Warning! This article contains spoilers for The Rings of Power season 2!

The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Powermay be telling a different story, but there are still many clear influences from Tolkien’sThe Lord of the Rings. The Prime Video series is set during Middle-earth’s Second Age, thousands of years before Frodo set out from the Shire with the One Ring. Still, this is the same land where the Hobbit had his adventures, and the overlap in characters allowed for many familiar sights and events. In some ways,Rings of Powerseason 2 is just repeating some of the best parts ofLord of the Rings.

Lord of the Rings The Rings of Power Season 2 Poster Showing Charlie Vickers as Sauron

Rings of Powerseason 1spent eight episodes getting audiences familiar with the Second Age. A common complaint of the debut installment is that it didn’t feel likeLord of the Rings, which is entirely valid. However, with all that slow exposition out of the way,Rings of Powerseason 2 is free to run. There are a greatmany beloved features and dynamics added to the mix that allow the Prime Video series to finally feel like it is set in Tolkien’s world.

8The Stranger & Dark Wizard Repeat Lord Of The Rings' Gandalf & Saruman Dynamic

This Wizard Dynamic Is Familiar

Going intoThe Rings of Powerseason 2,The Stranger is heading through Rhûnin search of answers regarding his role in Middle-earth. In episode 4, he comes across Tom Bombadil, who states that he will teach the Istar magic to confront Sauron and the Dark Wizard, who cannot be allowed to join forces. There’s still a lot to learn here, including the true identities of The Stranger and the Dark Wizard. However, the way it’s being set upfeels a lot like another Istari relationship inThe Lord of the Rings.

The idea that the Stranger must stop this evil wizard from joining Sauron is a repeat of Gandalf and Saruman’s dynamic in The Lord of the Rings—regardless of their true identities.

It has been heavily implied that The Stranger is Gandalf, and there is some indication that the Dark Wizard, who is running a cult in Rhûn, is one of the Blue Wizards sent to Middle-earth in the Second Age. However, the idea that the Stranger must stop this evil wizard from joining Sauron is a repeat of Gandalf and Saruman’s dynamic inThe Lord of the Rings—regardless of their true identities.

7Poppy Following Nori Makes Her Even More Like Sam Gamgee

Nori & Poppy Are The New Frodo & Sam

Prime Video’s decision to feature halflings in the Second Age was controversial since Tolkien didn’t talk much about the Hobbit ancestors during this period in Middle-earth’s history. However, this has really begun to pay off inRings of Powerseason 2. Nori’s relationship with the Stranger is one of the series' emotional high points, andthe Hobbits' general nature makes the Second Age feel more cohesive withThe Lord of the Rings.

A significant way thatRings of Powerseason 2 has pulled this off is through Poppy, who follows Nori and the Stranger to Rhûn despite initially hanging back. This loyalty brings to mindThe Lord of the Rings’s Sam, who stuck by Frodo through thick and thin despite his own initial fears and reservations. Sincethis kind of love is a staple of Tolkien’s work, Poppy and Nori’s relationship has made a massive difference inRings of Power.

6The Rings Of Power Season 2 Adapts Fellowship Of The Ring’s Old Man Willow Scene

Tom Bombadil Saves Another Soul From A Mischievous Tree

When the Stranger finds Tom Bombadil’s home inRings of Powerseason 2, episode 4, he quickly notices a tree whose branch looks perfect for a wizard’s staff. However, when the Stranger tries to break it off, the tree’s trunk begins to fold around him until he is entirely enveloped. Just as escape seemed hopeless, Tom Bombadil stepped in and cheerfully encouraged the tree to let the Istar go. While this had little to do with the plot of season 2, there’s a significant connection toThe Lord of the Ringshere.

The situation the Stranger finds himself in isnearly identical to the one faced by Frodo, Merry, Pippin, and Sam in theLord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ringbook. Shortly after leaving the Shire, the Hobbits made their way through the Old Forest and were sucked up into the massive roots of a tree called Old Man Willow. Just like the Stranger, they were saved by Tom Bombadil.

5The Rings Of Power Season 2 Includes Fellowship Of The Ring’s Barrow-Wights

The Barrow-Wights From Fellowship Of The Ring Are Back

Rings of Powerseason 2 saw Galadriel, Elrond, and their team of elite Elves unable to carry on down the beaten path to Eregion. They were forced, instead, to head into the forest, where they came upon a clearing of ancient graves. One of the Elvish company identified this as the Barrow-downs, a place where Men once buried their kings and nobles. This is a location familiar to fans of theLord of the Ringsbooks. Of course, the same is true for the monsters that emerged from the graves.

The Barrow-wights were left out ofPeter Jackson’sLord of the Ringstrilogy, butthey were memorably frightening monsters in Tolkien’sFellowship of the Ringbook. Like with Old Man Willow, the Hobbits were saved from the wights by Tom Bombadil, whose singing sent the beasts away. The fact thatRings of Powerhad the Elves face the Barrow-wights while Rory Kinnear’s Bombadil was being debuted in Rhûn was highly fitting.

4Elrond Not Trusting The Elven Rings Recreates LOTR’s One Ring Dilemma

The Ring Dilemma Is A Tale As Old As Time

Very little attention was paid to theThree Elven Rings inThe Lord of the Rings, which Elrond, Galadriel, and Gandalf wore. However,Rings of Powerhas begun to dive into the morally complicated process that it might have been for the Elves to initially use these rings. Elrond, in particular, is fearful of their effects andis adamant inRings of Powerseason 2 that Galadriel’s Ring of Power is under Sauron’s influence. The big question seems to be, “Can something influenced by evil be used for good?”

As it is, that’s the same question that dominated the Council of Elrond inThe Lord of the Rings. Boromir wanted to use Sauron’s One Ring to turn things around for Mordor, thus using the villain’s own weapon against him. However, it was rightly determined that this wouldn’t be possible since any action done with the Ring would be as evil as the object itself. Of course, this won’t ultimately be the conclusion for the Three Elven Rings since even Elrond is destined to bear one of them. Still,Rings of Powerhas repeated The Lord of the Rings' overarching theme.

3Bronwyn’s Death Repeats The Old LOTR Elf & Human Romance Dilemma

Mortality Has Always Been A Problem In These Romances

ThoughThe Rings of Powerseason 1 was dedicated mostly to establishing Prime Video’s version of the Second Age, some details were direct repeats of TheLord of the Rings. An example is the romance between Bronwyn and Arondir—a human and an elf. Such relationships are common throughout Tolkien’s works, withThe Lord of the Rings' Aragorn and Arwen being the most familiar. However, while these two have their happy ending, the trilogy presents the painful dilemma associated with this dynamic.

This was the price that Aragorn and Arwen were so frightened to pay in Lord of the Rings and one that has been paid several times in Tolkien’s legendarium.

InRings of Powerseason 2, it’s revealed thatBronwyn did not survive her injury from season 1. Arondir explains that the poison of Orc arrows is hard for humans to overcome, and Bronwyn ultimately succumbed. If she had the resilience of an elf, things might have gone differently. This was the price that Aragorn and Arwen were so frightened to pay inLord of the Ringsand one that has been paid several times in Tolkien’s legendarium.

2Tom Bombadil’s Debut Repeats His Interactions With LOTR’s Hobbits

Tom Bombadil Is The Same Even Thousands Of Years Earlier

Bombadil saving the Stranger from Rhûn’s version of Old Man Willow wasn’t the only way this character’s debut was a repeat ofThe Lord of the Rings. After bringing the Stranger into his home and helping him get freshened up, a great deal ofBombadil’s words and actions were direct repeats of his first interactions with the Hobbits. In fact, just about everything that happens through this sequence is an Easter egg to Bombadil’s time with the Hobbits inThe Lord of the Rings.

The true nature of Tom Bombadil is unknown in Tolkien’s works, thoughRings of Powerhints that his role is to train the Istari in Middle-earth.

When the Stranger asked what Tom Bombadil was, the mysterious being said, “Don’t you know my name yet? That’s the only answer.” This was precisely what he said when Frodo asked the same question. Additionally, all the songsBombadil is heard singing inRings of Powerare those written by Tolkien for theLord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ringbook. Even the woman’s voice that the Stranger heard from his bath comes directly from Tolkien’s books since this is Goldberry, a river spirit and wife of Tom Bombadil.

1Theo Being Captured By The Ents Recreates Merry & Pippin’s Fanghorn Forest Experience

The Ents Are Back (& Taking More Prisoners)

After helping outIsildur inThe Rings of Powerseason 2, Theo mysteriously disappeared, seemingly captured by some terrible monster. Arondir and Isildur went after the boy and ultimately discovered that it wasn’t a monster who had captured him—it was a couple of Ents. These tree shepherds had been snatching up anyone they found in the forest, hoping to stop them from continuing to harm the trees. Naturally, this brought to mind a similar moment fromThe Lord of the Rings.

Like Theo,Merry and Pippin were snatched up by Ents inThe Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers. Similarly, Treebeard thought these hobbits were members of the Orc clans that had been destroying the forests. Once he realized this wasn’t the case (and ran into Gandalf the White), he called the Entmoot to help lay siege to Orthanc in Isengard. While the Ents inRings of Powerhaven’t joined the fight against Adar and his Orcs, perhaps this is how the Prime Video can further model itself offLord fo the Ringsin the future.

The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power

Cast

Set in the Second Age of Middle-earth, The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power explores the forging of the iconic rings, the rise of the Dark Lord Sauron, and the epic events leading up to the stories in J.R.R. Tolkien’s classic novels. The series chronicles the creation of legendary characters and the historic alliances and rivalries that shape the fate of Middle-earth.