Tuesday 20 December 2011

10 Years of Fellowship


10 years ago I got to see The Fellowship of the Ring. I was mildly annoyed not to have seen it the day it came out, but since I'd had a nasty bike accident the day the tickets went on sale I was lucky to only have to wait 24 hours longer. At the time, largely because of expectation, I wasn't entirely impressed. And though I came to love it, I've always enjoyed its flaws, as can be seen from this retelling of the film that I wrote shortly after a second viewing. 

Just to blow my own trumpet, quite a lot of these gags ended up in the 2005 Melbourne Comedy festival as part of Folk-comedian Martin Pearson's hilarious musical one-man show "The Unfinished Spelling Errors of Bolkien". 

The Fellowship of the Ring:
A Plot Précis

Frodo Baggins is a shy Hobbit from the shire. He lives in Bag End, which is technically under "The Hill", but for some reason is actual under "A Hill", since the Shire has turned into the Barrow Downs. His Uncle Bilbo, who hasn’t aged a day since he found a mysterious magic ring (despite in fact now being greyer and more wrinkly) is planning a party of special magnificence for his birthday (Bilbo has concealed from Frodo the fact that it is also the young Baggins' birthday as a mean trick).

Frodo meets Gandalf, who can be recognised by his inability to carry a tune. Frodo and Gandalf smirk at each other for half an hour, then the plot continues. Frodo guesses that Bilbo is trying to hide the fact it is his birthday too, but Gandalf will not tell him.

Bilbo makes some tea. This will obviously become very important later in the film, as great attention is paid to it.

Bilbo has his party, and vanishes before he can wish Frodo happy birthday. Gandalf, perhaps alarmed by the tea making, urges Bilbo to abandon his magical ring, which he does after demonstrating how far he can make his eyeballs bulge.

Frodo comes home, to find that Bilbo has finally sprung the joke by giving him a wraith attracting ghoulish article of hideous power for a present. Happy Birthday Frodo! Hurrah!

Movie Gandalf then proves himself far clever than Book Gandalf by realising immediately that this must be a ring of power, and a pretty nasty one at that. He dashes off, congratulating himself on saving seventeen years that will inevitably lead to the whole story being very much shorter, thereby appeasing all the critics that thought it was too long.

Unfortunately for the free peoples of middle-earth, Movie Sauron is also a lot brighter than Book Sauron, and decides to torture Gollum with something scarier than a stapler. Gollum, vocalised by a man straining his voice so hard he can only squeak one word at a time, shrieks something that Sauron's minions, being creatures of darkness and used to having conversations with whistling kettles, somehow understand as being vital clues.

Gandalf, walking into a library of ancient, tinder dry scrolls with a flaming torch, discovers a scroll written by Isildurrr that explains how to identify a one ring.
1. Take ring you suspect of being harbinger of doom.
2. Prepare one-hundred ounces of cooking chocolate.
3. Throw ring on nearest fire
4. Control room!*
5. Remove ring from fire.
6. Read horrible writing proclaiming ring as harbinger of doom.
7. Eat chocolate.

Meanwhile, Movie Nazgul have proved themselves more evil than book Nazgul by a) getting to the Shire quicker and b) actually killing someone, instead of letting small old gardeners slam doors on them and merely going 'sssssssss'. Unfortunately they are less scary than Book Nazgul, since where ever they go St Wallonstone's Church Male Voice Choir and seven children with trumpets start playing Mozart's little known "Symphony for Loud Unsubtle Bastards." Gandalf then proves himself far more careless than book Gandalf and again leaves Frodo to walk despite going pretty much in the same direction on a horse. Perhaps he thinks Frodo needs the exercise.

Sam, meanwhile, has joined the quest as a special reward for delivering the funniest line in the film.
Unfortunately the Hobbits are so unfit that their only chance of making he long journey is to slice huge swathes of film out with a penknife. This leads to fairly incomprehensible cutting, but does save on bunions. On the way, they meet Merry and Pippin who decide to join their perilous quest to avoid watching re-runs of "Keeping Up Appearances" on UK Gold.

At Bree, Frodo discovers new respect for his wicked Uncle Bilbo when he finds out that the magic ring that makes you invisible, also turns the visible world into a huge grey blancmange accompanied by the sound of Concorde taking off from Heathrow (described in the book at 'improved hearing') making him wonder how his uncle killed all those spiders and stole from a dragon with all those bloody distractions. The Hobbits take up with a man who likes to pick them up and throw them up stairs because they like his beard. 'Strider' increases his range of Hobbit taunting when he takes up throwing apples at Pippin's head, perhaps as some kind of in-joke for fruiterers.

We cut to Saruman, who reveals that Sauron, the Dark Lord and owner of the Ring, has returned to earth as an "I" rimmed with fire. To emphasise this, we see several shots of a huge flaming letter I surrounded with flame. Chilling. Saruman re-enacts several scenes from "Break Dance: the Movie", before inventing the elevator and sending Gandalf to the top floor as his prisoner.

Deciding to camp on the Watch Tower of Amon Sul (known in the ancient tongue as 'weather top', but excised from the film for being too archaic) because it's the most obvious place for miles around to camp and therefore the Black Riders following them will never find them, the Black Riders find them. The Male Voice Choir and the kids with the Trumpets set up shop somewhere up the hill, then Strider sets fire to the Black Riders, who then become Orange Flickery Riders and run away. But not before the Rotting Zombie King of the Riders has very, very carefully missed Frodo's heart with his knife.

Just in the nick of time, Arwen appears. Because Frodo is fading into the spirit world he sees Arwen, an Elf, as a) a bright and shining figure and b) as wearing a really out of place wedding dress, since everyone wears wedding dresses in the spirit world. Arwen puts Frodo on her horse and then rides the 200 miles to Rivendell in three minutes. Arwen cunningly uses a Guinness advert to kill the Riders, but Frodo is being killed by his contact lenses, which he forgot to bring the cleansing fluid for, so Arwen tries to cry into his eyes to soothe him. Failing in this, she takes him to Rivendell to see Elrond the Half-Opthalmist, who plucks them out in time to save the little tyke. Awwwww.

Through a few shots of wooden garden furniture in black and white which are perhaps supposed to represent a troubled subconscious, we see Frodo awake. Gandalf is there. Frodo, whose eyes seemed to have recovered, asks why Gandalf doesn’t join them. The wizard recalls being saved by a moth, but doesn’t actually tell Frodo any of this, and says simply that he was "delayed", so that the Hobbit probably thinks he lost his car keys or something.

Elrond convenes his Council, by which he means that everyone there behaves as if they lived on a Council estate. Several important characters appear. Legolas the Blonde Elf (not described as such in the book), Gimli the Ginger dwarf (not described so in the book) and Boromir the fair-haired, bearded Man (not described so in the book). At this stage the audience is advised to forget all the reviews praising Peter “Pyjama” Jackson for sticking closely to the book.

The Council argue a lot about very little. No one explains why they can't use the ring. They just say "we can't use it", and almost everyone nods and agrees (the only time they do). Pyjama invokes "The Ladybird Book of Racial Tension" and stages a race war at the council, with Elf and Dwarf and Man all getting hot under their very well designed collars. Frodo, representative of a race that no one has yet learned to hate (give them time) therefore volunteers to carry the ring, purely to stop the violence. Elrond smirks.

To save costs, Pyjama superimposes the characters on film stolen from the closing reel of "The Sound of Music". Legolas shows himself to an expert ornithologist by announcing that the approaching flock of Saruman's spy birds are "Crebain out of Dunland" instead of the erroneous but briefer and possibly more useful "duck".

The presence of large crows forces Gandalf to entirely rethink his plan (Film Gandalf is rather less good at planning ahead than Book Gandalf) and he decides that they should climb right over the top of the highest mountain they can find, because Legolas informs them that Crebain out of Dunland are a southern genus and cannot survive in the thin, cold air of mountains, where their sub-species the Hooded Crebain exist instead. Needless to say, this plan is shit too.

Scottish Ginger Gimli suggests that they go through Moria. Film Moria is nearby, and to the knowledge of the whole company appears to be comfortably settled by Dwarves, with no suggestion of contact having been lost years ago. This worries Gandalf, if only because he can’t stand the thought of all those unconvincing Scots accents. Fortunately, all the faux Scots have been killed Cockney Orcs, and things go very well until Gandalf is apparently killed by a giant, fire-breathing goat. And that's diplomatically skipping over the well-endowed cave-troll…

Blonde Bearded Boromir, showing his sensitive side (not described so in the book), asks for the Company to have a moment to mourn. But Aragorn knows that they must complete the story within three hours, and hurries them on to the Terrifying Realm of the Evil Elf Queen Galadriel, who tries to drive Frodo mad by whispering things inside his head. She tries to take the ring but, just in time, someone at Weta accidentally hits the "reverse image" key, and she turns inside out for a moment. This so unnerves her, she gives up her attempt on the Ring, and agrees to help the company.

The Company take to boats, and sail down "Anduin", the 'Vaguely Sizeable' River. They pass by the Argonath, huge graven images of Isildurrrr and Elendil, saluting Hitler. A cute tweeting bird wanders in from a Disney film for no apparent reason.

The Company stop at Parth Galen. Frodo and Boromir argue. Frodo realises the problem with the fair hair and beard when he announces to Boromir "you are not yourself". Boromir mumbles several things, which might well be "yeah, and like you're a fifty-one year old, hypocrite" before falling over and getting covered with leaves. Frodo escapes into the Giant Grey Meringue, and climbs an unnamed hill, sits in an unnamed seat and mysteriously sees The Dark Tower and the giant, flaming "I" of Sauron. Frodo is so weakened by his quest, that the simple act of taking off a gold ring causes him to fall off the stone seat in exhaustion. He meets Aragorn, who carefully ways up the dangers of the corrupting influence of the ring and of journeying 250 miles through enemy territory on one’s own, and bravely sends Frodo away. The audience are probably meant to realise how serious this whole corrupting lark therefore is, but actually it just makes Strider look like a bit of a git (Cruel Strider now joins Wicked Bilbo and Smirking Elrond, not to mention Scary Galadriel, as being corrupted by the evil power of the script writers).

Frodo runs away. Strider faces Orcs alone, but they do their best to help by only attacking him one at a time.

Meanwhile, Merry sees Frodo and tries to get him to join him and Pippin. But Frodo has had enough of Merry's misshapen face and runs away. The Orcs see Merry & Pippin, but Blond, Bearded Boromir blows his bass kazoo and fights the Orcs. They shoot him three times. Puzzlingly, the crippled Boromir is then completely ignored by the fleeing Orcs, and then Lurtz conveniently takes half an hour to draw back his bow (the first sign of the crippling brain disease of delayed killing that the Orcs suffer from, perhaps because of the bits of chopped up Orc in their feed) , just giving Cruel Strider time to have a fight with him and chop his bits off. (much cheering)

Boromir dies, and his bass kazoo is cloven.

In a moment of panic, Sam realises that the film is running slightly under its intended length, and he throws himself into the river to fill up an extra minute. He and Frodo then leave.
The remainder of the company, Cruel Strider, Blond Legolas and Ginger Scottish Gimli throw Boromir's body over a wet cliff and then run after the bad guys with a needlessly macho five-syllable sign off. But it's a moot point whether it's any worse than "forth the three hunters".

The film ends with Sam and Frodo looking at some spiky rocks.

Cue soppy generic Enya mush.

THE END

* an injoke after someone posted a translation on-line of the scene where Gandalf reveals the ring to Frodo. As he throws the ring in the fire, rather than shouting "wait", Babelfish rendered it as "Control Room". Although this classic is lost to posterity, you can get a flavour from the surviving translation of the Ring Verse:

Three rings the Elbe kings highly in the light filters
The dwarf rulers in their halls from stone
The mortal one eternally death expire, to 9 The dark gentleman on dark throne
In the country Mordor where the shadows drone

A ring it to farmhands to find in the darkness drive it all and eternally bind
In the country Mordor where the shadows drone