Alloyed
- El episodio se transmitió el 14 oct 2022
- B
- 1h 12min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.7/10
40 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Finaliza la primera temporada. Se forjan nuevas alianzas.Finaliza la primera temporada. Se forjan nuevas alianzas.Finaliza la primera temporada. Se forjan nuevas alianzas.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Lenny Henry
- Sadoc Burrows
- (as Sir Lenny Henry)
Opiniones destacadas
What a disappointing ending to a series from which you had expected so much - but maybe it's exactly this expectation that makes the last episode in particular so incredibly boring, empty and sad. The dialogue is so unimaginative and uncreative that it makes you wonder what the writers and producers did with all the money they were given. One of the most expensive series of all time? You only notice that in pictures and music. The rest is actually a dramaturgical catastrophe. I'm a big Lord of the Rings fan, and I still find Tolkien's creativity simply stunning. Unfortunately, what was made of the fabric is not good. The chance was there.
Finally, dialogs that doesnt seems to have been written by corporative robots. We started to care about some characters that needed much more screen time.
This last episode give me hope for the next seasons because this one was a snooze fest that care more about checking boxes than developing characters. Finally, we have some writing that actually mean something aside from pretty quotes and advance a global narrative.
I dont care much about the chronological adaption. Yes, they squeeze 2000 years (ish) into one generation. But i think, it was necessary. Either that or kill every mortal each episode with a 100 year time jump. It would have been a nightmare, story wise.
The last episode doesnt redeemed the season, wich, in my opinion, was very badly paced with a bad focus. Some scenes were cringe and badly acted and scripted. While the visuals are always extremly pleasing, I did not care about any character aside from Durin and hi wife.
In this last episode, they had no choice to go full throttle, overcompensating perhaps for lack of rythm of the season.
One scene still drag for way too long and again, focused on the wrong characters.
I am hopefull for season 2. But please, kick the corporate boomer out of the writting room.
This last episode give me hope for the next seasons because this one was a snooze fest that care more about checking boxes than developing characters. Finally, we have some writing that actually mean something aside from pretty quotes and advance a global narrative.
I dont care much about the chronological adaption. Yes, they squeeze 2000 years (ish) into one generation. But i think, it was necessary. Either that or kill every mortal each episode with a 100 year time jump. It would have been a nightmare, story wise.
The last episode doesnt redeemed the season, wich, in my opinion, was very badly paced with a bad focus. Some scenes were cringe and badly acted and scripted. While the visuals are always extremly pleasing, I did not care about any character aside from Durin and hi wife.
In this last episode, they had no choice to go full throttle, overcompensating perhaps for lack of rythm of the season.
One scene still drag for way too long and again, focused on the wrong characters.
I am hopefull for season 2. But please, kick the corporate boomer out of the writting room.
An episode full of "revelations" that most already knew. There is action, there is progress in the plot and visual quality. It is part of what I look for when it comes to enjoying content, and as such I give it 5 points. From a plot point of view, it falters everywhere. It's amazing that when I think about it there's no particular story arc that I'm interested in seeing. I mean, there are jumps here and there in each plot line, but I could rather say which one catches my attention the least. That's one of the worst signs for me. I don't feel attached to most of the main characters, and neither do they themselves since they change their attitude every half chapter.
Frankly, the most expensively poor product in a long time.
Frankly, the most expensively poor product in a long time.
The great tragedy of this show, is the sheer potential with this kind of budget and actors. The finale is no different, you can see what could have been, but they fail to deliver.
The writing quality is poor as ever, with twists and turns predicted by countless people. However, the cinematography remains excellent, acting of certain characters are still excellent, such as Daniel Weyman and Robert Aramayo, who's take on the characters feels consistent.
The pacing is poor and the forced connection between some characters that I will not name for the sake of avoiding spoilers is very obvious and frankly amusing. It has bits and pieces that are fun though, specially scenes around the ''Stranger'', even though we all now know who he is.
Overall not the worst episode in the season, but a weak finale with many questionable decisions plagued with inconsistent writing. Rings of Power will remain one of the great 'What Ifs' of the modern era.
The writing quality is poor as ever, with twists and turns predicted by countless people. However, the cinematography remains excellent, acting of certain characters are still excellent, such as Daniel Weyman and Robert Aramayo, who's take on the characters feels consistent.
The pacing is poor and the forced connection between some characters that I will not name for the sake of avoiding spoilers is very obvious and frankly amusing. It has bits and pieces that are fun though, specially scenes around the ''Stranger'', even though we all now know who he is.
Overall not the worst episode in the season, but a weak finale with many questionable decisions plagued with inconsistent writing. Rings of Power will remain one of the great 'What Ifs' of the modern era.
10XweAponX
This story likes to dance around things that might reveal who a character is and what their motivations are, but it stops short of revealing exactly who that character is.
For example: there were three strange looking women that appeared, they were very interested in the crater left by the Stranger, and the Stranger himself.
Ultimately, their goals and intentions were revealed, and were not good. But just like us, they were fooled. In this case they had fooled themselves, and they fell into their own trap. And in doing so they gave us a few more clues to the identity of the "Stranger". We now know that if the Stranger was not who they believed he was, then in fact he was somebody, something else. Somebody who we hope that he is.
That seems to be the theme here, not just the theme of the show but it's also embedded in Tolkein's books and stories and appendices. Misdirection.
We have to remember that Sauron fooled ELVES, as wise and intelligent as they are, they fell for it. But mainly Galadriel fell for it. And when she fell for it, so too, us.
She was basically fed what she wanted to hear and that caused her to set upon a course of action that will affect the very landscape of not just middle earth but Numenor and all other lands from the stories.
A lot of people, when talking about this show, are distraught because they feel that "Tolkien is being rewritten".
This is not so. This is exactly what he wanted, although it never happened in his own time, it is happening now. He wanted other people to expand upon what he had already written. So his works, starting with the Silmarillion, The Hobbit, Lord of the Rings, Lord of the Rings appendices, and his several books of Lost Tales... They are a tapestry which gives us something to start with and to build upon.
As long as we don't stray too far from the themes and characters that have already been developed. And this show does a very good job of keeping to the stories that have already been written.
We forget that Tolkien wanted to write these stories because he felt that Britain had no mythology of its own. Thanks to Tolkien, now they do.
So the framework we are given here that started with The Hobbit and then Lord of the Rings, can be viewed as this new mythology.
Those of us who are familiar with the history of events from middle earth, can now see those events in much more detail. There were Catastrophes and Eucatastrophes all through the history of middle earth, bad things that happened and good things that happened.
And this season stops with one of the good things that happened, a eucatastrophe, even though it was surrounded by catastrophes.
In fact all through this episode some very horrible things have happened to most of the groups that are shown, but with each of those groups of people, the Elves in their city, The Harefoots as they travel with The Stranger, The Numinorians... something good develops from each of those catastrophes.
We are going to have to wait to check in with the fate of Durin's Folk and the Southrons.
For example: there were three strange looking women that appeared, they were very interested in the crater left by the Stranger, and the Stranger himself.
Ultimately, their goals and intentions were revealed, and were not good. But just like us, they were fooled. In this case they had fooled themselves, and they fell into their own trap. And in doing so they gave us a few more clues to the identity of the "Stranger". We now know that if the Stranger was not who they believed he was, then in fact he was somebody, something else. Somebody who we hope that he is.
That seems to be the theme here, not just the theme of the show but it's also embedded in Tolkein's books and stories and appendices. Misdirection.
We have to remember that Sauron fooled ELVES, as wise and intelligent as they are, they fell for it. But mainly Galadriel fell for it. And when she fell for it, so too, us.
She was basically fed what she wanted to hear and that caused her to set upon a course of action that will affect the very landscape of not just middle earth but Numenor and all other lands from the stories.
A lot of people, when talking about this show, are distraught because they feel that "Tolkien is being rewritten".
This is not so. This is exactly what he wanted, although it never happened in his own time, it is happening now. He wanted other people to expand upon what he had already written. So his works, starting with the Silmarillion, The Hobbit, Lord of the Rings, Lord of the Rings appendices, and his several books of Lost Tales... They are a tapestry which gives us something to start with and to build upon.
As long as we don't stray too far from the themes and characters that have already been developed. And this show does a very good job of keeping to the stories that have already been written.
We forget that Tolkien wanted to write these stories because he felt that Britain had no mythology of its own. Thanks to Tolkien, now they do.
So the framework we are given here that started with The Hobbit and then Lord of the Rings, can be viewed as this new mythology.
Those of us who are familiar with the history of events from middle earth, can now see those events in much more detail. There were Catastrophes and Eucatastrophes all through the history of middle earth, bad things that happened and good things that happened.
And this season stops with one of the good things that happened, a eucatastrophe, even though it was surrounded by catastrophes.
In fact all through this episode some very horrible things have happened to most of the groups that are shown, but with each of those groups of people, the Elves in their city, The Harefoots as they travel with The Stranger, The Numinorians... something good develops from each of those catastrophes.
We are going to have to wait to check in with the fate of Durin's Folk and the Southrons.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaCelebrimbor states, "The Sun itself began as something no bigger than the palm of my hand." This refers to the story of the creation of the Sun and Moon as the last fruit and flower of the Two Trees of Valinor, as told in "The Silmarillion" by J.R.R. Tolkien.
- ErroresAt around 1h 1 mins, the audio description states, "The perspective rises to take in the apple tree on the hill's crest, along with the tiny figures of Nori and the Stranger as they embark on their sojourn." This is a misuse of the word "sojourn", which refers to a temporary stay in one place.
- Créditos curiosos"This production contains dialogue, characters, and places that were inspired by, though not contained in, the original source material."
- ConexionesReferences El señor de los anillos: La comunidad del anillo (2001)
- Bandas sonorasWhere the Shadows Lie
Written by Bear McCreary
Performed by Bear McCreary feat. Fiona Apple
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 12min(72 min)
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.39 : 1
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