Тёмный

JRR Tolkien - All VIDEO interview compilation - CleanCut 

Talking About Tolkien
Подписаться 3,8 тыс.
Просмотров 580 тыс.
50% 1

Tolkien VIDEO interviews are rare and scattered everywhere in different length and quality, and it's hard to keep track of them.
This CleanCut edition attempts to improve that -- Result is a short film of just Tolkien and his own words.
These footage are from 1962 & 1968 BBC, which are the only two VIDEO interviews of him that ever existed.
- 27 minutes
- collected all known released video of Tolkien from public domain [to date 2022-09]
- best video quality footage are used
- removed some irrelevant audio by other people
- between every segment is 2s blank
- subtitles: select English (not Auto Caption); now updated per the transcript. Accuracy 95%
This video is the result of 100+ hours of labor.
Credit / Source:
- Tolkien Estate, BBC, RU-vid
- "Secrets of Middle-earth" docu (2003)
- "Master of the Rings" docu (2004)
- "Tolkien in Oxford Reconstruction", PDF file by Stuart Lee (transcript)
- for fan collection purposes; copyright belongs to their owners
- this video is non-monetized. I did not set google ads on it
Compiled by TalkingAboutTolkien
-------
MAKING of these compilations: Long-expected projects, unexpected timing
This idea first existed 20 years ago in my mind: of putting together these random footage,
so that I could finally watch them in one sitting without interruption.
20 years later, more materials had been published, but files are still scattered.
One day I just started the process, unexpectedly.
It wasn't an easy project; maybe that's why no one else had done it.
As a reader, I was already a collector of these things: docu CD's and stuff, so I had a starting point.
The real challenge was that these materials had been mixed and remixed in so many random ways over the decades. And there were so few reference data.
Some footage were not easy to be found at first; took me a while to be convinced that there were no more.
The editing process took two weeks of long nights reviewing the video and audio segments altogether.
In the end, 100+ hours had gone into the process and many more hours afterwards to improve the subtitles.
Now that it has been completed, it's nice to know that people actually appreciate the result.
Now, if BBC could release the remaining materials...
-------
For anyone that wishes to post their "opinions" on Tolkien's work or life: feel free to visit Reddit,
where your input will be properly greeted and nurtured by knowledgeable Tolkien readers -
with fair and respectable responses, nonetheless. / tolkienfans
Comments regarding any *adaptations*: please tread lightly (or better yet - not at all). So please stay on topic: this video and its content.

Опубликовано:

 

13 сен 2022

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 443   
@TalkingAboutTolkien
@TalkingAboutTolkien Год назад
00:00 Hobbits 00:45 LOTR 01:07 Elvish 01:27 Allegory 02:02 Reviewer 02:10 Death 03:16 Fan mail 03:28 Escapist 03:38 When was 13 03:46 Writes Elvish 04:45 FOOD?! 05:01 Beer 05:21 Smoking 05:38 Invented Ring inscription/Black Speech 05:55 Black Speech 06:07 Cult --- B&W --- 06:42 (no audio) pipe w/glasses 07:01 (no audio) takes off glasses 07:20 Hobbits 07:37 Roos, memory 08:04 Life after WW2 09:30 Manor Road 10:35 Recollection 11:03 Elves Dwarves Men 13:12 Silm 13:50 Silm 14:16 BBC 1962 --- Oxford Tour --- 20:45 Walks into house 21:10 Tour#1 better quality 23:30 Tour#2 low quality 25:35 Fireworks 25:45 Claps/Yeah 26:05 Aerial view 26:33 In a field
@stoicepictetus3875
@stoicepictetus3875 Год назад
This is very helpful indeed. Thank you!
@paulnolan4971
@paulnolan4971 Год назад
Thank you
@zzodysseuszz
@zzodysseuszz Год назад
That black speech though. Absolutely amazing
@pphedup
@pphedup 2 месяца назад
Wow, thank you!
@ahmetakgun5358
@ahmetakgun5358 7 месяцев назад
This man was fluent in 15-20 languages, fought in the trenches of WW1, became the father of a happy family, professed literature at some of the most pristine universities and created a saga that is still popular after a century... what a life!
@johnrockyryan
@johnrockyryan 7 месяцев назад
Much like Sir Christopher Lee may they both RIP 🙏
@ahmetakgun5358
@ahmetakgun5358 7 месяцев назад
​@@johnrockyryanyes, he fought as a special forces operative in WW2, became fluent in multiple European languages, acted in hundreds of movies, won countless awards, including knighthood and formed a heavy metal music band... the lives of 20th century men are like legendary tales!
@BackStarOfficial
@BackStarOfficial 6 месяцев назад
Tolkien's life is the definition of the word “Accomplished”
@JoeyArmstrong2800
@JoeyArmstrong2800 5 месяцев назад
An absolute genius.
@marcusblackwell2372
@marcusblackwell2372 5 месяцев назад
Also, was one of (I think) the first translators of Beowulf to English)
@dakotaroot_8816
@dakotaroot_8816 Год назад
He's exactly as I imagined him, Gandalf incarnate with those sly little smiles and quick bright eyes
@gib59er56
@gib59er56 Год назад
Yes dakota!! The Man is the Wizard in a tweed coat!! Tolkien was so unappreciated by the critics and those of that ilk. But us geeks( not really geeks) know the value of Tolkien.
@silverdragon710
@silverdragon710 Год назад
Exactly as you'd imagine him yup. In his tweed suit with a pipe. And next to a fireplace so charming
@mungomidge1090
@mungomidge1090 Год назад
Ian McKellen based Gandalfs voice from Tolkiens.
@jimmybailey7198
@jimmybailey7198 Год назад
He's like that but with a hint of everyone else, a little Bilbo in there for sure
@jamescerone
@jamescerone Год назад
I see more Bilbo than Gandalf honestly. You can tell he’s a bit grumpier in everyday life than he lets on lol
@josephjoe4180
@josephjoe4180 3 месяца назад
Tolkien was so immersed in his own lore that he spoke of his own elvish writing "as inferior to the elves," as if they were a real race that actually existed. That's so badass. I love this man.
@etienneporras7252
@etienneporras7252 Год назад
"Oh Lord, I've made a mistake, haven't I." The sheer WEIGHT of that statement shows just how much love and devotion this man poured into his work.
@diverguy3556
@diverguy3556 6 месяцев назад
It's at 4:19 for those who are curious
@creepyjk863
@creepyjk863 Год назад
you can really tell how fast his mind worked. its like constantly bubbleing up with thought
@gib59er56
@gib59er56 Год назад
Yes Creepy! Man does talk fast, his mouth is trying to keep pace with his thoughts. Not very clear as a speaker, which is ironic, as he was a professor and spoke for hours at a time. I guess you get used to it after a bit. The man was an absolute genius. He gave us so much, and I never tire of his works.
@Micolash_is_behind_you
@Micolash_is_behind_you Год назад
@@gib59er56 LOL i thought you were calling his mind creepy lololololol
@LonersGuide
@LonersGuide 7 месяцев назад
For some reason it was more common in those days (early to mid-20th century) more common for English speaking people to speak very fast like that. Whether it was before I don't know, since there were scarcely any recordings of people before then. Probably has something to do with not being dumbed down by television and other media.
@Crabbadabba
@Crabbadabba 5 месяцев назад
⁠@@LonersGuide yeah, you had to get your thoughts out quickly. You could hand write it but that was kind of slow. There were typewriters, but you couldn’t really rely on that on the go.
@jordangroff8978
@jordangroff8978 Год назад
God, seeing Tolkien write in Elvish himself is like watching Mozart write music, or MIchelangelo making sketches!
@chadbennett7873
@chadbennett7873 Год назад
One of the statements made in this world filled with more truth that can fit within the words.
@lukeluke7082
@lukeluke7082 Год назад
You know it wasn’t actually Mozart writing in Amadeus? It’s just a film he was an actor. It would have been equally amazing to see those masters at their craft though we are very lucky to be able to have had video for the best writer of all time
@chadbennett7873
@chadbennett7873 Год назад
@@lukeluke7082 I'm very sure he was speaking figuratively and it had nothing to do with the film. Nice comment.
@chriszablocki2460
@chriszablocki2460 Год назад
And speaking the languages he invented. He was going off on some forbidden language of Mordor in there.
@carlosmafia
@carlosmafia 11 месяцев назад
Lots of people have plenty of negatives to say about technology, but it's moments like this that you realise, we are truly blessed to have items like this to refer to, hopefully forever.
@romulomontes8884
@romulomontes8884 Год назад
I think his personality is kind of a mix between Gandalf and Bilbo. Such a brilliant and nice man.
@johngingerich8776
@johngingerich8776 Год назад
Yes! I was thinking the same. Sometimes he seems almost uncanny to Bilbo, both in the books and the movies. And of course, the wisdom and comfort of Gandalf. Such a blessing to read his works and see his interviews
@tomschofield5566
@tomschofield5566 7 месяцев назад
Ian McKellen did consciously base his performance of Gandalf on interviews like these.
@DaysofElijah317
@DaysofElijah317 3 месяца назад
Gandalf,Bilbo, Fangorn, and Bombidel it seems
@highpsi11
@highpsi11 Год назад
I absolutely love his acceptance of the term "escapist" writing as "escaping from prison".
@nbeutler1134
@nbeutler1134 10 месяцев назад
Such is the nature of fantasy
@Usernamesdontmatter1
@Usernamesdontmatter1 8 месяцев назад
More writers need to pay attention to that specific part of the interview.
@djuzi4514
@djuzi4514 5 месяцев назад
He means it in the sense of man escaping the prison of sin. Same thing he means when he says that death is not natural for man but is an unjust infliction. This is a very Catholic worldview.
@donovanjones4175
@donovanjones4175 3 месяца назад
@@djuzi4514ww1 was the end of christiandom, I’m thinking this is an influence
@Rekaert
@Rekaert Год назад
Tolkien: "I now wanted to try my hand at writing a really stupendously long narrative." Also Tolkien: Goes on to write one of, if not the best, fantasy novels of all time.
@lisazkc256
@lisazkc256 Год назад
It is the best, second only to the Silmarilion. No other fantasy author has ever come even close to Tolkien.
@minicle426
@minicle426 11 месяцев назад
​@@lisazkc256Challenge accepted. :P
@squamish4244
@squamish4244 10 месяцев назад
@@lisazkc256 In the sense of LOTR, yes. Countless authors have followed in his footsteps, or deliberately subverted his tropes, which is itself a comment on his influence, with varying degrees of success, in telling a narrative as complex and dense as LOTR. There are some truly great fantasy authors out there who've made statements as profound as Tolkien's in LOTR, with as much skill in language and elements of narrative structure like pacing. In the sense of the Simarillion, no. The Silmarillion is a friggin Bible of a world from its beginning to its end, and afterwards, loaded with philosophy and theology and incredible storytelling. It's certainly not to everyone's tase, "a phonebook written in Elvish", as one commenter hilariously put it. But if you get it, you understand that nobody has come close to it. The Silmarillion is a truly unique work in fantasy.
@Finarphin
@Finarphin 6 месяцев назад
The best fictional story written in prose (mostly). Except....there's The Silmarillion.
@Relixification
@Relixification 5 месяцев назад
@@squamish4244 The Silmarillion is Tolkein's bible of Middle Earth.
@chikami6014
@chikami6014 Год назад
His reply to the bbc interviewer around 20:30 was so profound :'D "The made thing, unless it says something, won't be remembered."
@flashpanshmecker
@flashpanshmecker 10 месяцев назад
I love his smile at the end😁
@ReadingAdam
@ReadingAdam 2 месяца назад
You could tell his intellect was leagues beyond that interviewer, whose mind was blown at the remark. A pity that better men weren't able to record conversations with him.
@alexajennelle5722
@alexajennelle5722 7 месяцев назад
"No, I don't desire to go and have afternoons talking Elvish to chaps." 😂 Thank you so much for all your time and effort in putting these clips together and for writing out the transcript. It's wonderful!
@BookofGates
@BookofGates 6 месяцев назад
When one wants Tolkein, only Tolkein will do. Not philosophy, commentary or imitation ie that series (mockery) let's pretend to be Elves 😅. What makes it stand out, is that because he was so meticulous, it makes it very hard to impose values on it, or subvert what is already there. That's why it took so long to get anything close to a good adaption because they cannot corrupt it to suit their ends.
@johns1625
@johns1625 Год назад
It's crazy to think that all through this time he was sitting on most of the Silmarillion and he never got a chance to see all the wonder and lore that unfolded after it was published. Imagine all the questions we could ask him.
@ilokivi
@ilokivi Год назад
The work of Christopher Tolkien to edit, compile and publish The Silmarillion, the Unfinished Tales and so much more after his father's death is accordingly valuable as an attempt to provide answers. No less a labour of love.
@Swarm509
@Swarm509 Год назад
@@ilokivi A lot of people seem to forget this when talking about Christopher Tolkien's work on this. It isn't perfect but I don't think anyone could of done it "perfectly" outside of JRR himself, and even he was constantly revising as he worked.
@h-t.p.24
@h-t.p.24 3 месяца назад
He already answered them in his writings
@HiHi-lt1cb
@HiHi-lt1cb 2 месяца назад
I wish he got to see it published, he worked on it for so long!
@ryanl8730
@ryanl8730 2 месяца назад
At 8:32, you can see the universal rawness of war in a man’s soul that knows he will never ever be able to forget how it touched his life. Being a Marine, I connected with this moment.
@primus7776
@primus7776 Год назад
How much pleasure, joy and escapism from the mundane has this man given the world. Magnificent to see.
@Suddennew
@Suddennew Год назад
exactly
@morry19965
@morry19965 Год назад
Wonderfully put :-)
@andrewwilliams2353
@andrewwilliams2353 7 месяцев назад
His brand of escapism is, as he confirms, an escape from our mechanised, stultifying prison of post industrial living where we are obsessed with Things and not Life in all its facets. Tolkien's greatest gift to us is to help us to become restored to be able to seeithe world as a wonder and a gift
@joepalooka2145
@joepalooka2145 11 месяцев назад
"I'm very fond of beer" ---- LOL what an amazing and wonderful man he was. I first discovered "The Hobbit" and "Lord Of The Rings" as a teenager back in the '60s and I've loved and admired JRR Tolkien ever since.
@truincanada
@truincanada 8 месяцев назад
I like to be rlevated...ha!
@AudioThrift
@AudioThrift 4 месяца назад
He has such an infectious smile.
@brandonboucher7090
@brandonboucher7090 4 месяца назад
Imagine being the student who left that page of the exam paper blank that Tolkien out of boredom decided to write the whimsical sentence “In a hole in the ground there lived a Hobbit.”
@AS-fu1kd
@AS-fu1kd Год назад
This man was such a precious gift to humanity
@RUDDYHELL2014
@RUDDYHELL2014 8 месяцев назад
Our... Precious 🧟‍♂️
@winterbas8927
@winterbas8927 Год назад
So... We have a student who left a blank page to thank for The Hobbit
@jeffvannda1250
@jeffvannda1250 Год назад
I read The Hobbit in 1970..took it to school and hid it in my class books and read it non-stop..move on to The Rings...got an A in Tolkien..not so high marks in classes ..it was such a place to go for a boy so unhappy at home, school and tragedy... reading always took me away
@captainaryan26
@captainaryan26 Год назад
Damn ❤
@jet_blast1622
@jet_blast1622 4 месяца назад
The Hobbit was required reading as part of the English class curriculum in around Grade 7 or 8 where I went to school in Canada. This was early 90's, but definitely started before that.
@unlimitedmuphinz
@unlimitedmuphinz Год назад
Just his way of speech and body language is almost exactly how I imagined Gandalf to be before the movies even came about. Easy going, but knowledge of things few ever knew. If he lived a thousand years I don't think he would run out of stories.
@carloscontrerass4418
@carloscontrerass4418 Год назад
The actor actually based his voice off of Tolkiens
@unlimitedmuphinz
@unlimitedmuphinz Год назад
@@carloscontrerass4418 yep Ian Mckellen indeed did that
@Free_Range_Hippo
@Free_Range_Hippo Год назад
It’s like meeting an actual visitor from Middle Earth.
@JoeLeonardo
@JoeLeonardo 3 месяца назад
It’s meeting Eru Ilúvatar
@aliciasirena8104
@aliciasirena8104 4 месяца назад
Journalists always try to trick people on their own words, but how wonderfully Tolkien outsmart that young man there; he was awesome.
@paradox7358
@paradox7358 Год назад
What a wonderful mind. Just imagine all the stories and details that were never noted down and died with him.
@thelionsshare6668
@thelionsshare6668 Год назад
I might be reading into this: when he mentioned the Tempest having more allegorical elements than the other Shakespeare plays, it seemed he was struck with a certain sadness. His best friend, C.S. Lewis, was a professor of medieval and renaissance literature. This is the sort of thing they would've talked about. And then he mentions the inevitability of death.
@jonahnolastnameneeded3130
@jonahnolastnameneeded3130 Год назад
Both Lewis and Tolkien fought in WWI, they were quite familiar with death. Interesting to imagine that this might’ve come up in a conversation they shared.
@thelionsshare6668
@thelionsshare6668 Год назад
@@jonahnolastnameneeded3130 That's for sure. Tolkien's entire unit was wiped out, while he was in hospital. But I did look this up, when the interview took place. 1968, so that was five years after "Jack" passed away. Charles Williams died in the early 1940s.
@thelionsshare6668
@thelionsshare6668 Год назад
@@jonahnolastnameneeded3130 lol ok... no, I didn't mean death as the subject of conversation, but rather the Tempest. Thinking of the Tempest might've reminded him of Lewis.
@QFGEE
@QFGEE 9 месяцев назад
Tolkien’s ability to take the pseudo-intellectual jibber-jabber of the pretentious interviewer and give genuinely intriguing answers is great talent.
@victortunisse6686
@victortunisse6686 6 месяцев назад
My god, that reporter was nasty... Why did he treat him like that?
@ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim
@ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim 5 месяцев назад
So disrespectful, how many people wouldn't give their left hand to have one talk with Tolkein and he goes on trying to manipulate Tolkein's words like he's examining a captured enemy. . . .
@hjpev6469
@hjpev6469 11 месяцев назад
This is the most English sounding man I have ever heard
@realMaverickBuckley
@realMaverickBuckley 3 месяца назад
Most middle class people South of Birmingham sounded like him until the 90s.
@Uberdude6666
@Uberdude6666 11 месяцев назад
I learned a new word today, "trencherman". And it seems like a perfect description of a hobbit... Also Tolkien seems like such a nice, down-to-earth chap. I always had this image of him being a very stern, classical figure, almost a bit larger than life... Probably because of the lack of interview-footage like this in the past
@simonidastankovic2627
@simonidastankovic2627 9 месяцев назад
Well...he is larger then life (as a creator of the World and Work larger then life.
@matthewbryant958
@matthewbryant958 Год назад
Insane to think this legend created a whole new world, a world we all fell in love with
@getcontrol1
@getcontrol1 Год назад
Such a blunt yet profound thing to say - Death! That’s what it’s all about. I love his words about beer, hobbits having no king, and that it was intentionally free from specific religiosity. Language, trees, and a good pipe smoke. Just priceless footage.
@hellomate639
@hellomate639 3 месяца назад
It's like the way to worship for real is to live in harmony with life.
@spencergellsworth
@spencergellsworth Год назад
I can see some of the things Ian McKellen incorporated into his portrayal.
@ApocGenesis
@ApocGenesis Год назад
And Bilbo. His light stammering and putting his waistcoat in his pocket. Tolkien did that when he was talking about the inevitability of death and I wonder if that was self-soothing gesture
@NavaeraGreenleaf88
@NavaeraGreenleaf88 Год назад
I'm getting emotional watching this. He died way before I was born, but I love his creation so much
@cyclesofstrength
@cyclesofstrength Год назад
"I like feeling elevated. I'm very fond of beer". Me too bud
@myworldstorm
@myworldstorm 4 месяца назад
What a truly wonderful man he was, rest in beautiful peace Mr Tolkien.
@carcasses5131
@carcasses5131 4 месяца назад
astounding that I have read this man's books for nearly 30 years, but it is only here and now that I have heard him speak
@pphedup
@pphedup 3 месяца назад
60 yrs. I'm reading it now for almost the 10th time.
@johndogwater
@johndogwater 9 месяцев назад
Wow! Those black and white silent sections, his expressions and gestures - all I could see was Ian McKellen as Gandalf! I'd never realised he was putting Tolkien in there but it's uncanny!
@josequijas7663
@josequijas7663 7 месяцев назад
God, seeing Tolkien drink a beer out of a regular beer mug makes him so humble yet distinguished. I wish i lived in the same time as him to share a mug or two.
@David.Bowman.
@David.Bowman. Год назад
Reminds me of my dad. He was born in Warwick before moving moving around various parts of that area. He had been moved up a couple of years in school as he was quite smart and went on to study English at Leeds in the early 60s, for some reason finishing off at Cardiff. I know his English degree had something to do with Anglo-Saxon and the likes of Beowulf and all the names you hear when you learn about Tolkien’s favourites. Went on to be an English teacher but never displayed any intention of writing his own material. Once, I asked him why and he said it had all been done and by better minds so he didn’t see the point. Nowadays he still enjoys a pipe and speaking in the odd riddle whilst generally living a Hobbit life.
@gib59er56
@gib59er56 Год назад
Hearing The Master quote the dark speech of Mordor used in the writing on the One ring was new to me. I have a box set of J.R.R. and Christopher reading from the Hobbit, the Lord of the Rings and the Silmarillion on C D`s. But he does not ever speak the tongue of Mordor. The way he pronounced " nazg" (ring) is a suprise to me. It sounds like he is saying " nazga" almost. Wow, this was a treat for me! I thank you for the posting of this video. Tolkien has been with me since 1977, when I first read the Hobbit in 5th grade. Lord of the Rings in middle school, and the Silmarillion in H.S. I am such a JRRT fanatic/geek, that I have everything ever published by the Tolkien estate, and quite a few books by Humphry Carpenter, and others. I never get tired of Tolkien and his wide world of beings and monsters, and the most epic of all quest tales, up there with Homer and the Illiad. Even better in my eyes and mind.
@sheerluckholmes7720
@sheerluckholmes7720 Год назад
🦘... Greetings friend...it's a very healthy sign, to be inspired by Tolkien. 👌 Your reflections have taken me back to 1971...final year High School English exam looming...teacher saw me reading a book during class. What are you reading? Lord of the Rings... Sir ! Yes excellent, but we are studying Tess of the D'Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy which is in the exam, and LoR isn't ! Yes Sir, but I prefer Tolkien. Teacher with a respectful grin, "Alright just sit at the back of the class and don't disturb anyone." Couldn't stop reading Tolkien, never finished Hardy,passed the exam ! 😂🤣🤫
@gib59er56
@gib59er56 Год назад
@@sheerluckholmes7720 Nice!! Sounds like your teacher was indeed familiar with Tolkien, and thought you were not wasting your time. But you did pass at least, so you made out pretty good in the end! People who I grew up with did not know anything about Tolkien, but for about three of my friends. Now you see all these video`s about his works, and it is all from the movies. I am happy that they are now into Tolkien , but sad at the same time, because so many of them wait for a new video to pop up and teach them. WTH is that. That is lazy , or something I don`t understand. I do not see Gimli with a hemet , bumbling around and joking. Gimli never laughed once even. He was a hardcore dude. I do not see Viggo Mortisson`s face when I think of Aragorn. I see him as I have always seen him, in my minds eye. Same with all of the characters. They did a great job, and I appreciate them, but I know Tolkien would not have let them make movies out of his work. He had a hard time with the fame that the books brought him. He just did not understand the whole thing. Anyway, I am sorry for chewing your ear off. But I always like to speak with a true Tolkien fan, such as you!! Cheers!!
@pphedup
@pphedup 3 месяца назад
​@@gib59er56I wish I could still see them all like when I was 15, but Peter Jackson's actors keep stepping in front of my screen.
@gib59er56
@gib59er56 3 месяца назад
@@pphedup Now YOU have got the right attitude. You have the characters in your head as you imagine them. Not an actor but JRR`s people places and things. I salute you my fellow geek!!!
@user-ej1oe2jl9h
@user-ej1oe2jl9h 10 месяцев назад
he reminds me of Gandalf. the way he speaks, the extra words he lets out. and that smile is so comforting. i wish i met him.
@leespiderpod
@leespiderpod Год назад
I think he’d really hate what Amazon have done with his lore
@davidhimmelfahrt3732
@davidhimmelfahrt3732 Год назад
No one considers Amazons adaptation to be canon
@samuelleask1132
@samuelleask1132 Год назад
@@davidhimmelfahrt3732 because they’re not. Same with all the other movies and videogames and stage plays and songs based upon Tolkien’s works
@davidhimmelfahrt3732
@davidhimmelfahrt3732 Год назад
@@samuelleask1132 Yes
@lorddarkrai5753
@lorddarkrai5753 Год назад
​@@samuelleask1132 It's impossible for every film to be 100% loyal to the source material and you know what in the case of The Lord Of The Rings that is highlighted to the highest of extents than any other book work transferred to the big screen.Once somebody watches the films first he or she is amazed at all the detail captured in every frame and how deep the story really is.And then if they decide to give the books a go they find out the books are even deeper than that as Tolkien traverses through all the wars and battles with his experiences and his feelings and his heart beats at the times he had fought in the trenches of World War 1. So Tolkien definitely devotes more pages to explaining the philosophy of the war and why it shouldn't really be happening at all.Some of the sweet moments between the characters in Jackson's films can be illustrated in your mind once you encounter their corresponding parts in Tolkien's books even though they're not too much.Peter Jackson did certainly an amazing job with the Lord of The Rings and definitely the best adaptation this story will ever get.Combining the clues i mentioned earlier one can deduce that should a certain individual read the books at first and watch the movies afterwards , some moments might seem too vanilla amd a bit foreign and that is acceptable and understood.Anyways , since Tolkien had also proposed Christopher Lee to play Gandalf i believe his opinion on film adaptations would be the most general a writer's thought , that is they cannot give you more than the book but if done right you might be in for an entertaining experience.Still though , Lord Of The Rings has one of the highest percentages of precision when it comes to tranferring a book work to the big screen , most films that walk the same path roughly reach 15%.Finally to add a bit about myself , i too lile most people out there watched the films at first and then read the books.Return Of The King is my favourite movie of all time , the book is definitely on my top 5 books of all time in mankind's history and my take on Lord Of The Rings doesn't differ not one bit from everything i've mentioned above.Hope you doing well!!!
@Jordan3DS
@Jordan3DS 10 месяцев назад
Is there anybody who doesn't hate it? xD
@VicViperT301Pilot
@VicViperT301Pilot Год назад
You can see some of the old Tolkien manuscripts at the Raynor library at the University of Marquette in Wisconsin. I highly recommend it. It’s awesome to to see such a marvelous body of work being developed through Tolkien’s notes and drafts. You don’t write something that large without a large degree of outlining which is clearly what Tolkien did; it wasn’t all stream-of-consciousness. You can tell how intentional he was about everything from the dialogue to the smallest descriptions of the environments that the events took place in. Truly a marvelous writer.
@edopronk1303
@edopronk1303 Год назад
He is so relaxed and happy.
@HansHammertime
@HansHammertime Год назад
While he seems to talk like Gandalf, he himself always compared himself to a hobbit. Just happy to tend his garden, go to bad late, and wake up late
@captainaryan26
@captainaryan26 Год назад
​@@HansHammertime hobbits are funnier than minions for me 😂
@SchillerDD
@SchillerDD 5 месяцев назад
I'm a Tolkien fan since my early childhood. My mom bought me a book every year. And later in my teens all the christopher books came out and I was even more in love with this world. I've read every Middle-earth related book many times over by now (I'm 33 now) and still are amazed and captured by his work. Absolutely amazing man. Amazing work. Amazing life.
@JoaquimRabelo-zy9zt
@JoaquimRabelo-zy9zt Месяц назад
Him talking in the dark tongue of Mordor qas great, simply great
@cosmicman621
@cosmicman621 Год назад
Thank You for posting and creating such a fine historical document. “Work is love made manifest.” -K.Gibran -
@sheerluckholmes7720
@sheerluckholmes7720 Год назад
🎯
@efjay3183
@efjay3183 11 месяцев назад
He was so well spoken that he made the word ”eloquent” look like clumsily stuttered slang.
@carlwoods4564
@carlwoods4564 5 месяцев назад
One of my personal heroes. Im very proud that he served in the Lancashire Fusiliers, im from Lancashire. His son also studied at Stonyhurst College near me. A great Englishman. 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿
@nintendianajones64
@nintendianajones64 Год назад
"All stories are about one thing, the inevitability of death."
@donaldhock5946
@donaldhock5946 5 месяцев назад
The greatest writer of all time...such a tale....deeply moving,soul stirring...the entirety of fantasy today evolved from this brilliant mind.
@michelletewhata7768
@michelletewhata7768 Год назад
The Legend. Creator of the best trilogy fantasy author ever RIP Tolkien xx
@alex-internetlubber
@alex-internetlubber 6 месяцев назад
I choose to believe that the fiction we invent, books, video games, are real in some universe. We tap into it when we display the creative impulse. Let me have my dreams.
@madkoala2130
@madkoala2130 Год назад
If there is one thing in all my years since childhood that surprised me it was this interview. Since I have first readed his autobiography I thought I will never see or hear him talk since he was avid hater of modern technology's and that he had never given to be recorded or interviewed something like this. But thank goodness I was wrong. Thank you for sharing this, because it shows that he wasn't very closed person to the public. Edit: After researching little bit more about this footage, I found out the original BBC edit, and thank you for removing those bits from those students that sound same as today's "Tolkien schoolers" that are actively destroying and humiliating this mans wonderful legacy.
@Light-Shift
@Light-Shift 5 месяцев назад
Idiots and fools cant destroy greatness. Out of their mocking jealousy and twisted morality they only annihilate themselves in the end. Which is exactly what theyre doing. Allowing themselves to be programmed to destroy themselves. If anyone is to be mocked its them. And they are. By their own indoctrinators. Communism and islam.
@MarianneHjorthJespersen
@MarianneHjorthJespersen 2 месяца назад
Words fall short. ln loving memory to this giant. I hope to meet him on the other side. In deep devotion I bow to this mighty human❤‍🔥
@Olivier-cr8ri
@Olivier-cr8ri Год назад
Merci Monsieur Tolkien. Je vous dois beaucoup.
@dalriadaskillen
@dalriadaskillen Год назад
A man after my own heart, very fond of a beer. Watching him write and speak an Elvish dialect he constructed from Welsh and Finnish, just amazing. Thanks for uploading this.
@r.e.tucker3223
@r.e.tucker3223 Год назад
Thank you for this.
@SWW_Productions
@SWW_Productions 11 месяцев назад
This is absolutely marvellous! Thank you.
@pappleseed
@pappleseed Год назад
thanks for this
@susiemcq3963
@susiemcq3963 Год назад
Thank you for this. Priceless.
@miless544
@miless544 4 месяца назад
Thank you for compiling this.
@radimh
@radimh 5 месяцев назад
Very nice work, thank you!
@RampantDaydream
@RampantDaydream Год назад
Wow thanks for this dude. Great contribution.
@VousEtre
@VousEtre Год назад
Wonderful. Thank you for posting.
@veljoriktsiervada4449
@veljoriktsiervada4449 5 месяцев назад
Wow. Thank you for putting this together. What a gem
@stetsonstarkey
@stetsonstarkey 4 месяца назад
Thank you for your great gift to us, JRR.
@johnnyw525
@johnnyw525 8 месяцев назад
Thank you for collating this! So great to have them all in one place in their best quality. A trove.
@joesgotya9930
@joesgotya9930 Год назад
This is magnificent. I didn’t even know video of Tolkien existed.
@Subdood04
@Subdood04 8 месяцев назад
I went to the Eagle and Child Pub a number of what’s ago. It was a really moving experience for me. To stand in the room, where he and C. S. Lewis (among others) would sit, smoke and read each others works is difficult to describe.
@alex-internetlubber
@alex-internetlubber 6 месяцев назад
Those experiences are always special. To be able to somehow take in the aura of those departed from us, we always build off the past
@mcnallyaar
@mcnallyaar Год назад
Thank you very much to whoever took the time to make the transcription so accurate. Very helpful!
@awanderer5446
@awanderer5446 Год назад
What a brilliant and lovely chap, thanks for compiling and sharing!
@david9243
@david9243 Год назад
A true genius. Nothing describes this man better
@BradsGonnaPlay
@BradsGonnaPlay 11 месяцев назад
I remember seeing footage of the opening interview earlier in my life and it was incomprehensible due to the quality. Great job on the restoration to whoever handled it, I could actually understand what he was saying.
@manoflego123
@manoflego123 2 месяца назад
I just want to say thank you for your hard work putting this video together, it is appreciated!
@ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim
@ifyouloveChristyouwillobeyhim 5 месяцев назад
He knows so much about everything, it's amazing! How the sap runs in the tree when it warms up in the sun each day. . . I'd forgotten about that!
@kyro-jaxxsonofkosmos23
@kyro-jaxxsonofkosmos23 8 месяцев назад
He has always been such an inspiration to me. I find his stories to be among my favorites, and his works have moved me to create my own mythology. Thank You!
@cleverusername9369
@cleverusername9369 11 месяцев назад
Ian McKellen has said he based his voice as Gandalf on Tolkien's voice and it shows
@ramprashad29
@ramprashad29 4 месяца назад
A big thank you sir for what you have contributed to the world
@jamesellsworth9673
@jamesellsworth9673 Год назад
THANK YOU FOR POSTING THIS SEMINAL INTERVIEW! 'We' began reading Lord of the Rings in our College years--so long ago. This interview means so much to those of us who pored over those pages...and who have revisited them ever since!
@kramnam4716
@kramnam4716 7 месяцев назад
What wonderful enthusiasm and energy and a brain the size of a planet! 🥰brilliant thanks for compiling.
@bokehintheussr5033
@bokehintheussr5033 Год назад
It's interesting to hear Tolkein quote Simone De Beauvoir. Most people think of Tolkein as a pretty conservative, old fashioned sort, but Beauvior was one of the most radical continental philosophers of her time.
@biseinerheult78
@biseinerheult78 11 месяцев назад
I think that was in a time when you still engaged with very opposing views. We don't know if Tolkien agreed with De Beauvoir's philosophy overall (and I'd think it unlikely), but I would imagine that he could respect her as a thinker with a keen intellect and wouldn't dismiss her completely out of hand, just because he didn't agree with her on everything.
@mbdizzle
@mbdizzle 11 месяцев назад
@@biseinerheult78 this is was during the time, where americans would kill you if you said you were a communist and hang black people, its very easy to pretend people could have nice little discussions but it was rarely ever like that.
@dalfyramone8710
@dalfyramone8710 11 месяцев назад
De Beauvoir and Sartre's epistemological and political writings are different beasts. You don't have to take a political stance when you look at their work in epistemology.
@Vingul
@Vingul 10 месяцев назад
​@@biseinerheult78 100% -- I would go further and say he probably disagreed with her on most philosophical and moral questions.
@simonidastankovic2627
@simonidastankovic2627 9 месяцев назад
​@@Vingul.....but not regarding Death, which is here the case.
@danielgreen2788
@danielgreen2788 Год назад
Every time I hear the Mordor lenguage I get the creeps. To think its written on elvish charachters its just horrific. Pure Genius this man.
@dalagnolghislain8694
@dalagnolghislain8694 3 месяца назад
it's a strange but sweet feeling that tickles our minds as we listen to John Ronald respond mysteriously to those journalists from 1968. An insider's feeling. We know what they didn't know at the time. Thanks to Christopher, we know the history of the Silmarils, we know the captivating beauty of the forests of Doriath, of the willows of Nan-Thatren bathed by the waters of Sirion. We have all imagined the mountainous walls of the Crissaegrim protecting Gondolin. We all wept for the outrages suffered by Hurin and his children, and by so many other children of Illuvatar. So many legendary stories, so many mythical landscapes are discovered with each word written by Tolkien. Hearing the master speak to people who knew nothing about Beleriand and the splendors and miseries that took place there gives me a selfish feeling of love for the spirit of this man. We feel close to him, because, thanks to the colossal work of his son, the history of Middle Earth is part of our lives. Love you John and Christopher!!!
@EmperorCaligula_EC
@EmperorCaligula_EC 6 месяцев назад
He seems like a mixture of Bilbo and Gandalf. :)
@sheerluckholmes7720
@sheerluckholmes7720 Год назад
Thank you so much for this excellent production. Keep it up. 👍
@Element8909
@Element8909 7 месяцев назад
Interviewer: "Would you rather be remembered as a man who has said something or as a man who has made something?" Tolkien: "I don't think you can distinguish. The made thing, unless it says something, won't be remembered".
@dannyk7226
@dannyk7226 8 месяцев назад
thank you
@volpilh
@volpilh 3 месяца назад
At 17:58, during the BBC interview, it is incorrectly transscribed in the subtitles that Tolkien said "ethological", when he in actuality, as with this entire part of this interview, is talking about ætiology, namely the matter of how things are created, or caused, or otherwise come about. It certainly might be related to matters of what ought be, or ought be done, (as is also prevalent theme throughout the interview in its whole,) but here, specifically, Tolkien seems to talk about the matter of which how his Arda came about to him, which is an ætiological matter altogether.
@pphedup
@pphedup 3 месяца назад
Thank you very much for this!
@TrailBlazer5280
@TrailBlazer5280 9 месяцев назад
Excellent compilation! Thank you for putting it all in one place. Have to say that BBC interviewer had me rolling my eyes though 🙄
@PGHEngineer
@PGHEngineer 7 месяцев назад
And Tolkein didn't look too impressed by him either!
@gurugoat8298
@gurugoat8298 Год назад
To sit and discuss both his mythology and my own, over a right good pint, has always been my dream. He is a remarkable storyteller, even about the basest of things. Professor, you are missed by even those who never met you. You are revered by millions, who would cut off an arm AND a leg to merely speak with you. I am sure you entertain gods with your stories. Ah, to sit at the table with you... Godspeed, on to the next great tale
@DL-df3lg
@DL-df3lg 5 месяцев назад
Yeah, you’re definitely one of the weirdos wanting to talk with him in elvish he just talked about wanting to avoid lol. Chill. He would be the first to tell you he’s just a fucking human. Albeit an extraordinarily lucky and talented one.
@Fardawg
@Fardawg Год назад
At 19:33 I know those are encoded subs from the source video, but I believe he said "auctorial" (he pronounced it like "auctora") not "of Torah." Auctorial meaning "of or relating to the author." I get why the original subtitler thought that was correct (because Tolkien wanted to maintain the idea of most Europeans not having a Judaic style religion before the coming of Christ, with only the Elves and those close to them knowing the full truth of Creation and having their own unique form of religion), but I've listen to that clip many times and don't believe he was referencing the Torah.
@warot359
@warot359 Год назад
Maestro Tolkien, gracias.
@MarkArandjus
@MarkArandjus 4 месяца назад
I did not expect to hear Tolkien quote Simone de Beauvoir, very interesting.
@georgekokkalis3330
@georgekokkalis3330 Год назад
You see how he's picking up his words, his mind was always working and coming up with new ideas and explanations.
@Ingens_Scherz
@Ingens_Scherz 6 месяцев назад
All I could think of while watching these interviews, especially the clips that included the various, smug and clearly socialist, interviewers, was "pearls before swine". And now, or lately rather, his own descendents have betrayed him and allowed his vision to be left entirely open to total corruption. A real "Mordor" has risen, in other words, and in the lands across the ocean to the west. tragically. Eventually, all that will be left for us to do - the only avenue remaining for survival - is fight. So be it. The hill I'll die on, if I have to die, is the one called "Tolkien". Among them all, it's worth protecting almost more than any other imaginable, besides the Bible. If you don't know why that might be, then perhaps you should re-read (or read!) the books, but more attentively.
@wobblertv8083
@wobblertv8083 7 месяцев назад
Im not sure if he would have liked the movie adaptions ...But hopefully would have approved of Bernard Hills portrayal of Theoden .
@mchurch3905
@mchurch3905 3 месяца назад
Having been a great fan of Tolkien since the 60’s, I find these interviews absolutely fascinating. How a man, under all the triumphs and tragedies, in his life, using his imagination, could so effectively create such a detailed world of hobbits, wizards, orcs, and dark forces, is beyond me…. Thanks for this compilation.
@DavidRLentz
@DavidRLentz Год назад
What a keen mind, and a full-on expert in my greatest strengths: spelling, reading, writing--the language arts. A joy to learn!
@Dedbeatz.
@Dedbeatz. 9 месяцев назад
You sir. Are a Legend.👍
Далее
ОН ТОЧНО ЗАЕДЕТ. ВЕЗДЕХОД АГ-34.
41:09
Lewis and Tolkien Debate Myths and Lies
8:46
Просмотров 409 тыс.
Five Great Tom Bombadil Theories | Tolkien Theory
22:21
Tolkien naming his characters
2:50
Просмотров 2 млн