Lord Of The Rings: The Rings Of Power Borrows Opening From Movies

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The Two Trees of Valinor glowing in The Rings of Power.

Published Mar 21, 2026, 10:30 AM EDT

Zach Moser is a Philadelphia native who loves films, television, books, and any and all media he can get his hands on. Zach has had articles published on satirical sites such as Points In Case, Slackjaw, and McSweeney's.

The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power owes a lot to Peter Jackson's live-action The Lord of the Rings films, with even the opening moments a call back to the films. Your mileage with The Rings of Power may vary. For some, it's a pleasant return to Tolkien's incredible fantasy world.

The look of the show, its epic scale, and its music are all explicitly pulled from Jackson's movies. While the series and the movies are no more connected than Rankin/Bass animated The Hobbit is to Jackson's The Fellowship of the Ring, the show does evoke the films, starting with the beginning of the series.

Both Live-Action Lord Of The Rings Adaptations Start With A Galadriel Voiceover

Galadriel looking at her Ring in Rings of Power

Both Jackson's movies and The Rings of the Power begin with narration, and both are done by Galadriel. In The Fellowship of the Ring, Cate Blanchett plays the Elven queen and catches the audience up on thousands of years of Middle-Earth history. It's brilliant place-setting in a complicated universe.

She introduces the idea of the Rings of Power and explains, in clear and economical screenwriting language, how we come to the start of Fellowship and the stakes. Even more impressive, her voice-over is powerfully moving. "But there were some who resisted," still sends chills down my spine.

The Rings of Power also has an incredibly complex world to explain before it gets to its main storyline, so it borrows the Galadriel voice-over trick, though here she is portrayed by Morfydd Clark. This young Galadriel also explains the history of Middle-earth, but she begins in the First Age of Middle-earth.

Galadriel Being The Lord Of The Rings' "Narrator" Actually Makes Sense

Galadriel (Cate Blanchett) looking sad in The Lord of the Rings The Fellowship of The Ring.

Having Galadriel be the "narrator" for both Jackson's film and The Rings of Power makes as much sense internally within the setting as it does as a way to get the audience oriented. Galadriel is a legendary figure in the history of Middle-earth, and she's been around for the most important events of the setting.

Galadriel's story in The Silmarillion is surprisingly sparse compared to other characters of her stature, likely a result of Galadriel first being written for The Lord of the Rings and not The Silmarillion, meaning J.R. Tolkien had to go back and reinsert her into his prehistory text.

Of course she would have enough knowledge to explain the history of the world in voiceover. Galadriel is the daughter of an elf named Finarfin, the son of Finwë, who is arguably the most important Elf king in LOTR history. Basically, Galadriel is the descendant of Elven royalty in Middle-earth.

She is also considered extraordinarily beautiful and preternaturally wise. In the early ages of Middle-earth, she stood up against her brethren who were leading the elves in a destructive rebellion. In Lord of the Rings and The Rings of Power, Galadriel has the history, the grace, and the power to tell the story of Middle-earth better than anyone.

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

Release Date September 1, 2022

Network Amazon Prime Video

Showrunner John D. Payne, Patrick McKay, Louise Hooper, Charlotte Brändström, Wayne Yip

Directors J.A. Bayona, Sanaa Hamri

Writers Patrick McKay, John D. Payne, J.R.R. Tolkien, Justin Doble, Jason Cahill, Gennifer Hutchison, Stephany Folsom, Nicholas Adams

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