One Tale to Rule Them All
Before Star Wars and Harry Potter, J. R. R. Tolkien's epic novel, The Lord of the Rings, defined the modern fantasy genre. Published in full in
1955, the multi-volume novel weaves together intricate
descriptions of varying landscapes and adventures that
stretches across alternative mythologies, changing
atmospheres, and invented languages, for its various
races, including Elves, Dwarves, and Orcs.
The Hobbit, published in 1937, introduced the
world where its ambitious sequel would take place:
Middle-Earth, an (almost) idyllic land that closely
resembles Europe and Asia in some prehistorical
imagined time, where Elves still walk the forests and
Man has just started serving as the planet's head
species. This enchanted setting is made nearly
tangible in Tolkien's elaborate and sensuous language
and maps drawn by the author. It's easy to mistake
The Lord of the Rings as a trilogy. Its
actually one novel, comprising six "books," often
published in three volumes: Part I, The Fellowship
of the Ring; Part II, The Two Towers; and
Part III, The Return of the King.
It must be hell trying to make it into a film.
Yet, two men have taken on the task. While Peter
Jackson's live-action trilogy, adapted from the three
volumes in LOTR, is the first time that the
entire tale will make it to the screen. The only other
serious effort to reimagine Tolkien's tale as a movie
is Ralph Bakshi's 1978 animated version, an ambitious
effort that resulted in both success and failure.
To understand how this film can be simultaneously
great and dismal, one must first acknowledge that it
is impossible to render LOTR faithfully.
Audiences would have to be in theaters for 30 or more
hours at a clip to witness every lovely nuance Tolkien
devises in his masterpiece. This is a common complaint
about adapting any book, particularly a long one like
LOTR, for the screen, but LOTR works
much of its magic through Tolkien's deft use of
language. His Middle-Earth needs no visuals to bring
it to life -- the novel's scenes are almost mystical,
rich images seeming to spring from some deep psychic
well, where trees have souls and immortals walk
alongside humans. Nevertheless, Bakshi tries. The
result is glorious in scope and imagination, yet
ghastly to the eye and mind.
Innovative and beautiful, cheesy and disjointed, the
film tracks the story of Frodo Baggins. For those
unlucky souls who've yet to read LOTR, this
begins six decades after the events of more
child-oriented The Hobbit (the book began as
stories Tolkien made up to tell his children). This
"prequel" to Lord of the Rings tells the
adventure of Bilbo Baggins, a hobbit (a short,
humanlike creature with a passive attitude and hairy
feet) who joins a group of Dwarves in their quest to
reclaim a distant mountain and treasure from the
control of the evil dragon Smaug. Along the way, Bilbo
comes into the possession of a magic ring.
The Lord of the Rings was supposed to be The
Hobbit's sequel. However, it took on a loftier and
darker tone. As LOTR opens, Bilbo is
celebrating his "eleventy-first birthday," announcing
his retirement and departure from his home in peaceful
Hobbiton. He bequeaths the mysterious ring to his
adopted heir, Frodo (voiced by Christopher Guard).
Bakshi's adaptation requires some previous knowledge
of what's going on, because it introduces this info in
the form of a hasty exposition and some rushed
dialogue between Bilbo and Frodo.
Seventeen years later, Frodo is unexpectedly visited
by Gandalf the Grey (William Squire), a wizard also
took part in Bilbo and the Dwarves' earlier adventure.
He tells Frodo that Bilbo's ring is actually the One
Ring, ruler of all the Rings of Power, created long
ago by the Dark Lord Sauron. Bearing the One Ring, he
has power to destroy Middle-Earth. Overthrown almost
three thousand years prior, Sauron has now risen to
reclaim his stronghold in the evil land of Mordor, and
he's looking for his Ring. Sauron is never seen; the
reader and Bakshi's audience experience only his
effects, the way in which anyone who bears the Ring
becomes selfish and evil, and his preternatural army.
Nine Black Riders, the Ringwraiths, have made their
way into the Shire seeking a "Mr.
Baggins." And so, Frodo and his friends venture from
their cozy home eastward, determined to keep the Ring
from Sauron. The rest of the film is a long,
complicated, and extremely entertaining quest across
Middle-Earth, the wonder and intricacy of the land
conveyed almost perfectly.
Bakshi succeeds most clearly in the landscaping
department, beautifully portraying lush greens and
vast terrains. When he gets experimental, things get a
little trickier. Bakshi uses rotoscoping, that is, a
process by which live-action footage is animated by
artists (much like Richard Linklater's recent film,
Waking Life). The technique can be used to make
animated lines, movements, and proportions seem
"realistic," but Bakshi's film looks absolutely
surreal, even borderline psychedelic. The images
fast-forward and rewind, ease into slow motion and
occur over eerie backdrops, more a psychological quest
than the vision of an unknown history and a mythical
quest.
The film includes many on-point depictions, such as
the caves of Moria, portrayed with perfect menace and
gloom. And when Frodo wears the ring and is
subsequently drawn into the nightmarish realm
inhabited by Sauron's Ringwraiths, the visual
abstractions and disorienting sound help us to
understand Frodo's state of mind. At other times,
however, Bakshi's experimentations come off as bad
special effects. Fully animated and partially animated
characters interact, but the figures don't come
together. And some characters' broad gesticulations,
Gandalf's in particular, are distracting. The Lord
of the Rings is supposed to be dramatic, not
campy.
Though Bakshi clearly understands Tolkien's work as a
breathtaking piece of art, his animated version is not
itself breathtaking. Worst of all, even with its fast
pace and narrative leaps, the film covers only half
the story. Even within Tolkien's text, the divisions
between books are largely arbitrary. Bakshi's "Part I"
ends at the beginning of a major battle scene, set
roughly halfway through The Two Towers. A lot
has happened, but still, the action is only beginning
and no clear resolutions have been achieved. And so
Bakshi's film feels incomplete and anti-climactic. And
after the film's lackluster critical response, and an
almost nonexistent popular one, Bakshi never made a
second installment. Instead of being a definitive
depiction of one of the most popular books of the 20th
century, his LOTR is a mere curiosity,
something for Tolkien or Bakshi fans to cherish (or
despise), but nothing anyone would recommend to an
outsider.
Bakshi succeeded in capturing a portion of LOTR
with stunning, if sometimes confused, imaginative
renderings, but failed to capture its realistic
fantasy (or fantastical reality). Now, 23 years later,
Peter Jackson has his chance. The prospects are
promising, in that technology now allows what was once
the providence of pure animation -- magical spells,
strange and mythical creatures, and unearthly scenery
-- to occupy the same screen as live actors. Bakshi
(also known for Fritz the Cat and Cool
World) tends to show how fantasy and reality can
intersect, but they never fully merge, and the
differentiation makes his LOTR seem too much
like a practice in artifice. Bakshi's film falters on
many points, but it has some merits. No matter what
one feels about Bakshi's presentation, the story and
characters keep you intrigued.
Perhaps this is the reason that no adaptation of
Tolkien can fail completely: the source material is
too good. LOTR remains one of the most popular
and influential works in the modern fantasy genre
almost 50 years after its publication; not even
Tolkien could have imagined the effect his writing
would have on our popular culture. Jackson has more
time and money and space than Bakshi even dreamed of
having, so he has a greater chance to portray
Middle-Earth as the good professor may have preferred,
a world full of mythical races, rich and varied
cultures and tongues, where fantasy and reality are
more closely joined than either lets on.