Warning! This article contains major spoilers for The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power episode 8. If you've not yet caught up with the show, turn back now!
Galadriel's search for Sauroncomes to a dramatic close in The Rings of Power finale, when her ally Halbrand, the supposed king of the Southlands, reveals himself to be the long-plotting, all-powerful Dark Lord. Over the show's eight episodes, the elf's blinkered quest to vanquish evil has caused those around her to question her morality – audiences members, too. But her purity is proven when she manages not to be seduced by Sauron's idea of them joining forces to "save" (or rule, depending on who you're talking to) Middle-earth.
In his attempt to persuade Galadriel (Morfydd Clark) to join him, Sauron (Charlie Vickers) insists that he "would make [her] a queen, fair as the sea and the Sun, stronger than the foundations of the earth" – a line that retroactively sheds light on Galadriel's sudden lack of control when Frodo Baggins offers her the One Ring in the first Lord of the Rings movie.
In The Fellowship of the Ring, Cate Blanchett's Galadriel shocks the Hobbit when her etherealness disappears when she reaches out for the ring. Her voice deepens and distorts, her eyes blacken, and she throws up her arms as she shouts: "In place of a Dark Lord, you would have a queen! Not dark but beautiful and terrible as the dawn!
"Treacherous as the seas," she continues, seemingly in some sort of trance. "Stronger than the foundations of the earth! All shall love me and despair!" Sounds a lot like what Sauron said to her all those years ago, eh? If his words are still lingering in her mind thousands of years later, it just proves how deeply hurt Galadriel was by the betrayal.
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