It is
a rule. Give anyone the license to The Lord of the Rings and eventually, they
will name the Nazgul. Well, the other seven anyway. Tolkien gave names or
titles to two of them: The Witch King of Angmar and Khamul the Easterling. The
others, he left unnamed; I suspect on purpose.
But
people just can’t resist, especially if they are trying to make new product and
sell it, and so they give them all names. I believe the first company to do
this was Iron Crown Enterprises, when they were working on the Middle-Earth
Role-Playing game. These names were later used in the LOTR collectable card
game and by Mithril Miniatures.
It is
one of those Mithril Miniatures that is featured this week. Here I present the
pronunciation train-wreck that is Dwar of Waw. In my opinion, whoever came up
with that name should probably have been taken off the project. I believe the back story is that Dwar was
some kind of genetic manipulator who bred strange creatures for Sauron, which
(sort of) explains why he wears a helmet with a monkey face...
Well,
as stupid as the name and concept are to me, I quite like the figure. When I
was young, Mithril Miniatures were my favourite minis to paint, partly because they
were based on the LOTR and partly because they had minimal detail that made
them easy to paint. However, as I got better at painting, I started to find
that lack of detail a bit frustrating. I enjoy picking out details much more
than I do the subtle blending that is required to get large areas of cloth to
look good.
I’m actually not sure what happened to most of
my Mithril miniatures, perhaps they are buried away at home, perhaps I got rid
of them. Yet last time I was home, I found old Dwar, still in his box, and
decided to bring him back to England and paint him up. I decided early on that
I didn’t want to use him as a Nazgul. I really do like the figure, and the pose
is cool, but he just doesn’t seem like a Nazgul to me. Instead, I figured he
could make an evil sorcerer.
I
went with purple robes, that seem to have shifted a bit blue in the picture. As
usual, I found a figure who is mostly robes very difficult to paint. Although the photo makes the colour blending harsher than it looks in real life, it still troubled me. I'm not that happy with the outcome, to be honest, but I'm also not willing to spend any more time on the figure. It is 'good enough'.
The
best part about the figure is that he fits in perfectly with the rest of my
Lord of the Rings miniatures from Games Workshop. This is a little strange
since the two lines are supposedly different scales, but I’m not complaining. I’ve
included a comparison shot of Dwar standing next to (my much better painted) The Betrayer, one of the
Nazgul from GW.
Yes,
GW also named the Nazgul, although I think they took a much better approach and
gave them all titles instead of names. It helps preserve the mystery that makes them so cool.
As a
final note, I am aware that both ‘Nazgul’ and ‘Khamul’ should have little
chevrons over the ‘u’, but try as I might, I could not find this symbol in my
version of word.
Dwar
of Waw...what were they thinking.
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