The "What Are You Thinking About Right Now?" PIP

39794 replies · 3613684 views

Jade Bahr's avatar
Jade Bahr
Posts: 11842
#37321

Of course LOL

 

‘The Lord of the Rings: Hunt for Gollum' Will Be Split Into Two Films

Ian McKellen has confirmed that Andy Serkis’ upcoming “The Lord of the Rings: The Hunt For Gollum” will be split up into two films.

McKellen, who will be returning as Gandalf, explains that he still hasn’t read the script, but that it’s supposed to be by finished early next year. “I’m told it’s two films,” the actor told ITV’s This Morning.

It was recently reported that Serkis might be using AI to de-age his LOTR actors, which include McKellen, Viggo Mortensen, Elijah Wood and Orlando Bloom. The story of ‘Gollum’ is set only a few years after 2003’s “The Return of the King.”

The rest is confetti's avatar
The rest is confetti
Posts: 26671
#37322
6 hours ago, Cult Icon said:

Also Taylor Swift came out of the woodwork to endorse Harris after the debate lol.

 

Spoiler
Spoiler

 

Jade Bahr's avatar
Jade Bahr
Posts: 11842
#37323

yes-yes-yes-amanda-holden.gif

 

‘Rings of Power’ Season 2 Is So Much Better Than ‘House of the Dragon’

The most expensive show in TV history, the “Lord of the Rings” prequel has a major creative glow-up in Season 2. From storytelling to visuals, Middle Earth > Westeros.

 

240827-schager-rings-of-power-season-2-h

 

Hunky Sauron returns in the second season of The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power, and though he divided fans during the series’ maiden run, his duplicitousness proves the lynchpin of its superb sophomore outing.

 

Determined to create additional rings of power and, with them, to manipulate Middle Earth’s numerous races into aiding his quest for world domination, Sauron is a villain of menacing Machiavellian proportions, and Charlie Vickers’ sterling performance as the dark lord drives much of this thrilling saga. Rife with deceptions and betrayals, the latest installment in the J.R.R. Tolkien-inspired prequel is a grand and unnerving showcase for Sauron’s superior cunning, intuition, and gift for treating his adversaries as pawns and rendering them fools—including a legendary craftsman who turns out to be the one dupe to ruin them all.

 

With these eight new episodes, The Rings of Power, launching August 29 on Prime Video, remains a worthy backstory complement to Peter Jackson’s Oscar-winning cinematic trilogy, marked as it is by CGI that brings the diverse realms of Middle Earth to stunning life, intricate plotting that’s rooted in three-dimensional characterizations and a sense of this civilization’s history and lore, and a collection of set pieces that culminate with an all-out war that recalls The Two Towers’ Battle of Helm’s Deep.

 

Filled with extravagant monsters, vast and unique lands, brawny skirmishes, and striking tableaus, J.D. Payne and Patrick McKay’s fantasy epic—the most expensive TV show ever produced—is an aesthetic triumph, its direction (courtesy of Charlotte Brändström, Louise Hooper, and Sanaa Hamri) and score (by Bear McCreary) channeling the sweeping scope and scale of its big-screen ancestors without ever feeling duplicative or redundant. Yet more important than its style, ultimately, is its nuanced multi-pronged narrative about greed, ambition, and seduction, all of it exploited by Sauron for devious ends.

 

There’s more going on in The Rings of Power than just about anything on television, but Payne and McKay weave their several storylines together into a coherent tapestry of honor and treachery, selfishness and altruism.

 

Having discovered that her comrade Halbrand was Sauron, Galadriel (Morfydd Clark) becomes convinced that the three rings of power created with the dwarves’ mithril is the key to saving the elves from extinction. Given that they were designed under Sauron’s watch, however, Elrond (Robert Aramayo) is deeply distrustful of the rings, thus putting him at odds with his long-time friend.

 

Their dispute is one of many sown by Sauron, who having outed himself to his former allies allows himself to be captured by Adar (Sam Hazeldine, replacing Joseph Mawle). The Orc leader holds him prisoner without realizing his true identity, and in an opening flashback, he's revealed to be the figure who, in the aftermath of Morgoth’s demise, attempted to kill Sauron, played in this earlier incarnation by Slow Horses’ Jack Lowden.

 

Following his escape from Adar’s military encampment, Sauron travels to Eregion to meet with master elven smith Celebrimbor (Charles Edwards), whose trust he gains after divulging his “authentic” (read: false) self as Annatar, an elf god. Celebrimbor’s genius and hubris are easy prey for Sauron’s trickery, and he’s soon persuaded to craft new sets of rings, beginning with seven for the dwarves.

 

Dwarf King Durin III (Peter Mullan) is eager to accept these gifts, considering that their predecessors restored the elves’ immortality and his mountain kingdom of Khazad-dûm has suffered cave-ins that have left it without sunlight. Alas, the ring he wears quickly corrupts his heart and mind, making him mad with avarice, which seriously concerns his estranged son Prince Durin IV (Owain Arthur) and daughter-in-law Disa (Sophia Nomvete) but earns Sauron further mithril supplies for his ring-making endeavor.

 

Elsewhere in Middle Earth, elf warrior Arondir (Ismael Cruz Córdova) is grieving a painful loss and crosses paths with Isildor (Maxim Baldry), who winds up partnering with a wild woman named Estrid (Nia Towle), whose romantic feelings for him are as obvious as her motivations are clandestine. In Isildor’s native Númenor, blind queen Míriel (Cynthia Addai-Robinson) and her beloved right-hand man Elendil (Lloyd Owen) find themselves at odds with scheming politician Pharazôn (Trystan Gravelle), who wants to usurp the throne and free their kingdom of elven influence even as he secretly wields an elf crystal ball (known as a palantir) that, like so much in The Rings of Power, spreads Sauron’s influence like a plague.

 

At every opportunity, the dark lord takes advantage of men and women’s dreams and desires, noble impulses and base vulnerabilities, to advance his plan. Though he’s not always present in these narratives, Vickers’ baddie hovers over them like a malevolent specter, orchestrating chaos with a seemingly helpful insinuation here and a tantalizing promise there.

 

This is just the tip of the iceberg for The Rings of Power’s second season, which also picks up with the Stranger (Daniel Weyman)—accompanied by his diminutive Harfoot friends Nori (Markella Kavenagh) and Poppy (Megan Richards)—as he searches for a staff spied in slumbering visions. This trek leads him to Tolkien favorite Tom Bombadil (Rory Kinnear) as well as a Dark Wizard (Ciarán Hinds) who commands a battalion of skull-masked marauders.

 

The identities of the Stranger and the Dark Wizard are hardly big mysteries, but the series nonetheless has fun playing coy with them, and it offsets that impishness with a mounting atmosphere of doom and gloom begat by Sauron, whom Vickers inhabits with a calculating friendliness and benevolence that belies his monstrous intentions. The actor’s terrific turn evokes both Sauron’s slyness and the bottomless void it masks, and it’s matched by a collection of equally solid performances led by Clark, whose fierceness and resolve are as daunting as her skill at rolling her Rs (especially when she purrs “Celebrimbor” and “Sauron”) is impressive.

 

The Rings of Power elegantly balances its myriad points of interest, only faltering slightly with a Númenor thread that too closely resembles House of the Dragon. Still, unlike that TV rival, Payne and McKay’s series boasts no stagnant placeholder episodes; every scene and subplot moves with urgent purpose. Better yet, it exudes grandeur in its expansive panoramas of Middle Earth and conflicts between combatants big and small, and it rarely indulges in one-dimensional writing, such that even the Orcs are complicated creatures rather than merely snarling, rabid fiends.

 

Building to a prolonged campaign between forces that don’t (or refuse to) understand that their strings are being pulled by a virtuoso puppeteer, The Rings of Power is a tragedy born from arrogance, gluttony, and ego. Suspenseful, graceful, and frequently breathtaking, it’s a portrait of the way in which our chief strengths are also often our greatest weaknesses—a notion embodied, here, by Celebrimbor, an artist whose aspiration for immortality is the seed of incalculable destruction.

Jade Bahr's avatar
Jade Bahr
Posts: 11842
#37324

Ok this scene made me legitly choking, croaking and finally screaming at my television RUN GIRL!!!! 🤣 Or not? 😚 My neighbours probably thought now she's gone nuts LMAO

 

THE RINGS OF POWER: 2.05 — Halls of Stone

Spoiler
Spoiler

3f8af8a302cb8eab4282de2d2aace953ab148666

8eab44f26ad7bfba1910418c2ebaf8dde81cab20

7cf777400f1b2f212263fa787a740a75279b4bda

1ecc25d6bda8a18f62a08055969d6af6e3bd7e75

 

bonus

9d1a72b19c54ec86758df6b8a7f5ab69cb92c5e9

4ef50336d39dcc1e872c449a2b804af70b0cee20

 

This episode was so good omg

Spoiler
Spoiler

833709e2fa8f3e464d4c34edd702665d19ef9566

1078390427545dd3140cefafdfc45c34696bcda9

4c62af6305cfd4ca7d30d2cbdd6a53a4dfbcd00a

ccb149b04dc0a64de655cc00e9b7ebf145bf61c9

5679d82544b9287b976106646f5ec670dc0824a8

5d232bbb3ad6fa455c59abb3d20908a0c19adfa6

35c2d407957fd80aa3b8a1ea3a81a0c8078242d4

 

The show just does a great job of showing how terrifying and depraved Sauron is. The way they show him manipulating and gaslighting the elves and muddling the truth and speaking beautiful nothings! The way he talks shit about his coworker by the watercooler - blaming Brimby for his own mistakes. The way he flatters young inpressionable intern. The way he patronisingly flirts wit her to get her loyalty...

The rest is confetti's avatar
The rest is confetti
Posts: 26671
#37325

 

The rest is confetti's avatar
The rest is confetti
Posts: 26671
#37326

 

Jade Bahr's avatar
Jade Bahr
Posts: 11842
#37327

This scene and how they played with light and shadow is *chefs kiss and not subtle at all

Spoiler
Spoiler

dce41449bfdc5ddd70aa14abe63a26cd934f5bf8

dd82243280192f6875cd282d82ff835c8bfe7b27

 

Everyone

18edd3042dd914c3c182b2462ecbec32eee99c2c

1e9debb570e97cc81f0e7901fa9174ac1ebf0d8f

 

5a525c463fed8dbdb5f7a0bfd94d4d7561ec9185 4b2bf3df816c30341951a7045189299b8acc4294

 

Sauron

f9f36986a906107920a79ac95561efdee727ffe4

The rest is confetti's avatar
The rest is confetti
Posts: 26671
#37328

 

You ready? @Jade Bahr 

Jade Bahr's avatar
Jade Bahr
Posts: 11842
#37329
51 minutes ago, Matt! said:

You ready? @Jade Bahr 

colinfarrell-colin.gif.4cf668bd8d86e59dcd631ba5f898a2e3.gif

 

... you bet 😏🤩

The rest is confetti's avatar
The rest is confetti
Posts: 26671
#37330
1 hour ago, Jade Bahr said:

colinfarrell-colin.gif.4cf668bd8d86e59dcd631ba5f898a2e3.gif

 

... you bet 😏🤩

 

tenor.gif

The rest is confetti's avatar
The rest is confetti
Posts: 26671
#37331
IMG_8809.jpeg
The rest is confetti's avatar
The rest is confetti
Posts: 26671
#37332

 

Jade Bahr's avatar
Jade Bahr
Posts: 11842
#37333

TRoP is renewed for another season

 

Screenshot2024-09-16at11-27-55StoriesInstagram.thumb.png.121175bde841e1c948d85bfb6195ba53.png

The rest is confetti's avatar
The rest is confetti
Posts: 26671
#37334
3 hours ago, Jade Bahr said:

TRoP is renewed for another season

 

Screenshot2024-09-16at11-27-55StoriesInstagram.thumb.png.121175bde841e1c948d85bfb6195ba53.png

 

The rest is confetti's avatar
The rest is confetti
Posts: 26671
#37335

 

Uh oh 

Grossly Incandescent's avatar
Grossly Incandescent
Posts: 42604
#37336

 

The rest is confetti's avatar
The rest is confetti
Posts: 26671
#37337

 

Grossly Incandescent's avatar
Grossly Incandescent
Posts: 42604
#37338

taytay re-released this song with the all the curse words removed  😛

 

 

Jade Bahr's avatar
Jade Bahr
Posts: 11842
#37339

 

Jade Bahr's avatar
Jade Bahr
Posts: 11842
#37340

Todays episode was a great hair day 💛🖤

 

Screenshot_20240919-190012_Instagram.thumb.jpg.dbb50b87042d58ba2fe3e3073682ec76.jpg Screenshot_20240919-190019_Instagram.thumb.jpg.fa092980d2f19ac36b3d640af1c31f65.jpg

12318651866186718681869198819891990
Page of 1990