In the book, he says nothing special to Frodo - it is at the guard room where he cannot decide that Pippin knocks something heavy down the well awakening the goblins and balrog.
In the movie, there are two noteworthy exchanges, both which occurred elsewhere in the book. Frodo - (upon seeing Golum) "I wish Bilbo had killed him when he had the chance."
Gandalf - "Many who live deserve death, and some that die deserve life - can you give it to them? Do not be so quick to deal out death and judgement. For Even the very wisest cannot see all ends."
Frodo - "I wish the ring had never come to me. I wish none of this had happened"
Gandalf - "So do all who live to see such times, but that is not for them to decide. All we have to decide is what to do with the time that is given to us."
He knows that the dwarves there accidentally woke a Balrog, a great demon of shadow and flame. The beast is still there.
a person who goes into the cole mines
Sauron was a Maia, a demi-god of sorts, and thus could not be "killed." Sauron's bodily form was destroyed in the destruction of Numenor, and he was ever after unable to assume a fair form. When Isildur severed the Ring from him, Sauron's spirit was greatly diminished, but not destroyed. Sauron was finally destroyed by Frodo when he dropped the ring into Mt. Doom, the volcano. Even then, his spirit still lived on, but so diminished in power as to be completely defeated for many an age.
He Was Going Down Into The Mines And there Was An Explosion And He Was Blown To Bits
She shoots a bag of apples that set off the mines.
It's called a "Balrog"
The Watcher in the Water
A Balrog of Morgoth that had lived in the mines for many years. He defeats a balrog in the Mines of Moria.
The cave is the home to goblins of the mountain that attack Bilbo, Gandalf and the dwarves. Gollum also lives in the deepest part of the mountain, where he keeps the ring of power. Bilbo steals the ring and starts a riddle game with Gollum. He beats Gollum and escapes the caves and catches up with the dwarves. Gollum will later venture out of the cave to find Frodo and his precious.
The Mines of Moria symbolize the descent to the dead, specifically Jesus' descent to the dead according to Christian beliefs. There are a great deal of similarities between Gandalf's journey in the mines and Jesus' death and resurrection. Gandalf stayed in the mines for three days, just like Jesus was dead for three days after his crucifixion. Gandalf also has to defeat a great evil, the Balrog (representative of original sin in Christian theology), in order to ascend from the dead and complete his task on earth. The analogy is not perfect since obviously the whole fellowship entered the mines and the fellowship as a whole does not symbolize anything related to Christianity, but when applied specifically to Gandalf the analogy works very well. Tolkien was actually a world renowned biblical scholar in his day, so reading his books can be a good intro to the Bible!
He knows that the dwarves there accidentally woke a Balrog, a great demon of shadow and flame. The beast is still there.
Reset
Gandalf travelled with the rest of the Fellowship. There was a pony they had bought in Bree, but it was uses as a pack animal, and they had to release it before entering the mines of Moria. A great Eagle carried him from the mountain peaks above Moria after he defeated the Balrog and went through some changes.
the soldiers faced mines because during the war they were hidden so after they forgot about the mines and they would blow up and die.
Balrogs are fictional characters in the story The Lord of the Rings. Just over 1000 years before The Fellowship of the Ring Dwarf King Durin VI is killed by a Balrog, and it earns the name Durin's Bane. Then Gandalf is forced to battle Durin's Bane in the mines of Khazad-dum (Moria), he and the balrog are both killed a few days later though Gandalf is sent back to Middle-earth as Gandalf the White. .
No, definitely not. He meant that they should leave the Mines now while they had a chance, and not let him keep them any longer.
The Balrog is a fictional demonic creature from J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth fantasy writings. He is pretty much Satan with big, leathery wings and a fire-whip. And he likes to pop out of abandoned dwarf mines and try to eat the heroes of the Lord of the Rings movies, like wee little Frodo Baggins the hobbit.I'd have to say that the Balrog is worth... eh, at least Gandalf the Grey Wizard's life, if the LotR movies have anything to say about it.That's a pretty high price, Tolkien!