The Lord of the Rings
The Lord of the Rings
One of the Niubiest movies that I have ever seen, also the first series film I've seen since I can remember. The films are so great that the only word capable of describing my feeling is NIUBI. The great fantasy world created by Tolkien is the foundation for all future movies, games, and TV shows such as <World of Warcaft>, <Game Of Thrones>.
I strongly suggest everyone see the three series of The Lord of the Rings, and also three series of The Hobbits. And the filming of The Silmarillion is heard to be on-going, what a Wocao news.
Here come the brief story telling of the film, please enjoy with the audio.
The Fellowship of the Ring
The film begins with a summary of the prehistory of the ring of power. Long ago, twenty rings existed: three for elves, seven for dwarves, nine for men, and one made by the Dark Lord Sauron, in Mordor, which would rule all the others. Sauron poured all his evil and his will to dominate into this ring. An alliance of elves and humans resisted Sauron’s ring and fought against Mordor. They won the battle and the ring fell to Isildur, the son of the king of Gondor, but just as he was about to destroy the ring in Mount Doom, he changed his mind and held on to it for himself. Later he was killed, and the ring fell to the bottom of the sea. The creature Gollum discovered it and brought it to his cave. Then he lost it to the hobbit Bilbo Baggins.
The movie cuts to an image of the hobbits’ peaceful Shire
years later, where the wizard Gandalf has come to celebrate Bilbo’s 111th birthday. The party is an
extravagant occasion with fireworks and revelry, and Bilbo entertains children
with tales of his adventures. In the middle of a rambling speech, however, he
puts on the ring, which makes him invisible, and runs to his house to pack his
things and leave the Shire. Gandalf meets Bilbo back in his house and tells him
he must give up the ring. Eventually Bilbo agrees to entrust it to his nephew
Frodo. Gandalf senses that the ring is gaining power over Bilbo. We see a flash
of Mordor, and hooded horsemen, the ringwraiths, leave its gates. The scene
shifts to Gandalf, who rushes to a library to sift through ancient scrolls. As the
ringwraiths begin to close in on Bilbo’s house, Gandalf returns to Frodo and
throws the ring into Bilbo’s hearth. Mysterious letters appear on the ring’s
surface. Only then does Gandalf realize that this ring is actually Sauron’s
ring. Gandalf explains to Frodo that the ring and Sauron are one. He longs to
find it, and it longs to find him. Gandalf has learned that Sauron has
kidnapped Gollum and that Gollum has revealed that Bilbo has the ring. The ring
must leave the Shire or it will endanger all the hobbits. Gandalf cannot take
it himself, since as a wizard he will wield too much power with the ring. He
determines that Frodo must take it. Gandalf explains that if Frodo puts on the
ring, it will draw Sauron’s agents to it. Suddenly, Gandalf discovers that
Frodo’s friend Sam has been hiding outside and listening to Gandalf and Frodo.
At first, Gandalf is furious at Sam’s eavesdropping, but then he recruits Sam
to be Frodo’s travel partner and protector.
Sam and Frodo leave Bilbo’s house, and in very little time they
have ventured further from the Shire than ever before. Merry and Pippin, two
mischievous hobbits who are fleeing a farmer from whom they’ve stolen,
encounter Sam and Bilbo and join their party. The ringwraiths ride by, and the
hobbits narrowly escape detection. Frodo is tempted to put on the ring, but Sam
stops him. This urge is Frodo’s first insight into the power and temptation of
the ring.
The hobbits arrive at the town of Bree and enter the inn known
as the Prancing Pony, where they are supposed to meet Gandalf, but the wizard
isn’t there. The ring accidentally slips onto Frodo’s finger, alerting the
ringwraiths to his whereabouts. A ranger named Strider introduces himself to
the group of hobbits and urges them to be more careful. The wraiths arrive at
the hotel, but the hobbits, thanks to Strider, are well hidden. Strider
explains to them that the wraiths were formerly the nine human kings who had
the nine human rings. They are hunting the ring because finding it is the only
way they can come back to life.
Meanwhile, Gandalf has approached another wizard, Saruman, for
counsel. Saruman already knows about the ring and Sauron’s attempts to regain
power. He declares that Mordor cannot be defeated and that the two wizards must
join with Sauron. Gandalf protests, and the wizards battle. Saruman wins and
imprisons Gandalf atop Saruman’s giant tower in Isengard, called Orthanc. At
his tower, Saruman is constructing a terrifying army with the intention of
waging war on Middle-earth. A butterfly rouses Gandalf and takes a message from
him, and a giant eagle comes and saves him.
Strider and the hobbits head for Rivendell, home of the elves.
They stop at a hill called Weathertop, where Strider hands the hobbits weapons
and suggests they make camp for the night. The hobbits foolishly light a fire
at their campsite, and the ringwraiths spot them. The ringwraiths stab Frodo,
but Strider fights them off and saves Frodo’s life. Arwen, an elf princess,
finds the party and hurries to Rivendell with Frodo, barely evading the
wraiths. Frodo is cured and wakes up to discover Gandalf by his side. Bilbo,
who has aged significantly, is also at Rivendell, having just completed the
book of his adventures, There and Back Again: A Hobbit’s Tale. Elrond, the king
of the elves and Arwen’s father, tells Gandalf that the ring cannot stay in
Rivendell but must go further. Pessimistic about the future of Middle-earth,
Elrond claims that the time of the elves is over, the dwarves are too selfish
to help, and men are weak. The ring survives because of Isildur’s weakness.
Moreover, the line of human kings is broken, though the heir of Gondor, who has
chosen exile, can reunite them.
Shortly
after this declaration, we learn that Strider’s true name is Aragorn and that
he is the heir of Gondor. We also learn that Aragorn and Arwen are in love and
have been for many years. However, this love requires that Arwen sacrifice her
immortality, one of the chief attributes of elves.
Elrond
convenes a meeting and announces that the races must come together to defeat
Mordor. Frodo presents the ring, and Elrond insists that it must be destroyed
in the fires of Mount Doom, where it was made. There is some disagreement as to
who will undertake this arduous task, and eventually Frodo emerges. Others step
forward to accompany Frodo, forming a fellowship of the ring. The fellowship
includes the hobbits Frodo, Sam, Merry, and Pippin; one elf, Legolas; one
dwarf, Gimli; one wizard, Gandalf; and two humans, Aragorn and Boromir. Boromir
is the son of the steward of Gondor, who has ruled the kingdom in the absence
of the rightful king.
The
fellowship sets forth from Rivendell. Saruman causes an avalanche of snow to
block the group’s attempt to cross the pass of Caradhras, and they decide to
enter the realm of the dwarves, the mines of Moria. Inside Moria, the party
discovers that all the dwarves have been killed, and soon the fellowship is
surrounded by an army of orcs, inhuman creatures that are also brutal, ruthless
warriors. The orcs disperse, however, at the approach of a Balrog, a demonic
creature from the underworld. The fellowship flees this creature as the mines
collapse. Gandalf stays behind to battle the Balrog, which he sends collapsing
to the depths of the mines. However, as the Balrog falls, it grabs hold of
Gandalf’s legs and drags the wizard down with it. The fellowship emerges from
the mines saddened by the loss of Gandalf, but Aragorn insists they have no
time to mourn and must press on.
Coming to
a forest, the Sylvan elves, led by Galadriel, the Lady of Woods, meet the
fellowship. That evening, the Lady and Frodo speak in private. She asks him to
look into a mirror, which is a basin of water, and tell her what he sees. He
sees visions of the Shire destroyed, of his companions surrounded by orcs, and
of the huge, fiery eye of Sauron. The Lady tells him he has seen visions of
what will happen if his mission fails. She warns him that the fellowship is
breaking and that one by one the ring will destroy them all. Frodo doubts his
ability to accomplish his task on his own, but she says that as the
ring-bearer, he is already alone. If he does not accomplish the task, no one
will. The Lady encourages Frodo and gives him a parting gift, a star of light
that will illuminate his path when all other lights go out. The next day, the
fellowship departs in boats down the river. Meanwhile, Saruman has dispatched
Uruk-hai, unusually large and powerful creatures whose sole mission is to
destroy the world of men, after the party, with the instructions to kill everyone
but bring the hobbits back alive.
After
docking on dry land, Frodo wanders off, and Boromir follows. Frodo is
determined to go off alone, but Boromir wants the ring. He is about to attack
Frodo for it when Frodo puts on the ring and disappears. This is the longest
period of time that Frodo has ever worn the ring, and he has his longest look
yet at the fiery eye of Sauron. When Frodo takes the ring off, Aragorn is
beside him. Frodo distrusts him, too, but Aragorn passes the test that Boromir
failed. He tells Frodo to run off and turns to face the approaching army of
Uruk-hai. Boromir also fights valiantly but is badly wounded. The Uruk-hai
capture Pippin and Merry. Aragorn wins an epic battle with an Uruk-hai, then
rushes to the fallen Boromir, who confesses that he tried to steal the ring
from Frodo. Boromir says he has failed the group, but Aragorn tells Boromir he
has fought bravely. Boromir swears allegiance to Aragorn, his rightful king, as
he dies. Back at the river, Frodo regrets having the ring but remembers
Gandalf’s words about his destiny. He departs in a boat, but Sam insists on
coming along. Though he can’t swim, Sam jumps in the water, and Frodo is forced
to rescue his flailing friend and pull him aboard. Once safe, Sam reminds Frodo
that he made a promise never to leave him. On the water’s opposite side, Sam
and Frodo climb a mountain and spot Mordor in the distance.
The Two Towers
The movie
begins with Gandalf falling into the mine with the Balrog. As he falls, he
catches his sword, which is dropping beside him, and stabs the Balrog. Then he
lands in a body of water. This vision is just a dream of Frodo’s, however, not
reality. Frodo and Sam seem to be going in circles, not making any progress on
their way to Mordor. Frodo has a vision of Sauron’s fiery eye—the ring is
beginning to take hold of him. Frodo and Sam smell something swampy, then
stumble upon Gollum, a pale, hunched creature who used to be a hobbit. Gollum
calls the hobbits thieves and accuses them of stealing his ring from him. After
a brief fight, the hobbits subdue Gollum and place a leash around his neck. Sam
doesn’t trust him, but Frodo pities him. In exchange for Gollum’s leading them
to Mordor, they agree to remove the leash from his neck.
Meanwhile,
Legolas, Gimli, and Aragorn pursue the Uruk-hai, which carry Pippin and Merry.
In the castle of Rohan, Éowyn and Éomer, the niece and nephew of King Théoden,
tell the elderly, incapacitated king that Saruman’s army has severely injured
his son the prince; he will soon die. Wormtongue, the king’s evil advisor, has
Éomer banished. The Uruk-hai carrying Pippin and Merry are attacked by horsemen
of Rohan, led by the banished Éomer, and Pippin and Merry escape in the
confusion. Aragorn, Legolas, and Gimli reach the scene of battle shortly
afterward. At first they fear there are no survivors, but then they find
footprints leading into the woods, which indicate that the hobbits escaped.
In the
forest, they come upon a white wizard, who turns out to be Gandalf. Gandalf
says that a new stage of the war of Middle-earth is upon them: war has come to
Rohan. He leads the others back to the edge of the forest and whistles for his
horse, and then the four set off for Rohan. Asked to disarm before going to see
the king, Gandalf holds onto his staff, which he uses to release Théoden from
Saruman’s controlling spell. Théoden is transformed from elderly to middle-aged
and from weak to strong, and he banishes Wormtongue. Soon villagers arrive at
the castle, telling of an oncoming orc and Uruk-hai army. Théoden elects to
move Rohan’s entire population to the fort at Helm’s Deep, which is what
Wormtongue, who arrives at Saruman's tower, tells Saruman will happen.
Meanwhile,
Pippin and Merry have discovered Treebeard, a giant walking tree, or Ent, which
has promised to keep them safe. Sam, Frodo, and Gollum, having arrived at the
gates of Mordor, are about to enter Sauron’s kingdom when Gollum suggests that
they take a back entrance. Frodo defends Gollum to Sam. Frodo feels sympathy
for the former ring-bearer, while Sam says that the ring is beginning to take
over Frodo.
One
night, as Frodo and Sam sleep, Gollum has the first of what will become a
series of internal debates. Sméagol, his good side, wants to be obedient to
Frodo, who has treated him so nicely. Gollum, his bad side, desperately wants
the ring. Sméagol temporarily wins out, and the next day Gollum/Sméagol
presents Frodo with a gift, a rabbit he’s hunted, which Sam cooks as a stew. As
they eat, they see thousands of troops marching to Mordor, part of the army
Sauron is assembling. These arriving soldiers are attacked by a group of humans
led by Faramir, Boromir’s younger brother, who come upon Frodo and company and
capture them.
In a
dream, Arwen encourages Aragorn to stay the course and not falter. Her father
wants her to go off with the other elves to eternal life. Aragorn tells her
that their love is over and she should go. As his people head to Helm’s Deep,
Théoden leads an army to fend off the approaching orcs. Aragorn appears to die
as he falls over a cliff in the clutches of a hyenalike creature. However, he
actually falls into a body of water, and dreams of Arwen kissing him. Aragorn’s
horse resuscitates him and carries him to Helm’s Deep. Arwen’s father, Elrond,
tells her that the time has come to leave Middle-earth. She wants to wait for
Aragorn, but her father insists that Middle-earth can offer her only death.
Even if Aragorn does manage to return, he is mortal and will eventually die.
However, the Lady of the Woods tells Elrond that Faramir, who has taken Frodo
captive, will seize the ring and then all will be lost. Do we elves leave
Middle-earth to its fate? she implores Elrond. Do we abandon the fight and let
them stand alone?
Faramir
questions Frodo and Sam. He wants to know of his brother’s death. That evening,
Faramir captures Gollum, who’s been following the troop. Faramir wants to kill
the creature, but Frodo insists on sparing him. Later, Frodo tries to help
Gollum escape, but Gollum misunderstands and thinks Frodo is complicit in his
capture. He undergoes another round of Sméagol/Gollum debates, and Faramir
comes to understand that Frodo has the ring. Sam explains that their task is to
destroy the ring in Mordor, but Faramir says the ring will go to Gondor.
An army of 10,000 marches on Rohan, and Helm’s Deep prepares for
battle. Aragorn says they must call upon their allies, but Théoden says they
have none and that Gondor cannot be counted on. Things do not look good for Rohan,
since the fighters are few and of generally low quality, but all try to be
hopeful. Then an elf army of bowmen led by the warrior Haldir arrive. Sent by
Elrond, they come to honor the ancient alliance between men and elves. The orcs
and Uruk-hai arrive at the walls of Helm’s Deep beneath a pouring rain. The two
armies face each other, and the combat begins when a single human lets an arrow
fly. After that, a ferocious battle rages. The Uruk-hai raise ladders and scale
the walls of Helm’s Deep. The elf-human army fights bravely, but the oncoming
Uruk-hai are difficult to withstand. They pierce the castle walls and force the
defending army deep within the castle. Haldir is killed in battle. Gimli and
Aragorn fight bravely on the drawbridge, buying time for the rest of the
defending army to regroup.
Meanwhile,
the Ents have gathered to debate whether to go to war. They speak incredibly
slowly and take a long time to make decisions. Eventually, despite Merry’s
entreaties that they participate in the world, the Ents decide against going to
war and encourage the two hobbits to return to the Shire. As Treebeard carries
the two hobbits to the edge of the forest, however, he comes across a stretch
of gutted forest and burnt trees. He blames Saruman for the destruction and
decides to rally the other Ents to war.
Women and
children flee Helm’s Deep for the safety of the mountains as Aragorn rallies
the remaining soldiers to continue to fight. When all hope seems lost, Gandalf
appears in the distance along with the riders of Rohan, led by Éomer, who
charge the Uruk-hai. The Ents attack Saruman's tower and destroy its defenses.
They open a dam and the rushing water floods the entire plain surrounding the
tower. The battle of Helm’s Deep is won, but Aragorn and Gandalf see Mordor in
the distance, buzzing with activity. The battle for Middle-earth, they know,
has just begun.
Meanwhile,
back in Gondor, where Faramir has brought his captives, Frodo stands
face-to-face with a wraith riding a dragon and is about to hand him the ring
when Sam intervenes. Angered, Frodo almost attacks his friend, then apologizes
and begins to doubt his own strength. Sam encourages him with a stirring speech
about heroism and fighting for good. Moved by Sam’s words, Faramir releases the
hobbits.
The Return of the King
In a
flashback, we see Sméagol, a hobbit, happily fishing with a friend. The friend
falls into the water and reemerges holding a ring. Sméagol wants the ring and
strangles his friend to death. After this, Sméagol slowly decays into the
dirty, green, raw-fish-eating swamp creature Gollum. He says he forgot what
life was like outside his cave. He even forgot his own name. Back in the
present, Gollum awakens Frodo and Sam and hurries them along. Sam says he’s
begun to ration the little food they have left.
Meanwhile,
Aragorn, Gimli, Legolas, and Gandalf come upon Merry and Pippin celebrating on
the flooded plain of Saruman's tower, which Treebeard now seems to control.
Saruman is still alive, but he is powerless and isolated in his tower. Pippin
spots a seeing stone in the water, and Gandalf grabs it and covers it up. At a
memorial service and victory celebration at Rohan, Éowyn shares wine with
Aragorn, with whom she is falling in love. That evening, Pippin steals the
seeing stone from Gandalf and sees the fiery eye of Sauron. The stone nearly
kills Pippin, who is revived by Gandalf. In the stone, Pippin saw a vision of
Minas Tirith, the capital of Gondor, destroyed. He also saw Sauron but refused
to give the Dark Lord any information about Frodo. Gandalf says this vision
proves that Sauron plans to attack Minas Tirith, where he and Pippin head.
About to
depart Middle-earth for immortal life, Arwen has a vision of a child that she
and Aragorn will have. Quickly, she turns around and returns to Rivendell,
where she beseeches her father, who has the gift of foresight, to tell her
everything he has seen. She says she knows that death is not the only thing
that awaits in her future, but also a child. She says that if she leaves now,
she’ll regret it forever. She asks her father to reforge Narsil, the sword with
which Isildur cut off Sauron’s finger, thereby releasing the ring.
Meanwhile,
Gandalf and Pippin arrive at Minas Tirith, where Lord Denethor, who rules
Gondor as steward in the absence of the king, already knows of the death of his
son Boromir. Pippin offers his fealty in payment for Boromir’s life, claiming
that Boromir saved his own. Gandalf calls upon Denethor to raise an army and
call upon his allies. Denethor, however, knows about Aragorn and is afraid of
losing power. Gandalf says he cannot resist the return of the king, but
Denethor insists that Gondor belongs to him. Disobeying Denethor but following
Gandalf’s instructions, Pippin lights the Beacon of Minas Tirith, with which
Gondor calls its allies to help. Soon, beacons all across Middle-earth are lit,
and Théoden decides that Rohan will answer the call.
Faramir
and his men are gathered at Osgiliath, an outer fortress of Gondor, but lose a
battle to an approaching orc army. Escaping to Minas Tirith, Faramir tells
Gandalf he has seen Sam and Frodo. Denethor, who clearly favors the deceased
Boromir over his surviving son Faramir, beseeches Faramir to retake Osgiliath.
Faramir agrees, even though it is clearly a suicide mission. He and his men are
promptly slaughtered as they ride into battle.
Gollum
leads Sam and Frodo to a secret staircase that leads into Mordor. Frodo is
pulled toward the front gates, and Sauron’s giant eye burns, sensing the
nearness of the ring. Gollum tells Frodo that Sam will turn on him and come
after the ring. As the hobbits sleep, Gollum throws away their remaining food
after sprinkling crumbs on Sam to make it look like Sam ate the food himself.
When they wake up, Sam discovers that the food is gone and accuses Gollum, who
points to the crumbs on Sam’s cloak. Sam beats up Gollum and then asks Frodo if
he needs help carrying the ring, which triggers Frodo’s doubts about Sam. Frodo
decides that Sam, not Gollum, is the problem and decides to continue on with
only Gollum.
At camp
with the horsemen of Rohan, Aragorn dreams that Arwen has chosen immortality,
thereby breaking her promise to him. He is roused by a messenger, who informs
him a stranger has come. Aragorn follows the messenger into a tent where Elrond
reveals himself and relates very different news about Arwen: she is dying, and
her fate is tied to the ring. For Aragorn, saving Middle-earth is now bound up
with saving the life of his love. Elrond also tells Aragorn he needs to enlist
those who dwell in the mountain to fight against Sauron. These
mountain-dwellers are crooks, murderers, and traitors, but they will respond to
the king of Gondor. In an act that functions as a kind of coronation, Elrond
presents Aragorn with the sword Anduril, which was forged from the shards of
Narsil. Éowyn confesses her love to Aragorn, but he tells her he is committed
to another. He rides into the mountain with Legolas and Gimli. The men of the
mountain swore an oath to a previous king of Gondor but reneged, and Isildur
put a curse on them, decreeing that they would never rest until they had
fulfilled their obligation. Aragorn and company enter a cave in the mountain
and come across a ghost king who says that the dead do not suffer to let the
living pass. Suddenly, swarms of ghostly warriors appear. Legolas’s arrows are
powerless against them, but Aragorn’s sword can stop their thrusts. He asks
them to fight for him and regain their honor, marking the first time that he
asserts himself as king of Gondor.
Dragged
behind a horse, Faramir’s body arrives at Minas Tirith. The orc army catapults
the heads of his dead companions into the city. Denethor bemoans the end of his
line, but Pippin insists that Faramir is still alive. The attack on the city
begins, but Denethor commands the soldiers to abandon their posts. Seeing that
the king is losing his mind, Gandalf takes over command and orders the soldiers
to prepare for battle. While the battle rages outside Minas Tirith, Denethor
plans to burn Faramir and himself on a pyre. Pippin insists that Faramir is not
dead, but Denethor is unconvinced. He lights the pyre, but Gandalf and Pippin
rescue Faramir, and Denethor burns alone.
Gollum
and Frodo arrive at a cave full of skeletons and giant spider webs. With his
plan to steal back the ring falling into place, Gollum seems to disappear, and
Frodo is suddenly alone and lost. Meanwhile, Sam, descending the stairs out of
the mountain, comes upon the bread that Gollum dropped. He understands Gollum’s
deceit and turns around. In the cave, Frodo gets stuck in a web. Using the gift
given to him by the Lady of the Woods, he lights the cave and sees Shelob, a
giant spider, coming toward him. Frodo cuts his way out of the web and escapes
the cave, but Gollum attacks him. They struggle, and Gollum falls over a cliff.
The Lady of the Woods reappears to Frodo and encourages him to complete his
task. Frodo continues to Mordor on his own. However, Shelob creeps behind him,
stings him, and spins a thick web around him. Sam arrives and fights off the
creature, but Frodo is wrapped tight in a cocoonlike bundle of webbing, and Sam
fears he is dead. Sam abandons the body when a few orcs come down the path.
They pick up Frodo’s body and carry it off with them.
Giant
elephants, carrying numerous reinforcements from Sauron, arrive on the
battlefield of Minas Tirith. Having recently arrived at the battlefield, the
riders of Rohan fight bravely, using their speed and agility to confront the
elephants. Still, the battle appears to be going in Mordor’s favor. Pippin and
Gandalf, within the castle, begin to philosophize about death. On the
battlefield, the witch-king is about to kill Théoden, but Éowyn and Merry
intervene. Merry distracts the creature, and Éowyn kills it. Théoden dies from
his wounds, but he is proud of Éowyn and goes gladly into the afterlife.
Meanwhile, a ship carrying Aragorn and his army of ghost men arrives, and the
group overwhelms the orc army. The field is calm, and the battle seems won.
Aragorn releases the men of the mountain, and they disappear. Pippin and Merry
reunite on the battlefield.
Frodo
awakes in Mordor. He is chained and half naked. His things have been taken from
him, including the ring. Sam enters the orc stronghold where Frodo is held
captive and rescues Frodo. When they are free, Sam tells Frodo that he, not the
orcs, has the ring. He took it when he thought Frodo was dead. Though a little
reluctant to return it to Frodo, he agrees to. The two friends dress in orc
armor and go onto the plains of Mordor. They spot Mount Doom in the distance,
Sauron’s fiery eye raging at its peak.
Back at
Minas Tirith, Gandalf despairs about Frodo’s ability to complete the mission,
but Aragorn says they must not give up hope. He suggests they march upon Mordor
to distract Sauron. As Aragorn’s army approaches the gates of Mordor, Sauron’s
orcs are drawn from the plains of Mordor to its front gate, and Sam and Frodo
cross the plain unhindered. Nevertheless, the passage is far from easy. They
have little water left. They drink the last drops and accept that there will be
no return journey. As they struggle up Mount Doom, Sam encourages his friend
with talk of the Shire and has to carry the weakened Frodo a good distance on
his back. Gollum reappears, and Sam fights him as Frodo runs to the top of
Mount Doom on his own. Standing above the fiery inferno of Mount Doom just as
Isildur did years earlier, Frodo holds the ring above the volcano, but, like
the former king, he cannot let it go. Instead, he declares the ring his and
puts it on. Gollum has also managed to get to the top of the mountain and
attacks Frodo. In the ensuing struggle, Gollum bites off the finger on which
Frodo is wearing the ring and falls, clutching the ring, over a cliff and into
the lava below, while Frodo survives by holding onto the cliff. Sam pulls him
up as the ring disappears into the sea of fire. With the ring destroyed,
Sauron’s eye burns out. The tower of Mordor begins to collapse and then
explodes. Mount Doom erupts, flooding the plain with lava. Sam and Frodo are
stuck on top of a giant boulder, with lava flowing all around. They prepare for
their deaths, but Gandalf swoops by on a giant eagle and picks them up.
Frodo awakens in a luxurious bed with
Gandalf by his side. The remaining fellowship is there, too. Aragorn is crowned
king at a ceremony in Gondor. Placing the crown on his head, Gandalf announces
the return of the king. Legolas and the elves arrive, along with Arwen. She and
Aragorn kiss. Then the whole crowd bows before the four hobbits. The fellowship
is declared over, and the fourth age of Middle-earth begins. The hobbits return
to the Shire, and the four friends drink at a pub. Sam sees the girl he used to
have a crush on and talks to her. Shortly thereafter, they are married. Frodo
writes his adventures in the same manuscript in which Bilbo wrote his. It is
called The Lord of the Rings. He finishes four years to the
day after receiving his wound from the ringwraith, but he still hasn’t healed
from the experience, and he, along with Bilbo and Gandalf, head off with the
elves to eternal life. As he boards the ship that will carry them off, Frodo
hands Sam his book. “The last pages are for you, Sam,” he says. Then the boat
sails off. Returning to the Shire, Sam joins his wife and two children.
Easter egg for all who scroll to the bottom LOL. Here is one of the most epic scenes of the film.
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