The ending of “King of the Rings” that you might not know when you watch a movie.JPG


Something that people who only watched “The Lord of the Rings” might not know

Why on earth did Frodo leave at the end

Honestly, I don’t know why I went

I don’t even know where he left

Is it physically crossing the Jordan


And when asked why he was leaving

We went on a journey to save Shire

I finally got him

But it wasn’t for me

I only give a broad explanation that


But in the movie, Frodo gives you a clue to the answer to why he’s leaving

The wound suffered by the magician still hasn’t healed

Because I say that

In the original version, Frodo said that even after the Ring expedition

The day Shilop stabbed me, the day I was poisoned by Shilop

Describing that he was in severe pain and groaning as if he had returned to the situation at the time


The reason Frodo left was because not only the people who read the original

You can guess by looking closely at the description of the movie

He was still suffering from the wounds he suffered during the ring journey

The original version gives a clearer answer

to be exact

It’s because I got a scar that can never be healed in this world


But the answer to where he left is still not available in the movie

If you look at the sad atmosphere and nuance, it seems like you’re going to a place where you can’t come back

I wonder if I’m really going to heaven

I know a lot of people now, but Frodo is not in the afterlife

Ballynor

a continent called


Ballynor is a continent inhabited by fairies and gods

It’s also known as the land of immortality because it’s where those immortals live

It’s similar to heaven in that it’s a place where the mortal can’t go

a place that exists in this world

It’s not the afterlife

But for fairies, it’s like the afterlife


The Fairy of the Lord of the Rings world view is immortal

You can die in an accident or a soldier’s murder, but you can’t die like a real human being

Because the soul can’t get out of this world

Then what happens

The spirits of the fairies were summoned to Ballynor immediately

wait roughly on a waiting listgo

Rebirth by receiving a new body

Since then, I’ve been eating well and living well in Ballynor

Sometimes, fairies who do bad things don’t come back to the waiting list


This place is like a paradise where immortals live

Frodo, who has suffered irreparable wounds, can find rest there

In the first place, the mortal hobbit was allowed to go to Ballynor

Because Frodo made a great achievement as a ring carrier

Bilbo is leaving too. That’s the context

Sam has carried a ring before, so I thought he’d be recognized as a ring carrier

So unlike Frodo, Sam enjoys life and leaves for Ballynor as soon as his wife dies

I want to meet Frodo before I die of old age


To put it simply

Frodo went to a good place to recuperate

And

Being in the land of immortality doesn’t mean that you’re not a professional or eternal, so it’s not even the afterlife

I’ll eat and live comfortably for the rest of my life until I die there

But Frodo will never come back to the middle ground

Those who went to Ballynor in the first place are not allowed to return to the middle ground

So people who interpreted Frodo as crossing the Samdocheon Stream are not very wrong

Since we can’t see Frodo again from the perspective of the ones left in the middle


In fact, Tolkien also wrote in a personal letter about Frodo’s departure to Ballynor

He likened it to going to the afterlife or purgatory

The reason Frodo volunteered to be a ring carrier is because

I want to save the world But I’m not strong enough

Nevertheless, I will go as far as I can go

That’s what I thought


But Frodo gave in to temptation at the last minute

This was a temptation that no one could resist, so no one blamed him

Frodo blamed himself

He originally dreamed of returning to his hometown of Shire as a hero

that guilt led him to define himself as a sinner and to judge himself

So in the story, Frodo left for Ballynor because of his physical wounds

In fact, the author’s intention was that it was also due to the psychological wound of guilt


Tolkien was able to learn how Frodo left for Ballynor

going to purgatory

described by

Only

Purgatory not as a purgatory of punishment but as a healing and reward

in the sense that

in a pure world unspoiled by sin

It’s not a self-inflicted guilt, but a true sense of self-reflection

being given time to explore one’s place in the minutiae and the great

Tolkien describes that

If you look at the nuance and detail of the description

You can feel the author’s compassion-filled attitude toward Frodo

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