McAvoy wrote: ↑Tue Feb 15, 2022 4:44 am
Frustration wrote: ↑Mon Feb 14, 2022 6:43 pm
Beastro wrote: ↑Sat Feb 12, 2022 7:49 am
It's interesting that in those cases it's that way while in others, like Tolkien's work, it's the opposite. It could be different aspects between written and visual mediums.
That's a very polite speculation, but it seems more likely that some collaborations allow for personal flaws of specific individuals to be compensated for by others, while people whose flaws don't impact the work can work alone.
I would never suggest that Tolkien had no flaws. But those he had largely didn't turn up in the work. Roddenberry's flaws seem to manifest themselves in his works, and so working with others made it possible for the deficiencies to be made up for. His 'vision' still largely informs the things he made, but not in all ways. The limits of Tolkien's vision don't seem to have presented difficulties with making good stories, so others weren't needed.
I would suggest that Tolkien's flaw that does show up in the books is his general lack of experience or knowledge of how to write a proper novel. That's me though. It's been 20 years since I read the trilogy. He was really all about world building.
Roddenberry just came up with the initial concepts. His own scripts that he actually wrote were not that good.
George Lucas is something in between Tolkien and Roddenberry IMO.
One has to keep in mind what kind of books Tolkien was trying to imitate in each of his works. LOTR is notorious for being rather dry and the characters lacking distinct personalities, but he was seeking to recreate a work similar to Beowulf which itself is notorious for those exact same things. (Even then, there is more personality there than people think. The only problem is it changes in places and fades as the book goes on. Take Aragorn in the beginning, he teases and tests the hobbits prejudices as Strider showing an open down to earthness that fades by the time they get to Weathertop.)
The Hobbit had more characterization to it and far more "liveliness" to the prose in keeping with its fairy-tale/child's story setting while the Similarillion's beginning (The rest is a patchwork from notes) is very much drawing from Genesis and has a more detached, "commanding" tone as the early Bible has.
TBH, the worst issue I've seen with LOTR rereading it was the major plot dumps Tolkien has Gandalf do at the beginning and after returning as the White because he simply can't fit them in elsewhere. The second plot dump is the worst because it takes everything away from Saruman. People complain he got cut out of the movies, but he got cut out of the novel as well being in the plot more directly, but not in the distant, "off screen" was as Sauron.
The thing is even Lucas needed others (Tolkien too, I'll get to that later). The first two movies worked because of that, but he came to dislike having less reach over the production of the second. Decline came with RotJ precisely because of him trying to grasp for more control which led to.... the prequels.
Even with Tolkien his work was a project involving three main people: his son, CS Lewis and himself. CS Lewis helped him through the 30s and 40s, especially with LOTR, but once the novel began to get wrapped up their collaboration (and friendship) began to die. It wasn't helped either by Tolkien falling into a slum of depression in '48 which ran against Lewis' more open personality. After that, Lewis' place as collaborator and sounding board switch to his son Christopher through the 50s and onward until he took over as keeper, editor (and second author though he refused the title; good amounts of stuff the published posthumously had many blank holes Christopher had to fill in with his own writing) of his father's work.
Frustration wrote: ↑Mon Feb 14, 2022 6:43 pm
I would never suggest that Tolkien had no flaws. But those he had largely didn't turn up in the work. Roddenberry's flaws seem to manifest themselves in his works, and so working with others made it possible for the deficiencies to be made up for. His 'vision' still largely informs the things he made, but not in all ways. The limits of Tolkien's vision don't seem to have presented difficulties with making good stories, so others weren't needed.
The limits of his vision are what made his work so good. He established clear, defining rules for his world in it's essence and built everything up from it. You look into it and you realize he made his Legendarium upon philosophical and religious reflection which permeates everything in the stories. Everything he wrote about is a reflection on the concept of power:
http://tolkiengateway.net/wiki/Letter_131