Tolkien focuses on
Tolkien’s early life from roughly age 10, circa 1902, ending with him writing
the iconic first line of The Hobbit,
in the early 1930s. We get a heavy emphasis on his romance with Edith Bratt,
his friendship with the T.C.B.S., four passionate boys who shared a common love
of heroic literature, his love of languages, and his experiences with love and
war that inspired his great story of the war of the ring and its underlying mythology.
Overall I enjoyed the film, and was moved by a few scenes.
It took several dramatic liberties, compressing and magnifying various events
to help propel along the sometimes quite ordinary course of about 25 years of
his life. Other events I believe were wholly created—sneaking into the storage
room of a sold-out concert hall to listen to a performance of the Richard
Wagner opera “Der Ring des Nibelungen” with Edith, for example. Normally I would
not complain about it, except that Tolkien was not particularly influenced by
Wagner’s opera, despite the shared conceit of a ring of power, and a casual viewer
of the film might leave thinking that Wagner’s Ring Cycle was the chief
influence on The Lord of the Rings (it was not). Tolkien did romantically reunite
with Bratt after the latter had gotten engaged to another man, and encouraged
her to break off the relationship. But it did not happen in the seconds before
Tolkien dramatically boarded a transport ship to France, as was portrayed in
Tolkien. But I accept these changes in the spirit of needing to create a
dramatic film, which is very different from biography or history.
Tolkien was also surprisingly low on the “cringe” factor.
There were no made-up dramatic charges into German machine gun fire, embarrassing sex
scenes, or manufactured maudlin T.C.B.S. speeches; rather the genuine friendship
and spirit of the four boys was well-portrayed, as was Tolkien’s view of Edith
as something akin to an elven princess (for better and for worse, as she often felt alienated by his split personality around her). Tolkien’s life had a great many
tragedies and triumphs that required no exaggeration, and the film presented
some of these faithfully. I particularly liked that it preserved the 1916 letter
from G.B. Smith to Tolkien, in which the former foresaw his own end in the fields
of France and implored his old schoolmate to continue the great work the
T.C.B.S. had vowed to create:
My God bless you, my
dear John Ronald, and may you say the things I have tried to say long after I
am not there to say them, if such be my lot.
It is heartbreaking to think what came next: T.C.B.S member
Rob Gilson died in one of the many suicidal advances across the mud-choked
Somme battlefield, straight into German machine-gun fire; Smith suffered
shrapnel wounds from an exploding artillery shell and later died of gangrene
infection. That left only Wiseman and Tolkien to carry on the T.C.B.S.'
promised great work. Tolkien developed trench fever and had to be evacuated
back to England, which in all likelihood saved his life. He and Wiseman held up
their end of the bargain: Wiseman would go on to become a school headmaster,
while Tolkien of course would go on to become an Oxford professor and write the
greatest fantasy the world has ever known.
The best account of this period of Tolkien’s life remains John
Garth’s Tolkien and the Great War, which after Tom Shippey’s The Road to Middle-Earth is one of the
best pieces of Tolkien scholarship I have read. But you could do worse on a
Saturday night than a viewing of Tolkien.
2 comments:
splendid review!
I watched it a while back. I agree with you--it's good but not great.
Post a Comment