So @snapdragonroar and I were talking about inconsistencies between Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit, and one of the most glaring ones, especially to people more familiar with the film universe, is that Gandalf (as the bearer of an Elven Ring of Power and just generally an all-around smart dude) didn’t figure out sooner that Bilbo’s quirky little magic ring of invisibility is in fact The One Ring of great doom, destruction, and all-around badness. 

But let’s cut Gandalf some slack here and point out just how insane that realization would be. 

The closet equivalent I can come up with is like… ok listen, you know this kid (because everyone’s a kid to Gandalf) who has a lucky arrowhead he found on a hike one day in England. And the arrowhead may have some historical value, but it’s probably only a century old at most and is ultimately just a nice trinket. You are happy for the kid that he found a cool arrowhead that he treasures, but you probably don’t think about it very much.

… Only to discover years later that this is no mere arrowhead, but in fact (wait for it) the tip of the Spear of Longinus which pierced the side of Christ 2,000 years ago, thought lost to the entire world, frequently copied and imitated but never truly rediscovered and certainly not expected to be found somewhere on a hiking trail in England just lying around, and this is in fact A Spiritual Artifact of Enormous Significance with potentially the power to change the world, and the only reason you’re even thinking about the Spear of Longinus at all is because weird End of Days shit has begun to happen and you notice, idk, a tiny carving on this kid’s arrowhead but it’s not like you were LOOKING for the Spear of Longinus, no one is because it went missing 2,000 years ago and it’s a frankly insane thing to expect to turn up in some kid’s pocket one day. 

So for that, I give Gandalf a bit of leeway, because in context, the One Ring showing up on the world stage when it did–in the Shire of all places, having been adored for 500 years by a weird fishman in a cave before your cute little hobbit friend won it with a riddle game and used it on his plucky little adventures–is kind of totally bonkers

So the Maple Hobbit Fan Edit does an AMAZING job re-cutting Rivendell. I really thought there was nothing to change in AUJ, but by removing the White Council to a different movie and keeping the focus on Bilbo and Thorin in Rivendell, a lot of story beats get clarified.

– Elrond reads the map but is later shown discussing Thorin’s potential madness with Gandalf while Thorin overhears with Bilbo beside him, and Thorin is clearly distressed and ashamed by what he and Bilbo are overhearing.

– Then it cuts to Bilbo wandering Rivendell and Elrond’s invitation to stay there.

– THEN they cut to the Company leaving but they cut OUT the Storm Giants so that Bilbo is the only one who slips and nearly falls to his death. THIS makes Thorin rescuing him, and snapping at him that he’s always been lost, seem more like he’s still reacting out of stress to Bilbo overhearing about his family’s history of madness and Bilbo and his own near death experience, rather than that Thorin’s just an asshole since almost everyone fell during the Storm Giant incident (it also removes some muddiness from the narrative to get rid of the Storm Giants, since they never get mentioned again anywhere in Middle Earth). The Company immediately finds a cave and makes camp. 

– THEN Bilbo leaving right after almost slipping to his death and getting himself and Thorin killed is more motivated by guilt and fear, and also since his last nice conversation was Elrond inviting him to stay, it makes it much clearer that his motivation to go straight back to Rivendell is because of that invitation and Thorin’s harsh words.

– WHICH MEANS that Thorin looking guilty while overhearing Bilbo’s plans to leave actually looks like him feeling bad for snapping, and that it’s a one-off thing from being stressed out, and that he’s not normally like that as a person. Since the editor also took out some of Thorin’s earlier harsh lines too along with the Azanulbizar flashback and cliffside scene in general, and put the dwarven history flashbacks into a separate film, it really feels like the Elrond talking about Thorin’s family history is the first time we get a glimpse behind the curtain into Thorin’s vulnerabilities and shame, so it’s a humanizing moment and shows him to be proud and stressed out but not normally a jerk. 

SO basically what I’m saying is, I really thought AUJ couldn’t be improved upon but the elegance of the Rivendell edits has really changed my mind and I may start using this version as a go-to when I don’t want to spend 9 hours re-watching the Hobbit and fast forwarding through the cringey parts.

The Hobbit – The Bilbo Edition (4 Hour Fan Cut of the Peter Jackson Hobbit Films)

So my final assessment after watching The Hobbit Trilogy “Bilbo” fan edit. I believe this edit had a focus on following the story only from Bilbo’s POV and to be closer to the events of the book. There were some interesting plusses and minuses in this attempt.

AUJ: As the least flawed of the Hobbit movies, more was lost in this film than gained with the edits. By leaving out the “Erebor” prologue, later emotional beats lack context. While focusing on Bilbo’s POV does have the effect of making the world broaden along with his perspective, it leaves a somewhat bland tale behind as we’re given little incentive without the original opening scenes to care about the drama unfolding. Leaving out the White Council and Radagast removed some sense of the greater threat beyond Bilbo’s little world, though it does streamline the film. The best removals were no doubt the cut warg chase scene between the troll incident and Rivendell, and the cut of the early Azog reveal right after the Azanulbizar flashback. Not seeing Azog in that moment actually heightened the tension, but that was lost when Azog was also removed from the burning pines scene at the end. The ending is also choppy as the burning pines segues straight to Beorn’s without the Carrock Hug scene, and from there until Lake-town the pacing is wonky with ups and downs. 

Conclusion: If you want a short version of AUJ, just watch the theatrical cut. 

DoS: By segueing straight from the burning pines to Beorn, we get a more book-true version of events, but this also reveals the flaws in Tolkien’s somewhat plodding plotline on the big screen. Events just seem to fall randomly one after the other when the threat of Azog is removed. That said, the DOS edit is fantastic for removing some of the more cringey moments of Endless Legolas, Tauriel being introduced then swiftly de-fanged as a character with her love story, Alfrid & the Master, and some of PJ’s more ridiculous flights of comedic action sequences, but some good character moments are lost along the way too and the film doesn’t really feel like it comes towards any conclusion until the Hidden Door. 

Conclusion: If your goal is to avoid the cringey moments of DoS, and boy did it have a lot of them, this may be the edit for you. I’m 50/50, since some of my favorite character moments were lost too. 

BotFA: This is where the edit gets interesting. With a final time of 90 minutes, this is an extremely trimmed down version of BotFA but I must admit with very few exceptions I approved of the choices. Things get shaken up immediately when the editor removes the entire fight within the Mountain between Thorin & Co. vs. Smaug. While good character moments are lost, it cleans up the narrative immensely. Thorin’s fall intro dragon sickness is swift and sickening, without the backtracking we see when he fights Smaug, which changes the tone of the character admittedly. We also lose some of the more bewildering back-and-forth costume changes at the beginning of BotFA when Fili and Kili now don’t rejoin the party. With that removed, we jump immediately into the drama of the missing Arkenstone and Thorin’s fall to the dragon sickness without any speed bumps to slow it down. Smaug’s defeat is also immensely streamlined, Bard killing him within minutes of Smaug leaving the Mountain after his argument with Bilbo in the tapestry room. Bain, Tauriel, Kili and the dwarves never enter into the scene, so it’s over very quickly, almost too abruptly but honestly given how agonizingly long that sequence was it leaves only the best stuff behind and removes all the weird cringey elf stuff cluttering the story. With Legolas, Tauriel, and Alfrid removed almost entirely except for absolutely key plot points and cameos, it’s almost a different film, one I could watch without cringing of fast-forwarding. It would almost be perfect, except that we lose Bofur and Bilbo’s discussion before he goes to give the Arkenstone away, and we lose Thorin’s fight with Azog, as the editor makes a bold choice of removing Fili and Kili’s deaths, Thorin’s duel (which also had plenty of “scream at the camera because of the Stupid” moments), and pretty much the entire battle after Ravenhill, by moving forward Bilbo getting knocked out and cutting out everything between that and when he wakes up, so we cut straight to Thorin dying on the ice. It’s a jarring shift, and I think a little too much is removed there, but given how cringey much of the final battle was it also leaves a more stark and clear narrative, and makes for an emotional gut punch with the suddenness of the loss and the realization only at the funeral (like in the book) that Fili and Kili are gone too. 

Conclusion: The fan edit shines with BotFA, and while there are niggling plot threads that I miss, the removal of the extraneous dross very nearly makes up for it and makes for a less time consuming and burdensome version of the movie to watch, basically the speed run with all the highlights. 9/10 very likely to watch the edit again just for BotFA, with quick digressions to the main film to watch the couple missing scenes it leaves out.

The Hobbit – The Bilbo Edition (4 Hour Fan Cut of the Peter Jackson Hobbit Films)

gaaladrieel:

The Quest of Erebor in Unfinished Tales, and A Brief History of the Hobbit are such gems. 

Gandalf just wants to save the world and comes up with even more plans as to how to do it as he runs into Thorin in Bree. And so he plans this quest and he gets angry at dwarves and calls poor little Bilbo a middle-aged bachelor that’s getting flabby and fat and tells Thorin he will fail and he won’t help him at all if he doesn’t bring this little hobbit of his, and Thorin tells Gandalf that fine, I’ll bring this damn hobbit of yours but that Gandalf will have to come along because “if you insist on burdening me with him, you must come too and look after your darling.” 
And when Gandalf tells Fili about Bilbo, and that his name is Bilbo Baggins, Fili is just like “What a name!” and laughs. 
And when they’re in Hobbiton, at Bilbo’s, Thorin tells Gandalf that Bilbo is “soft as the mud of his Shire, and silly” after Bilbo has gone to bed.

Why is everyone so mean!

And then there’s the fact that no Durin was supposed to die in the beginning. There was a battle, but not outside Erebor and no dwarves took any part in it, only Bilbo joining the elves and men in battle as he leaves the dwarves to go home. And that makes me both happy and angry. But then, then only Thorin dies, then Fili and Kili as well. argh.  

In the original story neither Fili nor Kili died fighting alongside their great-uncle but survived to the end of the tale. The idea that the two most likeable of all Bilbo’s companions should also die in the battle – one of the saddest moments in the whole story, even though it occurs offstage while our narrator is hors de combat. [….] Thorin had still been their great-uncle when the First Typescript reached Chapter X, where at some point after the page was typed ‘sons of my father’s daughter’s son’ was changed to ‘sons of my father’s daughter’. The phrase ‘their mother’s elder brother’ perhaps suggested the presence of another brother as well, as would indeed eventually be the case, although the unfortunate Frerin was not invented until late in Tolkien’s work on The Lord of the Rings.”

And I can’t forget this, I love how Tolkien has just used Bilbo and Gandalf’s initials
“’Where are the eagles?’ he said to Gandalf that evening as he lay rolled in many warm blankets. ‘They are gone’ said G. […] ‘I should have liked to see them again,’ said B. sleepily.” 

And then there’s the very first manuscript of The Hobbit where Thorin is called Gandalf, Gandalf is called Bladorthin, Smaug is Pryftan, Beorn is Medwed, Lonely Mountain is Black Mountain, Mirkwood is Wild Wood, and Thror was supposed to be called Fimbulfambi because the Dwarf names are Old Norse and comes from Dvergatal in the Elder Edda (apart from Balin) and Fimbulfambi is then of course also Old Norse, just from Hávamál. And the author has added “Hávamál strophe 103: Fimbulfambi heitir, saer fatt kann segja: ‘a fimbul-fambi he is called, who can say little’ – i.e., a mighty fool or great idiot.” 

I can’t for the life of me take that name seriously, or the fact that Bilbo calls Beorn a furrier when Gandalf tells them about him. (And a fur-trader as the author says it is, is definitely not what I first thought of.) 

This turned into quite the post, but I’ve been re-reading The Quest of Erebor today, and looked through my History of the Hobbit again, and it’s been great, and it made me laugh a bit. 

I’m not surprised upon reflection, but I totally want to know more!

So to catch others up, Bilbo is totally in “Beowulf”

From “Beowulf”:

“a dragon on the prowl from the steep vaults of a stone-roofed barrow where he guarded a hoard; there was a hidden passage, unknown to men, but someone managed to enter by it and interfere with the heathen trove. He had handled and removed a gem-studded goblet; it gained him nothing, though with a thief’s wiles he had outwitted the sleeping dragon; that drove him into rage, as the people of that country would soon discover. A dragon awakes. An accidental theft provokes his wrath The intruder who broached the dragon’s treasure and moved him to wrath had never meant to. It was desperation on the part of a slave fleeing the heavy hand of some master, guilt-ridden and on the run, going to ground. But he soon began to shake with terror;………in shock the wretch….….….……….….….…. ….….….……….….….…. panicked and ran away with the precious….……… metalwork. There were many other heirlooms heaped inside the earth-house, because long ago, with deliberate care, somebody now forgotten had buried the riches of a high-born race in this ancient cache. Death had come and taken them all in times gone by and the only one left to tell their tale, the last of their line, could look forward to nothing but the same fate for himself: he foresaw that his joy in the treasure would be brief.”

From “The Hobbit”
He grasped a great two-handled cup, as heavy as he could carry, and cast one fearful eye upwards. Smaug stirred a wing, opened a claw, the rumble of his snoring changed its note. 

Then Bilbo fled.”

So yes, Tolkien is a giant nerd and I wouldn’t be surprised if this part of his Beowulf fanfic, “The Hobbit”, was his favorite to write.

vardasvapors:

God the Hobbit is such a great and underrated book in so many ways, but I especially love its carpet-pulling-for-kids. Like really, if someone wanted to make an actually palatable adaption of it there’s no dearth of material for elaborating on and playing with it to make something fresh and unique, because it already is:

“Haha, wouldn’t it be fun to have a story where instead of everyone celebrating when the villain is defeated, the civilians sued the heroes for the zillion dollars in property damage they caused in the fight.”

“You mean like in the Hobbit?”

“What a twist it would be if, right after the main villain dies and the story is almost finished, Minor Villain #2 from 13 chapters ago that everyone had totally forgotten about suddenly turned up seeking revenge and killed three of the heroes.”

“You mean like in the Hobbit?”

“It would so neat to have a story about a knight slaying a dragon, but the whole thing is told from the pov of the supporting characters who messed around and caused the dragon attack in the first place, and the knight barely shows up at all.”

“You mean like in the Hobbit?”

The War Within: Similarities Between Bilbo Baggins and John Watson, as played by Martin Freeman

A really excellent post about John Watson in Sherlock Season 4 by @thepurplewombat got me thinking about Martin Freeman’s acting, which got me thinking about Bilbo, as is my usual train of thought, and it put me in the mood to ramble a bit.

First of all, I don’t think I’ve ever seen an actor have two characters be so infantilized as Martin Freeman’s roles are with John Watson and Bilbo Baggins. Both John and Bilbo are constantly depicted in fanworks as soft, emotional nurturers who often wear their heart on their sleeve and are the small, yaoi blond sub to their tall, dark, and brooding partner. This baffles me because it is a huge step away from the text, though of course this is all my opinion and I don’t want to come across as telling others how to do fanworks, so allow me to give my perspective.

Martin Freeman is very, very good in both of those roles at showing men at war within themselves. Martin once said the only similarity between Bilbo and John was the actor who plays them, and in that I’d say he’s wrong, or if he’s right it’s because he’s put something of himself so strongly into both roles that it would be uncomfortable to express in an interview. To the latter I cannot comment, not knowing the man personally, but here’s how I see the similarities between John and Bilbo:

Both John and Bilbo are defined by who they were supposed to be in life. John desperately wants to be normal, but more than that he wants to want to be normal. He sees his desire for action and danger, the desire that sent him into war in Afghanistan, as a faultline within himself. He resents the injury that sent him home from the war, where glimpses throughout the series (mostly in the first episode, but later his reaction to seeing Sholto) that the war was one of the high points of his life. More than his injury though, he resents in himself the fact that he misses the war. He wants to be someone who is glad to have been sent home, he wants to be someone who wants to put the war behind him as some sort of embarrassing adolescent phase, one that he’s grown out of in favor of settling down with a job as a doctor, a wife and children.

The reason, I think, for the sheer joie de vivre that we see in John in the first episode of BBC Sherlock, is because Sherlock allows John to be himself. He provides a replacement for the war, as Mycroft observes. For a short time, John is able to forget the war within himself and what he “should” do versus what he wants to do. But the tension returns soon after, as his nagging feeling that he should be working harder to settle down returns in 1.2 the Blind Banker with his dates with Sarah. For a little while we see John hoping he can live the superhero double life, but as this puts stress on his non-Sherlock relationships the tension within him is exacerbated. Can he really have it all, or does he have to choose, as the girlfriend Jeanette first puts into his mind in 2.1 Scandal in Belgravia, between a normal life and a fulfilling one with Sherlock?

I think there is a valid reason why so many fans and fanwork makers project a gay narrative onto John, and that’s because there is an element of struggling with one’s true desires running through the narrative. Like many gay men of a certain time period (and today), he wants to want a wife and children because it is the narrative society has told him he should want. He’s not only never been able to accept himself for who he is, which is a man who loves danger and who is lost, self-destructive, and off-kilter without it, but in addition when he is reminded of society he becomes resentful of the things and people that give him joy in life, namely danger, and Sherlock’s role in it. 

I daresay for a little while near the end of season 2, John was close to making a decision in his life between inflicted domesticity and desired danger. He was leaning towards Sherlock, which I think is the root of much of the ship’s popularity. Sherlock and John felt as if they were moving towards being finally open with one another, with accepting one another in their lives as something they needn’t be ashamed of, of moving on past what society asks of them. Again, one of the core plot points of many gay narratives. This all went to hell when Sherlock faked his death, and didn’t take John with him. 

John had dared to begin thinking he could buck what society wanted of him, but in return his life– as he was beginning to build it– was utterly destroyed. He dared to fly close to the sun, to happiness, and in his hubris he was crushed back to earth by Sherlock’s “death”. He did what many people do when confronted with such a trauma: he retreated back into the past. He made a somewhat superstitious assumption that he had been punished for not wanting domesticity, that he had been slapped down by the universe, and therefore that all that was left to him was to be who he was “supposed” to be – an upstanding member of society, a husband and father.

This is the reason why the revelation of Mary being an assassin was so traumatic in John’s life. Sherlock is back, and Mary is as dangerous as Sherlock, and as dangerous John had been on the battlefield. He had made the assumption that domesticity would protect him from himself, and it had failed. Now he has been burned badly by both sides of the desires in his life. He literally could not win and was horribly punished in both cases, losing Sherlock then losing his wife. Neither side of his personality could taste of anything but failure and grief. So yes, he became angry, he became introverted, as many trauma survivors do, he snapped at the people who represented either side of himself, he was seriously, deeply shell-shocked. 

And to a very real extent, Sherlock understands only later what he has done. The reason why the Christmas episode features Watson saving Holmes from the Reichenbach Falls goes the way it does is because Sherlock finally understands that his moment of over self-reliance by leaving John out of his plan to destroy Moriarty’s network is where he lost everything he really wanted. Sherlock’s version of a happy ending is one where he never faked his own death, and never lost John as a result. Had he not faked it, he and John were in the process of fumbling their way towards a happy life together. Unlike every other interpretation of Sherlock Holmes, the BBC Sherlock is one where John is unable to forgive Sherlock for his betrayal, and that in my opinion has poisoned the narrative and left so many viewers dissatisfied, because the show was at its best when it was two men who had no exact word for what they were to each other, but who knew they were better and happier together. Men who were willing to throw society aside in order to complete one another. Sherlock, as much as John, believed he had to be alone because society had shown him no one could accept his eccentricities, so he too was learning that they could ignore the voices outside and build something together. 

Adventure died, domesticity was used as a bandage to replace it, domesticity was poisoned, adventure returned only for John to discover that it too was poisoned by his grief and resentment which were in turn caused by the initial trauma of Sherlock’s death.

It may seem a jarring pivot here to suddenly switch to Bilbo Baggins, but indulge me. 

Gandalf upon meeting Bilbo again after many years is shocked at what he finds. He had considered young Bilbo to be one of the few hobbits of the Shire with a thirst for something more from life, and a desire for adventure. Yet the man he finds so many years later is an utter homebody who claims to want nothing more from life than the comfort and solitude of his home. 

We as the audience have not seen what happened in the intervening years, but we do get some hints from Gandalf: Bilbo’s parents have died, including his mother who loved adventure. He has refused to marry, though he is by all accounts the town’s most eligible bachelor, from the book we know it’s because part of Bilbo sensed he was waiting for something, someone to take him away who year after year never came. I would extrapolate here that the slow decay of time and society had beaten Bilbo into an acceptable, bland person. Not happy as such, but comfortable, and without the energy to change even as he never felt any true joy or purpose. This makes him similar to Martin’s John Watson, something that as an American is somewhat baffling to me and that I would typify as an “English” trait: both feel tremendous pressure to conform to society, while in their hearts they were meant for something different. 

We never see Bilbo smile quite so joyfully as when he finally takes the leap and runs out his door. Like John Watson leaving his cane behind and racing through the streets of London, he has rediscovered an inner fire that was thought dead. I hesitate to speculate on a real person, but given the similarities and some tidbits from Martin’s personal biography, I wonder if he has ever felt that split between being a respectable family man versus the glamour and extroversion of his career. Even in “Fargo” we get the sense of a man trapped by domesticity who longs to be something more (in the case of that story, a murderer, but to each his own). 

I tend to see Richard Armitage’s Thorin Oakenshield as the “Sherlock” of The Hobbit trilogy. It’s his quest that Bilbo embarks upon, so in a very real way he represents the danger that Bilbo is chasing after. Though Bilbo repeatedly mentions his desire to return to the comforts of his home, he only once attempts to do so and only after he perceives that Thorin (the adventure itself?) has rejected him. Once accepted into this life by Thorin’s embrace of Bilbo and his desire to help, it’s interesting to note that Bilbo never brings up Bag End again. And on Thorin’s deathbed, is is Thorin who reminds Bilbo of his desire to return home. Thorin vividly remembers that speech, perhaps because Thorin too is someone who is seeking home and recognized that desire in Bilbo but arguably from the opposite direction, in that Bilbo is enhanced by the desire to leave home for adventure, Thorin is enhanced by the desire to leave the world of adventure to return home.

What’s so striking about the moment when a dying Thorin urges to Bilbo to go home and live a long life is how confused Bilbo looks. He really does appear to have forgotten about Bag End entirely, just as he’s confused by Thorin’s request for forgiveness. In both cases, he seems utterly baffled that Thorin thought he needed forgiveness, and that Thorin thought Bilbo wanted to return home. Like John Watson on the case, he has found a life that makes him happy, he has forgotten domesticity. 

At least, both John and Bilbo forget domesticity until the life they dreamed of building outside it is suddenly, and brutally snatched from them by the death of the person that represented adventure to them. The only two times we see Bilbo cry in the trilogy is over the death of Thorin, once at the moment of his death and the second time at his funeral. Sherlock’s gravestone is the only time we see John lose his composure and give in to tears, at least until Mary’s death. (You would never know it given how often fanworks depict Bilbo and John as constantly in tears, but there you are.)

With Thorin snatched from him, Bilbo can’t even consider remaining in Erebor, not even for a day after the funeral. This wouldn’t be so odd, given the emphasis the character has placed on returning to Bag End, if not for what happens when he finally returns to Bag End. 

Bilbo’s return to Bag End is strikingly not a happy ending. After disrupting the auction of his belongings, Bilbo enters an empty, grey home that is in ruins in much the same manner as Thorin’s Erebor. Both homes were ransacked by greed, both leave the returning hero bereft and under the sway of evil, cursed gold. Our last glimpse of young Bilbo’s face is almost demonic as he smiles down to one comfort remaining in his life: Sauron’s Ring. For all that The Hobbit trilogy is about the desire to return home, in both cases we learn that home is perhaps the most dangerous and toxic place for our characters to return to. The domestic has been corrupted, the only purity lies in adventure and the road, where Bilbo returns as soon as he is free (60 years later) of the Ring’s influence.

Why did Bilbo return home? Because he wanted to, because Thorin asked him to, because he felt it was the right thing to do? Whatever the case, we see it is a bad place for him, a place where he is utterly alone with his demons. John Watson is not so different, we rarely see him truly smile when he is not on the case with Sherlock, yet he feels continuously compelled to go on dates, to marry, to settle down, to raise a family that he seems ultimately unable to connect with because it’s not where his true passions lie. Bilbo, by the way, never marries.

Both John Watson and Bilbo Baggins, as portrayed by Martin Freeman, are men caught between their soul’s desire for danger and adventure, and their society’s desire for them to stay home and conform. Freeman’s tremendous acting ability, especially his talent for showing a character thinking two things at once, enhances this aspect, or perhaps places it in both of characters in the first place. Perhaps it is something that comes from within the man himself. Perhaps it’s just a character he feels he understands for other reasons. But the popular fanon of John or Bilbo being domestic, protective nurturers has always rung false to me. They are both men of action who have been forced to be otherwise by a society that wants to soften them. But there is anger within them, there is rage, there is an adventurer that loves danger more than comfort longing to get out, and that inner turmoil sets up within them an endless inner war.