Lord of the Rings - BBC Radio 4 Dramatization
Posted: Wed Jul 23, 2014 11:44 pm
I appreciate that this is not directly to do with TOR but as a source of inspiration I just had to share my thoughts on the above.
Many years ago when I was a boy, I listened faithfully to this every Sunday afternoon.
I was browsing iTunes recently when I came across the recordings there for download.
I have just finished listening to the Fellowship of the Ring (all 4 hours or so of it) and it's fair to say that I have fallen in love with the production all over again.
I'm sure many have already had the pleasure of listening to this but for those who have not, I cannot recommend it enough. Whilst Peter Jackson's films are a very good adaptation for the medium of film, radio lets your imagination soar. And the voice acting is superb. The cast list reads like a who's who of British acting for that era (early 1980s IIRC): Ian Holm as Frodo; Sir Michael Horden as Gandalf; Sir Robert Stephens as Aragorn; Bill Nighy as Sam; the list goes on.
The excellent voice actors for Gollum and Boromir in the Bakshi animated films reprise their roles in this Radio serialisation. The actor playing Gollum is for me the definitive version. Andy Serkis' version emphasised the tragic aspect of Gollum, which was a perfectly valid approach, but I much prefer Peter Woodthorpe's version. Much, much more sinister ("He's a villain...")
Listen to Gimli too - not a hint of a Scottish accent which seems to have become something of a fantasy trope over time. The part where he asks for a single strand of Galadriel's hair to place in "imperishable crystal" had me filling up earlier today.
The script is far more faithful to the books and the accents more in keeping with my own interpretation (yours may vary of course).
The initial part set in The Shire is excellent as all the accents are very West country ("Ooo arrr, young 'un"). Love the way Strider himself has a subtle West country burr in his voice until revealed as Aragorn whereupon Robert Stephens goes into full-on Shakespearean mode. Brilliant.
Apologies for gushing, but it really is that good and I just had to share that. The vocabulary, diction and prose has already inspired me as a Loremaster in how I could portray NPCs in a more Tolkienesque way. Inspiring stuff generally in fact.
Many years ago when I was a boy, I listened faithfully to this every Sunday afternoon.
I was browsing iTunes recently when I came across the recordings there for download.
I have just finished listening to the Fellowship of the Ring (all 4 hours or so of it) and it's fair to say that I have fallen in love with the production all over again.
I'm sure many have already had the pleasure of listening to this but for those who have not, I cannot recommend it enough. Whilst Peter Jackson's films are a very good adaptation for the medium of film, radio lets your imagination soar. And the voice acting is superb. The cast list reads like a who's who of British acting for that era (early 1980s IIRC): Ian Holm as Frodo; Sir Michael Horden as Gandalf; Sir Robert Stephens as Aragorn; Bill Nighy as Sam; the list goes on.
The excellent voice actors for Gollum and Boromir in the Bakshi animated films reprise their roles in this Radio serialisation. The actor playing Gollum is for me the definitive version. Andy Serkis' version emphasised the tragic aspect of Gollum, which was a perfectly valid approach, but I much prefer Peter Woodthorpe's version. Much, much more sinister ("He's a villain...")
Listen to Gimli too - not a hint of a Scottish accent which seems to have become something of a fantasy trope over time. The part where he asks for a single strand of Galadriel's hair to place in "imperishable crystal" had me filling up earlier today.
The script is far more faithful to the books and the accents more in keeping with my own interpretation (yours may vary of course).
The initial part set in The Shire is excellent as all the accents are very West country ("Ooo arrr, young 'un"). Love the way Strider himself has a subtle West country burr in his voice until revealed as Aragorn whereupon Robert Stephens goes into full-on Shakespearean mode. Brilliant.
Apologies for gushing, but it really is that good and I just had to share that. The vocabulary, diction and prose has already inspired me as a Loremaster in how I could portray NPCs in a more Tolkienesque way. Inspiring stuff generally in fact.