Booting up disk 2, start time :35 after the hour.
Where does it stop? The scene with the Wolf’s Head?
We’re at the part where you put in disc 2 and wait 10 minutes, I think!!
I don’t understand. Did someone sleep in their refrigerator?
When they bring out the Wolf’s head, with the beating drums and all. During the film I turned to my wife and said, “This is like a Gwar concert.”
Yea…jsut as the wolfs head shows up
Yep.
Denethor’s drool
Except without the oversized genitalia.
YAY…i found some forgotten Girl Scout cookies!!
Shhhh! There are Hobbits about.
How long have they been forgotten? :eek:
Awesome, that gave me plenty of time to heat up my food!
only a couple weeks…
It should, they are Wargs.
Wargs were a particularly evil, demonic kind of wolf. They were intelligent and capable of speech and they had their own language. Wargs were vicious killers, but their weakness was their fear of fire.
Wargs lived mainly in Wilderland on the eastern side of the Misty Mountains. In 2941, the Wargs joined forces with the Orcs and planned to attack the Woodmen who had made settlements in the eaves of Mirkwood. But when the Wargs arrived at the rendezvous point, they instead found Gandalf the Grey along with thirteen Dwarves and a Hobbit named Bilbo Baggins up in the trees. Gandalf threw pinecones burning with magical fire down at the Wargs, wounding their chieftain and setting a number of others ablaze. The Wizard and his companions were then rescued by Eagles.
The Wargs were enraged and sought revenge. They joined the gathering forces of Orcs at Mount Gundabad and marched eastward to the Lonely Mountain. There the Wargs and Orcs fought the Dwarves, Wood-Elves, and Lake-Men in the Battle of the Five Armies. Many of the Orcs rode wolves into battle. In the end the Orcs and Wargs were defeated. Afterwards, the Beornings kept the lands inhabited by Men on the western edge of Mirkwood free from Orcs and Wargs.
In January of 3019, a group of Wargs crossed to the western side of the Misty Mountains and they attacked the Fellowship in the early hours January 13. The Fellowship took refuge on a hilltop and fought the attacking Wargs. Gandalf set the ring of trees atop the hill on fire and Legolas slew their chieftain with a flaming arrow. The remaining Wargs fled into the night.
The next morning, there were no Warg carcasses to be found though the Fellowship had slain many in the night. It is not known whether the Wargs had been acting independently or had been sent by Sauron or possibly Saruman, but Gandalf implied that it was not by chance that the Wargs had waylaid the Company of the Ring-bearer. The Warg attack was instrumental in the Fellowship’s decision to enter the Mines of Moria.
Names & Etymology:
Tolkien wrote that the word warg “is an old word for wolf, which also had the sense of an outlaw or hunted criminal.” The Old English wearg means “accursed one, outlaw, felon, criminal.” The Old Norse vargr means both “wolf” and “outlaw” and the Old High German warg means “evil-doer.”
Wargs are sometimes referred to by the general term “wolves.” Gandalf called one of the Wargs “Hound of Sauron.”
Go time agian???
And we are on.
Oh no! They killed the director!
Oh. I thot he meant the winged beastie! My bad.
Man Aragon must feel violate…