King following the
next year. While Tolkien’s publisher liked the
novel, he feared it would be a flop. It didn’t
quite turn out that way. Initially, the novel sold
respectably. Then, as its reputation spread to
American college campuses, it zoomed past
commercial success to become a cultural
phenomenon. To date, the novel has sold
more than 100 million copies worldwide.
But numbers alone can’t begin to describe the
hold Tolkien’s opus has on its readers. In
1965, a high school student left a message,
written in the Elf language (Quenya) Tolkien
invented for the Lord of The Rings on
the subway walls near Columbia University. It
announced that the Tolkien Club would meet
in front of Columbia’s alma mater statue in a
week’s time. Despite typically freezing
February New York weather, six folks showed
up in response to an announcement that
wasn’t even written in a real language. This
exemplified the Lord of The Rings
mania that seized the imagination of a
generation. You couldn’t go anywhere near an
American college campus in the 1960s
without seeing bumper stickers that
proclaimed "Frodo Lives!" or "Visit Middle
Earth."
This response to Tolkien’s work, which has
progressed from bumper stickers to
thousands of websites and discussion
groups, attests to our need for certain of kinds
of narratives and stories — a need that is
rarely met. The word that best describes these
stories is "myth." By "myth" I’m referring to
stories that help us make sense of our lives
and the world around us. They provide an
account for good and evil, and they define vice
and virtue. As Joseph Pearce, the author of
Tolkien: Man & Myth puts it, "a myth or a
fairy story can convey love and hate,
selfishness and self-sacrifice, loyalty and
betrayal, good and evil — all of which are
metaphysical realities."
As an avid student of Celtic and Nordic myths,
Tolkien understood the role these myths
played both in the lives of individuals and of
the larger society. The myths not only
entertained, they transmitted people’s values
and beliefs. In this sense, "myth" means the
opposite of what we usually understand it to
mean. Instead of being something untrue, it’s
what we hold to be most profoundly true. Or as
G.K. Chesterton would say "not facts first, truth
first."
But what put Lord of The Rings in a
class by itself is something Tolkien brought to
the process of creating a myth: his Christian
faith. The Lord of the Rings that
captured our imaginations wouldn’t have been
possible without this faith and the worldview it
inspired.
This isn’t to say that Lord of the Rings
is a kind of Christian allegory. On the contrary,
Tolkien disliked allegory, considering it to be a
rather crude literary form. Instead, the values
and beliefs we see in Lord of the
Rings, the ones that set it apart from other
works of fantasy, and from the ancient myths
Tolkien admired, are those of the Christian
faith. An example is the depiction of evil in
Lord of The Rings. Tolkien
demonstrates the way evil insinuates itself
into the lives of the characters in a clearly
Christian way.
Evil in the novel doesn’t overpower, it
seduces. How? By using our idea about
what’s good against us. Tolkien
biographer Tom Shippey, who, like Tolkien,
taught at Oxford and Leeds, recently noted that
the evil characters in Lord of The Rings
started off with the best of intentions, but over
time, their willing collaboration with what they
knew, or should have known, was evil,
overcame those intentions and eventually
robbed them of their humanity. Likewise, it’s
only because Gandalf the wizard understands
this seductive power that he is able to refuse
Frodo’s offer to give him the ring. As he tells
Frodo "do not tempt me ... The way [of evil] to
my heart is by pity, pity for weakness and the
desire of strength to do good."
Evil in Lord of the Rings isn’t the
opposite of good, it’s a perversion of the good.
That’s why it can use our good intentions
against us. This idea is straight out of
Christianity and is best expressed in the
writings of the theologians St. Ambrose of
Milan and his more famous protégé, St.
Augustine of Hippo.
Even more than his depiction of evil, it’s
Tolkien’s choice of heroes that demonstrate
how the author’s faith shaped the world of
Middle Earth. Instead of choosing the wisest,
the strongest or the most powerful of Middle
Earth’s denizens to be the one to save Middle
Earth, Tolkien made his hero a member of the
smallest, weakest and least significant race:
hobbits. This confounding of our expectations
is a common biblical theme, one that Tolkien
was no doubt aware of. When God chose
David, the reader is told that whereas man
looks on the outside, God sees the heart. The
apostles stood out only in their ordinariness.
And of course the Son of God himself was
born in a stable.
What the hobbits bring to the fellowship of the
ring are distinctly Christian virtues, in
particular, love and the capacity for sacrifice.
And no one embodies these qualities more
than Frodo’s servant, Sam Gamgee, arguably
the true hero of Lord of The Rings.
There is no reason for Sam to be there. He’s
certainly not the warrior that the humans, elves
and dwarves are. Nor was he "meant," as
Gandalf puts it, to bear the ring, as his master
Frodo was. He isn’t even adventurous like
Merry and Pippin are. Sam’s only reason for
being there is the most Christian reason of all:
he loves Frodo and won’t hear of Frodo’s
going on this perilous journey without him. In
the end, this least of hobbits becomes their
undisputed leader, elected mayor of the Shire
seven times, as a reminder to all of us that the
meek do inherit the Earth.
The richness of the world Tolkien created,
along with its capacity to express
transcendent truths, caused me to doubt
whether Lord of The Rings could ever
be turned into a film. But Peter Jackson
(The Frighteners, Heavenly Creatures) did
it. And while much of the focus has been on
his tenacity in getting the film made and his
use of digital effects, the real reason
Fellowship of the Ring works is
because Jackson honored Tolkien’s story. He
didn’t substitute his judgment for Tolkien’s.
The Middle Earth readers like me love is there
on the screen.
Of course, no film can match what we "see" as
we read a book. There are omissions, most
notably Tom Bombadil. And, there are
deviations from Tolkien’s story. The Elven
princess Arwen is more, shall we say,
assertive than I recall her being in the
book for reasons I suspect have to do with the
perceived need to "balance" the film’s
demographic appeal. Other deviations are
probably related to the necessary shortening
of the story. And still others are simply
head-scratchers. Still, I’m amazed that the
greatest work of imagination of the past
century has survived the trip to the big screen
fairly intact. There’s a flip side to this: those
going to see the film who haven’t read the
books may find it a little confusing. In that
case, there’s the best part of "Lord of The
Rings" being brought to the screen: the hype
surrounding the film has sent sales of
Tolkien’s masterpiece soaring. So, here’s
hoping that many viewers won’t be willing to
wait until next Christmas and, like
Newsweek’s film critic David Ansen,
will tell themselves that a trip to the bookstore
is in order.
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