Thats too bad, I'm sure I'd love to talk cars with youI like art and cartoons.
My username 'CarLover' was supposed to be 'CatLover' because I love cats but I accidentally misspelled it. I'm not interested in cars.
Thats too bad, I'm sure I'd love to talk cars with youI like art and cartoons.
My username 'CarLover' was supposed to be 'CatLover' because I love cats but I accidentally misspelled it. I'm not interested in cars.
Nothing wrong with that. I like fashion to an extent as well. I particularly love leather jackets jeans, i'm not sure why but thats my styleHmmm....one of the ones that pop up to mind...fashion. I hate to sound pretentious and what not but I do enjoy following along higher end brands and such, and just playing around with clothes and designs and what not.
I gotta be honest Amur Leopard I always though you were an adult, interesting to know your still in pris- I mean schoolDrawing (do a fair bit of this...), now do predominantly portraits.
Tennis and rugby
Lord of the Rings (and the inferior copy Harry Potter to an extent)
Swimming
Star Wars and Jurassic park
Seinfeld and a few other sitcoms like it.
School![]()
I gotta be honest Amur Leopard I always though you were an adult, interesting to know your still in pris- I mean school![]()
I fail to see any resemblance between Lord of the Rings and Harry Potter, beyond the occasional dragon or wizard, which are also wildly different. You might as well list Star Wars as a ‘copy’ of LOTR, as the Jedi have about as much in common with the Istari as the children from Harry Potter do. If you want a real rip-off of Tolkien’s books, look no further than Christopher Paolini. It takes about five minutes of reading to realise he looked at the originals and thought ‘I like dragons! I don’t want them to be evil! I’ll write my own book!”.and the inferior copy Harry Potter to an extent
I fail to see any resemblance between Lord of the Rings and Harry Potter, beyond the occasional dragon or wizard, which are also wildly different. You might as well list Star Wars as a ‘copy’ of LOTR, as the Jedi have about as much in common with the Istari as the children from Harry Potter do. If you want a real rip-off of Tolkien’s books, look no further than Christopher Paolini. It takes about five minutes of reading to realise he looked at the originals and thought ‘I like dragons! I don’t want them to be evil! I’ll write my own book!”.
I realise I was too hyperbolic, but at the end of the day, Harry Potter focuses on schoolchildren, and LOTR does not. And please, don’t take this as an attempt to ‘defend’ Harry Potter- I don’t like it nearly as much as some other books. However calling it a copy feels a tad bit extreme to me. Of course Rowling copied a lot of stuff, but one can list many differences between the two. Also, my ‘Star Wars’ comment was not literal- I just happened to remember a graphic failingly trying to compare that franchise with Lord of the Rings.Here we go - orphaned child raised by uncle, goes on a quest to destroy a dark lord who conceals his power in a powerful object, without which he is not complete and can be defeated if the object is destroyed. The dark lord also wishes to regain physical shape.
A birthday sets off events, as the orphan sets off on a journey with little to no help (Harry travelling to school, the hobbits leaving hobbiton by themselves) The orphan is helped out by a wise, old, bearded wizard. The protagonist inherits an invisibility device that helps him out multiple times throughout the series.
The protagonist has to contend with evil, hooded creatures, trolls and giant spiders. Both have to contend with creatures from an dark, old forest on their journey. Both meet a small, pitiable creature talking in the third person that eventually helps out the protagonist despite creating difficulties at first glance. Both are accompanied and helped by a mischievous pair. They also both come across a dangerous willow tree and a basin of seeing, and collect a powerful, life saving sword.
Rowling also borrowed a few names:
Overall, a few too many similarities to be a coincidence.
- Dog called Fang
- ‘Wormy’ servants of a dark force
- Longbottom
- Dumbledore is also stolen from The Adventures of Tom Bombadil (written by Tolkien)
The hero's tale (as Joseph Campbell called it) is as old as humanity. We tell it over and over. None of these works can claim it as their unique contribution. Every work you cite is the retelling of its predecessors. And that is not a criticism.I fail to see any resemblance between Lord of the Rings and Harry Potter, beyond the occasional dragon or wizard, which are also wildly different. You might as well list Star Wars as a ‘copy’ of LOTR, as the Jedi have about as much in common with the Istari as the children from Harry Potter do. If you want a real rip-off of Tolkien’s books, look no further than Christopher Paolini. It takes about five minutes of reading to realise he looked at the originals and thought ‘I like dragons! I don’t want them to be evil! I’ll write my own book!”.
This shall endure as one of my favorite all time Zoochat postsMy username 'CarLover' was supposed to be 'CatLover' because I love cats but I accidentally misspelled it. I'm not interested in cars.
SameI’m also addicted to cars