Is it just me, or did someone else notice?
Initially, after seeing "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer Stone", and "The Fellowship of the Ring", I thought there are too many similarities between them to be coincidental.
After seeing "The Chamber of Secrets", and reading a bit about "The Prisoner of Azkaban", I saw "Lord of the Rings" trilogy again at home on DVD.
I thought that there was a lot of borrowing that J.K. Rowling did from J.R.R. Tolkien.
Let us see a list of similarities:
Similarity | Lord of the Rings | Harry Potter |
---|---|---|
Villian | Sauron is the head of evil. He lost his power, and needs the ring to gain it all back | Voldemort is also a vanquished evil wizard. He needs the Sorcerer's Stone in order to gain his strength back |
Unlikely Hero | Frodo Baggins is a Hobbit, a peaceful -- almost childish -- and weak race. He is entrusted with the task of saving the world from great evil | Harry is an 11 year orphan who does much the same |
Special Object | The One Ring is the object that the hero must prevent the villian from getting, so as to regain his full powers | The Sorcerer's Stone is the same |
Mentor/Protector | Gandalf is a guiding, helping, mentoring, teaching figure for Frodo | Professor Dumbledore is the same in the Harry Potter series |
Troll | In the Fellowship of the Ring, the Orcs have a Cave Troll with them, and in The Two Towers, the Cave Trolls open the gates of Mordor | In Harry Potter II, there is a Mountain Troll, whom Harry and his friends have to overpower |
Giant Spider | Shelob is a giant spider that almost kills and eats Frodo, in The Return of the King | In the forest, there is a talking spider. It is a friend of Hagred, but chases Harry wanting to eat him |
Giant raptor bird | A giant eagle saves Gandalf from Isengard | In the Prisoner of Azkaban, Buckbeak is a giant raptor helping Harry and friends |
Dragon | In the Hobbit, the prelude to The Lord of the Rings, the dragon Smaug is Bilbo Baggins adversary | In Harry Potter Chamber of Secrets, there is a dragon like reptilian monster, the Basilisk, whom Harry has to slay |
Goblins | The goblins are one of the races of evil allying with Sauron and Saruman | There are goblins who run the bank. They are physically similar to the other ones, although mostly benign |
Sidekick "Creature" | In Lord of the Ring, Gollum is a creature with both dual good and evil personalities. He helps Frodo in his quest | Dobby is a house elf who is both a hinderance and helpful at different times |
Of course, J.K. Rowling has a lot of original ideas of her own, such as the concept of muggles, and the game of Quiddich.
My opinion is that she borrowed too many themes to be a coincidence. For sure she was "inspired" by Tolkien's Lord of the Ring, at least partially.
After writing this page, I found the following links that ponder some of the points above:
- "Stone" and "Ring" look like 2 pages out of Same Spell-book
- Wikipedia article has a brief mention of similarities.
- A web page listing the similarities between Harry Potter and Lord of the Rings going into character details.
Comments
steph (not verified)
How rediculas! You are
Fri, 2009/12/11 - 12:07How rediculas!
You are seriously trying to compare two out of the seven books of HP to the three of LOTR.
The HP books don't just revolve around the Soucerer's Stone, where as LOTR just revolves around the ring. Therefore your comparison is irrelevant as it would only be valid if the HP books just consisted of the sourcerers stone.
Clearly this is a case of trying to find a connection where there isn't one.
And as for JK's writing, it manages to give a description that conjours images into the minds of the readers and instantly takes the reader to a fully formed world, anyone whom can create a magical world so full in every way is a better writer than most.
She manages to convey enough description for the readers imagination without sacrificing on the emotions. I've laughed out loud and cried in equal measure with HP and am proud to admitt so.
Just thought I'd pop by and point out how lame your comparison is :)
Anonymous (not verified)
sorry but your very flawed.
Tue, 2011/03/22 - 23:10sorry but your very flawed. The horcruxes are the ring ENTIRELY, do you have ANY idea how alike they are? The horcruxes are a theme that appeared throughout the series. Read my other post.
Aaron H (not verified)
I agree with you. In my
Tue, 2011/07/19 - 00:18I agree with you. In my opinion, Harry Potter is better than Lord of the Rings. JK Rowling put a lot more detail in creating the Harry Potter universe.
Anonymous (not verified)
Drawing similarities between
Wed, 2009/12/30 - 13:36Drawing similarities between two authentic and likewise powerful bodies of fantasy lore is an ambitious task that should only be undertaken after finishing the entire series of both participants. Making a list of the similarities after reading only a few of the books and seeing the movies is both amateur and obnoxiously cocky. From your descriptions it is clear that you not only have a poor and "on-the-surface" grasp of the characters, but you also fail to discern what the role of each character is in the respective stories. I find your parallels between the sorcerer's stone and the Ring almost laughable; where one is an extremely minor artifact that is temporarily desired by Voldemort to regain physical strength (he later uses a must more pivotal method, which is crucial to the plot), the other is the driving force behind the entire series, controlling entire empires and the greatest minds in the land.
Similarities can be drawn from almost any book to another, especially in fantasy. There are many common themes that abound, for good reason; they are potent and useful themes that can be reused without complaint (a wise mentor, a powerful villain). Attempting to draw direct connections to some misguided conclusion (J.K. Rowling copied Tolkien, or the like) is comical. It shows not only your complete lack of respect for these two brilliant authors, but also your own misplaced confidence in your abilities to accurately analyze a work of fiction after reading only part of it. The next time you attempt to draw conclusions, be sure to save us all from your half-minded musings and save in a Word document tucked away deep in your hardrive.
Khalid
J.K. Rowling named in law suit
Thu, 2010/02/18 - 11:06The similarities to J.R.R. Tolkien's Lord of the Rings are not the only ones ...
The estate of Adrian Jacobs, a British author has filed a law suit against Harry Potter's author J.K. Rowling for "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire" to Jacobs' "The Adventures of Willy the Wizard — No. 1 Livid Land".
Via CBC.
Anonymous (not verified)
Dementors vs. ringwraiths
Sun, 2010/03/14 - 14:38Yes their appearances are very similar but both serve different purposes. ringwraiths are a metaphor for fear whereas the Dementors are a metaphor for depression confirmed by rowling herself. On another note, i will scream he someone else calls harry potter kid's fantasy, have you not read the deathly hallows? over 50 deaths, i would hardly call that children's fantasy. one last point stephen king has said he feels rowling deserves a place next to alice, frodo and dorothy, surely an experienced author himself would notice these similarities.
Fred (not verified)
The Hobbit is kid's fantasy,
Mon, 2011/03/07 - 17:36The Hobbit is kid's fantasy, there's plenty of deaths in that. Just because it's for kids doesn't mean everyone has to live happily ever after.
Anonymous (not verified)
Rowling
Thu, 2010/03/18 - 18:23In literature when you "borrow" something you cite your source often after getting permission from the author from whom you 'borrowed'. When you plagiarize something you STEAL it as a scientist would steal a formula he had never invented, put your name to it and market it; and you then do your best to hide the fact using whatever clout in the media you can call upon to conceal the crime. That is the difference between 'borrowing' and 'stealing'.
Rowling belongs squarely to the latter and her so-called "borrowings" are so myriad it is extremely doubtful if a single important idea in Harry Potter came to her own mind.... "fully formed" or not. Little, her agent, and his team of hacks are likely involved in the systematic pillaging of the work of others. Why wouldn't they be?
If you admire this sort of thing, you might as well advertize for people to burgle your home, so that you can get their autographs. And if you are an aspiring writer who approves of plagiarizing having been duped into thinking it is merely 'borrowing' you might as well give up as you clearly accept that you have no rights whatever over your own work.
In the light of what is actually meant by THEFT, as above, the threadbare argument of 'precedents' is not only spurious in itself but unethical and inadmissable. And where is the real writer of inventive genius who would stoop so low as to use it? He/she wouldn't need to.
Anonymous (not verified)
He liked the ideas he had
Sun, 2010/03/28 - 04:56He liked the ideas he had come up with.
Anonymous (not verified)
More ripped off characters:
Thu, 2010/09/23 - 22:01In my opinion the Dwarf (his name escapes me) was also given an extreme height bonus and became Hagred.
Also, Sam acts similarly to Ron, and the other two hobbits act like the Weasley twins! I watched Harry Potter before I watched Lord of the Rings and actually seeing them really shocked me, every character linked to another character in LOTRs. It is claimed that J.K. Rowling wrote Harry Potter on napkins while living out of her car... sounds like she just tweaked the characters and got rich quick!
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