Film Review – Tolkien (2019)

by John Tuttle

When watching a non-fiction, biographical film, there are two separate and fundamental questions that deserve to be asked — and answered. First, does the film present genuine characters, a decent plot, and inevitably an entertaining product? Secondly, does the film portray historical events and figures accurately or in the spirit of the historical pieces involved? This latter question carries weight in that it ultimately seeks to know whether or not a modern feature film can convey a historical story with authenticity and in reality. Karukoski’s Tolkien (2019) provides answers to both questions, though it does not completely satisfy the latter.

The following review will be spoiler free.

Synopsis

Directed By: Dome Karukoski

Written By: David Gleeson and Stephen Beresford

Starring: Nicholas Hoult, Lily Collins, Colm Meaney, Derek Jacobi, Owen Teale, Laura Donnelly, Craig Roberts, Guillermo Bedward, Nia Gwynne, and Pam Ferris

Tolkien is fixated on some of the most influential events of author J.R.R. Tolkien’s childhood and early adulthood. It not only touches vaguely on those things which inspired the man to create one of the most epic works of fantasy literature of all time, but it also attempts to give us some idea of the personality of Tolkien.

A Solid Foundation

The movie itself is beautifully filmed, even if it is worth noting that the Tolkien Estate has officially stated it does not endorse the feature film, as has the Tolkien family— though that is often the outcome when anyone tries to tell a story that circles around Tolkien or his works. The cast assembled under this Dome Karukoski production consists of veteran movie stars as well as new, young acting talent. When combined, they deliver a convincing British gathering of the early 20th century. Stars such as Nicholas Hoult from Mad Max: Fury Road and Owen Teale of Game of Thrones come together to bring the life events of J.R.R. Tolkien to the big screen. Other notable performances are seen from Lily Collins (To the Bone) and Derek Jacobi (Gladiator).

As for up and coming acting talent, Anthony Boyle’s portrayal of Geoffrey Smith was splendidly performed. Robert Gilson is another character who we see develop. His breakthrough comes in achieving a backbone. But Robert is also the close companion of Ronald who is most inclined to foolhardiness. He is boisterous, rowdy, comical, and ever ready to jump into adventure. He is a character who possesses a slightly bigger-than-life personality. Albie Marber plays the more youthful Robert stupendously. Spot on. Additionally, fellow actor Patrick Gibson provides a fine, rewarding take on Robert Gilson as he is situated in a more mature body and mindset.

image via EW

The Highlights of the Movie

Two of the key elements feeding into young Tolkien’s own character are the love of friendship and the love of creativity. Ronald’s little club of creatives, the T.C.B.S. (Tea Club and Barrovian Society), is the chief exemplar of this welcomed inclusion of creative flare — at least in the film. Here, in this warm and benevolent atmosphere of support and constructive criticism, of niceties and jollity, Tolkien and his friends get to pursue their dreams. Here, among friends, dreams get turned into something tangible.

Tolkien’s love life with Edith features a number of enticing highs and lows. The only problem with it thematically is this: If you know the story of Tolkien, you know who he marries. Going into the movie, someone familiar with Tolkien is likely aware of the relationship between Edith Bratt and J.R.R. Tolkien. Therefore, the supposed drama between them is only half as suspenseful than if the audience was more in the dark in regard to what the outcome of the relationship is going to be. But, as a loose biopic, this fact can’t be helped. Suffice it to say that the relationship might have been put on the screen with a flare more romance without losing too much historical accuracy.

Perhaps the most important note to make on the author’s biopic is that it does not even come close to abusing the author’s work in those moments where his real-life events overlap the fantastical ones. The trailer alluded to a movie which promised to be more like the loose Charles Dickens biopic The Man Who Invented Christmas (2017). However, it had few to no resemblances to the plot devices employed in that previous biopic in that it did not bombard the real world with the fantasies dreamt up by the author.

image via EW

What the Movie Butchered and Neglected about Tolkien

While the movie does a good job in detailing a number of aspects of Tolkien’s early life that go on to weave their way into The Hobbit, The Lord of the Rings, and the other Middle-Earth tales, Tolkien almost completely removed any mention of another foundational dimension to Ronald’s life. In addition to language, his wife, and his interest in nature, Tolkien was a man of deep faith. A devout Catholic, he himself once noted how his faith had a significant impact on his literary works.

This aspect to his literature has been confirmed by scholars and critics including Joseph Pearce, Jonathan Witt, Jay Richards, William Ready, and others. Yet, this movie distills the presence of the Catholic faith in Tolkien’s life to something that was partially a necessity of custom and partially a burden he wishes to be rid of.

The way the film is set up, a good deal of Tolkien’s family life gets skimped. He goes from a war-torn vet to married with a couple of kids seemingly overnight. Also, there seems little hope in his own future. The only developing hope we see is the beginnings of the story which would eventually make him famous. But this has no bearing on his immediate future. The only friends of his — that we the audience were introduced to — were almost entirely wiped out, absent from Tolkien’s day-to-day life.

His career as a professor is also something to be left up to the audience’s imagination. A wedding between Edith and Ronald is wholly nonexistent as is the visible expression of a deep marital bond. The movie seems less about Tolkien himself than it is about conveying emotion and advocating for the admirable ideology of following one’s dreams.

image via Inverse

What the Movie Got Right about Tolkien

John Ronald Reuel Tolkien was a brilliant man, and as the movie acutely and accurately displayed, one who was quite dedicated to language, having in the course of his life thoroughly familiarized himself with Latin, Greek, French, Finnish, Old Norse, Middle English, and 20 other languages. Of course, we get a taste of the youthful Tolkien’s handle on a few of these: Latin and Finnish in particular.

Beyond this, we get a glimpse into another, more creative side of Tolkien’s talented mind. Specifically, his doodles. The man is seen sketching even more than Chris Evans’ Steve Rogers in the MCU. And this is true to the person Ronald was. A brilliant philologist and a gifted storyteller, he was also a decent artist. This is an aspect of Tolkien’s ingenious creativity that, I believe has been long forgotten. Only recently have art galleries, such as the one that was on display at the Morgan Library & Museum in New York City earlier this year, shed worthy light on his works in the mediums of watercolor and pencil.

The wonderful and truly magical relationship with Edith, though initially a difficult one both historically as well as cinematically, was pulled off decently. In regards to cinematic storytelling, a bit more tension and development may have been placed on Edith Bratt’s side of the story. But, for the most part, this endearing and substantial bond was played out believably on-screen. This was who Tolkien was: a man of morals, a man touched by beauty and magic, a man longing for one woman and one woman only.

It is of personal satisfaction that the film chooses to give Tolkien’s younger sibling, Hilary Arthur Reuel, at least some sort of involvement and attachment to his brother’s life. In so many biographies, I feel it is all too commonly forgotten that Ronald even had a brother. In Tolkien, we see Hilary interacting with Ronald the way brothers usually do, poking fun at each other. And, following the untimely death of their mother, we see them sticking together, having to occupy the same room together. Even much later on in the movie, we get a glimpse of Hilary as an adult on an outing with Ronald, Edith, and some of their children. It’s just refreshing to see the inclusion of the oft-lost Hilary Tolkien.

As is noted in the book The Hobbit Party, Tolkien “lost his father when he was four and his mother when he was twelve. He fought in the trenches of World War I, lost all but one of his closest friends there, married and raised a family, saw the industrial revolution disfigure his pastoral childhood home, and sent two sons off to World War II” (Richards & Witt 21). Most of this, especially the sadder moments in the young life of J.R.R. Tolkien, is starkly brought to life on the screen in this movie.

True to Tolkien’s life story, we hear of the deaths of three of his four closest comrades who together had formed “an invincible alliance.” It was this alliance, its slogan or battle cry of sorts which we see as a common thread that holds each of the young men to something higher. It urges them to greater heights, to make a leap of faith, to persist in their passions and dreams. “Helheimer!”

Unfortunately, what we do not get to see is how, later in life, Tolkien would be fortunate enough to join a similar band of gentlemen who also had similar fancies and creative tastes. The group that was to in some small way replace the T.C.B.S. was that of the Inklings, another brotherhood whom Tolkien felt right at home in and which often enjoyed beer as much as or more than tea. And, most certainly, it was the bosom, chummy friendship in such circles as these which inspired the close-knit fellowship in his Lord of the Rings novels.

The continual return to Tolkien’s time at the Battle of the Somme cannot be overrated and should not be underrated. This period of Ronald’s life served as a perfect focal point for flashbacks. The significance of the experience and that the war’s toll took on the future author is great. In his own words, Tolkien would later say, “My ‘Sam Gamgee’ is indeed a reflexion of the English soldier, of the privates and batmen I knew in the 1914 war, and recognised as so far superior to myself.”

Several of the mythical and strictly literary influences over the Middle-earth author are infused throughout the run of Tolkien, such as some of the ancient Greek lore and the Norse tale of Siegfried the Dragon-Slayer, both are attributed as heavy influences over Tolkien’s work by critic and fellow novelist Lin Carter in his book Tolkien: A Look Behind “The Lord of the Rings” (1969). Within the plot of the film, one version of the story of the valiant warrior Siegfried gets told to young Ronald and Hilary by their mother as a bedtime story.

Yet another terrific influence over Tolkien’s life and the relating of the fantastic realm which he created was his natural love of living things and especially, for some reason, trees. His passion for trees and their prominence, in the film anyway, are seen in several scenes. Trees would not only make up much of Middle-earth’s intricately precise landscape, but for Tolkien, some of them would become more than trees. For him, there would be fighters and warriors, guardians and shepherds, and more specifically — the Ents.

image via Thrillist

What Could Have Made the Movie Better?

Inclusion would be the short-form response to the question posed above. Simply put, there were so many aspects of Tolkien’s life that could have been fleshed out a bit more in this presentation even with it following the early part of his life. His ideas, his beliefs, and his longing for fellowship could have been a bit more convincing if the writers had merely included more about Tolkien, about who he was as an individual. It is simply not enough to show points in his life that would later influence his writing. As a result, much of the character work falters here.

As it stands, Tolkien‘s biggest nods to The Lord of the Rings (apart from the references to hobbits and Middle-earth itself) come in most visual ways: particularly in the visions on the battlefield of the Somme and in Ronald’s drawings. If Tolkien was infused with a bit more of the man’s faith, there could be a great deal more inspirational yet subtle moments in which Ronald finds inspiration. (For instance, certain Catholic devotions helped to develop some of Tolkien’s key female characters like Galadriel.)

Final Thoughts

In conclusion, Tolkien delivers content that answers both of the key questions noted at the beginning of the review. The biopic is a beautiful film. But at the same time, it falls short in telling a well-rounded story about Tolkien. Too many of the characteristics of Tolkien’s life were presented in vague imagery or merely in passing, elements essential to who Tolkien was.

Film is rather like language in a way; if it doesn’t tell a story, what purpose does it serve? Tolkien struggles with this idea at times, though it will satisfy in many instances.

Grade: B-

image via Crosswalk.com


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6 comments

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Sam Simon May 29, 2019 - 10:59 am

What a thorough review, thanks! I enjoyed reading it and it’s clear that you know a great deal about JRR Tolkien, so I found your thoughts about the movie very insightful. I want to watch this one!

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The Animation Commendation May 23, 2019 - 12:52 pm

I’m mainly watching this for my girl, Lily Collins, lol!

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Vuava May 23, 2019 - 10:19 am

As a life-long fan of Tolkien I am looking forward to watching this film. It sounds like it is disappointingly lacking in some areas from what you are saying. Still, I will see it regardless.

Reply
Jason May 22, 2019 - 11:33 pm

Personally, I liked this movie. It was definitely a “labor of love” and was very well-made, but doesn’t tell the fully life story of Tolkien. Still, in the end, I really liked it.

Reply
Nick Kush May 22, 2019 - 8:55 pm

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