Shrinweck wrote:I'm not familiar with the Silmarillion but I don't think The Children of Hurin could ever be made into a movie that would appeal to anyone. That book is dark. Like, come home from WWI and sit down to write a novel to district yourself from what you just went through kind of dark. I loved the book but sitting through the movie would make me want to open my veins. This book nearly makes The Road look like a happy romp through the Shire.
The Silmarillion as a whole is much much darker than Tolkien's other works; and in regards to Hurin; there is a portion of the Silmarillion I can never get through without tearing up;
Correctly titled: The Battle of Unnumbered Tears.
The Elves had built this absolutely wonderful new world; and for a good while it stood strong; and the way Tolkien described it makes it such a happy thing to read about - the grand scale of it all and the great cultural achievements - and the History of Middle Earth takes this farther. Then comes the battle of sudden flame, and all the lands are brought to chaos and darkness - greatness is still in some places, but the world was now darker than before; this is the time when Beren and Luthien takes place.
Later come the gathering of the elves and men in incredibly powerful numbers (56,000 under Fingon King of the House of Fingolfin; and 60,000 under Maedhros King of the house of Feanor), and everything is so certain for a march against the forces of Morgoth. You can always feel the determination and confidence in the characters... "The new bright morning is at hand!" became the theme of the hour, and the battle began. Betrayal occurs here, and a host of men who they thought attacks the Elves - it was similar to Falkirk in Braveheart; except more potent.
Then that last scene of the battle; after the victory of Morgoth and the destruction of the Hosts of Fingon and the house of Feanor, where the great warrior, Hurin, alone stands fighting a hopeless battle, and cries out "Day shall come again!"
I can't get through that part. It's like the part in the book Lord of the rings when Theoden is dies thinking that all has come to ruin (they really toned down that whole sequence in the movie; and totally ruined the raising of the banner of Ellesar which is one of the most powerful moments in literary history.).
It is not just the death of certain figures, but of whole cultures, and the knowledge of the ruin that was now inevitable.