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Info on the LOTR:FOTR DVD

WonderBoy Cox writes "IGN's FilmForce has an interesting article about the much anticipated Lord of the Rings: Fellowship of the Ring (LOTR:FOTR) DVD coming in the fall of 2002, and the next two movies. According to Jackson The Two Towers is fairly complete in rough cut and Return of the King is coming along nicely. "Both films will be between two-and-a-half and three hours in length with 500 to 600 effects shots, much like the first movie." But, the best part, is that he DVD will have around 30 to 40 minutes of extra footage! "

37 of 551 comments (clear)

  1. Arwen Rewrite by _Neurotic · · Score: 4, Funny

    Perhaps they will have the option of "un" expanding Arwen's role... ech.. ;-)

    Justin

    1. Re:Arwen Rewrite by Quizme2000 · · Score: 4, Funny

      30 to 40 mins. of that steamy Liv Taylor scene...no wait that would a different movie, but I would like to know why Peter Jackson didn't include a wet t-shirt scene when she was escaping the ring wraiths in the river. Think DVD pause and Zoom.

      --
      "Get them before they get....
    2. Re:Arwen Rewrite by Anthony+Boyd · · Score: 4, Funny
      I would like to know why Peter Jackson didn't include a wet t-shirt scene when she was escaping the ring wraiths in the river. Think DVD pause and Zoom.

      Well. I thought the film couldn't have been improved. Apparently, I was wrong.

    3. Re:Arwen Rewrite by WotanKhan · · Score: 5, Insightful
      SPOILERS BELOW:

      As a long-time Tolkienophile ;), I was as concerned as anyone with the rumoured revisions to the story. I even penned a message to Jackson a year or so ago about the Arwen change, pleading with him to be true to the book.

      After my second viewing, the movie is obviously a labour of love on the part of a true fan. Having read the books umpteen times, each deviation from the text obviously jumps out at me, but I can clearly see how the changes help to convey the essence of the story, within the constraints of the different medium.

      Merging the role of Glorfindel and Arwen makes perfect sense when you consider her lineage, and conveys much more Tolkien's sense of the role of women in the struggles of Middle-earth, and the unions of elves and man. It also helps to illuminate the transition of Aragorns character from rootless wanderer to heir of Gondor.

      I liked very much the addition of Aragorn wilfully releasing Frodo to travel to Mordor alone, and the ring calling his name in temptation was nice touch. I got perfect chills from the shot of the ring reflecting the arguing councilmembers and faintly reciting its inscription in the tongue of Mordor. Other touches, such as Frodo solving the riddle of the gates of Moria, further conveyed the themes of the book, better perhaps than strict adherence to the original story.

      About the only nits I have to pick, which are really more stylistic differences, are the role of Saruman, and the heavy editing of the Lothlorien segment. I think that compelling dialogue and a skillful actor could have made much of Saruman's cunning arts of persuasion, though I will allow that the visual approach is compelling. I have high hopes for the extra footage on the DVD to flesh out the Lothlorien portion. But I have to really work to find criticism, when on the whole I was absolutely thrilled with the movie. The pervasive use of dialogue drawn straight from the book, authentic pronunciation, great casting, acting and direction, all the little touches have produced a classic in its own right.

      Peter Jackson thank you!!!

    4. Re:Arwen Rewrite by hey! · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I wasn't offended by the Arwen changes at all. The books are chock full of "minor" characters who have huge backstories. If I recall, it was Glorfindel who met Aragorn and the Hobbits by the ford in the book Glorfindel was a very important and powerful elf, one who could seriously challenge the Ringwraiths, if you knew his backstory.

      This kind of apparently throwaway detail is part of the geeky appeal of the LOTR book, but it contributes nothing to movie making. Movies work better when they use characters more economically. The animated LOTR did something similar -- Aragorn and the Hobbits were met by Legolas. Whatever the weaknesses of the animated version, this detail is seldom criticized despite the fact is makes no sense. The need to do something like this is obvious, once you get away from the fear that the book is being updated for some politically correct feminist agenda.

      Using Arwen for this scene was actually (IMO) a stroke of genius, because it avoided introducing a throwaway character and allowed the movie to introduce the Aragorn/Arwen romance, which was canonical but not part of the original book's narrative. I view the problem as this: the material outside of the main narrative (i.e. the appendices) is essential to the book, but unfortunately movies don't come with appendices. Well maybe with DVDs they do, but the movie is better this way than if it had followed the canonical narrative slavishly. This allows the movie to show more of the details of middle-earth in a way that (1) works in a movie, (2) doesn't leave the unititated confused and (3) does no significant damage to the important themes and narrative lines of the book. Sounds like a win to me.

      Another instance is how the details of Saruman's treachery were shown rather than told at the Council of Elrond. Jackson rightly pointed out that the book devotes something like thirty or forty pages to what is essentially a committee meeting. The movie medium works better by showing than telling (although I do have some issues with how it was shown).

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    5. Re:Arwen Rewrite by acroyear · · Score: 4, Interesting
      on authentic pronunciation, they even went as far as the dialog coach heavily reviewing the appendices of RotK and other notes scattered throughout Chris's compilations of JRRs notes and drafts.

      McKellen has this to say in his grey book diary:

      For instance, I have to learn a new pronunciation. All this time we have being saying "palanTIR" instead of the Old English stress on the first syllable. Just as the word was about to be committed to the soundtrack, a correction came from Andrew Jack, the Dialect Coach; he taught me a Norfolk accent for Restoration, and for LOTR he supervises accents, languages and all things vocal. Palantir, being strictly of elvish origin should follow Tolkien's rule that the syllable before a double consonant should be stressed - "paLANTir" making a sound which is close to "lantern."

      Talk about picky...when director's license wasn't changing things for the film media, the care for accuracy is astounding at times...

      --
      "But remember, most lynch mobs aren't this nice." (H.Simpson)
      -- Joe
  2. I think I'll wait for the box set... by billmaly · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Inevitably, there will be a box set of all 3 films sold, sometime around 2004 or 2005 (just in time for Christmas I am sure!). No doubt, the box set will be a no holds barred affair, lots of extras, behind the scenes, cut scenes, booklets, etc. This no doubt will be the one to own. I'm glad that FOTR is being released singly, but I'll wait and buy the full package with all the trimmings.

    1. Re:I think I'll wait for the box set... by Foochar · · Score: 5, Funny

      Or if he follows the George Lucas theory of releases it will be as follows:

      1) Fellowship of the Ring
      2) Fellowship of the Ring with extra features
      3) Two Towers, with redesigned packaging
      4) Fellowship of the ring with packaging to match
      4) Two Towers with extra features
      5) Return of the King with redesigned packaging
      6) Fellowship with packaging to match
      7) Two Towers with packaging to match
      8) Return of the King with special features
      9) Complete boxed set

      --
      "You can't fight in here! This is the war room" --Dr. Stra
    2. Re:I think I'll wait for the box set... by Anthony+Boyd · · Score: 5, Insightful

      10) Two Towers with a scene altered so that it appears that Solo^H^H^H^HFrodo fired in defense.

    3. Re:I think I'll wait for the box set... by Eimi+Metamorphoumai · · Score: 5, Informative
      Ok, I'll explain. In the first edition of the Hobbit, that chapter is a bit different. Gollum did indeed wager the ring, not knowing that he had lost it (in both versions he doesn't realize it's lost until after the game is over). Finding that he cannot meet his bargain, he shows Bilbo the way out.

      As the writing of the Lord of the Rings progressed, it seemed more and more out of character, so Tolkien rewrote the chapter, into the version you described. Tolkien later explained it as the first version being what Bilbo wrote in his own early accounts, at which time he was lying to himself to justify stealing the ring (in the same way that Gollum created the "birthday present" story). The later additions indicated a correction based on better,more accurate manuscripts Tolkien translated.

      See http://www.daimi.aau.dk/~bouvin/tolkien/changesofh obbit.html for more info.

      --

      Visit me on #weirdness on the Galaxynet.

  3. Extra Footage by DonnarsHmr · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm glad that the DVD will contain some extra footage, especially the evoloution of Gimli's character in Lothlorien. When that entire theme was left out of the movie, I was concerned. The friendship of Gimli and Legolas becomes important in later books, and without showing it's beginning, it would have been rather unexplained later. Truthfully, there was a lot that was left out of the movie that I'm afraid will make the later films a little rough. Hopefully the extra footage will eliminate future wrinkles.

    1. Re:Extra Footage by wass · · Score: 4, Interesting
      ruthfully, there was a lot that was left out of the movie that I'm afraid will make the later films a little rough. Hopefully the extra footage will eliminate future wrinkles.

      Does anyone else out there think that instead of squashing FOTR into one 3 hour movie with cut scenes and modifications, it might have been better to break it up into 2 movies based on the two distinct books within FOTR?

      This way there could be two 2-hour movies portraying FOTR more accurately, and not whizzing too many things by. I thought some scenes seemed rushed, even though they were severely truncated already. For instance, at the Prancing Pony.

      Of course, there's the issue that the public might get tired of a 6-movie series instead of a trilogy, and thus reduce demand which would rake in less dollars. However, from a fan-of-the-book viewpoint, I think the 6-movie approach would be truer to form and more interesting. Any comments?

      --

      make world, not war

  4. Re:WHat do you think by dinivin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Given that Tom Bombadil adds absolutely nothing to the storyline (other than providing the Hobbits with their weapons, which was handled pretty well in the movie), I'd be more than happy if they kept him out of the DVD.

    Dinivin

  5. Re:wooo. extra footage by bourne · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There's a reason the footage isn't in the original cut.

    Yup - the moviegoing public has limited patience for 4 hour films.

    ...the distributor threw in an extra hour of crap that they tossed on the cutting room floor...

    From the description, the extra bits will be sequences that got cut for time in a film that had to work especially hard to fit a large story into a smaller viewing slot. There's no evidence that these sequences are less well shot - just that G**** falling for G********* and thus changing his opinion of E**** didn't directly relate to FOTR as it did to the Trilogy as a whole, and thus it got cut.

    All the other "extras" they claim are in them are just crap.

    We'll see. In August. I am looking forward to it. The only big question is whether it'll be spliced into the story or if it'll be set aside.

  6. "Wait for it on DVD" not an insult? by scaramush · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Hmmm...back in the day if you said about a movie "I'll wait for it on video", it usually meant you were kind of excited about it, but not interested enough to [leave your home|pay 6 bucks|sit next to strangers] to see it.



    I wonder if in the future, we'll find people saying "I'll wait for it on DVD", because only by viewing it at home with your digital projector and 5.1 sound (minus the local talking idiots)with all the bells and whistles of extra footage can you see it "as the director intended". Maybe at that point movie theatres will only be for people too poor to make a "perfect" experience at home.



    That doesn't even get into the possibility of people getting snobish about only watching "their version" (digitally re-edited version) of a movie....

    --
    "...you can steal my woman, but you ain't done nuthin' smart."
  7. wowee!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Troll
    Fight the evil bastards at the MPAA!

    Whoa! LOTR DVD! forget that! I can't wait! wow!

    1. Re:wowee!! by ArtDent · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So, seriously, is anyone else actually still boycotting DVD?

      I do remember that there was much noise made, not so long ago, about boycotting -- not just DVD, in fact, but all products of the MPAA. I never went that far, but I haven't yet felt the urge to pay money for the priviledge of surrendering my freedom.

      This morning, I heard on the radio that DVD players outsold VCRs for the first time this Christmas (in Canada). The masses don't even understand the fair use and free speech ramifications, and now it seems like those who do understand just don't care anymore.

      Are these just different voices I'm hearing, or have people abondoned the boycott? If you have, why?

      Is it the fact that CSS was actually broken, and DeCSS widely distributed, in spite of the MPAA's efforts? The fact that this has enabled DVD playback on Linux? Do you feel that you are still protesting by accessing your DVDs in violation of the DMCA (whether for fair use purposes or copyright infringement)? Have you decided to embrace DVD to discourage its replacement by a new, more effectively protected medium? Or perhaps you have just decided that, in light of the mass adoption of the technology, resistance is futile?

      I'm really curious to hear what people are thinking about this these days.

  8. Re:wooo. extra footage by L-Train8 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Maybe the extra footage won't interest most people, but for fan boys like me, it sure as hell will. There are lots of reasons stuff doesn't make it into a movie. FOTR has to appeal to as wide an audience as possible, because it cost so damn much. So a lot was left out to keep the running time friendly to the mainstream audience.

    Fanboys and cinemaphiles love the kind of extras in DVD's. While the general public might not care about missing scenes or directors commentary, there is definetley a niche market that does, and I think in the case of FOTR, much of /. readership is part of that niche.

    --

    Don't forget that Friday is Hawaiian shirt day.
  9. How about Tom, Bambadill by curtis · · Score: 5, Funny

    I am missing the, Tom Bombadill-o!
    Where were the on my screen-o!

    'Tis there a part of you,
    Some unheard tune-age,
    appearing in the additional footage!?

    Seriously, it would have been cool to see some of the swamp/forest/willow/Tom from the book even though it would have extended the time it took for Frodo to find Strider and begin the second part of his adventure...

    1. Re:How about Tom, Bambadill by curtis · · Score: 5, Funny

      I was thinking of a more "hip" version of Tom --

      Think: Busta Rhymes!

      Hit you with no delayin so what you sayin yo? (uh)
      Silly with my nine milli, what the deally yo? (what?)
      When I be on the mic yes I do my duty yo
      Wild up in the club like we wild in the stud-io (uh)
      You don't wanna VIOLATE nigga really and truly yo (uh)
      My main thug nigga named Julio he moody yo (what?)
      Type of nigga that'll slap you with the tool-io (blaow!)
      Bitch nigga scared to death, act fruity yo (uh)
      Fuck that! Look at shorty, she a little cutie yo (yeah)
      The way she shake it make me wanna get all in the booty yo (whoo!)
      I am Tom Bombadil-yo!

  10. Through the miracle of CGI . . . by StefanJ · · Score: 4, Funny
    . . . The Lord of the Rings: Fellowship of the Rings 2011 Special Tenth Anniversary Edition DVD includes:

    • Osama Bin Laden synthespian as Barrow Wight #3
    • Robin Williams as Tom Bombadil
    • Elijah Wood's ubiquitous "deer caught in the headlights" expression replaced by fear or stolid determination, as warranted.
    • Bill the Pony now consistently appears in scenes between Rivendell and Moria.
  11. VERY disappointed in this movie by DonkPunch · · Score: 4, Funny

    Like most people who have actually read the book, I was VERY disappointed in the "Lord of the Rings" movie.

    It omitted several of the most important aspects of the novel.

    Specifically, there was no island, no conch shell, and no "Piggy". Instead, we got a bunch or fanciful immature swords-and-sorcery dungeons-and-dragons crap.

    Far too many dramatic liberties were taken.

    --

    Save the whales. Feed the hungry. Free the mallocs.
    1. Re:VERY disappointed in this movie by Kenja · · Score: 5, Funny
      I agree, I mean the so called "Hobbits" are obviously just rip offs of the D&D halfling race. And could Gandolf be any more a stereotypical wizard?

      Its obvious that this Tolkin hack just read the D&D 2nd addition rules and made up a story set in that universe.

      --

      "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
  12. Extra Footage by DRO0 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Please don't mention extra footage. Hobbits can be very sensitive about their height you know.

  13. Obsessing over details is fun! by GreyDuck · · Score: 5, Informative
    This page has a sizeable list of contributed observations... neat little details that helped "make" the movie for various viewers. It's a fun read if only to see just how hard Jackson & Co. worked on this thing.

    And when the DVD comes out, there'll be a revised version of the list, I'm sure. Yeah, I'll pick me up a copy...

    --
    I'm only wearing black until they come out with something darker.
  14. Great news but... by jsin · · Score: 5, Funny

    Is the DVD going to come with an ending? Watching that movie in the theater was like making out with your middle-school girlfriend for three hours and then having to go home...

    ...only you can't even finish the movie yourself!

  15. Re:WHat do you think by ZaMoose · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I can see a bit of Jackson's reasoning for not wanting to introduce another character (many of the non-readers that I've talked to have complained about the sheer volume of characters in the film). I am still pissed, though, that they made the ford scene one of Liv Tyler playing the Elven Amazon warrior, instead of letting Frodo take what he thought was going to be his last stand.

    Yeah, he was on horseback, but Glofindel wasn't with him. It was him going face-to-face with the Nazgul.

    That was my biggest gripe with the movie: the way the hobbits were portrayed as wide-eyed, bumbling know-nothings who couldn't fend for themselves if their lives depended on it.

    Most people would place Frodo as the "hero" of the books, but I've always been of the opinion that Sam ends up being the truest, most noble hero in the book... Ahhh well.

    --
    I wish I had a kryptonite cross, because then you could keep Dracula and Superman away.
  16. Re:Favorite scenes in FOTR by dan+g · · Score: 4, Troll

    Tell your sister it's just a movie and not to be scared.

  17. Important Question by sulli · · Score: 5, Funny

    What DVD-Region is Middle-earth?

    --

    sulli
    RTFJ.
  18. Woah, left out a crucial bit of info there... by EvilNight · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The DVD editions will have a solid R rating. For those of you who are more perceptive, I'm sure you noticed during the fights that there are a lot of folks swinging, but not a whole lot of hits. There were a lot of quick cuts made to the fight scenes to make the films PG13 (so they could get the kids in the theater of course), and this is one of the reasons why the fight scenes are so wild and crazy... you are missing about a fifth of the action.

    Remember that this is Peter "Brain Dead" Jackson. He has done his share to set the bar for film gore. You cna probably expect the fight scenes to be a lot more like BraveHeart and Gladiator on the DVDs.

    I'm looking forward to the 40 minutes of character development that hit the floor myself...

    --
    Hell is being intelligent in a world full of idiots.
  19. Troll Scene in FoTR by E1ven · · Score: 4, Interesting

    One of the scenes I suspect they filmed but cut was the discovery of the stone trolls while walking through the woods.
    In this scene, the hobbits walk into a clearing gaurded by trolls. The look around, cautiously, and get quite frightened. Later, however, they realize that the trolls were the ones that Bilbo had seen 60 years prior, and are made of stone now.

    I believe this scene was filmed and cut for two reasons-
    The first is that bilbo tells that very story in the party scene early in the movie. This allows them to tie that scene in, without having the hobbit made.
    The second is that we SEE the trolls. In the scene where they are resting before Arwen arrives (just before), look in the background. There be trolls there!

    I can understand why the cut the scene, hwoever, it must have slowed the pacing in the early act.
    I mean, run from danger, run from danger, Oh my god, trolls!
    Oh wait. They are stone. Let's all have a good laugh.
    Doesn't work in the fast push of the Movie.

    Colin

    --
    Colin Davis
  20. The Hobbit is more difficult why? by Sabalon · · Score: 5, Interesting

    being a more difficult adaption with its large number of characters and shifting plotline

    Okay...it is a pretty simple story. Wizard comes with dwarves to hire Buglar Baggins to go recover treasure from a Dragon.

    Along the way they have some adventures:
    - meet some trolls and find treasure
    - meet some elves
    - meet some goblins, lose their ponies, get lost
    - get saved from said goblins
    - Bilbo finds some treasure of his own that makes him invisible
    - regroup, meet some more goblins, get saved by Eagles
    - go into a scary forest, meet some more monsters, kill monsters, meet more elves
    - get captured and escape
    - meet people of Dale
    - see dragon, annoy dragon, kill dragon
    - have big war.

    Good lord. If this doesn't sound like an easy Hollywood plot, I don't know what does. 90% of the time, all the main characters stay together (the dwarves and Bilbo) with Gandalf coming and going when needed.

    Plenty of special effects and action sequences without all the history of LotR.

    Remember, this was a story that JRRT told his kids. With the exception of having "The Greatest Adventure" playing over and over, the Rankin/Bass version did a decent enough job of this already.

    If PJ can do a Balrog and tons of Orcs streaming out of Mordor, then Smaug and the Battle of Five Armies should be cake!

  21. Re:Me want more Sauron stomping by gilroy · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Blockquoth the poster:

    Why didn't Sauron turn invisible when he wore the ring?

    The Ring's power is not to turn people invisible (though it can do that). It's to amplify the bearer and give him what (he thinks) he wants.



    When Bilbo first finds the Ring, he most wants to escape .. he wants to evade Gollum. The Ring gives him that. Then, not knowing better, Bilbo takes that to be the power of the Ring. From then on, he only wears the Ring when he wants to be invisible (since it doesn't occur to him to wear it at other times). So, it still makes him invisible.


    Frodo also puts the Ring on during times he wants to be invisible (in the Prancing Pony, or when trying to escape Ringwraiths, etc.) So it makes him invisible.


    But in Mordor, Sam wears the Ring. Sometimes he wants to be invisible, and so he is. But at least once he instead uses the Ring to intimidate an orc, who sees him as some great Captain. At the time, that's what Sam needed done, and so that's what it does.


    We can only speculate what Sauron's desire is, although it's pretty clearly dominion. So the Ring gives him dominion over the other rings and over the minds of lesser beings.


    The essence of the Ring -- and perhaps, metaphysically, the source of its evil -- is that it gives the Bearer exactly what he wants, with no constraints.

  22. The One Region by hal200 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Region 3 for the Elven Kings under the sky,
    Region 7 for the Dwarf-lords in halls of stone,
    Region 9 for Mortal Men doomed to die,
    Region 1 for the Dark Lord on this dark throne
    In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.

    I hope that helps.

    --

    I just want to take over the world...Why does that automatically make me EVIL?

    1. Re:The One Region by decade_null · · Score: 5, Funny

      Region 1 for the Dark Lord on this dark throne
      In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.

      But I thought that region 1 was America?

      ...oh, I see.
  23. Books vs. Movie by verbatim · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Why is it so important that the movie glue itself to the book so tightly that it becomes impossible to tell the story visually. I've been hearing people say one of two things: either it was a great movie and very enjoyable or it was crud because a certain part of the book was left on the cutting room floor.

    Gene Siskel complained that one scene (with the Balrog) was extremly short in the book but played out longer on screen. Other people are complaining that their favourite parts of the book were omitted. My question is who cares as long as the movie tells the story.

    Going into the theatre there are two kinds of people: those who have and those who have not read the book. I think those of us who have read and enjoyed the book have a different perspective than those who are seeing it all for the first time. I know what scenes are missing and how the book portrays the story differently. These are, afterall, completely different media and there are many that believe that large books such as LoTR cannot be conveyed on the screen - it is a world that exists in the mind of the reader. What I think often happens is that some readers create different understandings of the same material and, when presented with a conflicting view, become all too defensive.

    There will never be a definitive Lord of the Rings movie that trancends the silver screen and gives everyone the full experience of the book. The movie is simply one person's description of the taste of the story. It is up to the individual to bite into the book.

    I enjoyed the movie for all it's flaws and omissions because what it presented was clear and complete within iteself. I don't think it is necessary to add scenes back in simply to make it more closely resemble the words from the book.

    It's an opinion, that is all.

    --
    Price, Quality, Time. Pick none. What, you thought you had a choice?
  24. Re:Me want more Sauron stomping by still+cynical · · Score: 5, Interesting

    > The Ring's power is not to turn people invisible (though it can do that). It's to amplify the bearer and give him what (he thinks) he wants.

    No, the Ring was made to hold much of Sauron's power and to control the wearers of the other Rings of Power. Read the book, you'll see that that is the reason that the bearers of the Elf Rings removed theirs immediately when Sauron put his on.

    > Frodo also puts the Ring on during times he wants to be invisible (in the Prancing Pony, or when trying to escape Ringwraiths, etc.) So it makes him invisible.

    Back to the book again. Frodo does not put the Ring on in The Prancing Pony, it slips onto his finger to reveal itself to those who are looking for it. It is trying to return to Sauron, remember? It turns him invisible at a bad time, not what he would want.

    Yes, you can watch the movie without reading the book, but you have to take it for what it is, and at face value. If you're going to ask deeper questions, such as:

    > Why didn't Sauron turn invisible when he wore the ring?

    You have to read the book. Although it makes no mention of Sauron turning invisible when he wore the Ring, the answer is clearly implied in the Tom Bombadil sequence. Frodo asked Gandalf why Tom didn't turn invisible when HE wore the Ring. Gandalf replied that it was not because Tom had any power over the Ring, but because the Ring had no power over HIM. I would imagine that the Ring would have no power over Sauron either, Sauron being its maker and the source of its power.

    (Wow, it's amazing what sticks in the mind, even after twenty some-odd years! Of course, read anything that many times and you'll be hard-pressed to forget it no matter how hard you try.)

    --
    Ignorance is the root of all evil.