Observations
from my weekly wanderings, usually in Northern Virginia (NOVA).
A
Turkish court is weighing evidence to determine if Gollum, the gangly creature
with the ill-favored look, from The Lord of the Rings is a good guy or a bad
guy.
First
let me stress, I’m not interested in debating the merits or the Turkish law
that makes insulting the head-of-state a crime. It’s Turkey’s law and they’re
welcome to it.
I’m
more interested, amused really, with the debate about Gollum’s redeeming qualities.
As a
child, when I’d read only The Hobbit, there was no question – Gollum was a
sinister creature who terrified me. (see post on Scariest Read)
But
things get a bit more complicated in LOTR. The reader learns Gollum’s full
tale, and some readers begin to pity him a bit. Me, not so much. I was pretty
much on Sam’s side whenever Gollum’s trustworthiness came up – He’s a villain!
I can
see things from Frodo’s point of view though, and I’m fairly certain this was
Tolkien’s intent. The Ring – pure evil – had corrupted Gollum. He was once a
fairly decent chap, but the evil beckon of the ring seduced him, and ruined
him.
Or did
it? There is a hint of something decent left in him. Frodo, by his own
admission needed to believe that Gollum could “come back.” The book and the
film portray the inner turmoil that Gollum faces, as well as the growing
division between Sam and Frodo on the redeemable possibility for Gollum.
But
that doesn’t really address the question, is Gollum a hero or a villain?
To me
it’s pretty simple – he’s a villain. His actions end up saving Middle Earth,
but there was no virtue in his actions, only treachery.
But
then, all you fans of literature over film, Peter Jackson did something that
Tolkien did not intend. (subtle allusion there – did you get it?)
And I
can’t say for absolute certain that Tolkien did not intend this, and I can’t
even say for certain that Jackson did it intentionally, but the film portrays
something so magnificently, I will have difficulty describing it.
Frodo,
as I already implied, was feeling the growing power of the Ring upon himself.
He needed, or wanted, to believe he could be free from its power, but he was
clearly doubting if he ever would.
So,
Gollum bites Frodo’s finger off, falls into the molten rock and perishes,
leaving Frodo dangling precariously, and the Ring floating on the lava, not yet destroyed. Frodo still has a trancelike look on his face, is still
apparently under the power of the Ring and Sam rushes to his rescue. But Sam cannot
rescue Frodo, if Frodo will not try to be rescued and that seems clearly in
doubt.
And
the sequence to this is ALL IMPORTANT. Frodo, comes to himself reaches out to
Sam and is rescued, and THEN – a short second later – the Ring is destroyed.
Frodo
conquered the Ring. He was not set free once it was destroyed – he conquered
it, and THEN it was destroyed. Gollum was no hero. Frodo was.
And
I’m a geek. It’s just a stupid bit of fantasy, but Oh how I love that scene.
However,
I hope the Turkish courts do not read this post. Even though I think Gollum is a villain, I don’t think the guy should
go to jail for comparing the PM to Gollum.
Wonderful post--it's been 40 years since I read LOTR and have only watched the first movie, but this post made me want to reread the trilogy and finally watch all the movies.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the feedback Jane. Yes, you really MUST reread and for goodness sack finish watching the movies. (You can skip the Hobbit movies IMO).
DeleteYES!!!!!!
ReplyDelete