A Single Line From The Lord of the Rings Secretly Inspired This Bizarre Rings of Power Scene

Over the course of centuries, Sauron consumed any organisms unfortunate enough to cross his path, absorbing their mass and gradually increasing his strength. Sauron eventually escaped the cave and latched onto the wheel of a passing wagon. After devouring the unlucky driver, he was finally able to take on a new humanoid form. None of this happened in J. R. R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings novel. Sauron was indeed a shapeshifter who could slowly reform his body after its destruction, but he did not become black slime in the meantime. Both he and his fellow Maia, Saruman, turned into clouds resembling mist or smoke when their bodies were slain. However, the Dark Lord’s gooey transformation was not entirely without precedent in Tolkien’s writings. The chapter “The White Rider” from The Two Towers included a line that evoked Sauron’s regeneration scene, and it likely served as inspiration for The Rings of Power‘s writers.
The Balrog’s True Form Left Was Vague in The Lord of the Rings
Jackson originally intended to include this detail in the film. In the director’s commentary track for The Two Towers, he explained, “This scene was drastically shortened, before we ever shot anything, for budgetary reasons. Because once Gandalf hit the water, remember, we were gonna have the Balrog turn to slime, and he was gonna be like a slimy Balrog creature fighting underwater.” Though this passage may seem strange to those who have not read the novel, it was in keeping with Tolkien’s amorphous descriptions from earlier in the text. In the films and in The Rings of Power, the Balrog was a bestial demon with stony skin, but in the novel, it lacked such tangible features. According to the chapter “The Bridge of Khazad-dûm” from The Fellowship of the Ring, “What [the Balrog] was could not be seen: it was like a great shadow, in the middle of which was a dark form, of man-shape maybe, yet greater.” When it fell into the water, it was no longer obscured by fire and smoke, but it remained just as difficult to clearly define.
Sauron and the Balrog Were Similar Beings
It would make sense for a description of the Balrog to have inspired a depiction of Sauron, because the Balrogs were also evil Maiar. They were some of Morgoth’s oldest and most fearsome followers, often serving as lieutenants in his army. Though The Rings of Power has departed from the lore of Tolkien’s legendarium in many major ways, it has also included some minor details that only die-hard fans of The Lord of the Rings are likely to notice, so Sauron’s slime form could easily have been a nod to the Balrog’s.






