Movies With Talking Worgs?
Alright, so I haven't seen the second Hobbit movie yet and I know in the books at least, there were Worgs that talked at least similarly to how they do in D&D. With that being said, are there any movies out there that you know of that have an 'accurate' depiction of Worgs, and especially Worgs that talk? In fact, anything Dungeons & Dragons inspired would catch my attention. I remember watching Mazes and Monsters way back when (and laughing most of the way through it), but sadly, apart from Lord of the Rings, I haven't really seen anything else that could be considered "Tolkien"-ish, if that makes sense.
I'm up for almost anything, I've been in a very sluggish mood lately and more or less sit down with a drink and a movie after work each and every day being about as useless as a human being can possibly be, so I'm sort of looking around for something interesting to me to see if I can find anything inspirational or motivational in the slightest.
Hit me with your best shot Thanks.
I'm up for almost anything, I've been in a very sluggish mood lately and more or less sit down with a drink and a movie after work each and every day being about as useless as a human being can possibly be, so I'm sort of looking around for something interesting to me to see if I can find anything inspirational or motivational in the slightest.
Hit me with your best shot Thanks.
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Comments
Believe me though, I have seen my fair share of books ruined by movies xD I feel your pain :P
I think I didn't saw a movie with talking wolves/Worgs, I can't recall if the first part (I did not saw the second part either) of the Hobbit had Worgs (it had Worgs, but I don't know if they talked).
The thing is that I saw very little fantasy movies, I like reading better.
In the Hobbit movie one thing I liked much were the fighting stone giants, I always thought those won't get to the movie, when they walked over them was exaggerated, but it was funny, in the book it describes like they see the giants from far away from the Goblin's main entrance (oh, that joke from the books is great, every time I read it I laugh again, that joke never gets old).
They had one to three word vocabularies, such as "raaargh, KILL", or "Grrrrr, BITE LITTLE MAGELING", but, the way he acted them, they were all the more terrifying for those discernible words through the growling, snarling, and biting.
I usually imagine all the BG canine killers as semi-intelligent, terrifying wargs, so that I don't have to feel guilty about killing them, especially since I know that natural wolves are very human-sympathetic animals, and were only villainized in human lore because of their competition for captive human food animals (sheep, pigs, and cows.)
@BelgarathMTH More or less how I view most canines as well. Fantasy speaking, Worgs/Wargs and Winter Wolves intrigue me to no end. I do think it is their ability to actually speak, as well as in the Winter Wolves' case, their interest in actually wearing apparel and the like that makes them so interesting to me.
Your friend's Wargs sound perfectly up my alley
The problem is that the movies are pitched to a mainstream audience, and talking doggies would likely be an instant turn-off for most viewers. The trade-off for that is the budget available is much greater for a mainstream movie than for a more niche market...
The reality is that if you want talking Wargs, you would have to accept Smaug being a dude in a costume or some stop-motion abomination...
(Or Homeward Bound )
@Kamigoroshi I did see Narnia, but I might need to see it again, wasn't aware there were Winter Wolves in that one.
@varwulf, sorry, I don't have any movies. I can hardly remember the movies I wanted to see in theaters two months ago, and I'm not been around long enough to remember anything old. Wait... On second thought, Did frozen have winter wolves? :P
@meagloth Blast, another reason to watch Frozen lol, I shall ask my friend who had seen it before stooping to see it myself lol!