idk man. there's so many episodes on the animated version. but if the animation one is better, i think im gonna watch that one. which one is the better one for you?
@@azulXreaction ok then, so here are 3 movies I suggest: Room 2015, The Book of Henry 2017, Good Boys 2019. It's up to you if you only choose 1, but watching all is gonna be very satisfying you'll not regret. But if you only choose 1 then Good Boys is my most recommended 😃
idk man. im in between. i hate it but i love it. i hate it bc it makes Mikasa sad for the rest of her life. i love it bc this ending was so good. so ironic how Mikasa is the one that always protects Eren from the first episode. but ended up becoming the one that killed Eren.
his mom, right!!??? i realize it when i edit the video. all these shits were planned by Eren. even his mom's death, it is his plan to make the child Eren hate titan so much! it was craaaaazy. i wish i realized it earlier while I watched it. but still, thats mind-blowing 🤯
Tom Riddle is a pathetic lich. Sauron is a being who came to be before the time itself and thus he/she/it is/are older than the concept of death. It's a perverted (for a divine being) desire to rule over things material and those bound to the earth that makes things complicated. Tom was simply afraid of ending up in a hospice one day, shitting himself, coughing and not being able even to hold his "wand" properly. Ambitions of a small man, although very powerful amongst Rowling's mages.
@@azulXreaction Netflix is wrong for sure. There are 4 seasons. The 3rd is split in part one and part two, the 4th is called Final Season and is also split in 2 parts. And then, after the final season there are special (1h 30 each one more or less)
Next Trilogy The Hobbit Extended Edition Of The Adventures Of Bilbo Baggin: (1) An Unexpected Journey Extended Edition (2) The Desolation Of Smaug Extended Edition (3) The Battle Five Armie Extended Edition
It wasn't from the spider it was from the morgul blade that the witch king angmar stabbed him on weather top. That never healed and the toll the ring had on his whole body he couldn't stay and be happy, he had felt too much darkness. He wanted to go to somewhere that took his pain away.
What a wonderful reaction!! You were feeling the feelings we all feel when we watch this trilogy/ read the books. Yes, they are going to the undying lands, where Frodo and Bilbo - who are not immortal - will live in peace and heal from the effects of the ring to the end of their days. Eventually, in his old age, Sam goes to join them as well, since he did wear the ring for a short time. Commenting here for the algorithm.
Imagine you go to war, and your former naive views get crushed by the harsh reality of it. You manage, kind of, for there is no other choice, survive and return. There will be a piece of your soul that is still wounded beyond recovery. That's Frodo. In order to move on in a way that will allow you to move on with "normal" life, you need to let this part go. And that's what happens, when Frodo takes the ship to "the other side". There's a reason why it is common that actual soldiers and other people in disturbing situations take "nicknames". It can help to differentiate between the trauma and a possible moving on. If one is lucky. Imagine most of the male cast being parts of the same person, and you may get close to understanding the depth of what has been shown. Thanks for the reaction. :)
I suggest you watch next the extended editions of the Hobbit, it deserves at least a watch once. Once you go to Star Wars, it will be a longer journey since hopefully you'll also watch the Clone Wars. So for now hopefully you get to see the Hobbit movies first.
@@azulXreaction Yes it's an animated series, the story is so good, and if you watch Star Wars in story timeline order, you'll feel the full experience 😃
@@azulXreaction i havent seen hunger games yet, but i would say hunger games its better , i didt like It at all the hobbit lol but its my opinión, you can watch It and judge by yourself
The child actor called Halleth, son of Hama, is a boy named Calum Gittins. Hama was the guy (the doorward) who let Gandalf keep his staff when he went in to see the king. He knew what he was doing...and he knew what Grima was doing to Theoden. When his men start forward to stop Gandalf and company inside the hall (Meduseld) Hama stops them.
Gondor was fighting already and could spare no men to help though Theoden didn't know that. In the movie the two towers are Orthanc (Saruman's tower in Isengard) and Barad-dur (Sauron's tower in Morder). The truth according to the author is that he never decided which two towers because there is also the 'tower of guard', which is the fortress (now capitol city) of Minas Tirith in Gondor. Geography: Isengard is at the very tip end of the Misty Mountains that run north and south. Helm's Deep is south of there, but far west of Edoras, Theoden's city on the high hill. Both of those last two are built along the northern edge of the White Mountains that run east and west. A very large plain separates them from Isengard. Go as far east as possible along the White Mountains, then turn south and there is Gondor, with the fortress city of Minas Tirith built around a sharp edge jutting out of the mountains. East across the open fields and the Anduin river from Minas Tirith is another mountain range and behind that is Mordor.
Aragorn was called (in the book) the greatest huntsman and tracker of his time. Gollum saved the ring, not Frodo. Your reactions are great. You're so deep in this movie I wish I could sneak up behind you and touch your shoulder. I bet you'd jump six feet in the air! When J.K. Rowling wrote Harry Potter she didn't have a clue that these films would be made and The Lord of the Rings would have such an enormous revival so she felt free to use Tolkien's books as much as she wanted. Only old fogies like me would be angry about that. The books these movies are based on were written from 1937 to 1949. Yep. It took 12 years. That's mostly because Professor Tolkien was an Oxford Don, so didn't have the luxury of working on them full time, but also because he was a perfectionist and wanted to be sure everything fitted perfectly together. Also, the story in the books is only part of the writing. He invented languages (Elvish, Dwarvish, Rohirric, etc.) and they are 'real' languages that can be learned, written, and spoken (at least in the case of two forms of Elvish, the Quenyan and Sindarin). He made calendars for the Shire and the Elves and men. He drew maps and family trees. All of that (and so much more) combined is why Middle Earth is a real world, conceived in one man's mind, but conveyed to the minds of millions as a living thing and a parallel earth just outside our reach. Tolkien's work is profound, deep, and wide and still entertaining. He is the father of modern fantasy and nothing since has lived up to his life's work that began in 1916, in the trenches of WWI.
Aahhaahha the best feeling of watching a movie is going deep into the movie 😁 Oh yeah, their debute are released in the same year. And HP came first. Those languages are real and can be learned? Maaan i got goosebumps reading this! Thanks
The people who swear allegiance to Saruman are from Dunland. That's farther West. They used to live in what is now Rohan, but they were always barbarians and didn't take care of the land or do anything productive. When the ancestors of the Rohirrim helped Gondor in war, the King gave them the land, which was a part of Gondor anyway. Back in the day, Gondor reached all the way to the Argonath where the huge statues of the kings were . That's well North of this area.
@@azulXreaction No. The ones attacked by Faramir were from far south, beyond any place included in the map. You could screenshot the map or capture one from the internet. It's really helpful throughout the movies.
It fills me with Joy to see how well you understood that Arwen's love story will end in tragedy and that her father (Elrond) is not just selfish dad. What he told her is her true end if she stays with aragorn; grief would eventually kill her, but after thousands of years of mourning. Not many people grasp that concept well.
@@azulXreaction It will be in Return of the King, not really a spoiler but just an info of how Gondor is ruled without a King 😁 - oh and also it was mentioned in Fellowship by Boromir