As Saruman the fallen wizard sends his hordes to assail the lands of Rohan, King Théoden calls all his people together to take shelter in the fortress of Helm’s Deep. Built across the mouth of a high-walled valley at the base of the White Mountains, the fortress consists of the tall Hornburg tower, a wide keep with room for the entire army of Edoras, and the long, arcing Deeping Wall with it’s stone battlements. Properly provisioned, the nation of Rohan could shelter indefinitely in Helm’s Deep from even a very large host, but never have they faced an assault such as that which Saruman had prepared.
This spectacular box set consists of a three-piece resin set of the massive gateway of Helm’s Deep, hand-painted and ready for use. Constructed in scale for the models of The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers, it will be the centerpiece of many of the scenarios for the game as well as countless others players will create on their own.
The piece is $75.00 US and can be found here. This is a limited piece and will sell out fast, so if you want one get it soon!
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TORN Staffers Asfaloth & Quickbeam were on the red carpet for the Two Towers premiere in Los Angeles, they hooked up with Sala Baker (Sauron) and Billy Boyd (Pippin) in this first video segment from the event! Take a look! [More]
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CBC Radio show ‘The Current’ recently spoke to myself and Tolkien expert Kiyan Azarbar concerning all things rings! Listen to Kiyan sound a whole lot more ‘with-it’ than me! (RealPlayer needed) [More]
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Lord of the Rings hobbits Frodo, Pippin, and Merry escaped Middle Earth to spend New Year in the Cumbrian countryside, the News & Star can reveal. [More]
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Hannah writes: The London Film Critic’s Circle have nominated PJ in their Director category! The awards have a very Brit-centric feel about them so it’s very nice to see PJ in the list. He’s only listed for ‘Lord of the Rings’, whether this is for FOTR or TTT is unclear. [More]
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JRR Tolkien was not a professional author nor, for much of his life, even a much-published one. He had a certain success with The Hobbit in 1937, when he was 45 – enough for his publisher, Stanley Unwin, to ask for a sequel. But though Tolkien dutifully began to write one almost immediately, it was 17 years before the first volume of The Lord of the Rings was published, by which time Tolkien had almost reached retirement. [More]
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