The ever interesting Mr Pearce turns a critical eye on Peter Jackson's film adaptation of J.R.R. Tolkien's, The Fellowship of the Ring.
By Joseph Pearce
It is probably at least ten years since I last saw The Lord of the Rings movies.
I own all three of the special extended DVD editions of the films, but
they sit on the shelf in their virgin state, unopened and untouched,
gathering dust. The reason is that I share my home with my children,
which means that I can’t watch anything that I don’t want them to see,
or at least that I don’t want them to see yet. My daughter is eleven,
with a very visual imagination. An early 1970s episode of Doctor Who gave her nightmares. Clearly she is not ready to be affronted with orcs, the Uruk-hai, black riders, and cave trolls.
Considering my protracted exile from
Peter Jackson’s Middle-earth (as distinct from Tolkien’s of which I am a
regular inhabitant), I was delighted when a friend suggested that we
have a movie night at his house on three consecutive Tuesdays to watch
all three of Mr. Jackson’s films. Last night we watched The Fellowship of the Ring in
all its full extended glory. For almost four hours, including “pause”
time for visits to the bathroom or to the refrigerator for ale
replenishment, we basked in the splendor of the first part of Jackson’s
magnum opus. Memories of my earlier viewings of the film flashed back to
me but my long period of exile meant that it was all once more
remarkably fresh.
After the back story is recounted,
showing how the One Ring was forged and became Isildur’s Bane, we find
ourselves in the Shire and feeling very much at home. Mr. Jackson really
captures the true spirit of Tolkien’s idyllic depiction of the agrarian
simple life, captivating us and thereby releasing us, albeit all too
briefly, from our own captivity in a “real” world which resembles the
reckless wantonness of Isengard. The beauty, and the power and the
glory, of Tolkien’s Shire is rooted in the way that it feels like home
even though we have never been there. Perhaps it rekindles childhood
memories of uncluttered and untroubled innocence; perhaps it touches
those primal and primeval parts of us that still long for the lost Eden;
perhaps it prefigures that other home to which we’re all called, the
desire for which animates every healthy soul. Whatever the reason,
Tolkien’s Shire presents us with an icon of idyllic community, which is
inspirational and aspirational, and which Peter Jackson revivifies
magnificently. It is indeed so much alive that we feel that we are less
alive when we leave it, either with Frodo, Sam, Merry, and Pippin on
their journey into the dark, or when we return to our workaday lives.
But leave it we must (alas!) as we
follow the hobbits to Bree, skipping past Tom Bombadil, whom Mr. Jackson
chooses to excise from the story, exercising poetic license and his
producer’s prerogative. Although Tom Bombadil plays a crucial part in
Tolkien’s book, which is discussed in my own book Frodo’s Journey in
a chapter entitled “The Enigma of Tom Bombadil,” I don’t have a major
problem with Mr. Jackson’s decision to leave him out of the movie.[*]
The multifarious characters and multi-layered plots with which good
authors construct their fictional works is not as easy to accomplish in
the medium of film. Compromises are demanded because they are necessary.
For this reason, I can sympathize with Mr. Jackson’s decision to drop
not only Bombadil (and therefore the equally delightful Goldberry) but
also Glorfindel, whose small but significant part in Tolkien’s book is
taken in the film by Arwen, thereby magnifying the role of Aragorn’s
love interest and accentuating the female presence within the movies,
both of which enhance the quality of the film, as a film.
Perhaps I am mellowing with age, or
finding it easier to separate the literary purist from the movie critic
in my engagement with Peter Jackson’s film, but I found myself much more
tolerant of those aspects of the film which had irritated my literary
sensibilities when I had first watched it. I recall my discomfort with
the way that Mr. Jackson had turned Aragorn into a confused and
conflicted modern man, unwilling or unable to accept and embrace the
duties and responsibilities of his calling. I remember accusing Mr.
Jackson of conflating James Dean and Jesus Christ in his
characterization of Aragorn. On this more recent viewing, I saw less of
James Dean and more of Christ, especially in the close-up shots in which
Viggo Mortensen looks uncannily like Max von Sydow in The Greatest Story Ever Told or Jim Caviezel in The Passion of the Christ or,
indeed, like the naturalistic romanticized portraits of Christ in pious
and particularly Protestant art. Similarly, Mr. Jackson is unabashed in
his iconographic depiction of Galadriel as a Marian figure, her
grotesque and monstrous transfiguration when tempted by the Ring
notwithstanding. Our last view of her, as the Fellowship departs
Lothlórien, is reminiscent of classic images of Our Lady of Fatima or
Our Lady of Lourdes.
The film version of The Fellowship of the Ring culminates with the death of Boromir, differing from Tolkien’s book in which Boromir’s death comes at the beginning of The Two Towers.
It’s a scene that has great sacramental significance in Tolkien’s
original work, the final exchange of words between Boromir and Aragorn
reflecting the formal aspects of the sacrament of penance, in which the
repentant sinner must have contrition for the sins he has committed, confessing them, and making satisfaction in
terms of an act of penance. Boromir’s final words contain all three of
these prerequisites for a good and holy confession: “I tried to take the
Ring from Frodo [confession]. I am sorry [contrition]. I have paid
[satisfaction].” Aragorn’s role is that of the priest, acting in persona Christi,
who forgives the sin and bestows “peace” upon the penitent. Mr. Jackson
deviates radically from Tolkien in this scene, replacing the
sacramental “confession” with Boromir’s fraternal “confession” that he
would have followed Aragorn, proclaiming him to be “my brother, my
captain, my king.” Thus the allusive allegorical confession to God in
Tolkien’s original story is replaced with an explicit literal confession
in Jackson’s adaptation, expressive of Boromir’s final reconciliation
with the man (and king) whom he had wronged. The effect lacks the
nuanced subtlety and the depth of theological applicability of Tolkien’s
original, but it has great power nonetheless in terms of its cathartic
effect upon the viewer. Had Mr. Jackson chosen merely to reiterate
Tolkien’s words, it is very unlikely that the literary subtlety of the
original text would have been grasped by the viewer, the allegorical
significance being lost in the fast-paced medium of film, weakening the
scene and depriving it of the catharsis that Mr. Jackson’s reworking of
it provides. As I pondered the artistic license that Mr. Jackson had
granted himself in this most important of scenes from Tolkien’s book, I
realized that a film adaptation of a literary work should not be
expected to follow the literal letter of the original but should seek
faithfully to encapsulate and project its true and essential spirit
because, and to co-opt the words of St. Paul, “the letter killeth but
the spirit giveth life.”
This essay is the first in a series on Peter Jackson’s cinematic adaptations of The Lord of the Rings by J.R.R. Tolkien. The second can be here.
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