Friday, July 15, 2022

LOTR The Rings of Power VR360 Metaverse OCULUS version!




The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power

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The Lord of the Rings:
The Rings of Power
The series' title, "The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power", in silver metal letters on a black background.

























The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power is an upcoming American fantasy television series based on the novel The Lord of the Rings and its appendices by J. R. R. Tolkien. Developed by showrunners J. D. Payne and Patrick McKay for the streaming service Prime Video, the series is set thousands of years before Tolkien's The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings in the Second Age of Middle-earth. It is produced by Amazon Studios with the Tolkien Estate and Trust, HarperCollins, and New Line Cinema.

Amazon bought the television rights for The Lord of the Rings for US$250 million in November 2017, making a five-season production commitment worth at least US$1 billion. This would make it the most expensive television series ever made. Payne and McKay were hired in July 2018, with the rest of the creative team publicly revealed a year later. The series is primarily based on the appendices of The Lord of the Rings, which include discussion of the Second Age, and it features a large cast from around the world. For legal reasons it is not a direct continuation of the Lord of the Rings and Hobbit film trilogies, but the production intended to evoke the films with similar production design and younger versions of characters who appear in them. Filming for the first eight-episode season took place in New Zealand, where the films were produced, from February 2020 to August 2021, with a production break of several months during that time due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The season is scheduled to premiere on Prime Video on September 2, 2022.

In August 2021, Amazon announced that production for future seasons would take place in the United Kingdom. Filming for the second season is expected to begin by mid-2022.

Premise

Set thousands of years before the events of The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings, the series is based on author J. R. R. Tolkien's history of Middle-earth. It begins during a time of relative peace and covers all the major events of Middle-earth's Second Age: the forging of the Rings of Power, the rise of the Dark Lord Sauron, the fall of the island kingdom of Númenor, and the last alliance between Elves and Men.[1] These events take place over thousands of years in Tolkien's original stories but are condensed for the series.[2]

Cast and characters

The following actors have been cast in undisclosed roles:[11][12][13]


Monday, February 14, 2022

Have you watch it in VR360 Metaverse? LOTR: The Rings of Power! funny commentary!

 

Have you watch it in VR360 Metaverse? LOTR: The Rings of Power! funny commentary!

 

There’s an epic water-based kingdom, epic grassy hillsides, and epic rainy battles with golden-armoured elves. In a word, it looks… well, epic. Amazon has spent a fortune on this that even Smaug would covet, and all that dosh is on the screen. While much of the trailer belongs to Morfydd Clark’s Galadriel – who very much seems to be in the thick of it here, climbing up icy cliff-faces and getting stuck into the action stuff – there are hints of rising conflicts between the factions of Middle-earth, a fiery scene that brings to mind Mount Doom, some slick slow-mo arrow firing, and some blacksmithing that might just be the forging of the titular rings themselves. All that, and a tiny hand at the end hints that there may be Hobbits in the mix here too.

As the inter-titles explain, this one does indeed come before King, before Ring, and before Fellowship – this is the Second Age of Middle-earth (Peter Jackson’s Hobbit and LOTR trilogies were set in the Third Age), an era thousands of years prior the stories of Bilbo and Frodo. Instead, it concerns the original rise of Sauron, the forging of the many rings of power (three for the elves, seven for the dwarves, and nine for men, and one for the dark lord), and everything that kicked off as a result. For more, see the opening prologue of Fellowship Of The Ring.

The series has JD Payne and Patrick McKay on lord as show runners, with JA Bayona directing the opening episodes, with others directed by Wayne Che Yip and Charlotte Brändström. The series is confirmed to begin streaming on 2 September this year, bringing – as the trailer has it – “wonders in this world beyond our wandering”. Who’s ready for a whole new unexpected journey?