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Tolkien fans should probably consider grabbing the BBC's 1981 Lord of the Rings broadcast

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Bossy Monkey Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-31-10 03:56 PM
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Tolkien fans should probably consider grabbing the BBC's 1981 Lord of the Rings broadcast
I got a set on cassette from a thrift store for $5, which may have made it somewhat wonderfuller. Granted, Gandalf sounds like Lord Buckley, Aragorn like Mr. Belvedere, and Ian Holm (yes, THAT Ian Holm) overplays Frodo pretty far over the top, but it's a hoot. Treebeard is excellent, if more Shakespearish than Entish, and Gollum is better still. Unlike in the PeterJacksonillion, Faramir isn't a yobbo but much more in line with JRR's conception. And you can hear where Sean Astin learned his Gamgee accent.

Recommended. Hey! This is a radio show! Should I have said, "RadioLady DOESN'T review: BBC Lord of the Rings 1981"? Guess not. (And a hundred DUers say, "Huh?"

http://www.amazon.com/Lord-Rings-BBC-Dramatization-Consumer/dp/160283492X
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elocs Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-31-10 05:24 PM
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1. I got a boxed cd set of it for Christmas years ago and have listened to it many times.
I think Aragorn in it is terrible because he lisps so badly at times. It's hard to listen to him after seeing Viggo Mortensen play the part. The others are great though.
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pokerfan Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-31-10 06:06 PM
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2. I've had it for years
but my prized possession is the fifty-hour complete unabridged reading by http://www.amazon.com/Lord-Rings-Trilogy-Gift-Set/dp/1402516274">Robert Inglis. I found the complete CD collection on Ebay a few years ago. He was praised by AudioFile that "His rich sound and grave manner would make a grocery list sound like a collection of rare treasure".



Yes, it's expensive. It has to be: it's on forty-five snugly packaged CDs. But if you're a Tolkien fan who drives a lot, this may be one of the best investments you ever make.

There are no sound effects except for snatches of a folk tune at the beginning and ending of each set of CDs. I could have dispensed with the tunes; there are two of them, one perky and one melancholy, and which one ends which disc seems random. Most egregiously, "perky" begins playing after "'Well, I'm back,' he said."

There is nothing else but Rob Inglis, and Tolkien's words. Inglis has performed with the Royal Shakespeare Company, and his old-school English voice is a perfect match for the books. There is a small photo of him on the back of the CD. He looks rather hobbit-like, much like my conception of Bilbo on his eleventy-first birthday, and his hair sweeps back over his ears, making them look distinctly pointy.

He shines with comedy, and his rendition of Bilbo's party had a non-Tolkien fan who shared my car howling. But he's also good at conveying solemnity, and his reading of the madness of Denethor was genuinely frightening.

He does different voices for all the characters, and, though he's not a distinguished singer, sings the songs in a way that conveys their emotional qualities.

His voice of Gollum is the most distinctive, and clearly the one he had the most fun with: cackling, gurgling, whining, and hissing, simultaneously hilarious and pathetic. I always found the second half of The Two Towers a slog; yes, there's "Of Herbs and Stewed Rabbit," and the Dead Marshes, and finally Shelob, but otherwise it's an inordinate amount of walking, climbing, walking, climbing, looking for water, walking... Inglis' Gollum makes that section not just tolerable, but often a treat... although it would take a greater man than he to save the part where Sam and Frodo take ten pages to climb a hill.

Even if you've read the books many times yourself, hearing them aloud is different. You are forced to listen to passages you might have otherwise skipped or hurried over, and many of them yield up unexpected treasures, a turn of phrase or simile that you never noticed before. We can never again read them for the first time; but this is the next best thing.

Rachel Manija Brown
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SoxFan Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-31-10 07:17 PM
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3. I remember listening to it on NPR in '81!
Everything about it, with the exception of the prissy Aragorn, was awesome.

Viggo dod a far better job of capturing the simmering badassery that a Ranger would need to survive.

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NewJeffCT Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon May-31-10 07:21 PM
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4. I have it on CD & love it
And, since it's on radio, I think you have to expect some of the "acting" to be over the top, as it's hard to distinguish a large cast at times.
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