Any decent edition of The Silmarillion will have various family trees in it. They are very handy.
Indeed. TVTropes has quite a large list, many of them predating Harry Potter.
I know of the “Frodo Lives!” meme, but I’ve never seen it and don’t quite understand what is really meant by it. Is it a spoiler, like “Snape Kills Dumbledore”? Is it a more philosophical statement? What is it, old nerds that might still have a Frodo Lives T-shirt tucked away somewhere?
Though even as TV Tropes mentions, Harry Potter is the ‘Trope Codifier’. So one can say that those that came after it probably were more influenced by HP than those beforehand.
In similar ways as Star Wars (and perhaps even LOTR) in some respects.
I think it is the other way. People identify with the villains more these days. Everybody wants to be the baddie. And SW has better baddies. Who wants to dress up like a giant eye when you can be Vader or a stormtrooper? The baddies are either off screen (off page?) or faceless hordes of the undead or whatever in the LoTR series.
It was kind of a combination of “in-joke” and “spreading the word” for Middle-earth aficionados when LotR started getting really popular in America in the 60’s. One analysis:
See also: “Gandalf for President”.
This really, really depends on how you classify “fantasy”, I think. Looking at what the young people I know are into (kids, up to mid-teens), I’d say the girls are *way *more into what I’d call fantasy than the boys. Stuff like My Little Pony or Disney movies are *much *more geared at girls than boys.
Superhero stuff is where the boy’s interest seem to outweigh girls, but I count that as its own, third genre from Fantasy and SciFi.
Saruman wept…
The Tolkien Estate keeps a very tight grip on merchandising, and won’t do things even when it would be in their obvious and non-gauche financial interest to do so. I went to the recent exhibit of Tolkien’s manuscripts and handrawn maps at the Morgan Institute in NYC, and there were no postcards available in the gift shop. I asked a manager about it, and she told me that they’d had some but soon ran out, and the Tolkien Estate would not authorize the printing of any more - and this was with many weeks before the exhibit was to close. I just don’t get it - they’d already authorized the printing and sale of postcards; why wouldn’t they authorize the printing of *more *to meet public demand?
So, other than unauthorized stuff, you’re not going to see nearly as many Tolkien T-shirts, bumper stickers, fridge magnets etc. as you will for Star Wars.
But the Tolkein estate isn’t the sole rights holder for merchandise. JRR sold off the movie, stage, and merchandising rights in LOTR and the Hobbit way back in 1969, and they’re currently held by Middle-Earth Enterprises. So absolutely you can get authorized T-shirts, magnets, or shower curtains.
The original “youngster with magical talent goes to a school for wizards” novel was Ursula LeGuin’s A Wizard of EarthSea. I don’t know if Ms Rowlings was influenced by it, but it seems likely.
Stormtroopers are for Star Wars (and Nazis), but orcs are for everyone.
That is exactly what I thought, when I first read the Harry Potter stories.
But it seems that EarthSea was way down the list of unacknowledged influences, after numerous acknowledged ones.
How many kids dressed as Saruman do you see at Halloween? He looks like Gandolf.
I rest my case.
70 bucks for a shower curtain? :eek: :mad: :rolleyes:
I kind of like some of the t-shirts, though.
Or, arguably, Dracula, if you count backstory:
(Yeah, I know, not really the same thing.)
Middle Earth is the Ur-example of medieval fantasy and more or less established the conventions that are widespread today. For example, Elves are now a race of tall and lithe beautiful people, not six inch-high brownies wearing pointed caps. The genre is successful, not just JJRT’s specific iteration of it.
The funny thing tho is that, on the big screen at least, we haven’t gotten much JRRT style epic fantasy lately, at least since the final Hobbit film. [Game of Thrones on the small screen sure, tho the tone there is pretty different, along with stuff like World of Warcraft on the gaming side of things] Since then we’ve gotten something like 2 dozen superhero films of various sorts, by way of comparison.
So you can’t be tempted by that shower curtain.
From what I remember, Lucas got his ideas from sci-fi serials, swashbuckler films, Westerns, and war movies like The Dam Busters. Tolkien was said to have been inspired by European epics and legends but watered down somewhat for kids.