Lord Of The Rings: 10 Things You Didn't Know About Orcs
10. Peter Jackson Changed The Uruk-hai For The Films
When it comes to the most distinctive group of orcs, the Uruk-hai of Isengard take the win. They were taller than the average man, and more ferocious fighters than the usual orc rabble.
Tolkien made it clear that Uruks were a new breed of orc, that turned up during the Third Age of Middle Earth. Sauron certainly had many in his service, but Tolkien seemed to make a distinction between the Uruk-hai of Saruman and the Uruks of Mordor.
Jackson took many characteristics outlined in Tolkien's original writing, but over-emphasised the size of the Uruk-hai. Orcs, typically, are short, squat creatures with very long arms, more akin to chimpanzees than humans. They tend to vary in size, and can be very broad and muscular, but even the largest of them were rarely as tall as a man. Tolkien painted an image of skulking creatures, who were so evil and twisted, that they tended to hunch over. Some were even described as touching the ground with their arms as they ran.
The Uruk-hai were unique in that they were almost the size of men, but certainly weren't as huge as they are in the movies. Jackson seems to have based his Uruk-hai on the descriptions of the half-orcs, and goblin-men Saruman created, which were different creatures entirely... but we'll get to them later.