The Rings Of Power

10 Most Annoying Lord of the Rings: Rings of Power Characters Fans Still Can’t Stand

When Amazon Prime Video released its television series The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power in Sept. 2022 (20 years after Peter Jackson’s film adaptation of The Lord of the Rings hit the big screens), fans were ecstatic. Die-hard Tolkien fans know that the only thing better than Lord of the Rings is more Lord of the Rings, and Amazon’s hefty production budget indicated its full confidence in a long and successful show.

After two seasons, viewers are divided on whether the series can be deemed “successful” or not. Sadly, The Rings of Power’s characters—the very thing that made Tolkien’s books so beloved—are disappointing many fans, to say the least. Out-of-canon, flat, boring, one-dimensional and straight-up annoying characters have fans talking—and not in a good way.

10. The Stranger’s Ambiguity Raised More Frustration Than Curiosity

Celebrimbor and The Stranger in The Rings of Power

The Stranger appears in Season 1, Episode 1 of The Lord of the Rings: Rings of Power as a naked, infant-like man who falls out of the night sky in a fireball. He is discovered lying in a crater in the earth by Harfoot Elanor “Nori” Brandyfoot who decides he is a good person. She immediately befriends him. By the end of Season 1, The Stranger is confirmed to not be Saruman, but called a wizard of the Istar Order. The appearance of his hair, beard and robe all allude to The Stranger’s real identity as Gandalf the Gray from Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit, which is confirmed in the Season 2 finale.

When he was introduced, The Stranger’s character created curiosity for viewers as to who he really was. However, curiosity quickly morphed into confusion and then into full-blown frustration for fans of LoTR. For one, even casual fantasy television show viewers understand that wizards are powerful and wise individuals who bring excitement and mystery to the story, but The Stranger’s weak and bumbling character delivers mostly cringe moments. Second, knowledgeable LoTR fans are quick to point out that wizards didn’t appear in Middle Earth until the Third Age, and since The Rings of Power takes place during the Second Age, his entire character shouldn’t even exist yet. The frustrating deviation from Tolkien’s canon for such an important character puts The Stranger/Gandalf in the top 10 list of most annoying characters in the show.

9. Queen Míriel Is a Lackluster, One-sided Main Character

Míriel looks up suspiciously on The Rings of PowerImage via Amazon Prime Video

Queen Míriel first makes her appearance in The Rings of Power when she is still the Queen-regent of Númenor, a powerful nautical island city in Middle Earth. The Númenoreans are a human race with Elvish origins, thereby granting them centuries-long lifespans and greater physical strength than ordinary human beings. Míriel decides to lead her people into a battle with Halbrand and Galadriel in their fight against the power of Sauron (or, who is believed to be Sauron).

Míriel has many redeeming qualities—she is fearless, intelligent and resourceful. She carefully weighs the consequences of dragging the subjects of her kingdom into Middle Earth’s war against dark powers. However, after two seasons, her strength comes across to viewers as stoicism, and her character lacks any real depth, despite playing a pivotal role in the show.

8. Kemen: The Villain Whose Only Real Offense Is Simply Being On-Screen

Kemen (played by Leon Wadham) shown in The Rings of Power Season 2Image via Amazon Prime Video

Kemen is the son of Númenor’s leading politician, Pharazôn. His father works to subvert Queen Míriel’s authority behind the scenes, and Kemen is taking over the reins in his father’s power play. He attempts to burn the Númenorean ships to stop them from sailing into battle, and he manipulates anyone and everyone around him.

Like any good fantasy television show or movie, The Rings of Power is chock-full of villains—the ones fans hate, the ones fans love to hate, and the downright terrifying ones. Kemen, unfortunately, fits none of those descriptions, and has been described by viewers as “bratty and egotistical.” Instead of rooting for his downfall, fans just want to punch him in the face. Not only hasn’t Kemen’s character earned his powerful position in Númenor, he doesn’t even deserve the title “bad guy” for the show’s sake.

7. “All of the Harfoots” Are Irritating All of the Fans in “The Rings of Power”

Harfoots in Amazon Prime Video's The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of PowerImage via Amazon Prime Video. 

The Harfoots are the short and barefooted ancestors of the Hobbits, who lived a nomadic lifestyle in Middle Earth, hundreds of years before they settled in the Shire. In The Rings of Power, one of the show’s main storylines revolves around the Harfoots discovering The Stranger/Gandalf and helping him fight against a trio of Middle Earth “mystics” called the Ascetic, the Nomad and the Dweller. The main Harfoot characters are Elanor “Nori” Brandyfoot, Poppy Proudfellow, Marigold Brandyfoot, Largo Brandyfoot, and Saduc Burrows.

In all of Tolkiens’ creation, the Hobbits are considered to be the least significant race of beings in all of Middle Earth due to their small stature and general lack of ambition. However, that is exactly what allows Frodo and Samwise to overcome the One Ring’s power, sneak in Mordor and throw the Ring into the fire. The fact that the Harfoots are given such a large portion of the show’s screen time that ultimately hasn’t delivered much to the overall plot, continues to irritate fans. Frodo and Samwise are timeless fan-favorite characters in Lord of the Rings, but fans simply fast-forward the Harfoot scenes in The Rings of Power.

6. Fans Can’t Relate to Disa’s Greedy and Forceful Character

Dwarven Princess Disa sings with her hands raised in The Rings of PowerImage via Amazon Prime Video

Disa is married to Durin IV of the Dwarf race, the son of the Dwarf king, King Durin III. Disa and Durin IV reside deep in the Khazad-dum mountains of Middle Earth with their two children and the rest of their people. Disa’s supernatural skill is her ability to sing and communicate with the mountains. She persuades her husband to defy his father’s orders prohibiting the mining of mithril and to extract the magical metal in secret.

Disa obviously loves her husband, Durin IV, and wants what is best for him, their family, and all the Dwarves in Khazad-dum. However, her quick decision to ignore her father-in-law for a precious metal that is dangerous to extract and puts Durin and the rest of the miners at risk seems to show a side of pure greed. Fans view Disa’s cajoling of her husband as controlling him, and she carries an overwhelming air of “never wrong, always right.”

5. Isildur Completely Disappoints Fans on So Many Levels

Isildur learns the ways of Naval combat from his father years before the Great War with Sauron in The Rings of Power

In Lord of the Rings, Elvish king Gil-galad recalls how Numenor warrior Isildur defeated Sauron in battle but, ultimately, was unable to destroy the One Ring because he wanted its power for himself. In The Rings of Powera young Isildur rebels against his father, Captain Elendil, when he stows away on a ship. He travels to Middle Earth to fight alongside his father and the Queen-regent against Sauron, and his younger sister is Earien.

Isildur’s character in Tolkien’s novels and in Peter Jackson’s screen adaptations represents the true power of the One Ring and a universal truth of power: “that absolute power corrupts absolutely.” Of all the characters in The Rings of Power, his story arc would have been the most interesting to watch unravel, and yet, Isildur completely falls flat throughout two seasons. His character is boring, and fans have no idea why they should care about him, other than the fact he is the Isildur from The Lord of the Rings. The letdown in Isildur’s character development is why he ranks number five in this list.

4. Bronwyn Shows How the Smallest Detail Can Make or Break a Character’s Likability

Bronwyn (Nazanin Boniadi) sits at a hutch in The Rings of PowerImage via Amazon Prime Video

Bronwyn is a healer in her small human village in the Southlands of Middle Earth. She has one son named Theo, and she shares a secret love-affair with Elvin warrior Arondir. In LoTR, the Southlands have been the location of Sauron’s kingdom of Mordor, surrounding the iconic Mount Doom, for more than 1,000 years, so Bronwyn and her village reveal to the audience that the Southlands used to be an idyllic place to live.

Bronwyn’s character isn’t derived from Tolkien’s novels or Peter Jackson’s films, so many fans dislike her based on that fact alone. But most viewers agree her character’s motivations and actions are confusing and veer in different directions with each episode of Season 1. Moreover, Bronwyn’s outfit, which fans have dubbed the “ridiculous blue summer dress,” seems to have only detracted from her character’s arc in the same way that Keri Russell’s haircut did in the ’90s television show Felicity.

3. Nori Brandyfoot Should Have Been Only a Minor Character

Nori forages in Rings of Power Season 2Image via Amazon Prime Video

Elanor “Nori” Brandyfoot plays the main Harfoot character in The Rings of Power. Her father and step-mother, Largo and Marigold, try to temper her natural curiosity in order to protect their daughter (and their entire clan) from the dangers of Middle Earth. Nori and her best friend, Poppy Proudfellow, eventually leave their families to travel with The Stranger/Gandalf on a quest to find out where he is from and his purpose in coming to their lands.

Nori’s desire to help The Stranger/Gandalf comes across as blatant disregard and disrespect for her parents’ and community’s rules and safety. As with other characters in the show, viewers don’t really understand exactly what is driving Nori internally to have this overwhelming empathy for a stranger. The wizard even accidentally hurts the teenage Harfoot and others with his uncontrolled powers, and she does not change her mind, which portrays her as naive and irrational.

2. Fans Would Be Perfectly Fine if Theo Disappeared Forever

Theo's sword lights aflame in The Rings of PowerImage via Amazon Prime Video

Theo is the rebellious, headstrong young teenage son of Bronwyn. One day, he finds a broken sword that produces magical abilities when he pierces the jagged blade into his forearm. He keeps the sword hidden from all the other villagers, even his mother, and later in Season 1, the weapon creates the lava-spewing volcano of Mount Doom.

Like Bronwyn, Theo’s character was created specifically for The Rings of Power, and his arc essentially spins its wheels without anything compelling to push it forward. Fans see Theo as “whiny, annoying and self-absorbed,” and his fascination with the dark magic blade has labeled him as irredeemable. Worse, his on-screen presence may be the least liked out of all the show’s characters, with viewers saying his scenes are easily forgettable and that even the sound of his voice is extremely irritating.

1. Galadriel Is a Far Cry from the Beloved The Lord of the Rings Character

Galadriel holds Finrod's dagger in Rings of Power

The Rings of Power’s first episode opens with Galadriel, as the star of the show, and her warrior Elves chasing down Sauron, only to come up empty-handed again, which leads her team to mutiny. She is ordered by the Elven king to return to Valinor, but she changes her mind and jumps off the ship to swim back to Middle Earth, where she intercepts Halbrand. By the time Galadriel discovers that Halbrand is actually Sauron, he has already created three rings for the Elves (including one for her) and she is not an outcast among her people. In Lord of the Rings, Galadriel, also known as the Lady of the Woods of Lothlórien, is considered the most beautiful, wisest and powerful Elf in all of Middle Earth, and she resists taking the One Ring when Frodo offers it to her.

Fans naturally expected to see Galadriel portrayed as someone who is tempted by the power of the rings, but elects not to use their destructive power. Instead, in The Rings of Power, Galadriel is determined to keep the ring Sauron created, and she justifies this by simply stating that she “knows in her heart” she should wear the ring. She is deceived by Halbrand (Sauron) and refuses his invitation to rule beside him, but when he reveals his true identity, she initially keeps this information to herself. When her Elvish friend Elrond later learns the truth about Sauron, she doesn’t own up to her mistakes and instead seeks to blame Sauron, Elrond and everyone else. Fans overwhelmingly agree that Galadriel’s character is dull, one-dimensional, and even gaslights the other characters, earning her the nickname “Gaslightdriel” and the Number one spot as the hands-down most annoying character on The Rings of Power.

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