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The Watcher is thought to have emerged from beneath Moria, being described by Gandalf as "older, fouler" than Orcs. During the attempted recolonization of Moria by the [[Dwarves]], the Watcher killed [[Óin]] when his reconnaissance party visited the West Gate. |
The Watcher is thought to have emerged from beneath Moria, being described by Gandalf as "older, fouler" than Orcs. During the attempted recolonization of Moria by the [[Dwarves]], the Watcher killed [[Óin]] when his reconnaissance party visited the West Gate. |
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− | When the [[Fellowship of the Ring|Fellowship]] arrives by the pool of water, many immediately begin to feel an evil feeling emanating from the water. |
+ | When the [[Fellowship of the Ring|Fellowship]] arrives by the pool of water, many immediately begin to feel an evil feeling emanating from the water. Pippin, disturbed by the water and frustrated by [[Gandalf]]'s failure to open the gates to Moria, threw a rock into the water, to which he was reprimanded by Boromir. After Gandalf opened the gates and the fellowship moved towards the entrance, the Watcher attacked Frodo using its many long tentacles to grab hold of Frodo's legs. Sam slashed at the tentacles that were around Frodo, and managed to injure the monster and it released the Hobbit. Gandalf then commanded that the Fellowship run further into the gate to escape the Watcher's wrath. The enraged monsters tentacles tore down the ancient holly trees which stood on either side of the doors, the beautiful doors of Durin and many bolders, thus trapping the Fellowship inside the Long Dark Of Moria.<ref>''[[The Lord of the Rings]], [[The Fellowship of the Ring (novel)|The Fellowship of the Ring]],'' Book Two, Chapter IV: "[[A Journey in the Dark]]"</ref> |
==Portrayal in adaptations== |
==Portrayal in adaptations== |
Revision as of 20:25, 6 December 2016
- "The Pool is up to the wall at the Westgate. The Watcher in the Water took Oin."
- —from the Book of Mazarbul
The Watcher in the Water was a horrifying and mysterious beast with many tentacles living in a stagnant pool near the Westgate of Moria in Middle-earth - a lake described by J.R.R. Tolkien as "... a dark, still lake" which was created by the damming of the Sirannon river. The water had crept deeper and deeper, closer and closer to The Doors of Durin leaving only a narrow walkway where once The High Road allowed traffic between Ost-in-Edhil and Khazad-dûm many years before during The Second Age. Some say it was the creature itself who created the dam over many decades.
History
The Watcher is thought to have emerged from beneath Moria, being described by Gandalf as "older, fouler" than Orcs. During the attempted recolonization of Moria by the Dwarves, the Watcher killed Óin when his reconnaissance party visited the West Gate.
When the Fellowship arrives by the pool of water, many immediately begin to feel an evil feeling emanating from the water. Pippin, disturbed by the water and frustrated by Gandalf's failure to open the gates to Moria, threw a rock into the water, to which he was reprimanded by Boromir. After Gandalf opened the gates and the fellowship moved towards the entrance, the Watcher attacked Frodo using its many long tentacles to grab hold of Frodo's legs. Sam slashed at the tentacles that were around Frodo, and managed to injure the monster and it released the Hobbit. Gandalf then commanded that the Fellowship run further into the gate to escape the Watcher's wrath. The enraged monsters tentacles tore down the ancient holly trees which stood on either side of the doors, the beautiful doors of Durin and many bolders, thus trapping the Fellowship inside the Long Dark Of Moria.[1]
Portrayal in adaptations
The Lord of the Rings film trilogy
The Watcher in the Water can be seen in Peter Jackson's rendition of The Fellowship of the Ring as a very detailed computer-generated creature. In the movie, the Watcher is disturbed by Meriadoc Brandybuck and Peregrin Took, who throw rocks in the water to pass the time while Gandalf tries to figure out the password to gain entrance to Moria. This differs from the novel, in which it was Boromir who disturbed the water by throwing a stone. In either case, by the time the riddle of the Door is figured out ("Speak 'friend' and enter." - by Frodo in the film and Gandalf in the original novel), the Watcher is already provoked. It catches Frodo and lifts him in the air, despite Samwise Gamgee's attempts to defend him. The rest of the Fellowship, who attempt to injure the many serpentine tentacles of the Watcher, save him. The Watcher drops Frodo when it is injured and he is caught by Boromir. Legolas shoots the Watcher in the eye as the Fellowship of the Ring retreats into the Mines of Moria. Just as they make it inside, the Watcher tears down the doorway, and the way out is blocked by falling rocks, which land on the Watcher and probably kill it. After the gate is blocked, the Fellowship is then forced to travel into the darkness of Moria. Although Tolkien described it to have twenty-one tentacles, Peter Jackson instead gave it twelve visible tentacles (this was due to the effects team finding that twenty-one tentacles were difficult to render properly). In the game adaptation of the novel, the Watcher is depicted as a Nessie-like creature with many arms.
Video games
The Third Age
In The Lord of the Rings: The Third Age, the Watcher in the Water is the first real boss that Berethor's party has to face. Its attacks consist mainly of tentacle attacks and "Reeking Spout", a gust of foul breath and slime that deals significant damage to the whole party. After a brief but fierce battle, Berethor's company is able to anger the Watcher enough to clear the way for them to enter Moria. Shortly after, they end up fighting the Watcher again, this time in a huge lake that has flooded part of Moria. When they fight it this time, they kill it for good.
However, this game is non-canonical to the book, and even to the movie, so the watcher's fate is still unknown. His head could have been crushed by the falling boulders.
The Battle for Middle-Earth II
In Battle for Middle-earth II, the Watcher in the Water is a power to use as Isengard/The Goblins or in the Evil Campaign or even a Skirmish. When it attacks, it uses its tentacles to smack any surrounding enemies. When picking up an enemy with one of its tentacles, it eats it and its health heals. It is a commander on the Good Campaign in Missions 2, 6 & 8.When it dies or its time is done it goes back into the water pool where it goes to its home until it is summoned again. In Evil campaign it cost 10 power points while in a Skirmish it costs 15 power points.
Lord of the Rings Online
Upon beginning Volume 2, the Mines of Moria in earnest, the player enters Moria with his/her legendary, which can be named and tailored to a specific play-style, making the new weapons very innovative and much more powerful than regular weapons. Before entering Moria, the prologue has the player at the walls of Moria. After completing a series of quests you may enter Moria. However, the first expedition goes wrong, and the watcher takes Broin (please correct this if this is incorrect). While Broin is not dead, several other Dwarves are killed and the group flees. Upon returning, you have been granted a legendary weapon, which is capable of hurting the watcher. After a prolonged fight of tentacle cutting and more hacking and slashing, the watcher retreats and you may enter Moria. In one of the playable dungeons (known as instances) you may kill the watcher, which gives one of the rarest and infamous trophies. However, it takes a large group to do this raid, or a group of high level players. It is recommended that before starting Moria you are level 50 and have completed volume 1 (in which you aid Gandalf and the fellowship by fighting the False king of Angmar's forces). It is also noted that the killing of the watcher was never confirmed in the books.[2]
Trivia
- It is common for The Watcher in the Water to be featured as the Kraken Peter Jackson created - but it should be noted that Tolkien never described the creature's physical attributes aside from the tentacles.
Translations around the World
Foreign Language | Translated name |
---|---|
Afrikaans | Bode in die Water |
Albanian | Vrojtues në Ujë |
Amharic | በውኃ ውስጥ ተጠባባቂ ? |
Arabic | المراقب في الماء |
Armenian | պահապան ջրի մեջ |
Basque | Uretan Behatzailea |
Belarusian Cyrillic | вартаўнік ў вадзе |
Bengali | পানিতে প্রহরী |
Bosnian | Posmatrač u Vodi |
Bulgarian Cyrillic | наблюдател във водата |
Cambodian | មើលនៅក្នុងទឹក |
Catalan | Observador en L'aigua |
Cebuano | Bantayan diha sa Tubig |
Chinese (Hong Kong) | 水中監視者 |
Croatian | Stražar u Vodi |
Czech | Hlídač ve Vodě |
Danish | Iagttager i Vandet |
Dutch | Wachter in het Water |
Esperanto | Prizorganto en la Akvo |
Estonian | Vaataja Vees |
Filipino | Bantay sa Tubig |
Finnish | Veden valvoja |
French | Guetteur de l'Eau |
Frisian | Horloazje yn it Wetter |
Galician | Observador na Auga |
German | Wächter im Wasser |
Greek | παρατηρητής στο νερό |
Gujarati | પાણી નોંધક |
Hausa | Tsaro a cikin ruwa |
Hebrew | הצופה במים |
Hindi | पानी में चौकीदार |
Hungarian | A Tó őre |
Icelandic | Áhorfandi í Vatni |
Italian | Osservatore nell'acqua |
Japanese | 水にウォッチャー |
Javanese | Penonton ing Banyu |
Korean | 물 속에서 감시자 |
Latvian | Vērotājs Ūdens ? |
Lithuanian | Stebėtojas į Vandenį |
Macedonian Cyrillic | стражар во вода |
Nepalese | पानी मा हेरविचार |
Norwegian | Sjøens vokter Vokteren i vannet |
Pashto | په اوبو کې څیړونکی |
Persian | فرشته در آب |
Polish | Czatownik z Wody |
Portuguese (Brazil) | Vigia na Água |
Romanian | Gardă în Apă |
Russian | Глубинный Страж |
Serbian | ватцхер у води (Cyrillic) Vidovita u Vodi (Latin) |
Shona | Mucherekedzi Mumvura |
Sinhalese | ජලය මුරකරු |
Slovak | Strážca vo Vode |
Slovenian | Stražar v Vodi |
Spanish (Spain and Latin America) | Guardián del Agua |
Swahili | Mlinzi katika maji |
Swedish | Bevakare i Vattnet |
Tajik Cyrillic | нигаҳбонашон дар об |
Tamil | நீரில் கவனிப்பவர் |
Thai | ร้ายที่อยู่ในน้ำ |
Turkish | Sudaki Gözcü |
Ukrainian Cyrillic | спостерігачем у воді |
Urdu | پانی میں نگہبان |
Uzbek | Wатчер ин тҳе Wатер (Cyrillic) Suvda Qorovul (Latin) |
Uyghur | ۋاتچھەر ىن تھە ۋاتەر |
Welsh | Gwyliwr yn y Dŵr |
Yiddish | וואַטשער אין די וואַסער |
References
- ↑ The Lord of the Rings, The Fellowship of the Ring, Book Two, Chapter IV: "A Journey in the Dark"
- ↑ The Lord of the Rings Online