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Azog tells Bolg to head to Gundabad and ready their other army. Following Bolg to the fortress of Gundabad, Legolas and Tauriel see Bolg with another army of Orcs and hundreds of war-bred bats. They decide to return to Lake-town to warn the others.
When Thranduil's army arrives in Dale, he forges an allegiance with Bard to claim a necklace of white gems from Thorin's treasure. Though Bard attempts to reason with Thorin to avoid further bloodshed, the stubborn dwarf refuses to listen, to his company's dismay. As they prepare for the battle, Thorin gives Bilbo a mithril vest. Thorin begins to talk like Smaug, telling Bilbo that he will never share the treasure with Bard and Thranduil, not wanting to part with a single coin.
Inside the camp, Thranduil reminds Gandalf that he is the one who started all this and he will finish it. The next day, the Elf army and the armed people of Lake-town gather at the entrance of the Lonely Mountain. Thranduil and Bard ride at the front, where Thorin threatens to kill them if they get any closer. Bard unveils the Arkenstone at the gates of Erebor.
Thorin refuses to believe them, thinking it was a ruse, until Bilbo reveals he gave it to them. Bilbo admits he wanted to give it to Thorin, but nonetheless, chides the dwarf for letting Greed corrupt him and cloud his judgement. Enraged, Thorin orders the Dwarves to throw Bilbo from the Rampart, which they refuse.
Thorin instead decides to kill Bilbo himself. Luckily, Gandalf approaches at the front with Bard and Thranduil, telling Thorin to return the hobbit to him. The other Dwarves hold off their leader so Bilbo can escape down the wall to Gandalf. Meanwhile, Alfrid takes a pile of treasure and escapes the battlefield, with Bard permitting him to do so.
Inside the Lonely Mountain, Thorin eventually overcomes his madness after a lengthy hallucination. At the same time, after being banished by Thranduil despite her and Legolas warning him of Bolg's army, Legolas and Tauriel set off for Ravenhill with Bilbo following to warn the Dwarves of the second Orc army.
But he is too late. After Legolas kills Bolg, the Great Eagles arrive, led by Radagast and Beorn , to assist in the battle, quickly decimating the Orc army. When Bilbo regains consciousness, he finds that Thorin has killed Azog but was mortally wounded in the process and dies soon after making his peace with the hobbit. Bilbo bids farewell to the surviving members of Thorin's company, telling them they are welcome to join him for tea whenever they are in the Shire , to which he returns with Gandalf.
As they part on the outskirts of the Shire, Gandalf reveals that he knows of the Ring that Bilbo found in the Goblin tunnels though unaware that it was the One Ring before they part ways on good terms. Bilbo's story ends when he returns to Bag End and finds the Sackville-Bagginses are auctioning off his belongings and are about to sell his house. The scene transitions to Bilbo on the day of his th birthday when he receives a visit from Gandalf, ending where the The Fellowship of the Ring begins.
The film's world premiere took place on December 1st, in Leicester Square, London. Many of the cast members were there, and the event reportedly went very well. The film was well received by those in attendance, and many critics praised the film's visuals, acting, and action sequences, while some also expressed criticism on the short length of the film.
Financially, the film was a success, earning over million in North America and another million overseas for a total of over million US dollars. Critically, the film was less well-received, with many critics complaining about the film's perceived shortcomings in terms of plot and pacing. Explore Wikis Community Central. Register Don't have an account? View source.
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How did you buy your ticket? View All Videos 3. View All Photos Movie Info. Having reclaimed Erebor and vast treasure from the dragon Smaug, Thorin Oakenshield Richard Armitage sacrifices friendship and honor in seeking the Arkenstone, despite Smaug's fiery wrath and desperate attempts by the Hobbit Bilbo Martin Freeman to make him see reason. Meanwhile, Sauron sends legions of Orcs in a sneak attack upon the Lonely Mountain.
As the fate of Middle Earth hangs in the balance, the races of Men, Elves and Dwarves must decide whether to unite and prevail -- or all die. Adventure, Fantasy, Action. Peter Jackson. Dec 17, wide. Apr 8, Warner Bros. Datasat, Dolby Digital. Lord of The Rings. Ian McKellen Gandalf. Martin Freeman Bilbo. Richard Armitage Thorin Oakenshield. Evangeline Lilly Tauriel. Lee Pace Thranduil.
Luke Evans Bard. Benedict Cumberbatch Smaug Voice. Ken Stott Balin. James Nesbitt Bofur. Cate Blanchett Galadriel. Ian Holm Old Bilbo. Christopher Lee Saruman. Hugo Weaving Elrond. Orlando Bloom Legolas. Stephen Fry Master of Laketown. Peter Jackson Director. Fran Walsh Screenwriter. Philippa Boyens Screenwriter.
Peter Jackson Screenwriter. Guillermo del Toro Screenwriter. Alan Horn Executive Producer. Toby Emmerich Executive Producer. Ken Kamins Executive Producer. Carolyn Blackwood Executive Producer. Carolynne Cunningham Producer. Zane Weiner Producer. Fran Walsh Producer. Peter Jackson Producer. Andrew Lesnie Cinematographer.
Jabez Olssen Film Editor. Howard Shore Original Music. Dan Hennah Production Design. Richard Taylor Costume Designer. Bob Buck Costume Designer. Ann Maskrey Costume Designer. View All Critic Reviews Dec 09, Pretty solid. Much longer than it needs to be, but this is a really entertaining watch, and it wraps up the storyline pretty nicely. Stephen S Super Reviewer. Jun 15, Here we are, the final chapter in this blatantly over-milked adaptation of the Tolkien Hobbit book.
If you've been following this franchise up to this point stupid thing to say really then you'll know this movie completes the story arc for Smaug the dragon, Bard and Thorin. Sauron himself pops up along with Saruman to hint at what is to come in the follow up trilogy, after freeing Gandalf, but as the title suggests the main crux of this movie centres around the battle at Lonely Mountain for the treasures deep within.
The most impressive part of this entire movie is right at the start, the destruction of Laketown by Smaug. Whether or not you agree that this sequence should have been at the end of the second movie is no longer of importance really, we all know it should have been. Nevertheless this sequence is mightily impressive with full-on dragon kickassery as Smaug swoops down, back n forth, carpet-bombing the town with a tsunami of fiery death.
Even though we have witnessed much death and destruction in these movies up to this point, there is something quite brutal and genuinely terrifying about this slaughter. Alas its all brought to a stupid conclusion with the way Smaug is brought down, one black arrow hitting one small chink in the dragons armour. I believe this is in the original book but the way it plays out on the big screen just feels totally unachievable, even for a fantasy film.
What's more, this entire sequence is the climax of the original book, yet here its all done and dusted before the opening credits. From this point onwards its merely a case of Jackson moving the various chess pieces into position for the long drawn out CGI battle at Lonely Mountain.
Unfortunately that is exactly what makes up the rest of this movie, an elf army turns up to help the people of Laketown and retrieve a precious elven item from the mountain. There is already an army of men led by Bard, there are a couple of orc armies marching to the mountain, and a dwarf army arrives on the scene too.
There is virtually no plot here, its quite simply What little else you see is basically padding and invented for the purpose of the movie. Lets get gritty, the battles, that's what its all about, how good are these battle sequences. Well first off we've all seen the LoTR's trilogy and the previous two Hobbit movies, so basically we've all seen this before. No I'm not being harsh, this movie actually feels like a rehash with the same CGI battles over and over, nothing new, its been done to death by Jackson and co now, battle fatigue much!
The CGI in question looks pretty bad too, I kid you not, its like the quality is basically about on par with the original trilogy or worse! LoTR's trilogy finished in Seriously there was very little here that actually jumped out at me, accept for the Smaug devastation at the start, everything else just felt like watching solid videogame sequences again.
To make matters worse the greenscreen was horribly obvious throughout, obvious and everywhere. In general, I think watching masses and masses of CGI men, elves, orcs and a variety of beasties, clash in a clinically sterile CGI arena or environment, has just become tiresome. Yes I know everything does have an aged, weather-beaten appearance but it still doesn't detract from the shiny plastic looking visuals and rag doll effects we get with CGI.
What really amazes me though is how this movie franchise never seems to grow up, the amount of deus ex-machina bullshit that still goes on is mind numbing. Time and time again various characters could and should be killed outright but the enemy pauses, or uses a non-lethal blow, or falls over, or gets shot with an arrow by someone else at the last second etc It really becomes a joke, the entire climax for the this movie is one big deus ex-machina, everything that Legolas does is a continuous deus ex-machina moment The battle ground is quite flat and expansive, so where on earth is Azog standing because from his viewpoint its right over the top of the battlefield.
Oh and how do orcs control Were-worms??
After reaching Erebor and encountering the dragon Smaug, Five Armies assemble for an epic battle that could decide the future of all in Middle-earth. The "Five Armies" are the Elves, the Men, the Dwarves, the Goblins (and Wargs) and the Eagles. Bilbo estimates the force of the Men and Elves on. The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies brings to an epic conclusion the adventures of Bilbo Baggins, Thorin Oakenshield and the Company of.