Movie vs. Book:Two Towers

The differences between J.R.R. Tolkien's book, The Two Towers, and the Peter Jackson movie screenplay of the same name are very difficult to document because of the substantial difference in plot sequence between them. There are two major plot threads in this story that are presented very differently between the book and the screenplay. They are the exploits of Frodo and Sam on the road to Mordor and the adventures of the other characters in the lands of the West&mdash;Gondor, Rohan, Fangorn, etc. Instead of separating the two major threads into two internal books as Tolkien did, the storylines are interweaved in the screenplay to keep up the pace and progress of each. In this article, these storylines are "unshuffled" into two subsections to make it more intelligible, but because the movie starts with Frodo and Sam, that is where we start here instead of the other way around as in the book. The differences between the movie and book are described here in considerable detail. The order is intended to be that of the movie, and it is also the intent that this article should eventually include all significant differences between them.

Frodo and Sam

 * In the scene at the Black Gate, the movie leaves out Sam's funny little ditty about Oliphaunts.
 * Also at the Black Gate, the movie throws in a near disaster in which Frodo and Sam fall down the side of the hill and are almost discovered by the captains of the Haradrim unit marching by. This did not happen in the book.
 * The words of Faramir over the body of the dead Haradrim soldier in the movie were thoughts in the mind of Sam in the book.
 * The personality of Faramir and of the Rangers of Ithilien was substantially altered in the screenplay. In the book, Faramir is quite unlike his brother, and even before he understood what was Isildur's Bane from his dream, he swore an oath to Frodo to never take it up or even to desire it to save Gondor.  In the movie, he was made to be almost a carbon copy of Boromir, and when he became aware of the enemy's Ring in Frodo's possession, he decided to take him and Sam to the White City instead of allowing them to pass on their way unhindered.  Moreover, in the book, he and his men were wise, trusty, and kind.  When they captured Gollum, they treated him with gentleness and kindness.  In the movie, Faramir and his men beat and tortured Gollum treating him with malice and cruelty.  This was altogether contrary to the nature of men of Gondor.
 * When questioned by Faramir in the book, Frodo could say, "I told you no lies, and of the truth all I could." In the movie, Frodo lied to Faramir when he was asked about "the gangrel creature" that had been seen with them.
 * In the movie, Frodo, Sam, and Gollum were brought to Osgiliath on the western shore of Anduin, which they could only reach by openly crossing the river exposing them all, and especially the Ring, to capture. In the book, the hobbits and Gollum were sent on their way from Henneth Annun and were not taken to Osgiliath.  After the events at Osgiliath in the screenplay, the three were shown the tunnel, which did not exist in the book, and allowed to take their journey.  (In the book, the two parts of the city were joined by a bridge and not a tunnel.)  Note:  None of the sequence of the hobbits and Gollum at Osgiliath occurs in the book.

Events in the West

 * Gandalf's battle with the Balrog is told more or less accurately in the movie, but the tale of it was divided between the prologue and his oral narrative when the three companions met him in Fangorn. In the book, the entire story was told in Fangorn.  This is just a difference of sequence.  (Note:  In the movie, the prologue is depicted as a dream of Frodo's as he lay sleeping on a mountainside in the Emyn Muil.)
 * The outcome of the Entmoot in the book was that the Ents chose to go to war, but in the movie, they chose not to. They were later manipulated by Pippin into doing so anyway.
 * The heart-tugging scene of the boy and little girl fleeing the Westfold and leaving their mother behind does not appear in the book.
 * The scenes about Dwarf women and Éowyn's discovery of Aragorn's age and heritage do not occur in the book.
 * The screenplay has Théoden sending his people to Helm's Deep for refuge even though that is exactly where he expects the battle to be fought. In the book, he sends them to the comparative safety of Dunharrow.
 * In consequence of the above, Éowyn was not at the Hornburg during the battle there as depicted in the movie. She was at Dunharrow in command of the refugee settlement.
 * The battle between Théoden's force with all of its refugees in tow and the Warg Riders of Isengard did not occur in the book. Théoden's men were not challenged to battle on their journey from Meduseld to the Hornburg.
 * The "loss" of Aragorn over a cliff did not happen in the book because the battle in which it occurred was not fought. As a result, Aragorn was not separated from the king and his men until he voluntarily chose to take the Paths of the Dead as his road to Minas Tirith.
 * The army of Elves that comes to Helm's Deep in the movie is otherwise occupied in the book. There, they fight a series of battles to defend Lothlórien from an Orc army that invaded from Dol Guldur and then later to conquer Dol Guldur.
 * In the movie, Aragorn summons the army of the dead inside the mountain, Dwimorberg. In the book, this takes place at the Stone of Erech which is outside the mountain.
 * The distance between the Dwimorberg and the river Anduin are shown to be negligable in the movie. Aragorn steps out of the mountain, and there is the river just below him.  In the book, more than 350 miles separate the mountain and river.  They had to cross the entire province of Lebennin before reaching the river.