Personal Lists featuring...

The Hobbit 1977

12

The Complete Rankin/Bass Collection
Missing:
The Comic Strip (Street Frogs, The Mini-Monsters and Karate Kat)
Kid Power
The Tomfoolery Show
The Reluctant Dragon and Mr. Toad Show

4

All "official" Movies and TV content Tolkien and LOTR related

6

Middle Earth Universe Chronology

2

Movies we watched as kids from the 80s that messed us up a little.

120

J.R.R. Tolkien, (John Ronald Reuel Tolkien) born January 3, 1892, Bloemfontein, South Africa—died September 2, 1973, Bournemouth, Hampshire, England), An English writer and scholar who achieved fame with his children's book The Hobbit (1937) and his richly inventive epic fantasy The Lord of the Rings (1954–55).
There are in total six Lord of the Rings movies. Three Lord of the Rings movies and three The Hobbit movies.
Those movies are 1. The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring, 2. The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers, 3. The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King,
1. The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, 2. The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug and 3. The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies.
J.R.R. TOLKIEN'S THE HOBBIT The entire Hobbit trilogy condensed into a 4-hour long movie. No unnecessary subplots, characters, ridiculous action scenes, and so on.

THE SILMARILLION is the PREQUEL to the Hobbit and the Lord of the Rings, recounting the creation of Middle Earth and its ancient history up to the time of Bilbo Baggins. The narration by Martin Shaw is an unabridged audio book that has been available for a number of years.

BORN OF HOPE is a fan film PREQUEL to the Lord of the Rings and is based on J.R.R. Tolkien's writings in the Appendices of the Trilogy. The story is set in the time before the War of the Ring and looks at the lives of the Dunedain.

THE HUNT FOR GULLUM - PREQUEL
The film is set during the timespan of The Fellowship of the Ring. It takes place 17 years after Bilbo Baggins's 111th birthday party and just before Frodo Baggins leaves the Shire for Rivendell (an interval which was not outlined in the motion picture based on that story). The wizard Gandalf fears that Gollum may reveal information about the One Ring to the Dark Lord Sauron, and sends the Ranger Aragorn, heir of Isildur, on a quest to find him.
THE APPENDICES are a collection of Bonus Features from the DVD/BluRay Releases of Peter Jackson's "The Lord of The Rings" and "The Hobbit" trilogies.
OTHER RELATED SITES:
NOTE: There is no correct order to watch The Lord of the Rings.

VARIOUS ORDERS of watching Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit movies depending on how fan-factual you are, (https://bit.ly/3D6YR0S)

THE OFFICIAL TOLKIEN ONLINE BOOKSHOP https://www.tolkien.co.uk/tolkien-bbc-ww1-inspired-lord-rings/

SIR PETER JACKSON https://www.newzealand.com/nz/feature/sir-peter-jackson/

THE TOLKIEN SOCIETY https://www.tolkiensociety.org/author/books-by-tolkien/

NEW ZEALAND- HOME OF MIDDLE EARTH PART 1 https://youtu.be/hsUlHilL0Is

3

HollyWood Movies based on Popularity

20

J. R. R. Tolkien's novels The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings, set in Middle-earth, have been the subject of various film adaptations. There were many early failed attempts to bring the fictional universe to life in screen, some even rejected by the author himself, who was skeptical of the prospects of an adaptation. While animated and live-action shorts were made off of Tolkien in 1967 and 1971, the first commercial depiction of the book onscreen was in an animated TV special in 1977. In 1978 the first big screen adaptation of the fictional setting was introduced in the animated The Lord of the Rings.

The rights to adapt Tolkien's works passed through the hands of several studios, having been briefly leased to Rembrandt films before being sold perpetually to United Artists, who then partially passed them to Fantasy films. During this time, filmmakers who attempted to adapt Tolkien's works include William Snyder, Peter Shaffer, John Boorman, Ralph Bakshi, Peter Jackson and Guillermo Del Toro. Other filmmakers and producers who were interested in an adaptation included Walt Disney, Forrest Ackerman, Denis O'Dell (who contacted David Lean, Stanley Kubrick and Michaelangelo Antonioni to direct) and Heinz Edelmann.

New Line Cinema released the first part of director Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings film series in 2001 as part of a trilogy and several actors and roles were introduced once again in a trilogy in The Hobbit film series. In 2017, Amazon co-operated with New Line to acquire the TV rights to adapt a new prequel show set in a period glimpsed during a flashback in The Lord of the Rings films.

There have also been a biopic of Tolkien's, as well as fan films of Middle-earth such as The Hunt for Gollum and Born of Hope, which were uploaded to YouTube on May 8, 2009 and December 11, 2009 respectively.

3

A bunch of films with White people in them, and can involve White culture. They have to show them in a positive light, that's really it. This is built off Yggdrasil's pro-White list and many others from forums/greentext boards. These are what I'd consider great films, most of which teach good morals, that feature predominantly White casts. Given the extreme anti-White rhetoric plaguing American mainstream right now, it's nice to have a reliable list of watchable films. This list encompasses all genres, that's why it's a mess.

If you have a problem with this list existing, move on. There are plenty of racial pride lists for other ethnicities on Letterboxd, including black nationalism. This is just to catalog the best of cinema featuring Europeans.

5

Sci-fi/horror/B movies from the 60's thru current

5

The Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation is given each year for theatrical films, television episodes, or other dramatized works related to science fiction or fantasy released in the previous calendar year. This list contains winners and nominees, covering both Long- and Short-Form categories as well as retro Hugos, but (obviously) does not contain nominees who are not (or cannot be) listed on Trakt, including (but not limited to):

1939 (R): "The War of the Worlds" by the Mercury Theatre on the Air (radio play)
1939 (R): "Around the World in Eighty Days" by the Mercury Theatre on the Air (radio play)
1939 (R): "A Christmas Carol" by the Campbell Soup Playhouse (radio play)
1939 (R): "Dracula" by the Mercury Theatre on the Air (radio play)
1939 (R): R.U.R. (stage play)
1941 (R, SF): Adventures of Superman: "The Baby from Krypton" (radio play)
1960: "Murder and the Android", NBC Sunday Showcase Imissing from Trakt)
1970: News Coverage of Apollo 13
1971: "Blows Against the Empire" by Paul Kantner & Jefferson Starship (album)
1971: "Don't Crush That Dwarf, Hand Me the Pliers" by Firesign Theatre (comedy album)
1972: "I Think We're All Bozos on the Bus" by Firesign Theatre (comedy album)
1976: The Capture (graphic novel)
1978: Blood!: The Life & Future Times of Jack the Ripper (audiobook)
1979: The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (radio play)
2004 (SF): "Gollum's Acceptance Speech", 2004 MTV Movie Awards
2006 (SF): Lucas Back in Anger (stage play)
2007 (SF): Prix Victor Hugo Awards Ceremony
2009 (LF): METAtropolis (multimedia stories)
2012 (SF): The Drink Tank's Hugo Acceptance Speech
2017 (SF): "Splendor & Misery" by clipping (album)

(R) is Retro Hugo
(SF) is Short Form

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