Tolkien (2019)
Directed by Dome Karukoski
Fox Searchlight, 112 minutes, PG-13 (some war violence)
★★★
With the staggering
financial success of Peter Jackson’s Lord of the Rings and The
Hobbit, how can anyone miss with a film about J. R. R. Tolkien? Director Dome
Karukoski managed to do so, though it’s not entirely his fault. Nonetheless, Tolkien
was a box office bomb that recouped just $9 million of its $20 million
budget.
It’s not a bad
movie, even though it’s flat in places. The problem is simpler. When a writer
builds an elaborate fantasy world with a life of its own, it’s often the case
that viewers care more about the fictional characters than the man behind the
curtain. Karukoski is handicapped by a script from David Gleeson and Stephen
Beresford that covers Tolkien’s life before he became a fantasy writer. It
helps enhance enjoyment if you simply think of this as a coming-of-age film about
someone who just happens to be J.R.R. Tolkien.
John Ronald Reuel
Tolkien (1892-1971) was born in the Orange Free State, now part of South
Africa. His father died when he was just 3, forcing his widow, Mabel, to take “Ronald”
and his infant brother back to England, where they lived in the Midlands. It
was exceedingly hard for a single woman to raise two young boys on her own, and
the Tolkiens relied upon the Catholic Church for assistance. The movie opens
with quick vignettes of their travails, as well as the largess of Ronald’s
benefactor: Father Frances Morgan (Colm Meaney). The children were home
schooled, but young Ronald proved precociously brilliant and Father Morgan both
nurtured his talents and acted as a stern surrogate parent. When Mabel died
when Ronald was 12, Father Morgan helped place him in a boys’ school and,
eventually, as a scholarship boy at Oxford.
The film closely
follows Tolkien’s life during his final years at boarding school, his time at
Oxford, and his service during World War I. The British class system was very
much in evidence, which meant Tolkien (Nicholas Hoult) was tormented by his upper-class
peers, though he eventually fell into a close friendship with three of them:
Christopher Bache Smith (Anthony Boyle), Robert Gilson (Patrick Gibson), and
Christopher Wiseman (Tom Glynn-Carney). They bonded over ideas, books, spirited
hijinks, and an elevated sense of their own cleverness. They even formed their
own secret group, the T.C.B.S. Club: the Tea Club and Barrovian Society, Barrovian”
a play on Barrows, their favorite café. This part of the film plays a
bit–perhaps too much–like something out of Dead Poet’s Society. We also
meet Edith Mary Bratt (Lily Collins, Phil’s daughter), also a lodger in Ronald’s
Birmingham boarding house, with whom 16-yar-old Tolkien falls in love and
introduces to his intellectual circle.
Things don’t go as
well at Oxford, where Tolkien is foundering at classics. Father Morgan
intervenes in ways Ronald dislikes but must yield. Even then he is on the verge
of being booted out when he meets Professor Joseph Wright (Derek Jacobi), who
agrees to take on Tolkien as one of his literature students. Wright mentors
Tolkien’s command of languages and his love of philology (the structure of and
relationships between languages).
Interspersed with
the linear narrative are snapshots of Tolkien and his mates during World War I.
Neither Karukoski nor the scriptwriters could possibly exaggerate the war’s
horrors; they do a credible job of showing just how grisly and idiotic it was.
Tolkien probably would have died in conflict had he not contracted trench
fever–a serious infection carried by lice–and was evacuated to England. The
only historically dodgy thing Karukoski does is use foggy shots of warhorses
and their riders to suggest that Tolkien’s balrogs derived from them. It’s also
not entirely clear what Tolkien actually experienced and what was fever-induced
delirium. We next meet Tolkien as a morose married man with children who
teaches at Oxford, wrestles with survivor’s guilt, and struggles to write
something about which he cares. Gee, wonder what that might be?
Perhaps you see the
reason why the hordes avoided this film. Karukoski’s is a reasonably accurate account
of what happened to young Tolkien, though a boyhood spider bite and an
adolescent trip to Switzerland had greater impacts on The Hobbit than hanging
out with his witty friends. Again, we must go back to the question of how much
we want to know about a writer’s biography, especially in a movie that ends as the
author is about to pen his masterworks. There is the additional obstacle of
casting a film in which the only actors known outside the U.K. are Jacobi and
Meaney, and their roles are essentially extended cameos. Tolkien
ultimately calls to mind the 2017 A. A. Milne biopic Goodbye Christopher
Robin. It too was a perfectly competent movie, but at the end of the day, there
are way more people who want Winnie the Pooh and Hobbits than a pair of starchy
British scribblers.
Rob Weir
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