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And Legolas? He’s Thranduil’s son. It would be stranger not to include him. Watching all three in a row, a theme emerges: The cost of adventure. Bilbo loses his handkerchief, but also his innocence. Thorin gains his kingdom but loses himself. The dwarves reclaim Erebor, but at the price of Fili, Kili, and their king. Unlike Lord of the Rings , where the world is saved, The Hobbit ends with a funeral and a hobbit who can no longer quite enjoy his second breakfast.

The door to the Lonely Mountain opening at exactly the last light of Durin’s Day, as the thrush knocks. Magic, pure and simple.

The battle itself is messy (and over-choreographed), but the emotional beats land: Kili and Fili’s deaths, Tauriel’s grief (a divisive addition, but Evangeline Lilly sells it), and Bilbo’s quiet return to Bag End. That final shot—Bilbo reaching for the door, hesitating, then stepping inside—is the perfect metaphor for someone who has seen too much to ever truly fit in again. Most criticism targets what Tolkien didn’t write: the Azog subplot, Legolas, the necromancer, the love triangle. But here’s the thing— The Hobbit book is a children’s adventure. Jackson needed a bridge to Lord of the Rings . The White Council, Gandalf’s side quest, and Dol Guldur add a sense of dread and scale. They remind us that Sauron was always lurking. the hobbit 1 2 3

The Riddles in the Dark scene with Gollum (Andy Serkis). It’s intimate, terrifying, and tragic. You see the moment Bilbo’s pity changes everything. That 10-minute sequence alone justifies the trilogy’s existence. Part 2: The Desolation of Smaug (2013) – The Thrill of Expansion Here’s where purists bristled. Jackson turned a few pages of travel into a full blockbuster: Mirkwood spiders, the elven king’s halls, the barrel escape, Laketown, and finally— the dragon .

It’s smaller in scale, but larger in heartbreak. The Hobbit trilogy is imperfect. It should have been two films. The CGI orcs lack the grit of practical effects. Alfred is annoying. But what it gets right—Bilbo’s journey, Smaug’s menace, Thorin’s tragedy, the music (Howard Shore, you genius)—is so right that I’ll defend it. And Legolas

We wanted The Lord of the Rings again. Instead, we got a melancholy, ambitious, sometimes silly epic about how gold poisons and home heals. And honestly? That’s a very Tolkien truth.

But years later, sitting down for an extended cut marathon, I found myself falling in love with Middle-earth all over again. Not in spite of its flaws, but through them. Here’s why An Unexpected Journey , The Desolation of Smaug , and The Battle of the Five Armies are a richer experience than memory suggests. The first film is the most faithful to the book’s spirit. Bilbo Baggins (Martin Freeman, perfection) is dragged from his hobbit-hole into a world of trolls, goblins, and riddles in the dark. The opening hour—set in Bag End, with dwarves arriving for an impromptu, chaotic dinner party—is some of Jackson’s best work. It’s cozy chaos. Watching all three in a row, a theme

Now excuse me—I have a sudden craving for seed cakes and a quiet night in. 🌿

Yes, the molten gold statue is ridiculous. But the dragon’s rage as he flies toward Laketown? Pure cinema. The shortest film in the series is also the darkest. Thorin Oakenshield (Richard Armitage) succumbs to “dragon sickness”—a gold-induced madness that turns him cold, suspicious, and cruel. His redemption arc, culminating in the silent, snowy charge at Ravenhill, is heartbreaking. When he whispers “If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier place” —that’s Tolkien’s soul speaking.