Razordon
VikingRage
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Characters
There are only a few LOTR characters that I feel truly invested in (Sam, Gimli, Gandalf). Don't get me wrong, the LOTR characters aren't bad, I just don't like them anywhere near to the level as I do the Star Wars characters. They don't come close to the likes of Darth Bane, Yoda, Darth Vader, Han, Darth Maul, Grand Admiral Thrawn, Qui-Gon, Obi-Wan, Luke, Leia, R2, etc. Star Wars characters are far more memorable in my opinion, and by a very large margin. Admittedly, Star Wars has more bad/annoying characters (Jar Jar, Ewoks, etc.), but the great characters more than make up for it.
Emotional Payoff
In Return of the Jedi we see Luke embrace the Dark Side and head down the path as his father had. He uses it to defeat his father. We see his father's severed hand, just as Vader had done to Luke a movie earlier. At the precipice of succumbing to the Dark Side, Luke turns back. "I am a Jedi, like my father before me." The emperor unleashes his power, Luke is outmatched and moments from dying. And it is Vader, the big scary villain from the trilogy that finally redeems himself and saves his son at the expense of his own life. The trilogy builds up so beautifully to this moment and it is such a satisfying emotional conclusion and character arc for both Luke and Anakin.
On the flip side, Frodo, in his moment to be the hero, chooses to keep the ring. The ring is only destroyed by fluke in a scuffle between Frodo and Gollum. It all came down essentially to chance and good fortune. Frodo fails where Luke succeeds. The emotional payoff is cheap when compared to the OT's finale. Yes, we do get that cool scene with Aragorn, Merry and Pip leading the charge against the forces of Mordor, and that is an emotional payoff, but its not there for the true climax of the film and the character arc of our primary protagonist, Frodo.
No active "big bad" in LOTR
The OT has Darth Vader and the PT has Sidious. They play an active role and are a direct threat to our protagonists. We get to see them engage directly with our heroes. We see them eventually fall (Sidious) or redeem themselves (Vader). LOTR is badly lacking in this regard. Sauron, outside of the intro does not play an active role. It is his underlings that do all the work and he is a very passive "character". A big threat that never arrives. Saruman never has a worthy end in the films. He has a brief fight with Gandalf, but other than that is only active at-a-distance. The Witch-King of Angmar is ruined by that cheesy line and feels very much like Boba Fett in the OT, in that their pitiful end kind of ruins them as characters. Gothmog is trivial. Azog is boring (and part of a terrible trilogy). As a result, our LOTR heroes are almost exclusively fighting cannon fodder. Like cutting your way through a bunch of Chaos Marauders but never facing off against Hortennse. Gollum is a cool villain, but he isn't threatening enough to be considered a "big bad".
I see your swords and I raise you lightsabers
"This is the weapon of a Jedi Knight. Not as clumsy or random as a blaster; an elegant weapon for a more civilized age." Swords and sword fights are awesome, but their lightsaber equivalents are better. The visual look of them and their sound really adds to the experience. I just really like lightsabers!
Not only do I like the OT better than LOTR, but the PT utterly destroys the Hobbit
I might give the PT some grief (when @Lord Agragax of Lunaxoatl tries to put it above the OT), but I still love the films. I still watch and enjoy them. The Hobbit trilogy (not the book, which is pretty good) is terrible. It is agonizing to sit through. While it does have some good moments, overall it is bloated, inconsistent and weak.
The Expanded Universe
If we look outside of the main stories (OT + PT and LOTR + Hobbit), Star Wars comes out on top for me. LOTR has the Silmarillion, which I generally hear is not a fun read. The Expanded Universe may have its fair share of duds but it also has a treasure trove of gems. The Darth Bane trilogy and the Thrawn trilogy are both amazing. Both Bane and Thrawn make it into my top 10 Star Wars characters of all time, with Bane holding the top spot (even above all the movie characters). There is so much good stuff to read and explore. I haven't even had the chance to play KOTOR, which I heard is also an amazing story. It is rumoured to be re-mastered for the PS5, so I should get to it then (unless they make it woke).
I guess that should do for now. Despite my criticisms of LOTR, I still absolutely love it. But if we're putting it up against my absolute favourite, it naturally falls (subjectively).
Well layed out!
I still disagree on enough points to sit me solidly in the Middle Earth Camp, but that seems to come more from a difference of what we value out each story than any disagreement with anything you said.
Like the lack of a tangible BBEG in LotR. The story is less about a surmountable enemy as it is a dialog about the dangers of power. The whole power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely. "Men" are always seeking new advancements, new lands, new technology, and are always looking forward, "to the future, to the horizon. Never his mind on where he was, hmm. What he was doing." And because of this they fall to corruption more easily; Theoden, Grima, Denethor, Boromir. Frodo on the other hand doesn't fall as easily to it, because he is a small person, with smaller wants, from a culture that values smaller things. The whole point is that despite this, Frodo's fall is inevitable, and only succeed through the help of others around him, grace, and the other most important point of the story, that evil destroys itself from within.
Merry and Pippin escape when the Uruk-hai and Uruk-morgol fight each other. The orks of Cirith Ungol killed each other to a man over a "Shiny Shirt", and most importantly despite the One Ring's greatest protection against harm (those who hold it will practically do anything else than do anything to bring it harm); it created the creature required to defeat it, Gollum. The books actually show how hard it is to intentionally try to damage the Ring, even all the way back in the Shire.
I think that the original Trilogy SW is one of the greatest adventure stories of all time, but I think that while The Hobbit is a spectacular adventure story, the Lord of the Rings is an Epic, with the intent of gleaning insight on the corruption of power and advancement for advancement's sake, but through the lens of those living through it.
To be fair, I think SW does attempt this in the PT, but falls short on the delivery. I hope y'all caught one of my favorite Star Wars quotes up above as well!
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