Rings of power lgbtq
Prime Videos The Lord Of The Rings: The Rings Of Power Rumored To Feature LGBTQ+ Representation
A brand new rumor claims that Prime Videos upcoming The Lord of the Rings: The Rings Of Influence series will feature LGBTQ+ representation.
This new rumor comes from YouTuber Gary Buechler of Nerdrotic.
Buechler states, I usually dont run with rumors , but Ill give you this one. Emailed to me by a random stranger, who Ive never met, who says he watches my channel, says he is working on this peripherally somehow, has stated that there will be LGBTQ+ representation in Lord of the Rings on the Prime.
RELATED: Lord Of The Rings Fan Site Implies That J.R.R. Tolkien, As A Catholic, Would Celebrate LGBTQ
This latest rumor from Buechler comes after so-called The Lord of the Rings fan site , who obtained the first official description of The Rings of Power series, channeled their inner Gríma Wormtongue and began pushing blatant LGBTQ+ propaganda onto not only J.R.R. Tolkien, but The Lord of the Rings as well.
Back in June , the website took to Twitter to claim
Grace Randolph Savages Galadriel In The Lord Of The Rings: The Rings Of Power, Claims Elrond Is Gay
YouTube reviewer and scooper Grace Randolph recently released her review for Prime Video’s The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power and she took Morfydd Clark’s Galadriel to task and claimed that Elrond and a number of the male Elves are gay.
Randolph uploaded her review for The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power and noted the review only looks at the first two episodes of the series.
In a section of the video that she labels “Worst Character” she specifically takes issue with Morfydd Clark’s Galadriel.
RELATED: After Telling Critics To “Shut The F*** Up,” Morfydd Clark Now Claims She Was Surprised By Galadriel’s Depiction In ‘The Lord Of The Rings: The Rings Of Power’
Randolph states, “As for characters that I didn’t like. Well, there’s only one character actually and that’s — while during the movies I wa slike no question I would be an elf. Team Elf. Here, the Elves are super monotonous. Like wow. So boring.”
She continued, “I think that the lack of deed
So.
I just finished watching one of my most anticipated shows in years. The Rings of Power is the Lord of the Rings prequel that explores the Rise of Sauron and the forging of the One Ring (and all the others that are linked to it).
Going in, I was a bit concerned about this new franchise after all, it was constructed from whole cloth from some appendices at the terminate of the Lord of the Rings by the corporate folks over at Amazon Prime. Epic fantasy by committee.
Even so, I actually enjoyed it.
The visuals are gorgeous, every bit as good as the films. We finally obtain a glimpse at the glorious world that existed before the Third Age, the period when LOTR takes place. The elven city of Linden the human isle of Numenor, and the dwarven kingdom of Khazad-dûm are all rendered in breathtaking beauty here. I want to go live there.
But where the story really shines are in its female characters. Unlike the original trilogy, women take center stage here.
Morfydd Clark fills in Galadriels character nicely, crafting a warrior with a spine made of mithril. It was wonderful
The Rings of Power Tells the Kind of Like Story We Never Notice on TV
Amazon Prime's The Rings of Power, its lavish prequel to The Lord of the Ringsbased on ancillary works by J.R.R. Tolkien, just ended its first season on several enormous cliffhangers, with Hot Sauron gearing up to enact some dastardly plan in the newly established Mordor, leaving everyone else in Middle-Earth basically crying, shaking, and throwing up about it.
While the series certainly didn't skimp on spectacle, it has faced some legitimate criticisms regarding its pacing: the storytelling moved at a glacial pace for several episodes, and the actual rings of control for which the demonstrate is named only construct an appearance in the final 20 seconds of the season finale.
The show has also been accused by some viewers for queerbaiting, a term which describes writing or acting that hints at a gay relationship without ever making the attempt to directly deal with LGBTQ+ content or themes. Given how historically underrepresented queer people have been in pop culture (and how desperate these audiences are to see th