PrettyDeadman
Guest
This is the reason why Christopher Token disowned his son.
Firstly, it's important to understand that de Plater's approach to Shelob comes from an interpretation that she and Gollum are, in fact, the unsung heroes of The Lord of the Rings. Put simply, it's his take that Frodo fails to cast the ring into the fires of Mount Doom at the crucial moment - instead Gollum succeeds where he cannot (albeit tumbling into the fire himself along the way). According to de Plater, that weakness in Frodo was something Shelob sensed, making a pact with Gollum and hastening him on his way to Mount Doom and the final confrontation that saw the ring destroyed. It also goes some way to explaining why Shelob tried to eat Frodo in The Two Towers.
It was that duality (being one of the saviours of Middle-earth while also being a giant, horrifying spider), de Plater explained, that drew the team to Shelob as a central character in Shadow of War. "There were two things that were a starting point for our inspiration. A big part of what we do is look at these characters that are in kind of the grey zone - they're not as pure good as Gandalf or Aragorn, they're more human. Characters we're inspired by, characters like Boromir and Saruman and Denethor, because I think sometimes Lord of the Rings gets characterised as being oversimplified, black and white, good guys vs bad guys, but actually there are these incredible nuanced characters.
Basically this. "We made her a woman because spider tiddies," was all he needed to say for his target audience. At least it would've been if they hadn't cocked everything up with the war chests, but that's fully beside the point.I'd have more respect for them if they shrugged their shoulders and said they put Shelob in the game and made her a woman because it was cool. Writing fanfiction and claiming false justification in the books is just bullshit.
Eh? Frist of all, I thought Tolkien hated spiders; there's no way Shelob's secretly a goody. Secondly, how does trying to eat Frodo advance the destruction of the ring? What if she had eaten him? Was she going to bear the ring to Mordor herself? Would she give it to Gollum, who would then dance a jig all the way to the volcano and accidentally fall in? Dudn't add up, Plater.
Basically this. "We made her a woman because spider tiddies," was all he needed to say for his target audience. At least it would've been if they hadn't cocked everything up with the war chests, but that's fully beside the point.I'd have more respect for them if they shrugged their shoulders and said they put Shelob in the game and made her a woman because it was cool. Writing fanfiction and claiming false justification in the books is just bullshit.
Prepare to be enraged.
http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/2017-08-15-why-shelob-is-a-woman-in-shadow-of-war
Firstly, it's important to understand that de Plater's approach to Shelob comes from an interpretation that she and Gollum are, in fact, the unsung heroes of The Lord of the Rings. Put simply, it's his take that Frodo fails to cast the ring into the fires of Mount Doom at the crucial moment - instead Gollum succeeds where he cannot (albeit tumbling into the fire himself along the way). According to de Plater, that weakness in Frodo was something Shelob sensed, making a pact with Gollum and hastening him on his way to Mount Doom and the final confrontation that saw the ring destroyed. It also goes some way to explaining why Shelob tried to eat Frodo in The Two Towers.
It was that duality (being one of the saviours of Middle-earth while also being a giant, horrifying spider), de Plater explained, that drew the team to Shelob as a central character in Shadow of War. "There were two things that were a starting point for our inspiration. A big part of what we do is look at these characters that are in kind of the grey zone - they're not as pure good as Gandalf or Aragorn, they're more human. Characters we're inspired by, characters like Boromir and Saruman and Denethor, because I think sometimes Lord of the Rings gets characterised as being oversimplified, black and white, good guys vs bad guys, but actually there are these incredible nuanced characters.
I'd have more respect for them if they shrugged their shoulders and said they put Shelob in the game and made her a woman because it was cool. Writing fanfiction and claiming false justification in the books is just bullshit.
What is this, Middle-Earth: WWE edition?
Prepare to be enraged.
http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/2017-08-15-why-shelob-is-a-woman-in-shadow-of-war
Firstly, it's important to understand that de Plater's approach to Shelob comes from an interpretation that she and Gollum are, in fact, the unsung heroes of The Lord of the Rings. Put simply, it's his take that Frodo fails to cast the ring into the fires of Mount Doom at the crucial moment - instead Gollum succeeds where he cannot (albeit tumbling into the fire himself along the way). According to de Plater, that weakness in Frodo was something Shelob sensed, making a pact with Gollum and hastening him on his way to Mount Doom and the final confrontation that saw the ring destroyed. It also goes some way to explaining why Shelob tried to eat Frodo in The Two Towers.
It was that duality (being one of the saviours of Middle-earth while also being a giant, horrifying spider), de Plater explained, that drew the team to Shelob as a central character in Shadow of War. "There were two things that were a starting point for our inspiration. A big part of what we do is look at these characters that are in kind of the grey zone - they're not as pure good as Gandalf or Aragorn, they're more human. Characters we're inspired by, characters like Boromir and Saruman and Denethor, because I think sometimes Lord of the Rings gets characterised as being oversimplified, black and white, good guys vs bad guys, but actually there are these incredible nuanced characters.
I'd have more respect for them if they shrugged their shoulders and said they put Shelob in the game and made her a woman because it was cool. Writing fanfiction and claiming false justification in the books is just bullshit.
Wow, that's some of the worst shit you could do to the LotR fiction. I'm pretty sure Tolkien is rotating in his grave. I'm all for expanding a universe but in this regard I'm just speechless how anyone in the Tolkien family could allow this. It's basically pissing on the heritage.
What is this, Middle-Earth: WWE edition?
Maybe they could start some rap battle at the end. That would be cool...
There's plenty to complain about with Shadow of War, but hyping up the different tribes is cool. Looking forward to more of these.What is this, Middle-Earth: WWE edition?
Making the Other essentially human/sympathetic is subversion 101. Problem here is not in the intention, but in their utterly tactless delivery.
Yeah, I hate it when people don't get that monsters are monsters. They don't represent real-world human nationalities or ethnic groups. The Orcs aren't a metaphor for the French. They are a personification of human rage. They're not there to be sympathetic or make us think "You know, even monsters have a story to tell." They're there to show us what's bad about ourselves so we can conquer it. It's OK for good and evil to exist in books and games.
Are you telling me racist europeans don't portray brown people as all powerful industrial anarchic empires?The Orcs aren't a metaphor for the French.
Gollum being a mixed bag, well, that's fine - lots of supporting evidence for that in the books, Gandalf's speech etc. If it wasn't for Gollum, Sauron might have got the ring because Frodo wouldn't have destroyed it and the Nazgul would have taken him off to Barad Dur. Saying Gollum served a dual purpose is not controversial. Saying the same thing for Shelob is utter horseshit, even before you get to the human thing.