ForgottenLore wrote:
As for Glamdring and the Elven Ring, I don't think he carried Glamdring around with him on a regular basis. He was going to visit a friend and ally and had no reason to think he might need his sword so I don't think that is a problem.
Except for the miles and miles of hostile terrain between them...
Quote:
The staff is a problem though, unless there is some reason, that Tolkien never went into, why a Wizard CAN'T be parted from his staff. Making Gandalf's breaking of Sauruman's all the more potent a statement later and making the scene in the movie where the Witch King breaks Gandalf's even more ridiculous.
I think it's more a characteristic of the times, when high rank enemies were still treated with the utmost cordiality. Saruman would hardly stoop to despoiling Gandalf of his sword. It would both speak poorly of his own sense of honour, and would also suggest that Saruman had something to fear. Watch some old movies even as recently as WW2, and how the Germans or the British dealt with their ranked captives. Heck, read Treasure Island, it's filled with that stuff.
The movie's wizard duel was ridiculous. The only contest those two would engage in would be a contest of wills. They never came to blows. We live in a comparatively crass age where if you're not physically whacking someone, you aren't winning or making your point...kind of sad.