Legolas Greenleaf (in Movies vs. Books)
…that are not included in the books. He is granted few lines, and none of the lighthearted banter that he utters in the book. In the movie his humor seems…
…that are not included in the books. He is granted few lines, and none of the lighthearted banter that he utters in the book. In the movie his humor seems…
…I have to go too. FRODO: Why? MERRY: Because, the book says so. FRODO: What book? MERRY: You know… the book! THE BOOK! FRODO: Oh, right… THAT book! Well, oh…
…be sensed during the last scenes that the wounds are also emotional but in the book it’s even clearer. Frodo intentionally lives a quiet life writing his book and he…
…of Galadriel as she is fighting her inner battle is similar in film and book. Book: “from the ring she wore there issued a great light that illuminated her alone…
King Théoden (Bernard Hill) hails his audience, while Éomer (Karl Urban) is dying with thirst in the backgroud Party at Edoras It sounds almost incredible to any book-fan, but after…
…that Frodo will also sail to the Undying Lands and so they leave sad farewell to Frodo too. The Book The book tells a lot more about the events after…
…with his wife Rose when little Elanor posed the question. “Daddy, what’s this book?” Sam looked down fondly at his six-year-old daughter, before considering the book she held up to…
…of what J.K. Rowling did with writing the very last chapter of Harry Potter in book seven, so I’ve heard. Peter Jackson had a very great time in his whole…
…to take it as a burden rather than an honourable task. We do not know from the book how Éowyn felt about her promotion to ‘lord of the House of…
…in the book, but calculating in the film. The details in this scene show the substantial difference in character between the book and film. In the book, Gríma sits at…