If you have spent more than an hour at the Games Institute, you have probably found yourself drawn into a conversation about Lord of the Rings (LOTR) in some capacity, even if 颈迟鈥檚 not your cup of tea. Executive Director, Dr. Neil Randall has been writing and teaching about Tolkien since the late 80s as part of his Fantasy Literature classes, and his enthusiasm for LOTR is infectious, leading many students to pursue research in this area and many more LOTRs debates to play out during lunch at the GI.鈥听
Dr. Randall has been especially interested in how these much-loved books have been adapted into other mediums, especially film, TV, and of course, games. Dr. Randall鈥檚 studies of LOTR and adaptation have led him to publish reviews of the Peter Jackson films in the Kitchener Record, as well as news media appearances on CBC News and NBC as 鈥減eople wanted to know, 鈥榳hat is this phenomenon? What are we seeing here?鈥 鈥 You have to remember, at the time, fantasy films were not what they are now 鈥 But then LOTR and Harry Potter changed everything.鈥 Dr. Randall comments that 颈迟鈥檚 strange to think now that it took forty years for 鈥渙ne of the most popular novels of all time鈥 to be adapted into a series of films.鈥鈥听
Dr. Randall started teaching classes about adaptation in 2001 when the first Peter Jackson film, Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring, came out. At the time, it was just a week in a larger class about literature, film, and adaptation studies, but as the LOTR universe grew eventually, it became a Lord of the Rings-specific class in which students read all the LOTR novels, watched all the films, played the Massive Multiplayer Online Game Lord of the Rings: Online (2007) and studied the many ways LOTR had been adapted.鈥鈥听
One thing that Dr. Randall鈥檚 classes have demonstrated is the staying power of Tolkien and his novels, 鈥減eople are just as interested now as they were 20 years ago. The class is not hugely subscribed, 颈迟鈥檚 usually 22-28 people, but the people who take the class are fascinated by these texts.鈥 Dr. Randall comments that even though now students have usually watched the movies as their introduction to Tolkien, 鈥渢here is still something that seems to resonate with students鈥 about the books themselves.鈥听
While adaptations are a huge money-making part of the entertainment industry, with sequels and adaptations being extremely popular in film, TV, games and theme parks, the study of adaptation has yet to make a significant impact in academia. Dr. Randall explains that, unfortunately, much like the study of games, despite being such an important part of contemporary culture, adaptations are still seen by many as frivolous and unserious, 鈥渁daptation studies is based on non-original work, it is coming from somewhere else, and our concept of 鈥楢rt鈥 in the 21st century, we value things we think of as unique and original.鈥 He argues this is problematic in part because 鈥渘othing is based on nothing at all, that鈥檚 why we have genres, you don鈥檛 write into a vacuum鈥 and also, because we continue to 鈥渄evalue the popular sentiment and popular audience.鈥 Neil has long been interested in studying and writing about what is popular and cutting-edge, even when it 颈蝉苍鈥檛 necessarily what will gain him recognition. But suddenly, LOTR is in the limelight again, and Neil鈥檚 adaptation studies agenda is ramping up .鈥鈥听
During the fall of 2022, Dr. Randall hosted a weekly discussion group focused on Amazon鈥檚 newly released $500 million adaptation, Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power (2022). Each week a small group would gather at the GI, watch that week鈥檚 episode and then spend an hour unpacking what they had just watched and how it functioned as an adaptation of Tolkien鈥檚 work. Dr. Randall would moderate the discussion and answer questions about Tolkien鈥檚 texts during debates and discussions, which were composed of Tolkien fans and critics from students, to faculty, to staff鈥攃reating a productive space critical thinking of adaptation and how they function differently for different audiences.鈥鈥听
Dr. Randall is currently working on the first in a series of books about Tolkien adaptation, Lord of the Rings Online, and the Rings of Power TV series and plans on continuing the discussion group when the second season of the show is released. The first book in the series, 鈥渋s all about modes of adaptation that take place in the Lord of the Rings Online. It's a game studies book as well, emergent narrative structures, ideas of simulation, how do you simulate a literary work, similar to simulating a historical work, representation on a worldbuilding level, and what does it mean to play The Lord the Rings compared to experiencing it via another medium.鈥鈥听
Dr. Randall concludes that an enormous appeal of the game, and any LOTR adaptation, is getting to experience the feeling of being inside Tolkien's world, saying that Lord of the Rings Online keeps drawing him back over and over for 15 years 鈥渂ecause there is a new expansion and I say, 鈥渙h I get to see another part of the world鈥 a world I have been fascinated with since I was 17 years old.鈥濃鈥听
Dr. Randall is also working on several other unannounced LOTR projects and is hoping to bring adaptation studies scholars into the Games institute in the near future, studying LOTR or other media, as the phenomenon continues to grow.鈥鈥听