Jelenafan
Multiple Major Winner
A monument will do, take this as inspiration:My apologies, Jelenafan. I will serve my penance by creating a shrine to Holger Rune.
A monument will do, take this as inspiration:My apologies, Jelenafan. I will serve my penance by creating a shrine to Holger Rune.
I talked about this with Fiero;Good stuff, Kieran. I'm really mixed on this. I like a greater diversity of courts and even wish we still had a few carpet tournaments for novelty (hey, why not indoor wood?!), but I also can see the logic of slowing things down. But it can go too far, as we've seen plenty of 5+ hour baseline wars of attrition.
Anyhow, I see it more that the default has become baseline, but some players can still employ serve & volley to great effect.
Should we call him the little Numenorean?
Now I didn’t know where to put this but it probably fits here since it describes clearly why the Big 3 were able to accumulate and dominate slams in an unprecedented way.
It doesn’t mention that the number is seeds at slams was increased to 32 from 16, which further eased their passage, and makes it more difficult to compare the modern era with the ones just before.
Didn’t hubris sink them? ; )Should we call him the little Numenorean?
Pretty much. They were deceived by Sauron and challenged the Valar, sailing west towards Valinor. Their fleet--and island home--was sunk. But they left cool stuff behind, and some survived as the leadership of Gondor and Arnor.Didn’t hubris sink them? ; )
I actually think Sampras is a guy who wouldn't have been much different during the current era. I mean, I suppose he might have faired a bit better at Roland Garros, but still don't think he would have won it - not with Rafa and Novak, or even Roger. But his hard and grass game would have translated just fine and he would have reduced the Slam count of all of the Big Three (and who knows if Andy would have won any with Pete added to the mix).Yeah, it became so much easier to win than during Sampras’ time? Sampras would have gobbled up slams if he had played in the big 3 era.
What’s your take on the Amazon Tolkien series, IMO it’s getting better per this 2nd season, though their take on Numenor is a little less grandiose than the image I had of those near god-like humans.Pretty much. They were deceived by Sauron and challenged the Valar, sailing west towards Valinor. Their fleet--and island home--was sunk. But they left cool stuff behind, and some survived as the leadership of Gondor and Arnor.
And yes, I'm a big Tolkien nerd. I've actually read the Silmarillion...two or three times.
That’s an interesting question, but it’s like comparing, say, in the NFL a QB in the early 80’s with the “protected” QBs of today.Yeah, it became so much easier to win than during Sampras’ time? Sampras would have gobbled up slams if he had played in the big 3 era.
What’s your take on the Amazon Tolkien series, IMO it’s getting better per this 2nd season, though their take on Numenor is a little less grandiose than the image I had of those near god-like humans.
Keep hoping, my friend. I admire your steadfastness, but am pretty much off the train - at least in terms of him being a special player, or in the very upper echelon of the game. He reminds me a bit of Tomas Berdych, who won a Masters back in 2005 just after turning 20, then never won another big title. But after that title, he took a few years to fully mature and had a nice seven year run in the top 10 from 2010-16, or age 25-31.Back to tennis, Little Holger has a golden opportunity to get going at Wimbledon, this time can’t fault getting a top seed early in the R16, as happened at both the AO ( Sinner) & the FO (Musetti) , but at a certain point he just has to breakthrough regardless.
Remind myself he’s top 10 & only just turned 22. Create aggressive opportunity as opposed to just trying to force it. ****Construction.*****. Ain’t sexy but it works.
Nevertheless , less flash & more meat & potatoes I say.
That’s a very interesting take. I first read the LOTR aged 18 and have lost count of how many times I read it. Even the appendices are masterpieces, the story of Aragorn’s last days is epic. There’s good reason why TV shows and movies should not make up their own stories: Tolkien was a genius. He was telling a story and he didn’t care if people liked it, or even read it. TV writers are trying to please an audience while also including everyone who’s watching in the fricking thing they’re making. That’s tasteless.I think it is a mockery of Tolkien. The original trilogy was great - Tolkien would have hated it, but it captures a nice atmosphere and are just beautiful films. The Hobbit trilogy was pretty bad - it was too long and got lost in the CGI - though had a few nice moments. But Rings of Power is...soul-less. It feels like Tolkien fan fic made by and for "Modern Audiences" with no clue of Tolkien's mythos.

I actually think Sampras is a guy who wouldn't have been much different during the current era….
the series is an abomination.. Filled with woke nonsense. Tolkien would have more than hated it. Somehow they did more violence to Tolkien than Disney has done to Marvel and Star Wars.. I never imagined that was possible. True vandalism. Ugh! I agree the LOTR trilogy films were actually decent. No Tom Bombadil pissed me off. Hobbit trilogies were a cash grab. I think they somehow made Galadriel too powerful, but at the same time got Gandalf just about right.think it is a mockery of Tolkien. The original trilogy was great - Tolkien would have hated it, but it captures a nice atmosphere and are just beautiful films. The Hobbit trilogy was pretty bad - it was too long and got lost in the CGI - though had a few nice moments. But Rings of Power is...soul-less. It feels like Tolkien fan fic made by and for "Modern Audiences" with no clue of Tolkien's mythos.
Tom Bombadil, what a character! Desperately missed in the film. Amazing creation by Tolkien!the series is an abomination.. Filled with woke nonsense. Tolkien would have more than hated it. Somehow they did more violence to Tolkien than Disney has done to Marvel and Star Wars.. I never imagined that was possible. True vandalism. Ugh! I agree the LOTR trilogy films were actually decent. No Tom Bombadil pissed me off. Hobbit trilogies were a cash grab. I think they somehow made Galadriel too powerful, but at the same time got Gandalf just about right.
Per Star Wars; How the hell did Disney hire the original stars (Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher, & Mark Hamilton) and not give them a single scene together?the series is an abomination.. Filled with woke nonsense. Tolkien would have more than hated it. Somehow they did more violence to Tolkien than Disney has done to Marvel and Star Wars.. I never imagined that was possible. True vandalism. Ugh! I agree the LOTR trilogy films were actually decent. No Tom Bombadil pissed me off. Hobbit trilogies were a cash grab. I think they somehow made Galadriel too powerful, but at the same time got Gandalf just about right.
It's the entire philosophy of this woke nonsense. They were there less as a tribute to their prior work, than to show that newer is better. Their heads are so up their own asses they don't comprehend that they're ruining the entire franchise. They don't respect the story, that's why Snow White can be Latina, and an untrained woman can pick up a light sabre and kick the ass of a man who's been practicing his entire lifePer Star Wars; How the hell did Disney hire the original stars (Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher, & Mark Hamilton) and not give them a single scene together?
Per Star Wars I don’t mind the Andor TV series. There are some interesting developments there.Not to get too side-tracked but, hey, it is my f-ing nerd thread, and we can nerd out in another way ;-). Anyhow, nice to know there's some Tolkien fans here. I probably haven't mentioned this here, but I'm a bit of a writer - I've been working on a big epic fantasy series for years and years, and Tolkien is (of course) one of my main sources of inspiration (though my story is quite different), with Ursula K Le Guin a close second. I have a 220K word manuscript gathering dust, and several sequels in various stages, but still haven't had the balls to try to get it published, though.
LotR film trilogy...I'm mixed on Tom Bombadil being excluded. I'm not sure if they could have done him well. Maybe someone like Robin Williams could have pulled it off, but we're talking about one of the great mysteries of Middle-earth: Who/what is Tom Bombadil? I'm not even sure Tolkien knew, but speculation runs from Iluvatar the One God, a demigod Maia, some sort of Middle-earth version of Santa Claus, to Tolkien himself. But I think the point was to keep the mystery. Tolkien famously disliked allegory and didn't like to force any particular interpretation on the reader. But I especially love the element that Bombadil refused the ring - he was theoretically the only being capable of resisting its temptation.
Anyhow, I re-watch the extended LotR trilogy probably every year or two. I personally think Tolkien would have disliked even the original films - he was a luddite curmudgeon, and would have hated the "Hollywoodification" of it - but I actually think Peter Jackson did about as good as humanly possible. There were a few parts I didn't like (e.g. Galadriel's goofy freakout), but the visuals and atmosphere and cast are all great.
But the Rings of Power...I mean, come on. There is literally nothing I liked about it. Actually, the Galadriel actress was really good in a horror flick Saint Maud, but terrible in Rings of Power ("I have a tempest in me!"). The silliness of forced diversity - the hobbits looking like a troupe straight out of a Brooklyn coffee shop, with every possible ethnicity on display. Orc children, elves that are too petty and human, the terrible usage of space (somehow they manage to make ME seem tiny), the confusing time line, etc etc. It is bad in every conceivable way, to the point that it almost seems a deliberately mockery of "dead white man" Tolkien's great work.
Star Wars...I just can't watch any of the newer stuff. It just feels ruined for me. It is a case of every single movie or show diminishing the franchise as a whole, since the original trilogy. That isn't entirely fair, as there were one or two things later on that were good, but the total effect seems to be that of taking a great, generational mythic story and diminishing it with each new offering. Good old franchising. The prequel trilogy was amazing visually, with Lucas' imagination on full display, but the Anakin/Padme romance (and Anakin's acting) killed it, and it also felt a bit soul-less. Don't get me started on the Force Awakens trilogy, starting with Rey as the ultimate "Mary Sue," as Federberg pointed out (the problem isn't a strong female lead...its one who is instantly perfect in every way, with no texture to her personality or narrative arc). And yeah, they seemed to deliberately diminish both Luke and Han Solo.
MCU...I sort of burned out on it after the Thanos stuff, haven't watched much since. I'm curious what they'll do with the X-Men, though, as I was a huge fan as a kid back in the 80s/early 90s, during the heyday of Chris Claremont's run. I must admit, the Fantastic Four film looks pretty fun. Anyhow, the best recent superhero film I've seen was The Batman with Robert Pattinson...that was surprisingly good, and I liked the noir vibe.
Yeah, I've heard that's good. I haven't watched it, mainly because I tend to dislike prequels.Per Star Wars I don’t mind the Andor TV series. There are some interesting developments there.