I was referring to the film and whats established in it. Not the book. Its established in the film that "Sauron has regained much of his former strength. He cannot yet take physical form, but his spirit has lost none of its potency." So it would have been a plot hole for him to show up in any physical form in ROTK.
It would have been a terrible idea. Firstly, PJ would have almost certainly have given Sauron the same form that he had in the prologue, despite it explicitly being said that losing the ring extinguished that form altogether.
Here's a couple of new clips. I haven't watched them (and won't), but I figured you guys may want to.
[YT]NmgFVlKkhA0[/YT]

Beautiful white Sauron brings his own mythical problems, because he was supposed to be unable to take a "fair form" after the fall of Numenor.
Tolkien doesn't get too descriptive with Sauron. Based on his letters, we can gather the following:So if taking the fair, beautiful form and the dark, armoured from from the prologue are incorrect, what would be the proper physical manifestation? Serious question, I'm not as well-versed in middle-earth lore as I'd like to be.
AwesomeHere's a couple of new clips. I haven't watched them (and won't), but I figured you guys may want to.
[YT]NmgFVlKkhA0[/YT]
[YT]H4Nz6XkD36E[/YT]

On its own merits, I liked the design of Sauron's armor in FoTR. It's not what I would have preferred for the character, but it's still a very striking piece of armory.Interesting. Thanks, Boom.
I watched and loved the original trilogy when I was younger, and while the new Hobbit movies aren't doing it for me, they are making me want to learn the actual Middle-Earth lore. It's so rich and I realize now that the original LoTR movies are just a small fraction of that world. So in a roundabout way, I suppose I should be grateful these hobbit movies were made.
Some of my favorite parts of the LOTR trilogy were the opening prologues that showed the history of that world, with the making the of rings, Elendil, Isildur, etc.
Nope. He is completely incapable of taking on a fair shape, illusion or not.
And he lost that power to deceive/seduce people following his betrayal. The Valar stripped it from him.I didn't say he took a fair shape, that's not what happens since his true form is the Dark Lord, but he could cast a spell that people perceive him as something beautiful, for a moment.
It doesn't alter his shape, but it alters the perception of the viewers.
Peter Jackson said:At Mondays world premiere of The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies in London, Ian McKellen fueled rumors that Peter Jackson would be returning to Middle-earth, saying that he didn't believe necessarily that this is the end of the journey.
But at a press conference Tuesday, the director swiftly put down any hopes that he would be delving further between the lines of J.R.R. Tolkiens works.
"Its a legal thing. The Tolkien estate owns the writings of Professor Tolkien The Hobbit and the Lord of the Rings were sold by Professor Tolkien the late 60s the film rights," he said. But they are the only two works of his that been sold. So without the cooperation of the Tolkien estate there cant be more films."
Jackson did say that fans wanting more could look forward to his extended edition DVD of the The Battle of the Five Armies, which he would be heading back to New Zealand to work on in the new year.
"Ill be putting that together for about four or five months, which will be fun," he said, later describing how the release would enable people to finally watch the entire extended editions of The Hobbit and Lord of the Ring trilogies back-to-back. Its 24 hours of joy, he laughed.
I envision Sauron after the fall of Numenor being as Milton described fallen angels; as having a darkened and twisted angelic form. After the death of Morgoth, Sauron became a seducer, and his later punishment was to be robbed of his seductiveness. At this point (and as he appeared in the fight with Elendil and Isildur) I can imagine him appearing somewhat like Doctor Who's "Weeping Angels":
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Although, of course, armed for battle.
After he was destroyed in that form, I imagine him as a decayed, malevolent and bent figure. Perhaps like an evil King Lear. But that's just my vision of him; apart from his being a physical and presumably humanoid figure with nine fingers, we don't know.
I thought different groups of Orcs used the common speech (always "translated" in the books to modern English) to understand each other, anyway? I thought of the Black Speech being specifically the language of Mordor, though maybe I'm wrong.
If it's a trust, then Christopher can't be the only trustee, anyway.
The copyright itself will end near the middle of this century, so it's always the case that these stories will be further adapted.
have you guys seen this?
http://www.avclub.com/article/ian-m...lMarketing&utm_campaign=LinkPreview:1:Default
At Mondays world premiere of The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies in London, Ian McKellen fueled rumors that Peter Jackson would be returning to Middle-earth, saying that he didn't believe necessarily that this is the end of the journey.
But at a press conference Tuesday, the director swiftly put down any hopes that he would be delving further between the lines of J.R.R. Tolkiens works.
"Its a legal thing. The Tolkien estate owns the writings of Professor Tolkien The Hobbit and the Lord of the Rings were sold by Professor Tolkien the late 60s the film rights," he said. But they are the only two works of his that been sold. So without the cooperation of the Tolkien estate there cant be more films."
Jackson did say that fans wanting more could look forward to his extended edition DVD of the The Battle of the Five Armies, which he would be heading back to New Zealand to work on in the new year.
"Ill be putting that together for about four or five months, which will be fun," he said, later describing how the release would enable people to finally watch the entire extended editions of The Hobbit and Lord of the Ring trilogies back-to-back. Its 24 hours of joy, he laughed.