Daily Mail

Will the $1billion RINGS OF POWER be TV gold?

It’s the most expensive show ever made. But as a first look is unveiled, Tolkien fans are already up in arms

- From Tom Leonard

By THe end of the epic Lord Of The Rings trilogy, the elves had returned to their woodland realms, the dwarves to their undergroun­d halls and that accursed ring finally consigned to the fires of Mount Doom.

But the human audience was hungry for more. So followed a three-part dramatisat­ion of The Hobbit — but even that wasn’t enough. Or at least that’s the hope of Amazon, which has got its hands on the works of J.R.R. Tolkien.

The retail and streaming giant is set to unleash the most lavish ever screen spin-off of the British author’s fantasy world.

Its new ‘prequel’, Lord Of The Rings: The Rings Of Power, tells the story of Middleeart­h thousands of years before the events of The Hobbit and The Lord Of The Rings.

It comes to our screens on September 2, and the five-series extravagan­za — running to 50 hours — is set to be the most expensive television production ever, with a budget running to more than $1 billion.

But the snarls of rampaging orcs may be nothing compared with the furious cries of anguished Tolkien obsessives. Already, they fear the desecratio­n of their beloved writer’s tales. Reports of an on-set ‘intimacy coordinato­r’ — a sure sign of sex scenes, which were very much not part of Tolkien’s vision — have set alarm bells ringing across Middle-earth.

After three Lord Of The Rings films and three more bringing The Hobbit to the screen, one might have been forgiven for thinking the Tolkien cupboard was bare.

But that would be to reckon without the ferocious competitio­n for online streaming viewers, the mega-success of medieval fantasy epic Game Of Thrones and the personal interventi­on of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos, one of the world’s richest men and a Tolkien fan since childhood.

A $250m DEAL WITH THE LORD OF AMAZON

AMAZON, which has been spending lavishly to establish itself as a rival to netflix and the big Hollywood studios, announced in 2017 that it had agreed a $250million deal with the Tolkien estate to buy the global rights to make a television adaptation of his works.

It was a vast sum, but the film versions of The Lord Of The Rings and The Hobbit had racked up almost $3billion at the box office and earned 15 Oscars.

Meanwhile, the enormous success of Game Of Thrones had shown there was a vast potential audience for such shows.

Amazon also had the enthusiast­ic backing of Jeff Bezos, a Tolkien obsessive (along with most of Silicon Valley) and one of the world’s richest people.

A former teacher of Bezos recalled being once impressed by a talk the 12-year-old gave on the brilliance of The Hobbit.

The original LOTR and Hobbit films were written and directed by new zealander Peter Jackson, but he has no involvemen­t in the new TV series.

Like his films, however, the first episodes have been filmed in new zealand — though production was reported last year to be shifting to Britain for subsequent series.

After hunting throughout Hollywood, Amazon is taking a risk by giving the task to two young and relatively inexperien­ced American screenwrit­ers, Patrick McKay and ex-schoolmate J.D. Payne.

Bezos is also a big fan of Star Trek, and the pair’s involvemen­t in writing the script of the forthcomin­g Star Trek 4 movie may have clinched the deal. Anxious not to give Tolkien purists too many sleepless nights, McKay and Payne have said: ‘We feel like Frodo, setting out from the Shire, with a great responsibi­lity in our care — it is the beginning of the adventure of a lifetime.’

And the writing duo, who admit they ‘were a little bit of a dark horse’, had to pitch their ideas not only to Amazon executives . . . but also to members of the Tolkien family.

KEEPING THE WRITER’S FAMILY HAPPY

AFTER publishing The Lord Of The Rings in the 1950s, Tolkien faced enormous pressure from fans to flesh out the world he had created with background informatio­n on its history, culture and languages. He responded by writing 150 pages of postscript which became known as the Appendices, and these are the basis for the new Amazon series.

They cover Middle-earth’s socalled Second Age, beginning 3,000 years before the Third Age, the era of Bilbo Baggins, Gandalf and Aragorn covered in the books.

not merely content with demanding a dragon’s hoard of gold for the TV rights, the Tolkien estate laid down the law on what the new series could and couldn’t do.

The screenwrit­ers have described how difficult it was to construct a

narrative in which, in order to be faithful to Tolkien, every season should span 200 years and see the mortal human characters die off. Tolkien’s heirs made it clear that while they would tolerate some immortal characters (such as the elf queen Galadriel) appearing in the new production, using mortal characters such as Frodo or Bilbo Baggins in the prequel was forbidden. The estate also insisted Amazon dispense with such Tolkien stalwarts as wizards and hobbits, as neither played much part in the Second Age. But Amazon was able to address modern sensitivit­y about racial representa­tion by introducin­g the harfoots, a type of hobbit that Tolkien did mention and specified had darker skins than their peers.

Any Tolkien adaptation is a double-edged sword. Though the production benefits from having a ready-made audience of fans, some are quick to take offence at any radical departure from the Oxford professor’s creation.

RIDDLES IN THE DARK AND SHATTERED RUINS

AMAZON has been obsessivel­y secretive about its new series in the hope this will generate interest. When, in 2019, the venture’s dedicated Tolkien scholar, British medievalis­t Tom Shippey, gave a reportedly unapproved interview to a German Tolkien fan website and offered a few hints on what might be in the series, he was removed from the project.

Even so, plenty of clues have been provided by a recent trailer — and there are Tolkien’s Appendices to mine for informatio­n.

The show’s creators say the series will feature no fewer than 22 main characters across various storylines — which sounds even more complicate­d than anything Tolkien wrote in The Lord Of The Rings. They flesh out a history only briefly touched on in the original films.

During the Second Age, the dark lord Sauron tries to consolidat­e his power, forging 19 ‘rings of power’ which he gives to the lords of elves, dwarves and men.

What they don’t know is that he has secretly forged another ring (yes, that one) — the ring that rules them all.

many of the places that are either shattered ruins or long-disappeare­d legends in The Lord Of The Rings are flourishin­g in The Rings Of Power.

They include Khazad-dum — the dwarves’ cave-kingdom under the misty mountains; the elven stronghold of Lindon; and the Atlantisli­ke island of numenor, realm of a mighty race of men.

As the TV series’ chronology long pre-dates The Lord Of The Rings books, there is no Frodo, Sam or Bilbo. And though the greybearde­d wizard Gandalf technicall­y could make a comeback, as he was alive during the Second Age, Sir Ian mcKellen, who played the character in the films, has played down speculatio­n that he might return in the role.

‘I think this would be the most upsetting headline I’d ever read, if I weren’t gainfully employed elsewhere,’ he said on Twitter.

NEW ROLES AND THE STARS OF THE FUTURE

PETER JAcKSOn’S films not only made the director a star but establishe­d the careers of a slew of actors, including Viggo mortensen (Aragorn), Elijah Wood (Frodo), Orlando Bloom (Legolas) and Andy Serkis (Gollum). many of them were British and largely unknown, and the same is true of the cast of the new series.

Tolkien included few female characters in his books and the film adaptation­s hardly changed this. nor did they cast many actors from ethnic minorities, leaving middle-earth not only very male but very white.

Amazon has addressed both issues head-on, possibly risking ructions with Tolkien purists.

Amazon chiefs have insisted that ‘Tolkien is for everyone’ and the author, after all, didn’t specify the skin colour of all his characters.

And so we will see Puerto Rican actor Ismael cruz cordova playing an elf, Arondir, who has a ‘forbidden’ relationsh­ip with a human ‘village healer’, played by British Iranian actress nazanin Boniadi. (The latter briefly made headlines when she went out with fellow Scientolog­ist Tom cruise and was reportedly considered by the organisati­on’s leadership as a possible wife for him.)

Black British actress Sophia nomvete plays a dwarf princess, while Sir Lenny Henry plays a black hobbit, or rather ‘harfoot’ — all 6ft 3in of him.

Sir Lenny recently explained: ‘We harfoots are multi-cultural; we’re a tribe not a race, so we’re black, Asian and brown, even maori.’

He described making the series over the past two years as ‘an extraordin­ary thing’, saying: ‘Literally, a hundred people on set glaring at you and trying to work out what you’ll look like 4ft tall.’

multi-cultural hobbits are one thing — but sex may be quite another. news that Amazon had hired an ‘intimacy co-ordinator’ sparked fears that, like the nudity and sex-filled Game Of Thrones, the new series would be stuffed with lusty scenes — a subject that the tweedy Tolkien always studiously avoided.

Screenwrit­er mcKay insists his new series will not feature gratuitous sex and violence, although the 11 and 12-year-olds at the bottom end of its target audience sometimes ‘might have to pull the blanket up over their eyes if it’s a little too scary’.

For many, Amazon itself is a dark empire worthy of a fantasy story. But time will tell whether or not it has finally sided with the forces of good — and done Tolkien proud.

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 ?? ?? Creature feature: A terrifying monster (above left) and the dazzling Elf capital of Lindon
Creature feature: A terrifying monster (above left) and the dazzling Elf capital of Lindon
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 ?? ?? Lake placid: Numenor, the island realm of courageous men
Lake placid: Numenor, the island realm of courageous men
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 ?? ?? Girl power: Morfydd Clark (above) as Galadriel clings to an icy cliff-face, and Markella Kavenagh (left) as Nori Brandyfoot
Fighting for Middle-earth: A battle scene from The Rings Of Power
Girl power: Morfydd Clark (above) as Galadriel clings to an icy cliff-face, and Markella Kavenagh (left) as Nori Brandyfoot Fighting for Middle-earth: A battle scene from The Rings Of Power

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