For me, it's when Aragorn saw a hundred Uruk-hai before him and didn't even blink.
LOTR
While yelling elendil
>movie aragorn wasn't a nine foot tall superman
For me it’s when he does it again at the black gate. Knows he will die, chooses to look back once more with such love. This is a lesson
Racemixing elf fucker
The first movie had the only battles that had any real sense of danger in them, this and the cave troll battle in Moria. The whole tone actually of the first movie was darker and seemed more dangerous
I eish they kept the nazgul weathertop attack an assassin strike like in the books iirc
For me, it's Faramir's hopeless ride into Osgilliath, simply because it was his duty.
>Whatever happens, stay with me. I'll look after you
Kino
Plus it was adventurekino with the Shire and a cool dungeon with demons in it and a giant squid
it was a complete dnd campaign with a significant character death
For me, it's Theoden's moment of hesitation when the beacons were lit, before he decided to do the right thing.
for me, it's Bilbo's depression
>Aragorn, direct descendant of Elendil and his son Isildur, both of whom had been seven feet tall, must nonetheless have been a very tall man ..., probably at least 6 ft. 6; and Boromir, of high Numenorean lineage, not much shorter (say 6 ft. 4). [Tolkien Papers, Bodleian Library, Oxford]
best character hands down
The one where they tried to cavalry charge a stone wall?
I will never get tired of this image
Faramir was the best character. And the real hero.
I have trouble choosing FOTR or Two towers. Return wasn't bad by any measure but it's never the one I really look forward to watching s much as the other two
Book Boromir vs. Movie Boromir is the only thing I have a problem with for the trilogy.
>my brother
>my captain
>my king
When you know you're completely fucked it's easy to accept your fate.
>mfw doing the combo he does here in The Two Towers on ps2
Why did he do it? He was clearly warned that the halflings were not for eating. What did he expect when trying to cut up their prisoners in front of dozens of Uruk-hai?
for me, it's the hobbits seeing the Balrog. They've already ventured out of the shire and seen endless halls greater than they could have ever imagined, dark wraiths of corrupted men, hordes of orcs, a cave troll, but only when they see the Balrog do they fully comprehend the depths of how truly great and terrifying the forces of evil are in this world.
>square, circle, triangle
>that instakill move where he turns his back toward the enemy and stabs them on the gut
and Rivendell and Lothlorien
For me its literally any scene with theoden
what sold me was that this bunch of badasses who just dispatched a hundred orcs and goblins just completely shitting their pants at the mention of the name Balrog
Legolas is even more scared in the book, yelling in complete despair that a Balrog was coming.
He knew the others were ignorant and didn't know the difference between a Noldori and Sindari. So they'd look to him to take care of the Balrog "like his ancestors" and that he'd fucking die.