Everything is grabbing the ears of the audience and shouting, he is Tolkien, he is destined to write the Lord of the Rings.

Lurline 2022-01-11 08:02:01

Playmates, girlfriends, wars, everything reminds the audience that there must be auspiciousness for the saint’s first birthday, and the reason Tolkien is Tolkien is a foreboding. But after all, the name of the movie is Tolkien, not the origin of the Lord of the Rings. Other things that have shaped Tolkien's personality that have nothing to do with the Lord of the Rings should also be reflected accordingly.

On the battlefield, it would be clever if only the flames of the torch were displayed plainly and the audience was allowed to imagine the fire dragon scene. In addition, as long as they are handsome, bragging B can also make girls. The logic of the movie is not impossible, but this is after all a biography, isn't it?

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Extended Reading
  • Briana 2022-03-20 09:02:21

    As a linguist, I recommend this film. The core literary and grammatical metaphor of the film lies in the scene where the male and female protagonists go to the theater to see Nibelungen's ring. The heroine said that to get the ring, you must first give up your love. This line is a metaphor for the love story in the entire movie. The second literary metaphor lies in the question of the source of Old English for the professor to clarify Tolkien's name, "TOLKELLNNE", Tolkien responds with foolhardy, which is reckless; the third literary metaphor lies in the TCBS tea party's "Stick stick" metaphor , Used to clarify the parents' interference and obstacles to each person's future life choices, this metaphor is responded to in the second act at the end: the mother played by Gina Wei O'Reilly retracts the stick and agrees to publish her son's collection of poems.

  • Chase 2022-04-23 07:03:37

    Mass production biography, painless, no need.

Tolkien quotes

  • J.R.R. Tolkien: There's a word in old German, it has no translation in English; but, it means a gift offered fearfully in the wake of an argument. Drachenfutter. Literally, "Dragon Food."

    Edith Bratt: So now I'm a dragon?

  • Edith Bratt: Wagner wrote it in four acts. It starts with a ring, a magical ring which can rule the world and which is forged by a dwarf.

    J.R.R. Tolkien: It's Alberich. Well, I have picked up the odd bit of German mythology.

    Edith Bratt: But to harness the ring's power, you first have to renounce love.

    J.R.R. Tolkien: Oh. A very sensible exchange, in my opinion.

    Edith Bratt: Well, that's because you're a coldhearted Viking.