The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim
Starring: Voices of: Brian Cox, Gaia Wise, Miranda Otto, Luca Pasqualino, Lorraine Ashbourne.
Distributor: Universal Pictures
Runtime: 134 mins. Reviewed in Dec 2024
Reviewer: Fr Peter Malone msc
A sudden attack by Wulf, a clever and traitorous lord of Rohan seeking vengeance for the death of his father, forces Helm Hammerhand, the King of Rohan, and his people to make a daring last stand in the ancient stronghold of the Hornburg.
This is a pre-Hobbit tale, 183 years before the story of the rings. The characters and places are taken from appendices to Tolkien’s sagas. However, one character has been invented for this film, a young, vigorous, heroic princess, Hera, with the narrator telling us that none of the stories told about her survived. A license then for the screenwriters to be creative.
The immediate striking aspect of the film is that it is an animation saga. Japanese direct Kamiyama has much experience with Japanese anime. So, on the one hand, this is very much anime style of storytelling and action, particularly characteristic, the minimal mouth movement of the characters as they speak. But, on the other hand, the influence of Peter Jackson’s films, backgrounds, castles, warfare, is still very important. And, the style of animation, building on the live performance of the actors.
It is surprising to learn that the film has not been a box office success. One would have thought that there is a continual succession of generations fascinated by Middle Earth, its characters, the conflicts, the magic.
For audiences able to accept this anime style and an animated version of the stories, it is enjoyable in its way. It is a very masculine world, a mighty king, voiced by Brian Cox, his prince sons, his prince nephew, his armed forces, and a conflict with a rival lord, a sudden death, the Lord’s son consumed with vengeance.
But, we have been alerted straightaway to Hera, another embodiment of the development of the Disney princesses, the Warrior Princess, doted on by her father, protected by him, but learning to take stronger and stronger stances, eventually confronting the angry vengeful besieger of the castle, and hand-to-hand combat.
At the end, there are some links to the future Rings stories, the image of Christopher Lee’s Saruman (and his actual voice, a clip from one of the films, reminding us of his evil power). Billy Boyd and Dominic Monaghan from the originals are also in the voice cast and, interestingly, Hera’s devotedly strong-minded maid is voiced by Lorraine Ashbourne (who, in fact, is the wife of Andy Serkis, Gollum).
Plenty of action, plenty of colour, memories of Howard Shore’s rousing score, a venture into a different kind of Middle Earth.
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