Review of The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003) by Chris G — 19 Dec 2018
Pippin, Merry, Sam, and Frodo all grew up in the Shire which represents youth, love, peace, nature, and tranquility. Smeagol turning into Gollum represents the duality of man. He started out as an innocent hobbit and now heâ(TM)s completely corrupted by his desire and passion for the ring.
The same ring corrupts Bilbo to a lesser degree and [Spoilers] we see the same thing happen to Frodo at the top of mount doom.The ring of power represents pride, greed, lust, wrath and all of the desires of the world.
Mordor represents hell, war, power, domination, evil, and sin. Gondor represents the Kingdom of God, a powerful, but just society. A Kingdom of Kings. With a just ruler, but all united under the almighty.
Gondor defeating Mordor and Frodo destroying the ring represent good conquering evil. Love conquering hate. God conquering The Devil.
This review of The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003) was written by Chris G on 19 December 2018.
The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King has generally received very positive reviews.
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