well,
Spoiler:
the first one is kind of. in the real book, aragorn and arwen do not die, but well after the book ends they do. my book has the appendicies in it, so they die in that, but im sure their deaths will not be in the movie. and about frodo, that is also true. sam thinks that shelob killed frodo, so sam takes the ring and starts to leave, when orcs find frodo and take him away. sam follows the orcs, and a fight breaks out between the orcs, killing all but i think two. so then sam rescues frodo, they dress in orc clothes, and are on their way again.
Arwenishott thanks so much for that info, that meant alot, it helped cleared things
someone posted at a orlando board, a link that went to the last 2 pages of the return of the king script, and it said that arwen and aragorn dies, it sounded really sad :-(
DarkQueen and Jimbo, i didnt appreciate those comments, i do need to read the books, but unfortuntly i dont have the time, since i work and have phlebotomy class, i want to get the books but i havent been able to go get them yet
Aragorn? Are we talking about the same sad excuse for a Dunadan who couldn't get over a stuck-up older woman who wouldn't give him the time of the day for twenty-nine years? The same rat who connived to usurp the kingship of Gondor -- a realm that had happily gotten rid of the last king nearly 1000 years ago -- taking advantage of some broken, rusty, factory-refurbished sword he found in his foster father's attic and a 1000 old myth about his ancestors? (How would you react if the descendent of Charlemagne showed up in Paris today to claim kingship over France, bringing in the shroud of Turin as the evidence?)
You have to admire the intricacies of his insidious plot to weaken and eventually eliminate the line of the Stewards while keeping his hands clean, though. First, he "erred" by leaving Boromir to die at the hands of Orcs (then had the cheek to win himself renown for chasing those same Orcs down Rohan, while making Eomer and friends do the actual work in destroying them!). Then he sent in his partners-in-evil, Gandalf Stormcrow and Peregrin the Hobbit, to fill poor Denethor with grief, entice him into looking into the Palantir, and hasten his death (but not so quickly that he couldn't win brownie points by arriving "just in time" to save the day at Minas Tirith, only hours after Denethor had died!). And, after the war was over, he finally marched in himself to wrest power peacefully from Faramir, who was too spineless to resist him (not that he could have done much, after all the clever PR campaigns Aragorn had done for himself in the city). Talk about perfect crime -- Saruman would have been proud.
All this, for bagging one Elven wench [1]. And you call Beren "lusty"? I think not.
</troll>
[1] See p. 277 in Return of the King: "A day draws near that I have looked for in all the years of my manhood." I'm honestly convinced that Aragorn would not have gone through so much trouble to gain kingship over Gondor were it not for Elrond dangling Arwen over his head -- he never seems hungry for glory, power or authority anywhere else in the book.