RE: Boromir
I think it is challenging to model Lord of the Rings characters with 3E but I think that Fighter is a possibility for Boromir. The love of songs and lore seen in Gondor could add in a level of Bard, which would easily explain his leadership skills (and he even has a horn as an instrument). But a pure fighter would also be a reasonable interpretation.
Aragorn is much harder to decide on (and Gandalf is the source of many spirited discussions).
My real take on 3E fighters is that they work really well for mixing with other classes.
In some ways, the 3E fighter is a real break from the other editions as 1E/2E fighters explicitly get to be leaders (and, if you count the revenue raised per inhabitant in the 1E rulebooks as a guide, they are intermediate between clerics and wizards as rulers). In 4E, the fighter can easily take feats to handle any gaps (which is a good way to separate the pure martial fighter and the other types). Plus, 4E has other martial classes that don't cast spells (Ranger, Warlord) to further diversify the class.
So... he fails to persuade the circle, fails to persuade/Bluff Frodo, fails a couple of Will saves, then dies after killing a ridiculous number of orcs. Sounds like a fighter to me. He is nominally an "aristocrat," from a land where political acumen means fighting off weekly raids by wild riders. I don't see him do anything more than is suggested by a few ranks of cross-class skills, even if he were low-level--which he is not. Based on the body count, he had to be at least 6th level, possibly higher if you think he took a bad crit early in the fight.
I think it is challenging to model Lord of the Rings characters with 3E but I think that Fighter is a possibility for Boromir. The love of songs and lore seen in Gondor could add in a level of Bard, which would easily explain his leadership skills (and he even has a horn as an instrument). But a pure fighter would also be a reasonable interpretation.
Aragorn is much harder to decide on (and Gandalf is the source of many spirited discussions).
My real take on 3E fighters is that they work really well for mixing with other classes.
In some ways, the 3E fighter is a real break from the other editions as 1E/2E fighters explicitly get to be leaders (and, if you count the revenue raised per inhabitant in the 1E rulebooks as a guide, they are intermediate between clerics and wizards as rulers). In 4E, the fighter can easily take feats to handle any gaps (which is a good way to separate the pure martial fighter and the other types). Plus, 4E has other martial classes that don't cast spells (Ranger, Warlord) to further diversify the class.