“The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Energy” is a unbelievable adaptation of Tolkien’s Legendarium, one which expands on what’s on the web page, capturing the brutality of warfare in the way in which that Tolkien portrayed it, and likewise incorporating the precise model of silliness and whimsy that Tolkien infused into his world. (Season 2 doubles down on this by lastly bringing Tom Bombadill to the display screen.)
One massive downside the sequence cannot actually shake is that it merely has too many characters and storylines. There’s the story of Celebrimbor and Annatar engaged on the rings, Durin IV coping with the corruption of the dwarves’ rings, Galadriel looking for Sauron, the political maneuvering in Númenor, Arondir and Isildur coping with orcs and Entwives, and even The Stranger and the Harfoots on Rhûn.
That final subplot can usually really feel disconnected from the remainder of the present, beginning with the truth that it is not explicitly primarily based on something Tolkien wrote. Given it isn’t about rings or Sauron in any respect (at the very least not but), at instances it might probably really feel just like the present simply wanted Hobbit-esque characters as a result of they’re related to “The Lord of the Rings.” Granted, there’s nothing incorrect with this, and each time the Harfoots pop up on display screen, it lights up with pleasure; the strolling track sequence from season 1 stays top-of-the-line scenes in the entire present.
A minimum of, that is the way it was till this season, when it grew to become clear that the Harfoots’ story has a transparent endgame, one which ties to arguably crucial location in “The Lord of the Rings.”
The Harfoots are looking for their perpetually house
In episode 4 this season, Harfoots Nori and Dori are separated from The Stranger and attain a settlement the place they meet the Stoors, a unique breed of halfling. Seems, the Harfoots themselves originate from a stoor who left his house in quest of a greater place for his folks to dwell than the merciless deserts of Rhûn — an virtually prophesied promised land the place halflings can dwell in peace, in holes within the floor. Sadly, that stoor apparently by no means discovered that location, and the Harfoots have been nomads ever since, touring alongside the Anduin river and shedding folks with each migration.
It’s clear by that episode’s imagery, after which once more in episode 6 when Nori tells Gundabel that the stoors ought to depart Rhûn and discover a new house (as Bear McCreary’s rating evokes Howard Shore’s Hobbits theme), that this story goes to finish with the Harfoots founding The Shire.
The books do not actually embrace specifics in regards to the origins of the Hobbits (versus the detailed origins of Elves, Dwarves, and Males), however we do know that halflings lived across the Anduin River within the Second Age, east of the Misty Mountains and across the space between Rohan and Mordor (which is why Hobbit-speech is analogous with Rohirric). Ultimately, the halflings cross the Misty Mountains, presumably escaping from Sauron’s rising energy within the close by forest later often called Mirkwood. Within the books, it is not till the Third Age that the land that turns into The Shire is granted to the Hobbits by the king of Arthedain.
Having the Harfoots’ story tie into the founding of The Shire is the proper means of creating this storyline really feel vital to the bigger historical past of Center-earth, and likewise connecting it to “Lord of the Rings.” That is as a result of that story, particularly as tailored within the Peter Jackson motion pictures, makes it clear that The Shire is the very raison d’etre for Frodo and Sam embarking on their quest.
The Stranger’s position within the Harfoots’ story
For Tolkien, The Shire was a vastly vital location, one impressed by reminiscences of his childhood in rural England, a spot that represents the countryside and small cities that had been untouched by world wars — the locations troopers went off to warfare to guard. All through Jackson’s trilogy we hear that the hobbits are embarking on this most likely suicidal mission so as to defend The Shire and hold it unspoiled by Sauron’s darkness. And but, additionally it is a location that finally ends up being ravaged by warfare throughout The Scouring of the Shire, as Tolkien argued that warfare adjustments everybody concerned, irrespective of how distant they’re from the frontlines.
Given how a lot “The Rings of Energy” has included issues from the books that had been deleted by Peter Jackson’s trilogy, it is vitally doable that we would see a proto-Shire be attacked, and the Harfoots pressured to appreciate that their quiet little lives away from the massive people issues cannot stay hidden and completely protected perpetually.
As for what this storyline means for the way forward for the present, it appears very possible that we are going to finish the sequence with the Harfoots founding The Shire, bringing all three Hobbit clans collectively. What nonetheless stays to be seen is that if The Stranger really is Gandalf – and if he’s, what higher means of creating his relationship with hobbits than having him actually lead the Harfoots to their everlasting house?