The elves of J. R. R. Tolkien’sThe Lord of the Ringspossess many abilities that seem strange or downright magical, many of which are demonstrated with aplomb by the gallantLegolas Greenleaf, prince of the Greenwoodand member of the Fellowship of the Ring. Legolas' central role in Peter Jackson’sLord of the Ringsfilm trilogy (and to a much lesser extent, Jackson’sHobbitfilms) makes him one of the most recognizable elves in Middle-earth, and sets him as a benchmark for audiences' understanding of what Tolkien’s elves are capable of.

Elves, as the chosen ofMiddle-earth’s deities, the Valar, are often described by others as possessing"magic,“yet it’s nothing like the magic of other fantasy series likeDungeons & Dragons. Tolkien’s elves combine a Valar-made soul (fëa) and a form made from the world (hröa), andit’s their union that lets an elf exist in harmony with natural forcesin a way a human or hobbit cannot. That’s how Legolas performs one of the most impressive – and fleeting – feats inThe Fellowship of the Ring: he effortlessly walks atop the snow of Caradhras that obstructs the rest of the Fellowship.

Legolas moves ahead of the Fellowship in the blizzard atop Caradhras in Fellowship of the Ring

The Lord Of The Rings' Caradhras Scene Shows Off Legolas' Light-Footedness

Unfortunately It Wasn’t An Ability He Could Share With The Rest Of The Fellowship

InThe Fellowship of the Ring, the Fellowship attempt to cross overmightyCaradhras, the tallest and northernmost peak of the southern Misty Mountains, beneath whichthe abandoned Mines of Morialie. Its name translates from Sindarin to"red horn,“describing the color that often spilled across its peak at sunset, but the Dwarves that mined its depths often just called it the Cruel for its frequent and dangerous storms. It is one such storm that besets the Fellowship as they attempt to traverse the mountain’s pass to reach Rohan, egged on by the conjuring of Saruman.

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Thankfully,Legolas' elven nature allows him to walk atop the snow, even as the other members of the Fellowship are forced to trudge through the drifts as they pile higher around them. That light-footedness allows Legolas to scout ahead of the party, as well as be the first free from the avalanche Saruman sends their way. There is no dialogue in the film about this innate elven ability, and the original text highlights it only in passing:

Gandalf-from-Lord-of-The-Rings

In places the snow was breast-high, and often Boromir seemed to be swimming or burrowing with his great arms rather than walking.

Legolas watched them for a while with a smile upon his lips, and then he turned to the others. “The strongest must seek a way, say you? But I say: let a ploughman plough, but choose an otter for swimming, and for running light over grass and leaf, or over snow – an Elf.”

Legolas Shield Slide (1)

With that he sprang forth nimbly, and then Frodo noticed as if for the first time, though he had long known it, that the Elf had no boots, but wore only light shoes, as he always did, and his feet made little imprint in the snow. (The Fellowship of the Ring, Book 2, Chapter 3, “The Ring Goes South”)

This Isn’t The Only Time The Lord Of The Rings Films Highlight The Elves' Light-Footed Nature

Legolas Repeatedly Performs Stunts That May Have Stretched Tolkien’s Use Of The Phrase “Running Light”

The Fellowship of the Ringtakes a"show, don’t tell"approach to Legolas' elven dexterity, as does the rest of the film trilogy, particularly in the major setpiece battles. InThe Two Towers' Battle of Helms Deep,Legolas' nimbleness lets himuse an Uruk-hai shield to skate down the stairsof the Hornburg’s Deeping Wall while firing off enough arrows.

He slices off the supports of the howdah full of armed Haradrim soldiers, defeats the Oliphaunt’s driver, kills the beast by filling its skull with arrows, and effortlessly gliding along its trunk as it collapses as easily as a child goes down a slide.

The Lord of the Rings Franchise Poster with Gold Words Resembling a Ring

Legolas' Tony Hawk impression is overshadowed inThe Return of the King, where the elf manages to singlehandedly kill a rampaging Oliphaunt by climbing the arrows embedded in its leg. He slices off the supports of the howdah full of armed Haradrim soldiers, defeats the Oliphaunt’s driver, kills the beast by filling its skull with arrows, and effortlessly gliding along its trunk as it collapses as easily as a child goes down a slide. Of course, as Gimli adamantly points out afterward, that still only counts as one kill in their friendly wager.

How The Lord Of The Rings Movies Captured This Impressive Legolas Ability

While Some Of It Was Questionable CGI, Some Of The Effects Used Were Brilliantly Practical

The special effects used to depict Legolas' elven stunts in the films were a mixture of straightforward practical effects and complicated CGI. For the Caradhras scene, the snow was mostly a solid mass that actor Orlando Bloom could walk around on freely, while the other actors were down in a trench below him. The Oliphaunt fight was, by contrast, almost entirely CGI, but the shield-surfing was actually a practical effect –Orlando Bloom was suspended on wires and simply floated down the stairs, much like a stunt ina classicwuxiafilm.

The Lord of the Ringsfilms are beautiful adaptations of an incredible series, yet like all adaptations, some details are changed in the process of shifting media. While Tolkien’s original narration relies heavily on his natural talent for understatement and Frodo’s everyman nature to describe some of the more fantastical aspects of Middle-earth, Peter Jackson’s films had to find ways to turn that understated narration into something exciting and cinematic. While Tolkien himself may not have approved of using Oliphaunts as slides, there’s no denying it was an effective demonstration of just how nimble a Sindar elf can be.