This is a story of long ago. At that time the languages and letters were quite different from ours today. English is used to represent these languages. But two points may be noted. (1) In English the only correct plural of dwarf is dwarfs, and the adjective is dwarfish. In this story dwarves and dwarvish are used, but only when speaking of the ancient peopl to whom Thorin Oakenshield and his companions belonged. (2) Orc is not an English word. It occurs in one or two places but is usually translated goblin (or hobgoblin for the larger kinds). Orc is the hobbits' form of the name given at that time to these creatures, and it is not connected at all with our orc, ork, appled to sea animals of dolphin-kind.
I cannot brofist this hard enough.Can we please have the intertwined chase & flight scene with rabbit sled, goblins and dwarves to the Benny Hill theme!
Fixed.I saw it, normal frame rate fortunately
I agree, I just saw it second time, with no HFR or 3D this time around, and I am sold on HFR so far.Saw this for a second time, no HFR, no 3d, no IMAX. Still an awesome movie (even better the second time around), but I'm 100% sold on the HFR now. It's like going back and watching SD channels after you get HD.
And you can easily deduce that from the fact that Orcrist means Goblin Cleaver.Like checkered hat quoted, "goblin" is just another word for "orc",
I never got over the fact that Glamdring is the Foehammer. A SWORD IS NOT A HAMMER!And you can easily deduce that from the fact that Orcrist means Goblin Cleaver.
If the sword was heavy enough and swung with enough force, it could mimic the effects of a hammer quite nicely, probably.I never got over the fact that Glamdring is the Foehammer. A SWORD IS NOT A HAMMER!
Well, it was kind of necessary, you know. If you're going to switch it from BoP to BoA, you really need to add some kind of limitation.That bind-on-pickup ring was pretty cool though. Infinite invisibility whenever you put it on? Yes please!
You just know that thing's going to get a nerf when the next update rolls around though. My guess is it'll have some sort of curse or disadvantage attached to it.
No wonder Elrond just let Thorin and Gandalf keep them, the whole time he was talking them up he was probably thinking "How cute, didn't I used to spread butter on my toast with this?"Eh, you know how elves are. They live so long they gather all kinds of useless junk over the centuries. I'm betting the swords thrown out with the rest of the garbage when the nearest elf last cleaned out the piles of old newspapers, moldy books and lembas delivery boxes from his house...
In the books they had a key that dropped from the trolls... they just got really lucky with the loot rolls.When it comes to Orcrist and Glamdring, I feel so jaded by RPGs, because the first thing that came into my mind was "So it's just in a troll cave maybe thirty feet in? No ancient catacombs? No epic traps? Who the hell were the guys that lost these supposed epic blades anyways?" I know that's how it was in the book, but seeing it in the movie just made that part of my brain get scratched a bit.
Not sure if that would be better or worse, at least it was a very funny but facepalmy moment for me.I think that was a big-ass deer, not a moose.
What's facepalmy about it?Not sure if that would be better or worse, at least it was a very funny but facepalmy moment for me.