Tolkien's novels were inspired by his mom's storytelling, falling in love with another orphan, Edith, forming a brotherhood with 3 other misfits at school, the trench war of WWI and later te... Read allTolkien's novels were inspired by his mom's storytelling, falling in love with another orphan, Edith, forming a brotherhood with 3 other misfits at school, the trench war of WWI and later telling stories to his own kids.Tolkien's novels were inspired by his mom's storytelling, falling in love with another orphan, Edith, forming a brotherhood with 3 other misfits at school, the trench war of WWI and later telling stories to his own kids.
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It's enough to see a fellowship develop in the prep school and the visual scenes of WWI without CG of dragon silhouettes and ghosts in gas clouds. We audience members can make connections on our own and guess at what inspired him. I doubt he was thinking about dragons while seeing an actual flamethrower used in warfare.
The real story was in the details and they were good.
At school Tolkien founds a Fellowship with other artistically minded students bur the Great War will wreak havoc on that brotherhood. The film cuts between Tolkien's earlier life and the trenches of the Somme. This is literally Hell, a real Mordor. The adult J.R.R .(Nicholas Hoult) is on a (perhaps allegorical) quest to the Front to find one of the Fellowship who is missing in action. He passes through mud holes full of bodies and fever stricken imagines that a german with a flamethrower is a dragon. The film suggests many inspirations for his books, Edith (Lily Collins) as an Elven Princess, his mother's reading tales of dragons when he was a boy, the War, his schooldays. A great influence on him was the philologist Professor Wright (Derek Jacobi) who won him over to the study of Old English and Gothic languages. Directed by Dome Karukoski from a screenplay by David Gleeson and Stephen Beresford, Tolkien is an engaging account of the earlier life of the scholar and author. 8/10
The film mainly focuses on his friendships and romance with Edith in school - very little of the war was shown. Also showed his relationships with a couple of his teachers.
You will easily see in the film how things connected to his books - hidden references as well obvious ones.
Very good movie if you like biographies, romances and/or Tolkien.
8/10
Since the Lord of the Rings and the Hobbit movies interest has increased in Tolkien himself. While this film is no adventure it is both funny and touching as the subject evolves like one of the characters in his stories. This is interesting and I did enjoy it.
I'd have preferred it if the timeline had stretched a little bit further and covered more of his life than it does. The flash-forwards were well done up to that point.
I liked, 'Get off the lawn!'
Did you know
- TriviaThis is Finnish director Dome Karukoski's first English language movie.
- GoofsOne of Tolkien's friends sports a moustache during the war and is mocked for it. Actually, moustaches were mandatory in the British military at the start of World War I. Tolkien himself wore a moustache during his service.
- Quotes
Edith Bratt: Things aren't beautiful because of how they sound. They're beautiful because of what they mean.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Good Morning Britain: Episode dated 30 April 2019 (2019)
- SoundtracksImmortal, Invisible, God Only Wise
Lyric by Walter Chalmers Smith
Music by John Roberts
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
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- Also known as
- Middle Earth
- Filming locations
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Budget
- $20,000,000 (estimated)
- Gross US & Canada
- $4,535,154
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $2,200,537
- May 12, 2019
- Gross worldwide
- $9,090,040
- Runtime1 hour 52 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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