Yes. In the movies: Legolas only speaks directly to Frodo once, saying "And my bow." In the books: On the Great River, after the first ambush by Orcs (which doesn't appear in the movie) and after Legolas shoots down the Nazgul's Fell Beast (likewise), we have the following exchange (the conversation opens with Sam):
As many have observed before, the interactions between Frodo and Legolas are severely limited in the trilogy even though they are allies. In fact, there's only one line that Legolas says to Frodo: “And you have my bow.”
Frodo is portrayed as a reserved and introspective character, while Legolas is more outgoing and extroverted. It's possible that they simply don't have much in common and don't feel the need to engage in conversation with each other. The hobbit didn't talk much with Gimli or Boromir either.
This is because Frodo's mind was distracted with the gravity of his mission when he met Legolas so he completely spaced during their introduction. Frodo didn't want to ask during the Fellowship reuniting as it would seem impolite. I completely buy it.
The actor is suffering from Legolas Syndrome — where you accidentally get cast into a role that suits you far more than your real-life looks, leaving you with a tricky predicament after the wrap party. Do you A) nick all the costumes and stay in character the rest of your working life, or B)
Etymologyedit edit source. The name Legolas is a Silvan dialect form of pure Sindarin Laegolas, which means "Greenleaf". At one point he is called "Legolas Greenleaf" by Gandalf, coupling his name and its translation like an epithet.
Legolas doesn't really talk to anyone outside of Aragorn and eventually Gimli, and even then his words are minimal.
He wasn't angry. He was a very serious elf which makes sense considering he has to deal with giant spiders on a daily basis and lives in dangerous woods for the past few years. He doesn't seem to like Thorin's Company as expected. He's only angry around them.
Why do Legolas and Gimli kneel before Gandalf the White and why doesn't Aragorn? For that matter, given that Gandalf is someone that people obey or kneel before, the Hobbits must seem rather impertinent in their treatment of him. As lowly as they are, they treat him like a friend or a kindly old traveler.
Legolas happens to be one of the strongest members of the Fellowship of the Ring. His aim with a bow and arrow is true and never misses.
Tauriel:and it will always be that way for as long as we both shall live... And with that, Legolas pressed a kiss to Tauriel's soft lips for the last time in our story.
Legolas wins if they're at a far distance. Even in close I'd give it to Legolas. Dude is more agile and experienced. Legolas doesn't hold a candle to Aragorn in a sword fight.
There is no doubt that Sam and Frodo's relationship is one of the greatest loves stories ever told. It's a love not catalyzed by sexuality but it's a love story none-the-less.
Similarly, Frodo Baggins has relatively outlandish Brandybuck blood. Among the Elves of Middle-earth, the highest are those whose ancestors conformed most closely to the divine will, migrating to Aman and seeing the light of the Two Trees of Valinor.
He Kept Gollum Captive
As the son of Mirkwood's king, Legolas undoubtedly was a part of keeping watch of Gollum. However, even if he didn't, the initial reason he was heading to Rivendell was to pass along the information that Gollum had escaped.
Legolas appears in The Lord of the Rings trilogy as a protagonist in The Fellowship of the Ring, The Two Towers, and The Return of the King, a minor character in the 1978 film adaptation, one of the eight protagonists of Peter Jackson's Lord of the Rings trilogy, and a supporting character in The Hobbit trilogy.
Legolas and Gimli's relationship is strong in The Lord of the Rings, even though it wasn't explicitly romantic in Tolkien's source material. The members of the Fellowship in The Lord of the Rings forge an unbreakable bond while on their mission to destroy the One Ring.
Legolas does not marry or have any children, based on the appendix of The Lord of the Rings. Regardless of who his mother was, Legolas is the last of his line. When he sails into the West at the beginning of the Fourth Age, he leaves no family members behind.
You may not think of Legolas and Frodo as close allies, but they were in a fellowship together, and Legolas's entire mission was to stall so that Frodo could get the ring to Mordor.
Legolas and Gimli are Aragorn's companions throughout The Two Towers and The Return of the King. They make up the new Fellowship of the Ring. Aragorn has now known Legolas from his younger says as a Ranger of the North as seen in The Battle of the Five Armies, as it was Thranduil who told Legolas of Strider.
They have a deeply spiritual side that they recognize and listen to, so Legolas could feel that Aragorn was the right person for the right time. Also, there developed a bond of friendship from the long journey they had been on, joined by fear, and loss and HOPE.
His prowess with a bow was unmatched among the Fellowship and, as J.R.R. Tolkien stated himself, Legolas was “endowed with the tremendous vitality of Elvish bodies,” as well as an inability to feel terrible hurts, which made it easy for him to travel long distances over rough terrain in only light shoes.
A Lord of the Rings movie theory indicates that, in Peter Jackson's beloved trilogy, Frodo Baggins didn't know Legolas' name. This would be a significant surprise since the Fellowship of the Ring members are often considered the closest of companions.
WEAKNESSES: One disadvantage to the sheltered life that Legolas has lived is the fact that he is far too quick to follow the orders of his father without really questioning them - though, there is later exceptions to this rule.