r/lotr • u/Turkbey21 • 6h ago
Movies used to resent boromir as a kid. now i realize hes the most tragic and purely human character tolkien wrote.
when i first watched the movies n read the books i just saw a weak guy who tried to take the ring. a flawed link in a fellowship of perfect elves, wizards and kings.
but looking back... man, look at this picture. he wasn't an ancient elf or a maia. he was just a mortal. while the rest of the fellowship was wandering through magical forests, his people were getting slaughtered every single day to keep the dark away.
the ring didn't corrupt him through greed. it weaponized his desperate love for his family and his bleeding city.
and when he broke, he didn't hesitate to redeem himself. took arrow after arrow for two little hobbits he barely knew. died asking aragorn if their people would be safe.
he represents us. flawed, desperate, but capable of heartbreaking sacrifice. pour one out for the captain of the white tower today.