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Lord Of The Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring

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In the novel, in the pit of Mount doom, awash in the joy of reclaiming “ the precious”, Gollum’s footing wavers and he goes falling into the depths of Mount Doom, destroying the Ring with his fall. In the film, Frodo summons the fuel to clash against Gollum for possession of the Ring, until they both fall over the edge and plummet to the lava beneath. Ring in hand, Gollum splashes into the lava and is sucked beneath, Frodo however, grips the stone walkway and is rescued by Sam.
J.R.R Tolkien in his novel uses the Ring to highlight the downfall it radiates around it. How Gollum is so encased within the idea of the Ring, he plummets to his death due to the Ring. By having Frodo laying on the ground, clutching his wounded hand, Tolkien frees …show more content…
Frodo duels against a Cave Troll in the Mines of Moria, he survives long odds, is tainted with darkness and yet Frodo strives forward. In Two Towers, he is plagued with darkness and is driven through lands rich with war, led by what was once a man before being twisted by the Ring. In Return of the King, Frodo is lost to the ring. Foresight and judgment is lost, Frodo is fully consumed by the Ring. His downfall is at its peak in the bowels of Mount Doom. Dismissing the chance to destroy the Ring and bring peace, Frodo outcasts this idea and craves the Ring, defining his downfall and his tragic succumbing to the Ring; highlighting that Frodo is no longer the hero he once was in the Fellowship of the Ring, but is now the very thing he sought to destroy. At the end of the film, Frodo is a defeated man. Not the hero he was supposed to be, Frodo leaves his life behind and travels with Bilbo and Gandalf into the Elf afterlife as he cannot bear to live his old life anymore. Defeated Frodo leaves it all behind as he failed this …show more content…
Standing in the depth of Mount Doom, Frodo is given the chance to drop the Ring, but instead, his will cracks his power shatters, and his loyalty quakes, as the Ring consumes him and steers him away from his deed. This scene depicts Frodo as much of a villain as the likes of Gollum, Saruman, or even Saron, as now he has renounced his devotion to the Fellowship and he is compelled to take the Ring for himself, banishing Middle Earth from peacetimes. This seen defines Frodo’s fall from grace and highlights how his mind has been warped and decayed by

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