最近評価された作品
ロード・オブ・ザ・リング
作品情報
| カテゴリ | 映画 |
|---|---|
| ジャンル |
アドベンチャー
ファンタジー
アクション
|
| 概要 | はるか昔。闇の冥王サウロンは世界を滅ぼす魔力を秘めたひとつの指輪を作り出した。指輪の力に支配された中つ国では一人の勇者がサウロンの指を切り落とし、国を悪から救った。それから数千年の時を経た中つ国第3世紀。ある時、指輪がホビット族の青年フロドの手に渡る。しかし、指輪を取り戻そうとするサウロンの部下が迫っていた。世界を守るためには指輪をオロドルイン山の火口、“滅びの亀裂”に投げ込み破壊するしか方法はない。そこでフロドを中心とする9人の仲間が結成され、彼らは“滅びの亀裂”目指し、遥かなる冒険の旅に出るのだった。 |
| キャスト(俳優・女優・声優) |
Frodo(Elijah Wood)
Gandalf(Ian McKellen)
Aragorn(Viggo Mortensen)
Arwen(リヴ・タイラー)
Legolas(オーランド・ブルーム)
Gimli(ジョン・リス=デイヴィス)
Boromir(ショーン・ビーン)
Saruman(クリストファー・リー)
Sam(ショーン・アスティン)
Pippin(Billy Boyd)
Merry(Dominic Monaghan)
Elrond(ヒューゴ・ウィーヴィング)
Galadriel(ケイト・ブランシェット)
Bilbo(Ian Holm)
Haldir(Craig Parker)
Lurtz(Lawrence Makoare)
Gollum(Andy Serkis)
Rosie Cotton(Sarah McLeod)
Celeborn(マートン・チョーカシュ)
The Ring (voice)(Alan Howard)
Everard Proudfoot(Noel Appleby)
Gil-Galad(Mark Ferguson)
Witch-King(Brent McIntyre)
Isildur(Harry Sinclair)
Elendil(Peter McKenzie)
Cute Hobbit Child(Katie Jackson)
Cute Hobbit Child(Billy Jackson)
Barliman Butterbur(David Weatherley)
Gondorian Archivist(Michael Elsworth)
Gate Keeper(Martyn Sanderson)
Farmer Maggot(Cameron Rhodes)
Bounder(Ian Mune)
Hero Orc / Goblin / Uruk-hai / Ringwraith(Victoria Beynon-Cole)
Hero Orc / Goblin / Uruk-hai / Ringwraith(Lee Hartley)
Hero Orc / Goblin / Uruk-hai / Ringwraith(Sam La Hood)
Hero Orc / Goblin / Uruk-hai / Ringwraith(Chris Streeter)
Hero Orc / Goblin / Uruk-hai / Ringwraith(Jonathan Jordan)
Hero Orc / Goblin / Uruk-hai / Ringwraith(Semi Kuresa)
Hero Orc / Goblin / Uruk-hai / Ringwraith(Clinton Ulyatt)
Hero Orc / Goblin / Uruk-hai / Ringwraith(Paul Bryson)
Hero Orc / Goblin / Uruk-hai / Ringwraith(Lance Fabian Kemp)
Hero Orc / Goblin / Uruk-hai / Ringwraith(Jono Manks)
Hero Orc / Goblin / Uruk-hai / Ringwraith(Ben Price)
Hero Orc / Goblin / Uruk-hai / Ringwraith(Phil Grieve)
Mrs. Proudfoot(Megan Edwards)
Orc (uncredited)(Rodney Bane)
Hobbit (uncredited)(Timothy Bartlett)
Last Alliance Elf (uncredited)(Jarl Benzon)
Lothlorien Elf (uncredited)(Jørn Benzon)
Last Alliance Elf / Rivendell Elf (uncredited)(Ben Britton)
Ringwraith (uncredited)(Jed Brophy)
Cute Hobbit Child (uncredited)(Riley Brophy)
Goblin (uncredited)(Rachel Clentworth)
Rivendell Elf (uncredited)(Sabine Crossen)
Khai (uncredited)(Peter Daube)
Goblin / Orc / Uruk-hai (uncredited)(Mana Hira Davis)
Orc / Uruk-hai (uncredited)(Siaosi Fonua)
Last Alliance Elf / Rivendell Elf (uncredited)(Kester Fordham)
Ring Dwarf-Lord (uncredited)(Xander Forterie)
Lothlorien Elf / Goblin / Uruk-hai (uncredited)(Ben Fransham)
Goblin / Orc / Uruk-hai (uncredited)(Winham Hammond)
Kissing Hobbit (uncredited)(Zo Hartley)
Cute Hobbit Child (uncredited)(Taea Hartwell)
Council Man (uncredited)(Ray Henwood)
Goblin (uncredited)(Lani Jackson)
Rivendell Elf (uncredited)(Gareth Jensen)
Gondorian Citizen (uncredited)(Tim Kano)
Last Alliance Elf / Council Elf (uncredited)(Sam Kelly)
Party Hobbit (uncredited)(Jeff Kingsford-Brown)
Isengard Orc Blacksmith (uncredited)(Peter Lyon)
Figwit (uncredited)(Bret McKenzie)
Uruk-hai (uncredited)(Tim McLachlan)
Hobbit Band Member (uncredited)(Liz Merton)
Uruk-hai (uncredited)(Dean Morganty)
Uruk-hai (uncredited)(Andrew Munro)
Goblin (uncredited)(David J. Muzzerall)
Witch-King (uncredited)(Shane Rangi)
Ring King of Men (uncredited)(Larry Rew)
Uruk-hai (uncredited)(Grant Roa)
Hand of Gollum (uncredited)(Thomas Robins)
Breelander (uncredited)(Chris Ryan)
Refugee / Orc (uncredited)(Samuel E. Shore)
Uruk-hai (uncredited)(Andrew Stehlin)
Hobbit (uncredited)(Betty Adams)
Uruk-hai at Amon Hen (uncredited)(Lynden Berrymen)
Hobbit (uncredited)(Bob Blackwell)
Uruk-hai (uncredited)(Tack Daniel)
Isengard Orc Blacksmith (uncredited)(Warren Green)
Hobbit (uncredited)(David Houma)
Council Man / Orc (uncredited)(Ralph Johnson)
Isengard Orc Blacksmith (uncredited)(Stu Johnson)
Uruk-Hai (uncredited)(Greg Lane)
Arms of Gollum (uncredited)(Sacha Lee)
Village Female Hobbit (uncredited)(Marta Martí)
Goblin (uncredited)(Sharon Maxwell)
Ring Dwarf-Lord (uncredited)(Richard Maybery)
Uruk-hai (uncredited)(Greg Morrison)
Council Elf (uncredited)(Blair Morton)
Uruk-hai (uncredited)(Mike Stearne)
Isengard Orc / Last Alliance Soldier / Morgul Orc / Uruk-hai (uncredited)(Ken Stratton)
Hobbit (uncredited)(Jo Surgison)
Uruk-hai (uncredited)(Branko Dordevich)
|
| 公開日 | 2001-12-18 |
| 製作会社 |
New Line Cinema
WingNut Films
The Saul Zaentz Company
|
AIに聞いてみた!作品へのポイント
ロード・オブ・ザ・リングのおもしろいポイントは、壮大な世界観と物語の奥深さです。作中に登場する種族や地名、歴史などが緻密に構築されており、読者や視聴者を魅了します。また、登場人物たちの成長や友情、愛情などの描写も感動的で、多くの人々の心を打つことでしょう。
おすすめするポイントは、冒険と戦いのエキサイティングな描写です。主人公たちが危険や困難に立ち向かいながら成長していく姿は非常に魅力的で、読者や視聴者を引き込みます。また、作中には魔法やファンタジー要素も豊富に盛り込まれており、非日常の世界に没入できるでしょう。
この作品はファンタジーが好きな人や冒険物語が好きな人に特におすすめです。また、友情や勇気、希望などを感じたい人にもぴったりの作品です。物語の広がりや深さを楽しみたい方にもおすすめです。
一方、おすすめしないポイントは、作品の長大さや複雑さが挙げられます。作品全体をじっくりと楽しむには時間と集中力が必要であり、短時間でさっと楽しむには向いていないかもしれません。また、ファンタジーが苦手な人や長編に抵抗がある人には、少しハードルが高いかもしれません。
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オーク達の襲撃で離散してしまった「旅の仲間」達。フロドとサムは独力でモルドールの滅びの山への旅路を続けていた。荒涼とした景色が広がるをエミン・ムイル行くその2人の後を指輪の前の持ち主ゴラムが追跡していた。ゴラムを罠に掛けて捕らえた2人だが、すぐに殺そうと主張するサムに対し、フロドはエルフの綱につながれて苦しむゴラムを哀れに思い綱をほどく。フロドは情けをかけてゴラムを信じ、モルドールへの道案内を任せる事にする。
昼なお暗いモルドールの山。フロドが眠る隣でゴラムは、彼の“愛しいしと”たる指輪を初めて手に入れたときのことを思い出していた。彼はホビットの支族ストゥア族で スメアゴルと呼ばれていた。ある日、いっしょに川で魚を釣っていたデアゴルが川に落ちてたまたま指輪を拾う。スメアゴルはその指輪を見た瞬間に指輪に魅せられ、それを奪おうとしてデアゴルを殺してしまった。そのために村を追放された彼は、指輪だけを友に長い年月を過ごすうちに指輪の魔力に蝕まれ、徐々に心身ともに変貌し現在の姿になったのだ。眠りから目覚めたサムはゴラムの邪心を疑うが、フロドはそんなサムをいさめる。
他人の夢に潜入してアイデアを盗み出す企業スパイのコブは国際指名手配犯であるが、それと同時に妻モルを殺した容疑もかけられていた。そんな彼に日本人男性サイトーからある依頼が。それはこれまでのように思考を盗み出すのではなく、標的にした人物の潜在意識に、あるアイデアを移植する“インセプション”という仕事だった。コブはサイトーを含むスペシャリスト6人を集め、標的の男性ロバートの夢に潜入しようとする。
神の世界では最強の戦士といわれていたものの、横暴でごう慢な性格が災いとなり、地球へ追放されてしまったソー。神の世界での力を失ってしまったソーに凶悪な敵たちが次々と襲い掛かり、ソーは地球でも戦いの日々を送ることになる。
1979年11月4日、テヘラン。イラン革命が激しさを募らせ、その果てにアメリカ大使館を過激派グループが占拠し、52人もの人質を取るという事件が起きる。パニックの中、アメリカ人6名が大使館から逃げ出してカナダ大使の自宅に潜伏。救出作戦のエキスパートとして名をはせるCIAエージェントのトニー・メンデスは、6名が過激派たちに発見され、殺害されるのも時間の問題だと判断。彼らを混乱するテヘランから救出する作戦を立案する。しかし、それは前代未聞で大胆不敵、そして無数の危険が伴うものだった。
The Movie Database(TMDB)で登録されたこの作品に対するレビュー・評価
Brooking no argument, history should quickly regard Peter Jackson’s The Fellowship Of The Ring as the first instalment of the best fantasy epic in motion picture history. This statement is worthy of investigation for several reasons.
Fellowship is indeed merely an opening salvo, and even after three hours in the dark you will likely exit the cinema ravenous with anticipation for the further two parts of the trilogy. Fellowship is also unabashedly rooted in the fantasy genre. Not to be confused with the techno-cool of good science fiction, nor even the cutesy charm of family fare like Harry Potter, the territory of Tolkien is clearly marked by goo and goblins and gobbledegook. Persons with an aversion to lines such as, “To the bridge of Khazad-dûm!” are as well to stay within the Shire-like comforts of home (their loss).
With those caveats in place, it bears repeating: fantasy does not come finer. There are electrifying moments — notably the computer-assisted swooping camera through Isengard as it transforms into a factory for evil — when Jackson’s flight of fancy approaches the sublime as the romantic poets would understand it: inspiring awe.
Leaving aside the thorny issue of Tolkien die-hards and their inevitable gripes — “What no Tom Bombadil?” — Jackson’s screenplay (written in collaboration with Fran Walsh and Phillipa Boyens) is both bolder and more judicious than Steven Kloves’ surprisingly timid retread of Harry Potter. In particular, rescuing the romance of Arwen and Aragorn from the footnotes and the elevation of Saruman to all-action bad guy actually has a corrective influence on Tolkien’s often oblique and female-sparse source material.
There are problems, though. The three-hour running time is high on incident and low on discernible form. After successive detours to Elf habitats Rivendell (the watery home of Elrond) and Lothlórien (the forest home of the Lady Galadriel), the uninitiated might well ask why these crazy Elf kids can’t just live together and spare us all this attenuated dramatic structure.
More importantly, the action clearly climaxes in the desperate flight from the Mines Of Moria, where the largely seamless SFX is showcased in the best possible light — total darkness — but the narrative demands a different, downbeat ending. Indeed, but for some fine emotional playing from Bean, Mortensen, Astin and Wood, the final fight might feel like a particularly brutal game of paintball in Bluebell Wood. But then, the real battles are yet to come...
Verdict - Putting formula blockbusters to shame, Fellowship is impeccably cast and constructed with both care and passion: this is a labour of love that never feels laboured. Emotional range and character depth ultimately take us beyond genre limitations, and it deserves to play as wide as a certain Mr. Potter.
5/5
- Colin Kennedy, Empire Magazine
An epic movie if I ever saw one. Captivating and just plain fun to watch. This movie is, indeed, art.
Tolkien’s adventure/fantasy LOOKS and SOUNDS fabulous, but is not without flaws.
RELEASED 2001 and directed by Peter Jackson, “The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring” adapts the first part of JRR Tolkien’s popular fantasy trilogy about adventures on Middle-Earth. The story starts in the homeland of the Hobbits (innocent, diminutive humanoids) where Frodo (Elijah Wood) is instructed by the noble wizard Gandalf (Ian McKellen) to quickly leave the Shire with the powerful One Ring in his possession. Gandalf and Frodo are later accompanied by seven others, the titular ‘Fellowship of the Ring,’ to take the ring to the only place it can be destroyed, the fires of Mount Doom in Mordor.
The rest of the main cast include Sean Astin (Sam), Viggo Mortensen (Aragorn), Sean Bean (Boromir), Christopher Lee (Saruman), Orlando Bloom (Legolas), John Rhys-Davies (Gimli) and Hugo Weaving (Elrond).
This three-hour fantasy features a diverse cast of colorful characters, quaint beings and settings, moments of genuine wonder, dark ee-vil creatures, high adventure, thrilling brutal action, a superb score, magnificent locations (forests, mountains, rivers, etc.), and wondrous CGI sets. The film LOOKS and SOUNDS so great that it’d be sinful to give it a lower rating.
There are problems, however, at least for those who aren’t uber-fans of Tolkien. For one, the opening is hindered by prologue that is overlong and convoluted, not to mention unnecessary. The bulk of it could’ve been conveyed later via flashback, which they do a little bit anyway. Secondly, the story takes forever to build any drive. Thirdly, except for maybe Frodo and Gandalf, the characters are shallow and I didn’t care much what happened to them. Fourthly, main protagonists getting seriously wounded and everyone else expressing their melodramatic concern gets redundant.
Fifthly, there are only two females in the main cast (Liv Tyler as Arwen, a half-Elf princess, and Cate Blanchett as Galadriel, a royal Elf); unfortunately, their parts aren’t much more than glorified cameos. “Mythica: A Quest for Heroes” (2014) cost LESS THAN $100,000 to make, which is a mere fraction of the $93 million it cost to make this blockbuster and the filmmakers knew enough to include a couple of prominent babes as key protagonists in the story.
Despite these negatives, “The Fellowship of the Ring” is the best of the trilogy and is a must for fantasy/adventure aficionados, especially Tolkien fans.
THE MOVIE RUNS 2 hours 58 minutes and was shot in New Zealand.
GRADE: B/B- (6.5/10)
Overall, I give this four stars. Not five, because some of the changes really bug me, as a long-time Tolkien fan, but a solid four.
The casting, to start, was brilliant. Sean Astin was the absolute perfect choice for Sam, and did a remarkable job bringing that character to life for us. He really WAS Sam, in this role, in a very deep way. I always liked his acting, but here, he showed how talented he actually is. Just amazing. Elijah Wood gives a great performance of Frodo, and those expressive eyes of his really add a lot of depth to the emotions the character goes through, which are such an important part of the story. Billy Boyd and Dominic Monaghan both did great work, for our other two main hobbits. Their smiles, their singing; just every aspect of these characters was so real. Viggo Mortensen, of course, was excellent. He's always good, and though I never would have pictures him as Aragorn, he delivered everything we could hope for. Great choice for that role! John Rhys-Davies, as expected, gave us the Gimli we wanted. Phenomenal actor, and I can't imagine anyone doing that role better. Orlando Bloom plays a convincing Legolas, and handles the nuances of being an elf quite well. Sean Bean as Boromir was outstanding, bringing the strength of that character to life, and making us love him. Then we have Ian McKellen, as Gandalf. I could never have chosen someone for that role, but the casting folks hit a home run with this one. Everything about his character was just right. Literally everything. I can't read the books without seeing these people in these roles now. The rest of the cast ws good as well.
Then we have the setting. New Zealand has to have some of the most utterly gorgeous scenery on the planet. Seeing it in these movies was great, and convincingly Middle Earth, and seeing more since, in other videos, just WOW! Thanks, to the people of New Zealand, for allowing this to be filmed there!
The sets were just fantastic. Everything looked as good as I'd always hoped it would look, with all the charm, mystery, and wonder Tolkien fan could hope for. From Bag end to Rivendell to the vastness of
Middle Earth, everything we saw was just right.
The only issues I had were some of the changes. Yes, I know things don't always work in movies as they do in books, but when whole sections are just omitted, that bothers me. It's not like the movies weren't long already! That omitted section, with which Tolkien fans will be quite familiar, was a very important part of the plot! I also didn't care for some of the other changes, and the way Arwen was used, the scene at the river being one example.
All in all, though, this was a well done movie, and even though some things bug me, this film, and the rest of the series, will be viewed many times. Classics, worth collecting and treasuring.
Lost count how many times I've seen the "The Fellowship of the Ring" but still fantastic after all these years, epic on every level and just all around entertaining, the 3.5 running time just flies by. Will be watching "The Two Towers" either tonight or tomorrow followed by "The Return of the King". **4.75/5**
Well, I wouldn’t read this review if you are a true fan of fantasy adventure epics, because I am not. Don’t get me wrong, I like this movie and have watched it a few times over the years, but I have watched (or read, for that matter) very little else in the fantasy genre. I didn’t get too far into the Game of Thrones as the violent rapes got old for me fast.
So I watched this first entry of the Lord of the Rings trilogy as just a viewer, not a fan, and I liked it just fine. The complex plot held together well and the scenery was gorgeous. There was violence, but not gore, and for those who don’t like war movies, there wasn’t as much of it here as there is in the other two films of the trilogy.
I gather the elfin roles for women were enlarged and brought to the fore, and why not; women were mostly good for setting mead and large pieces of rare meat down on tables in front of their warrior men.
I must confess, I found it jarring that the warriors like Strider were so invincible, walking into a horde of sixty orcs and scattering them like toy soldiers with his sword. I know they are epic heroes, but if I’m an orc, I stand back and throw something or whatever, but it is similar to the old legends with semi-gods like Achilles, back when Hector was a pup.
I am not going to compare the film to the book — I read it decades ago when I was in high school. It is worth watching and though real fans will take this with a large grain of salt, I think it is possibly the definitive adaptation of the book. (I need to watch the other two entries in the series before I say the same about those.) if you are among the 12% percent of movie goers who haven’t seen it, give it a try.
Magnificent! A great start to the franchise.
<em>'The Lord of the Rings'</em> is yet another film series that I am incredibly late to viewing, at least I've finally got around to it... albeit almost twenty years on from this film's release.
<em>'The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring'</em> is delightful. I never know what to expect from a film that goes on for nearly three hours, the pacing has to be near perfection for it to work - and boy does it here. The run time flew by, which is always a terrific sign.
I love a load of things about this, the one that actually sticks out most is the outstanding score. Music can play a huge part in how much I enjoy a film, so I'm delighted to say that the score is here is fantastic. That is by no means the only positive, obviously.
The cast are excellent. Elijah Wood gives a strong performance in the lead role. I've seen Wood in others things down the years and have actually found him a bit hit-and-miss, but here he is very good. Elsewhere, I really enjoyed watching Viggo Mortensen's character.
Away from those two, there are a whole host of noteworthy cast members. Orlando Bloom, or Will Turner to me, is involved, as are the likes of Ian McKellen and Sean Bean. I also liked Liv Tyler in her role.
The look of the film is spectacular, and has aged extremely well even to this day. Everything from the cinematography to the costumes is brilliant, those two things really make the film come alive - helped by the aforementioned score, of course.
Very eager to check out the sequels, prequels and, eventually, the upcoming television series.
This film may be perfect.
Based on the fantasy world written by Tolkien, we see the halfling hobbits, the most unlikely of heroes, a breed of human type beings who indulge in pleasures, games, and fun, and do little evil.
In the same world are more powerful beings, some good, like the elves and wizards, some evil, like the orcs, trolls, and dragons, and some in between, like the dwarves and men.
And one evil super being, Sauron, the second in command to the "devil" of this world called Middle Earth, and that devil called Melkor is now in chains and powerless, so Sauron rules all evil.
That said, we get a very faithful version to the book, only improved. This is the first of three segments called "The Lord of the Rings". The parts left out are parts best left out. Tom Bombadil, for example, along with his wife, represents a very Hitler like Aryan ideology of supremacy that Tolkien often engaged in.
The film begins with a narrative and action sequence that is awesome, and then goes into the "status quo" setting of the "shire" of hobbits, much like the status quo setting of films like "Women of Dolwyn".
From there, we get an amazing story of four hobbits who embark on a journey of utmost importance, joined by a wizard, an elf, a dwarf, and two men.
The direction is stunning. The motivation even better explained than in the Tolkien books. This is a masterpiece.
So now that the picture houses across the UK are beginning to reopen, this is the third film I've settled down to watch in front of a huge big screen - and it's a belter. You can only wonder at the sheer imagination of JRR Tolkien and of Peter Jackson, Fran Walsh & Philippa Boyens as they adeptly adapt this epic tale of power for a new generation. Certainly, it over-hams the accents - maybe just a few too many "rrrs" in "Arrragorrrrn" but otherwise it's a feast for senses. When the hairy-footed Hobbit "Bilbo" (Sir Ian Holm) gets to eleventy-one he sets off to write his life-story with the elves. He leaves his possessions - including a mysterious ring - to Frodo (Elijah Wood). When visiting wizard "Gandalf" (Sir Ian McKellen) identifies it as the epitome of wickedness that puts all of their lives are in danger, "Frodo" and his lifelong friend "Sam" (Sean Astin) must flee their bucolic happiness. This first instalment of the trilogy tracks the journey of the hobbits as they meet "Stryder" (Viggo Mortensen) and together try to evade the pursuing wraith attempting to get to "Elrond" the Elvish king in "Rivendell" and decide what is best to do with this evil, seemingly indestructible talisman. Their only solution proves to be returning the ring to the lava-filled cavern of "Mount Doom" where it was forged: only there can it's corruption be defeated. The brave hobbits, together with two men, an elf and a dwarf set out to accomplish this all but impossible task fighting the weather, evil orcs, malevolent magic and the harsh terrain on their treacherous way. It's the ultimate fantasy adventure; that sticks to the spirit, if not to every word, of the original work. The effects both in make-up and from the computer are expertly applied creating a real sense of tension and peril that compliments, rather than subsumes, the actual action and beautiful cinematography of the New Zealand scenery through which our intrepid gang must travel. This is probably the weakest of the three episodes as it takes a good hour to get going; but once it does and the "Fellowship" takes firmer form with a superb John Howard-Davies; a handsome Orlando Bloom and even the usually wooden Sean Bean raises his game to give us as a truly cracking, at times quite scary adventure that is magnificently scored by the inspired Howard Shore. This is not really a film that works on the telly - however large the screen may be. To do justice to the creativity of all concerned it just has to be given the respect it deserves and be seen in the cinema. If you get a chance, you should go see it (again!).
One Trilogy to rule them all. Peter Jackson’s The Fellowship of the Ring, the start of this epic journey, remains unmatched in its reverence for Tolkien’s work – not merely as an epic tale, but as a moral and mythological construct with its own internal gravity. Unlike many contemporary fantasy productions, which often treat Tolkien’s world as a loose template to be re-skinned, Jackson’s film operates as a careful translation, not a reinvention. Every creative decision, from script to score to set design, reflects an understanding that Middle-earth is not a playground, but a legendarium – a world with its own laws, languages, and deeply rooted cosmology. It is this sense of literary responsibility that makes Fellowship not just a good adaptation, but a great one.
Too many modern shows, even those cloaked in Tolkien’s vocabulary, feel less like adaptations and more like speculative reinterpretations – injecting modern anxieties and tropes into a narrative that was already rich in timeless concerns. Where those newer productions often flatten the moral contours of the story into grey ambiguity or impulsive spectacle, Jackson’s Fellowship preserves the text’s theological seriousness and philosophical clarity. It understands, crucially, that Tolkien was not writing about swords and sorcery, but about humility, sacrifice, and the perilous allure of domination. The Ring is not a mere object of power – it is a spiritual test – and the film never lets us forget it.
The performances reflect this deeper understanding. Ian McKellen’s Gandalf is not a stock wizard, but a being of deep time, burdened by knowledge and reluctant authority. Elijah Wood’s Frodo captures the very soul of Tolkien’s hobbit – a creature of small stature and immense will, shouldering a task no one would envy. Sean Astin’s Samwise is played not for comic relief, but as a paragon of unsung virtue: loyalty without ambition, courage without ego. Viggo Mortensen’s Aragorn is a man wrestling with history, shaped by the burden of lineage, not the thrill of it. These portrayals are not just emotionally effective; they are textually faithful.
Cate Blanchett’s Galadriel deserves special mention. Her portrayal embodies the strange, luminous power of the Elves as Tolkien wrote them – otherworldly and terrible in equal measure. Her temptation scene is delivered with haunting restraint, the grandeur of her voice a vessel for ancient sorrow and quiet wisdom. This Galadriel is not a warrior queen in the modern sense, but a bearer of deep time, whose greatness lies in her refusal to grasp at power. It is a performance that understands the Elvish condition: to be fading, beautiful, and bound to a world no longer theirs. Blanchett’s screen time is brief, but the echo of her presence lingers – like Elven light in dark places.
Jackson’s adaptation respects Tolkien’s languages and mythic structures with near-obsessive care. Elvish is not set dressing; it is spoken with phonetic integrity, tied to cultures that feel ancient and real. The geography, costumes, architecture – each bears the mark of deep lore, not just visual flair. Howard Shore’s score, informed by the same gravitas, does not accompany the film so much as inhabit it. His themes are not just musical motifs but narrative threads, echoing the rise and fall of kingdoms and the quiet dignity of small acts of heroism.
What distinguishes The Fellowship of the Ring is that it treats Tolkien’s world as something already complete – something to be entered humbly, not reshaped. In doing so, it achieves a rare artistic feat: it becomes an extension of the text, not a commentary on it. While newer works may borrow Tolkien’s lexicon and aesthetics, Jackson’s film believes in his world. It does not merely entertain; it partakes in a mythology. That belief, that reverence, is what endures.
この作品に対するレビュー・評価
「ロード・オブ・ザ・リング」のおもしろいポイントは、まず、作中に登場する種族やキャラクターの多様性です。ホビット族、エルフ、ドワーフ、人間など、さまざまな種族が登場し、それぞれが異なる文化や特性を持っています。特に、ホビット族の平和を愛する性格や、エルフの美しさや知恵、ドワーフの頑固さなど、個性豊かなキャラクターたちが物語を彩ります。
また、物語の中で描かれる冒険や戦闘シーンも見どころの一つです。仲間たちが協力し合い、困難に立ち向かう姿や、壮大な戦闘シーンは臨場感があり、読者や視聴者を引き込みます。特に、指輪の力や影響が物語の展開に大きく関わる点も興味深い要素の一つです。
さらに、作中に登場する中つ国という架空の世界は、詳細な歴史や言語、文化が描かれており、作品世界に没入する楽しみがあります。中つ国の地理や民族、伝説などが緻密に描かれており、作品の世界観を深める要素となっています。
最後に、友情や勇気、希望など、人間の持つさまざまな感情やテーマが作品全体に散りばめられており、読者や視聴者に共感や感動を与える要素となっています。物語の中で描かれるキャラクターたちの成長や葛藤、そして彼らが抱える使命や運命に対する姿勢が、深い感動を呼び起こします。
以上のような要素が組み合わさった「ロード・オブ・ザ・リング」は、幅広い読者や視聴者に愛される作品となっています。