Sauron's proposition to Galadriel in #TheRingsOfPower was an excellent scene. But here's a thread on how I think it could have been pulled off even better. š§µ
Sauron and Galadriel are alike. Tolkien deliberately parallels their characters. They're both immensely proud and have a desire to rule.
Galadriel left Valinor in part because she wanted to rule a piece of Middle Earth. Not so different from Sauron's motives.
The show took pains to parallel Galadriel and Halbrand. Both castaways with short fuses.
In episode 6 this is most clear when both of them stop each other from killing Adar. The bloodlust in both is apparent.
Where I think the show may have stumbled was focusing too much on Galadriel's desire for vengeance for her brother and her bloodlust. This is perfectly fine to show, and it's supported by the text, but for Sauron's offer to be tempting, I think we needed more.
I think the show needed to lean on Galadriel's desire for power, which is a canonical trait of hers. She wants to have a kingdom of her own in Middle Earth.
This would have played right into Sauron's offer for her to rule Middle Earth with him.
The show addresses Galadriel's problems with authority. We see that with Gil-Galad and Miriel, but that doesn't necessarily convey that she has a desire to rule herself. Just that she clashes with authority.
Had the show leaned harder on Galadriel's desire to rule, and how that is a trait she shares with Sauron, I think Sauron's offer would have come across as far more tempting.
"I would make you a queen." And we've seen that that's what she WANTS.
Those of us who are fans of the movies and the books know that Galadriel has ambitions to rule, and I think the writers were too reliant on us just knowing that about her. It should have been a major part of her arc.
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"Sauron lives because of YOU."
"And you will DIE because of ME."
Let's talk Galadriel, Sauron, and divine intervention. š§µ
Galadriel and Sauron's meeting in TROP has been described as a "chance meeting" by the writers. In Tolkien, that usually implies that it was the work of Eru, Middle Earth's God.
A meeting between these two in particular would not be an accident. It was pre-ordained.
Galadriel invokes Eru in episode 3 when she talks to Halbrand about their meeting, and Halbrand reminds her of their supposed greater purpose in being brought together in episode 8.
We are given good reason to believe Eru brought them together.