THE HOBBIT: AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY (2012) MOVIE REACTION - FIRST TIME WATCHING - REVIEW

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  • čas přidán 22. 03. 2024
  • Welcome to our first-time watching as we react to The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey (2012). It's only been a couple of weeks since we saw The Lord of the Rings and we already missed Middle-earth. So glad we still had yet to witness the thrilling adventures of Bilbo Baggins.
    Directed by Peter Jackson, "The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey" follows the humble hobbit Bilbo Baggins as he joins a group of dwarves on a quest to reclaim their homeland from the fearsome dragon Smaug.
    There is a lot of elements we enjoyed in this film. Getting to see a lot of the stories mentioned throughout "The Lord of the Rings" and how it all went down was exciting and we were thrilled to see how incredible Martin Freeman was as Bilbo.
    We loved that the themes of friendship and courage are present here and how they take this opportunity to expand a bit more on the history and lore of Middle-earth. There were other elements that were missed, quite frankly some of the aesthetic choices especially with the things that used to be practical and are now CGI.
    We hope that you enjoy our reactions, commentary and discussions as we delve into the film's themes and how it impacted the fantasy genre. How it's connection to the incredible "Lord of the Rings" trilogy made this such an enjoyable experience and how they continue to show the pure genius and innovation of J.R.R Tolkien who singlehandedly changed the landscape of what fantasy was as a genre and what could be achieved.
    The Lord of the Rings Trilogy Movie Reactions: • The Lord of the Rings ...
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    Watch our reactions early! / @officialmediaknights
    #TheHobbitAnUnexpectedJourney #Reaction #TheMediaKnights
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Komentáře • 1,3K

  • @OfficialMediaKnights
    @OfficialMediaKnights  Před měsícem +133

    Hey guys! Thank you so much for watching this with us and for the immense support these past weeks with "The Lord of the Rings". If you enjoyed this reaction leave a like and subscribe and if you'd like to support the channel and gain access to the full length reaction become a member of our patreon bit.ly/3ICVrJ6
    Watch our reactions early! czcams.com/channels/iCUz1bHid4H9mu6g2IOjXg.htmljoin
    The Lord of the Rings Reactions: czcams.com/play/PL3SJLuUxsbvOFsw7ljGojEx-JijBoLrjl.html

    • @bryanprime3438
      @bryanprime3438 Před měsícem +5

      Where in Middle-Earth would you two choose to live? I'd live in either the Shire, Rohan or Rivendell

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Před měsícem +10

      @bryanprime3438 Excellent question! We both think we’d choose Rivendell! It’s just so beautiful and ethereal.

    • @jebVlogs556
      @jebVlogs556 Před měsícem +4

      @@OfficialMediaKnights the dead marshs I would claim 📔 📚, since no one, not even tbe dark creatures like goblins,orcs not even the nazgul would want to be there.. "than i would enchant 12 miles of in a circle." That I can have peace and quiet 🤫

    • @marcusfridh8489
      @marcusfridh8489 Před měsícem +1

      Shire, Rohan or Lothlorien here

    • @P4GYY
      @P4GYY Před měsícem

      Don't worry guys, Hobbit's 3 movies are actually decent, and theres still the bullshit 'rings of power' newish tv show to emerse you in the tolkein world, although its nowhere near as good, it still gives u the LOTR feel a bit.

  • @charlesbarnes6912
    @charlesbarnes6912 Před měsícem +731

    I think Martin Freeman did an amazing job as young Bilbo

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Před měsícem +50

      We really enjoyed seeing him as Bilbo! So glad we got to know the character a little bit better!

    • @phj223
      @phj223 Před měsícem +35

      @@OfficialMediaKnights I mean for all the criticism the Hobbit trilogy got (and I agree with most of it), it is worth watching solely for Martin Freeman's portrayal of young Bilbo. He was an absolute gem in this.

    • @davidperkins6752
      @davidperkins6752 Před měsícem

      @@phj223 totally agree with this comment! also, i think if you're able to watch "the Hobbit" movies in isolation from the previous movies and try not to worry to much about the source material, you can enjoy them for what they are! it's a tall order but it's doable.

    • @kellypedersen9896
      @kellypedersen9896 Před měsícem +16

      Iam Holm (RIP) wanted to try and reprise his role as a younger Bilbo, but his health prevented him from doing so. You're right, though; Freeman did do a bang-up job with this.

    • @Babawze
      @Babawze Před měsícem +4

      You wot....?

  • @kingscorpion7346
    @kingscorpion7346 Před měsícem +355

    in The Fellowship of the Ring, at the beginning when Frodo was riding with Gandalf and they're talking, when Gandalf said, "If you're referring to the dragon, I was barely involved..." Gandalf was referring to this story.

  • @crimson_nimbus
    @crimson_nimbus Před měsícem +392

    "I'M GOING ON AN ADVENTURE!" Me, every time someone asks me where I'm going

    • @joshuacoldwater
      @joshuacoldwater Před měsícem +10

      😂- ME

    • @theevilascotcompany9255
      @theevilascotcompany9255 Před měsícem +11

      To be fair, the parking lot at Target lately is a lot like Mordor.

    • @Cyproduction
      @Cyproduction Před měsícem +6

      "Are you going to the toilet?"
      "YES, I'M GOING ON AN ADVENTURE!"

    • @01802fenix
      @01802fenix Před měsícem

      czcams.com/video/KMvYoDLpTkU/video.htmlsi=ceOc8vQdIk8ZdZc4

    • @01802fenix
      @01802fenix Před měsícem

      PLEASE WHATCH THIS TRAILER

  • @jeanabradbury3766
    @jeanabradbury3766 Před měsícem +258

    When Gandalf tells Bilbo "Home is behind, the world's ahead." is call back to Pippin's song he sings for the Steward of Gondor.

    • @Artnotforthesakeofart
      @Artnotforthesakeofart Před měsícem +16

      ...and there are maaaaany paaaaths to tread...

    • @tortepasti2
      @tortepasti2 Před měsícem +9

      oh wow, i never realized that but the moment i sang the words i got it.

    • @DarklightNamari
      @DarklightNamari Před měsícem +8

      @@Artnotforthesakeofart Through shadow.. to the edge of night!

    • @anacarolmsc
      @anacarolmsc Před měsícem +3

      Until the stars are all alight

    • @jawo8754
      @jawo8754 Před měsícem +5

      BTW Billy Boyd, Pippin in LOTR, wrote and sang “The Last Goodbye” in Hobbit: Battle of the Five Armies.

  • @blinkachu5275
    @blinkachu5275 Před měsícem +116

    "I didn't know Bilbo interacted with Gollum"
    If you remember in the Fellowship of the Ring, Frodo says to Gandalf "it's a pity Bilbo didn't kill Gollum when he had the chance", to which Gandalf replies "Pity? It was pity that stayed Bilbo's blade. Many that live deserve death. Some that die deserve life. Can you give it to them, Frodo? Do not be too eager to deal out death in judgment. Even the very wise cannot see all ends. My heart tells me that Gollum has some part to play in it, for good or evil, before this is over. The pity of Bilbo may rule the fate of many."
    In other words:
    Bilbo did meet Gollum, but also, Bilbo choosing to not kill Gollum is in large part the reason why Middle Earth was saved in the end ^^;
    Butterfly effect and all that

    • @FrenchieQc
      @FrenchieQc Před měsícem

      "I didn't know Bilbo interacted with Gollum"
      I think she meant it more as, she didn't know they had an actual conversation together, because she mentions later that line from Gandalf about pity staying Bilbo's hand.

    • @noahm6782
      @noahm6782 Před 14 dny

      That profile pic reminded me of some animations I'd rather forget

  • @davezwieback4208
    @davezwieback4208 Před měsícem +189

    Let‘s not forget that Tolkien wrote the Hobbit as a bedtime story for his kids in 1936. The Lord of the Rings came out in 1954.

    • @wal6377
      @wal6377 Před měsícem +10

      my understanding is that (yes, while he made it as a bedtime story for his kids) it was originally started based one of his student's paper that started out "In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit. Not a nasty, dirty, wet hole, filled with the ends of worms and an oozy smell, nor yet a dry, bare, sandy hole with nothing in it to sit down on or to eat: it was a hobbit-hole, and that means comfort."
      Also, while it was published in '37, it was started in 1930. just saying.

    • @torontomame
      @torontomame Před měsícem +9

      ​@wal6377 If I recall correctly, Tolkien was bored while grading papers, and wrote "In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit" on one of them.

    • @Cinerary
      @Cinerary Před měsícem +4

      @@wal6377yeah nah. He didn’t steal the hobbit idea from one of his students, he wrote that himself, while he was at home

    • @wal6377
      @wal6377 Před měsícem

      @@torontomame
      Someone else also said it was Tolkien's own creation. I read it differently in one of his books. I think it was in a preface from Tolkien's son. I'm going back 50 years ago, and while my memory can be spotty at times nowadays, I don't make things up. I trust you believe your story as much as I believe mine.

    • @ericpeterson9110
      @ericpeterson9110 Před měsícem +1

      I think that's why I dont really mind the more cartoonish tone of the hobbit films. While it's not a childlike story it is written to be more child friendly, and we see that in the way it's structured with much smaller bite sized encounters that can easily fit into 10-20 mins of bed time reading.
      I think people came into this series wanting LOTR 2, but the Hobbit is not LOTR. It's set in the same world and there might be common themes and story ties but ultimately It's very different in terms of tone and structure.

  • @peterdennis4394
    @peterdennis4394 Před měsícem +238

    I don't care what some critics say, I enjoy the Hobbit films. Are they as epic or deep as LOTR? Nope. But they are still a lot of fun. Was Legolas in the book? Nope. But it makes sense he was there somewhere, being that it was his father's kingdom. I could go on, but my point is while I understand the criticism, I don't let it get in the way of my enjoyment.

    • @Taewills
      @Taewills Před měsícem +26

      I agree with you! And the more I watched them the more I grew to appreciate them.
      Also Tolkien died before he could tie a lot of characters / events together. Some things we never saw or read that Christopher added & built on. The Hobbit was an oral bedtime story he told his children so even though the publisher didn’t put it in the final book doesn’t mean they didn’t exist. Azog for example wasn’t part of the story but gave the orcs personality, goals, motives adding him in as Thorin’s rival.
      So purists should really take the time to think about it. As a writer I have hundreds of pages of notes, background info that didn’t make the edit and plan to put in a different book or appendix. We just don’t know.

    • @hadesmcfadden2982
      @hadesmcfadden2982 Před měsícem +10

      thank you for saying this! fully agree.

    • @SuperMonkeeGirl
      @SuperMonkeeGirl Před měsícem +8

      10000% this. I saw this movie 8 times in the theater when it came out

    • @seregrian5675
      @seregrian5675 Před měsícem +7

      @@Taewills Exactly, fellow author! One must recall that ALL of the History of Middle-earth, Morgoth's Ring, and the rest of the published writings, were the rough drafts and the deleted scenes that did not make it into the final draft. Chris Tolkien dumped it onto a starving fanbase, and to this day fans take sides and die on hills they shouldn't.

    • @Taewills
      @Taewills Před měsícem +6

      @@seregrian5675 right? There’s so much language about butchering the published material when - 1. It doesn’t have to be identical to be deemed a great adaptation. 2. The public doesn’t know what they think they know. And 3. Sometimes the source material can be improved upon, honestly. There can be dull or bland portions of a book I adore that get changed on-screen for the better.

  • @jimreichers7196
    @jimreichers7196 Před měsícem +604

    It's entertaining, people need to remember the lord of the rings was based off of 3 books, the hobbit is only 1 book that isn't even 300 pages

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Před měsícem +153

      Right, it feels like the common consensus is that this did not need to be three movies...

    • @spitsfreeman
      @spitsfreeman Před měsícem +22

      Then they should have made it one film.

    • @TheBeastInBlack
      @TheBeastInBlack Před měsícem +89

      If it was just one movie a lot of stuff would have been missed out. I think two movies would have been fine. Cut out all the extra fluff the mocies threw in.

    • @Jester343
      @Jester343 Před měsícem +17

      ​@@spitsfreeman Damn right they should've. Although Hollywood started to care more about profits a hell of a lot than during the LOTR.

    • @hussain1921
      @hussain1921 Před měsícem +16

      it was the studios fault

  • @mustlearnmore4884
    @mustlearnmore4884 Před měsícem +58

    Something you may have missed in The Fellowship of the Ring: Extended Edition) is that just after Frodo was stabbed in the shoulder on Weathertop and Aragorn is trying to treat the poison from the Morgul blade, they're actually next to the stone trolls that were still there after so many years. Sam even says "Look Mr. Frodo, it's Mr. Bilbo's trolls!"

    • @davidareeves
      @davidareeves Před měsícem +2

      This is the magic of it all, great story telling and bring little gems back the more you watch and realise!

  • @lordmortarius538
    @lordmortarius538 Před měsícem +88

    You have to understand that Smaug is literally the LEAST of dragons. Compared to the largest of all he is the size of an ant. Ancalagon the Black was so massive that when he was finally defeated during the War of Wrath in the First Age and his corpse cast upon the three volcanic peaks of Thangorodrim (that Morgoth had built his fortress of Angband underneath), he crushed them utterly. The Elves were POWERFUL back in the day.
    Dragons also seek out/build treasure hoards because gold is a soft metal, but to a dragon's scales, it's _just_ the right softness to make a bed out of. It also attracts the occasional adventurer snack too :P
    Goblins are a degenerate form of Orc, mutated and devolved by their time spent wholly underground.

    • @l0sts0ul89
      @l0sts0ul89 Před měsícem +2

      Must've used a REALLY big gun

    • @ordinary6
      @ordinary6 Před měsícem +1

      I love that there are fans of the LOTL lore and story like you. I wish I was like that.

    • @lordmortarius538
      @lordmortarius538 Před měsícem +3

      @@l0sts0ul89From the Silmarillion: "Eärendil came, shining with white flame, and about Vingilótë were gathered all the great birds of heaven and Thorondor was their captain, and there was battle in the air all the day and through a dark night of doubt. Before the rising of the sun Eärendil slew Ancalagon the Black, the mightiest of the dragon-host ..."
      Eärendil already had the Silmaril set upon his brow, blazing with the light of the stars before the First Age began, which has a _significant_ effect on the servants of Morgoth, at the least weakening the great fire-drake. Thorondor was there also, the greatest servant of Manwë who was King of the Valar, and his eagles would have been able to inflict severe harm upon the dragon (recall the Battle of Yavin 4 from Star Wars, sure the Death Star was powerful, but a swarm of smaller ships took it down). Elvish weapons were also quite powerful (Glamdring and Orcrist, the two swords Gandalf finds in the Hobbit, were forged in Gondolin approximately 7000 years prior and showed no sign of age or wear), and so Eärendil would have been able to inflict some serious wounds with his blade. He was also likely empowered by the Valar, as it was his courage in sailing to Aman to plead for their aid against their former brother that inspired them to gather their host and join the battle.

    • @lordmortarius538
      @lordmortarius538 Před měsícem +4

      @@ordinary6Thank you, that means a lot :) It's not just LOTR, it's many scifi and fantasy realms. I'm a tremendous lore nerd, I eat it up, primarily because our own world's history is so drab and boring.

    • @ggez5890
      @ggez5890 Před měsícem

      Leave it to a Britain to make the biggest baddest most dangerous monster to be black

  • @MannyBrum
    @MannyBrum Před měsícem +32

    One of the things with the Hobbit, and probably the main issue, is that it was originally supposed to be directed by someone else and Peter Jackson only came in at the last minute, he was sick at the time, and he only had one month to prepare. They ended up doing a rewrite of the original script and they couldn't spend as much time before shooting as they did with LotR. In LotR they spend many many months creating props and even planting the crops you see in the Shire, waiting for them to grow, etc. In the Hobbit, they had to lean heavily on CGI in no small part because of this. Had New Line Cinema not tried to keep some of the money they owed Peter Jackson for LotR leading him to have to sue them, and he was part of the project from the start, the movies would have been much much better. Even he wishes that it had been different, but all he had to decide was what to do with the time that was given him.

    • @Starr1Bryte
      @Starr1Bryte Před měsícem +8

      It was Guillermo del Torro who was supposed to direct the Hobbit Movies. I think he's still listed in the credits because he did stay on to help out with some of it. At least that's what I heard.

    • @anacarolmsc
      @anacarolmsc Před měsícem +8

      @MannyBrum I see what you did there in the last sentence 💜 Yeah, you summed it up very well. In the end, I'm glad we had these films.

    • @redcrabdue1787
      @redcrabdue1787 Před 21 hodinou

      ​​​@@Starr1Bryte Del Toro is credited as a Co-screenwriter because he originally worked on the scripts with Jackson, Walsh and Boyens while being set as the director and some of his ideas survived after he left the project, even though the scripts were heavily re-written by Jackson & Co., when Jackson came on board as director and during filming. As far as I remember they also wanted to honor him with a credit line because he did so much work (1,5 years of pre-production).
      It's really a shame. When Jackson came on board and started everything from scratch the studios only gave him 4 months of pre-production because they had already invested a lot of money and therefore wanted to start filming fast. But this really was to the detriment of these films.

  • @Subuwu
    @Subuwu Před měsícem +152

    Fact of the day -
    Gloin, one of the dwarves in the company is Gimlis father.

    • @beautifulbliss5883
      @beautifulbliss5883 Před měsícem +30

      Goblin Mutant. I'm sorry I couldn't resist, I busted laughing in theatres when I heard that. 😂😂😂😂

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Před měsícem +31

      It WAS Gloin 😭😭😭

    • @craigdankovich7607
      @craigdankovich7607 Před měsícem +28

      I mean you could’ve waited one movie for that to be answered but sure spoil it lmao

    • @KatabaticPlays
      @KatabaticPlays Před měsícem +23

      ​@@OfficialMediaKnights Also Balin was the one entombed in Moria.

    • @TheWeedEclipse
      @TheWeedEclipse Před měsícem +17

      @@KatabaticPlays and Ori the owner of the journal Gandalf picks from his body, when he quotes ''they are coming...''

  • @KatabaticPlays
    @KatabaticPlays Před měsícem +39

    I've been to Hobbiton in New Zealand and got to do Bilbo's "I'm goin on an Adventure" line while running through the same path. Awesome time. We then had an actual feast at the Green Dragon Inn there as part of our tour. Absolutely recommend if anyone can get down there.

  • @cwardfilms
    @cwardfilms Před měsícem +7

    Anyone complaining how this one book is 3 movies will turn around and watch a tv series where each season is based off one book. Lol, people are silly. There’s enough in hobbit to be 3 movies or a season of a series. So I love that he spread it out so nothing was left out

  • @tigqc
    @tigqc Před měsícem +51

    @17:16 this scene was invented for the movie and serves as the "nudge" Gandalf mentions to Frodo during their first scene in The Fellowship of the Ring. "If you're referring to the business with the dragon, I was barely involved. All I did was give your uncle a little nudge out of the door." In the book, The Hobbit, Gandalf literally did nudge Bilbo out the door to catch up with the dwarves. When they were busy adapting the book into screenplay form, they decided to have Gandalf give Bilbo a metaphorical nudge instead so that Bilbo then makes up his own mind to go after the dwarves the next morning. A stronger character moment for him.

  • @P-M-869
    @P-M-869 Před měsícem +33

    In the Fellowship of the Rings movie they stopped where the 3 trolls were turned to stone. I think it was Sam who said these must be Bilbos 3 Trolls. Actually, the Lord of the Rings made call backs to this timeframe. Since this occurred first. Gollum was not a Hobbit, but a River Folk, who are similar to the Hobbits.

  • @nutbra694
    @nutbra694 Před měsícem +28

    So, Balin is the dwarf whose tomb it was they found in Moria in Fellowship of the Ring. Not a spoiler since he was named in LotR. There are more but I don’t want to spoil anything for the next two movies.

    • @julianmarpez3931
      @julianmarpez3931 Před měsícem +6

      And Ori is the one who was holding the book, lying in the same tomb

    • @casi77
      @casi77 Před měsícem +3

      And Gloin is Gimli's father.

  • @GranpaMike
    @GranpaMike Před měsícem +24

    Naysayers are a sad lot, full of dark counsel for all who are foolish enough to listen. I first read THE HOBBIT when I was 8 years old and I now find myself to be an old man. My many journeys into Middle-Earth has made me quite fond of the place, and I would share with you one thing that I have learned. Those who sit around a grand table and the feast spread out upon it will find some foods to their liking more so than others. Some will prefer mutton to beef, some will find the baked yams more tasty than the mashed potatoes. But this is the thing... when your table is Middle-Earth, everything is a delight, and any chance you have to sit at it is a blessing, indeed. In your feast, there are still two more courses ahead, and you will assuredly enjoy them both.

  • @kobarsos82
    @kobarsos82 Před měsícem +14

    I'll be honest the gollum scene is absolutely freaking amazing and is by far the best portrayed moment from the hobbit book too. They took a lot of liberties with this trilogy, at not following the book, however not on this scene. Chapter was called Riddles in the dark and I have no words at how much perfection they hit with it for the cinema screen. Mindblowing, speechless !
    A real treat like you guys said! Hail Andy Serkis the real goat!

  • @marcelmartin7424
    @marcelmartin7424 Před měsícem +14

    I love watching your comments because you notice everything. Camera angles, score, make-up artist work, costumes and so on. I like that you make connections to Lord of the Rings, recognize things and see a story. And I promise you, the other two Hobbit parts are epic. Especially in the extended version.

  • @SpOoNmAn365
    @SpOoNmAn365 Před měsícem +162

    These Hobbit movies get hate that isn't deserved. Nothing in that world could ever match the og 3. But they are great and entertaining.

    • @Reqwulf
      @Reqwulf Před měsícem +1

      The first one its almost perfect for me, second and third one could have been done a lot better, but still kinda "ok" (how they changed the ending was not needed and cant take it tho).

    • @Taewills
      @Taewills Před měsícem +5

      @@ReqwulfI prefer the ending of the movies. Had they just stuck with the book ending it would’ve been so bland. PJ, Spielberg and Cameron are known for their action/thrilling sequences- it would’ve been a shame not to have an epic battle/ death or Thorin, Fili and Kili

    • @davidbellamy2612
      @davidbellamy2612 Před měsícem +7

      Have to disagree. Jackson admitted he was disappointed with what he created but had no choice once he took over the project with less than a year before the first film was to be released. It is a bloated mess without any feeling of actual jeopardy. Dwarves dropping 50 feet plus from collapsing bridges yet unharmed may work in a whimsical film more suited for kids but you just can't go from that to darker serious themes where people do die and expect to hold an audience. When are characters at risk? Answer - when it is needed to stir the audience and not because it was part of the characters arc.

    • @sandimcalisterblood2675
      @sandimcalisterblood2675 Před měsícem

      Well said

    • @Taewills
      @Taewills Před měsícem +8

      @@davidbellamy2612 dropping from a height and surviving without injuries happened multiple times in both books. So is your gripe with PJ or Tolkien?

  • @Starr1Bryte
    @Starr1Bryte Před měsícem +119

    A lot of people were really angry about how The Hobbit was stretched into a trilogy. But what Peter Jackson did was delve DEEP into the Appendices for Lord of the Rings and tie together a whole HEAPING spoonful of lore that doesn't get talked about. The Battle of Azanulbizar was one of the most tragic battles in Dwarven history and it's not in the main book. Thorin didn't just lose his Grandfather there he lost his little brother too... who Fili is the spitting image of. Radagast, The White Council, the importance of Erebor and Smaug, Gandalf's whole storyline isn't in the book of the Hobbit. It's in the Appendices of The Return of the King. That's because The Hobbit is written purely from Bilbo's point of view in a fairytale format. If Bilbo didn't see it or hear about it... it didn't get written.

    • @Weaslgas
      @Weaslgas Před měsícem +13

      no the third movie was a studio demand after they already half finished the second movie. there is even behind the secenes footage where the actors are even confused of how many movies they are making.

    • @roguechevelle
      @roguechevelle Před měsícem +9

      @@Weaslgas Exactly. The plan was 2 parts but the studio chose to make it 3. It was already expanded with the lore of other books because the Hobbit isn't a big book but then the studio demanded it be ballooned into 3. There are added things I do like but there are things added that are too much that don't add anything to the story. Peter was right to only plan for 2 parts, part 3 is just the studio getting greedy.

    • @julianmarpez3931
      @julianmarpez3931 Před měsícem +3

      He may have delved deep, but there was no need to add invented material to a story already convoluted. Changing Thrain's timeline, adding Azog instead of Bolg, that love story between one of the dwarves and an elf, the whole concept of stone giants...

    • @00Kuja00
      @00Kuja00 Před měsícem +1

      They did not delve deep. They made stuff up and chanegd things. That is not going deep.

  • @joshuawiedenbeck6944
    @joshuawiedenbeck6944 Před měsícem +51

    Sarumon and Gandalf have a long-standing rivalry between each other going back to when they were "angels." "God" asked for volunteers to go down to Middle Earth to help, and Sarumon volunteered immediately, wanting to go out and prove himself. Gandalf (whose real name is Olórin) did not volunteer and did not want to go. "God" then told Gandalf that he had to go, essentially hand-picking him for the mission. Sarumon has always resented Gandalf because of this event. Basically, Sarumon wants to be the best, but Gandalf is always a reminder that "God" wanted Gandalf.

    • @user-qm7up9ne7y
      @user-qm7up9ne7y Před měsícem +2

      *Saruman

    • @zacharyhooker8395
      @zacharyhooker8395 Před měsícem +9

      It was actually not god "Eru Ilúvatar" just his chief archangel "Manwë" in your metaphor.

    • @joshuawiedenbeck6944
      @joshuawiedenbeck6944 Před měsícem +3

      @@zacharyhooker8395 Thanks for the clarification. I get a bit fuzzy when it comes to the deep lore.

    • @brianrussell6570
      @brianrussell6570 Před měsícem +2

      god meaning Illuvitar

  • @marieclaudeb.2366
    @marieclaudeb.2366 Před měsícem +25

    Hints and suspicion are high that Sauron is trying to return and Gandalf is afraid that Erebor and the dragon could fall to him. On the other hand, taking back Erebor would be a strategic move to control the upper parts of the woods and the mountain crossing to the west.. ❤ I love that you guys are still diving into this, I’m here for the adventure!🎉

    • @julianmarpez3931
      @julianmarpez3931 Před měsícem

      Yep, Gandalf is always trying to crush any potential ally for Sauron. That's why he left the Fellowship in Moria to defeat the Durin's Bane, after all

  • @CrownlessKing88
    @CrownlessKing88 Před měsícem +9

    They WERE the trolls Bilbo told the story of. And then you see them later after Frodo gets stabbed by the Nazgûl and they stop to rest. Sam says “look Mr. Frodo, it’s Mr. Bilbo’s Trolls!”.

  • @MelFright
    @MelFright Před měsícem +15

    16:24 Gandalf has a history with Baggins and Took family. He chose Bilbo for a reason.
    32:16 Thats the story that Bilbo was telling at the beginning of the LOTR.

    • @l0sts0ul89
      @l0sts0ul89 Před měsícem

      So what connection does he has with his family?

  • @sarveshsoomaroo3658
    @sarveshsoomaroo3658 Před měsícem +19

    I am glad you guys are not taking what others have said about the hobbit to form your opinion. The hobbit is honestly really good, and it may not be as good as lord of the rings, but what is? it is a very good trilogy and I love it so much!

  • @Ozai75
    @Ozai75 Před měsícem +14

    One of the most BS of things about this series was that they'd signed Guillermo del Toro as the director, but the heads at New Line Cinema had changed and the new guy wanted Peter Jackson to do it and for it to be three films (Originally it was supposed to be just two)
    How they made Peter Jackson do it was because New Line was withholding most of his payments for LOTR and basically said "If you ever want to see that money and don't want to be tied up in legal issues for *decades* you're going to fire GDT and make these films.
    And of course instead of spending the time and budget needed to make these as tight and well made as LOTR, the set an incredibly short deadline so tons and tons of corners had ro be cut.
    TLDR: Bullshit Corporations choosing maximizing Profits over Making Art. A tale as old as time.

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Před měsícem +6

      Another example of this bs affecting the creative teams. Such a shame. Peter Jackson really did his best with what he was given.

    • @Ozai75
      @Ozai75 Před měsícem +1

      @@OfficialMediaKnights Yup. It's never about the art for those suits. It's always about ROI and Growth over last week/months/year.

    • @joshuawiedenbeck6944
      @joshuawiedenbeck6944 Před měsícem +5

      It's basically the opposite of what happened for the original trilogy. When they screened the rough draft for LOTR for the higher-ups, it was condensed to one movie, and one of the higher ups said, "Shouldn't something like this be 3 movies?" And then they started making the Hobbit (a one-book film), and one of the execs said "this HAS to be 3 movies."

    • @jayconant3816
      @jayconant3816 Před měsícem +3

      Yep so much studio interference on the whole project that they made peter Jackson suffer from massive stress both mentally and physically ill and made him lose a bunch of weight I'm glad he got better afterwards

  • @TheArgiShow
    @TheArgiShow Před měsícem +49

    This movie has some fantastic cinematography! The teaser shots a Smaug in the intro is one of my favorites.
    The rune that Gandalf marks Bilbo's door with is the old Norse rune for "F", which was used for the God Frey. The God of, among other things, prosperity and good weather. Given the adventure upon which they are about to embark, is quite appropriate.
    The troll scene is indeed the story Bilbo was telling the young Hobbits at his party.
    Also, in the book, the Great Eagle Gandalf is riding is named Guaihir(sp?) Lord of the Eagles. Gandalf asks them if they might take them to their destination at Erabor, but he basically says he's not a horse to be ridden but will take him part of the way there. This is also the reason they never use the Eagles in the LOTR.
    I think most of the vitriol around this trilogy stems from the fact that it is one book stretched across three movies. They do change/add several characters, even some that are not present in the book. But that is more an issue with the production company pushing it on Peter Jackson. But it's still a great movie trilogy.

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Před měsícem +18

      Ohhhh yes, the film just has a stunning look!! Knowing this is the first one, we did have a great time, but can also understand the frustrations of the fans who actually know the source material.
      It's always disheartening when a director, especially one like Jackson who has more than proven his aptitude toward the LOTR, doesn't get proper creative control. And it looks like the changes that were pushed onto him were not received all that well, it's just a shame...
      Thank you for sharing the rest btw, we so appreciate you taking the time to teach us some more about the lore!

    • @Khadharphak
      @Khadharphak Před měsícem +12

      As far as I'm aware, Gwaihir and the eagles are essentially demigods, so makes sense they don't take kindly to being treated as ubers.

    • @fantasywind3923
      @fantasywind3923 Před měsícem +3

      Funfact: in the book the mark on the door is something different, not a g rune but actually a special 'thief's mark':
      "“Pardon me,” he said, “if I have overheard words that you were saying. I don’t pretend to understand what you are talking about, or your reference to burglars, but I think I am right in believing” (this is what he called being on his dignity) “that you think I am no good. I will show you. I have no signs on my door-it was painted a week ago-, and I am quite sure you have come to the wrong house. As soon as I saw your funny faces on the door-step, I had my doubts. But treat it as the right one. Tell me what you want done, and I will try it, if I have to walk from here to the East of East and fight the wild Were-worms in the Last Desert. I had a great-great-great-grand-uncle once, Bullroarer Took, and-”
      “Yes, yes, but that was long ago,” said Gloin. “I was talking about you. And I assure you there is a mark on this door-the usual one in the trade, or used to be. Burglar wants a good job, plenty of Excitement and reasonable Reward, that’s how it is usually read. You can say Expert Treasure-hunter instead of Burglar if you like. Some of them do. It’s all the same to us. Gandalf told us that there was a man of the sort in these parts looking for a Job at once, and that he had arranged for a meeting here this Wednesday tea-time.”
      “Of course there is a mark,” said Gandalf. “I put it there myself. For very good reasons. You asked me to find the fourteenth man for your expedition, and I chose Mr. Baggins. Just let any one say I chose the wrong man or the wrong house, and you can stop at thirteen and have all the bad luck you like, or go back to digging coal.”
      :) hehe Tolkien even made a drawing of the hobbit hole door with the symbol. The g rune is used as s sort of personal signature of Gandalf in Lotr so it's alright too:
      "This has been handled recently,' he said. 'What do you think of these marks?'
      On the flat under-side Frodo saw some scratches:  G.III Runes. 'There seems to be a stroke, a dot, and three more strokes,' he said.
      'The stroke on the left might be a G-rune with thin branches,' said Strider. 'It might be a sign left by Gandalf, though one cannot be sure. The scratches are fine, and they certainly look fresh. But the marks might mean something quite different, and have nothing to do with us. Rangers use runes, and they come here sometimes.'"
      As for the Eagles well they too have their limitations, they are giant talking Eagles but still can be hurt, shot down from the sky and all that (in the book it is said that Gandalf once rescued the king of Eagles healing his arrow wound).
      The Eagle Gwaihir is Gandalf's friend who helps him out during events of Lord of the Rings:
      'And the Eagles of the Mountains went far and wide, and they saw many things: the gathering of wolves and the mustering of Orcs; and the Nine Riders going hither and thither in the lands; and they heard news of the escape of Gollum. And they sent a messenger to bring these tidings to me.
      'So it was that when summer waned, there came a night of moon, and Gwaihir the Windlord, swiftest of the Great Eagles, came unlooked-for to Orthanc; and he found me standing on the pinnacle. Then I spoke to him and he bore me away, before Saruman was aware.' ...
      '"How far can you bear me?" I said to Gwaihir.
      '"Many leagues," said he, "but not to the ends of the earth. I was sent to bear tidings not burdens."
      '"Then I must have a steed on land," I said....
      '"Then I will bear you to Edoras, where the Lord of Rohan sits in his halls," he said; "for that is not very far off." ...
      '"Are the Men of Rohan still to be trusted, do you think?" I said to Gwaihir, for the treason of Saruman had shaken my faith.
      '"They pay a tribute of horses," he answered, "and send many yearly to Mordor, or so it is said;1 but they are not yet under the yoke. But if Saruman has become evil, as you say, then their doom cannot be long delayed."'
      The Fellowship of the Ring, LoTR Book 2, Ch 2, The Council of Elrond
      In The Hobbit they rescue the company first out to stop the orcs and because they owe Gandalf:
      "The Lord of the Eagles would not take them anywhere near where men lived. “They would shoot at us with their great bows of yew,” he said, “for they would think we were after their sheep. And at other times they would be right. No! we are glad to cheat the goblins of their sport, and glad to repay our thanks to you, but we will not risk ourselves for dwarves in the southward plains.”
      “Very well,” said Gandalf. “Take us where and as far as you will! We are already deeply obliged to you. But in the meantime we are famished with hunger.” The Hobbit
      ...
      "“What is all this uproar in the forest tonight?” said the Lord of the Eagles. He was sitting, black in the moonlight, on the top of a lonely pinnacle of rock at the eastern edge of the mountains. “I hear wolves’ voices! Are the goblins at mischief in the woods?”
      He swept up into the air, and immediately two of his guards from the rocks at either hand leaped up to follow him. They circled up in the sky and looked down upon the ring of the Wargs, a tiny spot far far below. But eagles have keen eyes and can see small things at a great distance. The Lord of the Eagles of the Misty Mountains had eyes that could look at the sun unblinking, and could see a rabbit moving on the ground a mile below even in the moonlight. So though he could not see the people in the trees, he could make out the commotion among the wolves and see the tiny flashes of fire, and hear the howling and yelping come up faint from far beneath him. Also he could see the glint of the moon on goblin spears and helmets, as long lines of the wicked folk crept down the hillsides from their gate and wound into the wood.
      Eagles are not kindly birds. Some are cowardly and cruel. But the ancient race of the northern mountains were the greatest of all birds; they were proud and strong and noble-hearted. They did not love goblins, or fear them. When they took any notice of them at all (which was seldom, for they did not eat such creatures), they swooped on them and drove them shrieking back to their caves, and stopped whatever wickedness they were doing. The goblins hated the eagles and feared them, but could not reach their lofty seats, or drive them from the mountains.
      Tonight the Lord of the Eagles was filled with curiosity to know what was afoot; so he summoned many other eagles to him, and they flew away from the mountains, and slowly circling ever round and round they came down, down, down towards the ring of the wolves and the meeting-place of the goblins."

    • @TheArgiShow
      @TheArgiShow Před měsícem +2

      @fantasywind3923 I really need to read the books again! I do remember the bit from Aragorn on Weathertop, and Gandalf re-telling his story at the Council of Elrond. Thanks for the refresher!

    • @Taewills
      @Taewills Před měsícem +8

      @@Khadharphakyes lol!! And I think ppl who didn’t actually read the books don’t understand that the Eagles aren’t some tool for Gandalf to use whenever he wants. They’re intelligent and wise and ancient, very different from generalized animals. Especially since they can speak.

  • @beautifulbliss5883
    @beautifulbliss5883 Před měsícem +29

    This trilogy is good, but a lot of stuff should have been cut out, but Hollywood being what it is wanted a trilogy, meaning more 🤑, but this was supposed to be an adventure, Tolkein wrote for his son when he was a child. And those trolls you saw those in LOTR when the group and Aragorn was resting after Frodo got stabbed and was passing into the shadow realm, the troll statues are covered in green shrubs. The Necromancer goes by another name too, I'll leave it you guys to guys who it is. And you guys have never heard the metaphor you tell your children? "Oh thats not a thunderstorm, that's just stone giants fighting?" Sir, Christopher Lee was very sick by the time this trilogy came out, so much so that his doctor said he cannot fly, and so Peter Jackson filmed that round table meeting with Hugo, Sir Christopher, Cate Blanchett, Sir Ian in a set with green screen in England. And I can't wait for the second one cause it's my favorite, and played by one of my favorite top 10 actors. With that being said it's still cool to see more of the world.

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Před měsícem +8

      Holy crap, didn't know that!! Thanks for pointing these things out! We are so excited for the second one and to continue this journey, see where it takes us!

    • @joshuawiedenbeck6944
      @joshuawiedenbeck6944 Před měsícem +9

      Sir Christopher Lee and Peter Jackson had a falling out when Return of The King came out because Jackson had to cut all of Sarumons parts out of the movie for the theatrical cut. Luckily, they both made ammends and ended things as friends before Lee died.

  • @stoic0012
    @stoic0012 Před měsícem +12

    So glad y'all are watching the extended versions. It bugs me when reactors watch LoTR extended, but not The Hobbit. Love your reactions. Have Fun With the rest!!

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Před měsícem +3

      Thank you! Figured, we’d already watched the first trilogy in the same format and loved it. Thank you for watching these with us ❤️

  • @HC1701
    @HC1701 Před měsícem +7

    I feel fortunate to have seen all six films in the theater on opening day, culminating with watching all three Hobbit films in a marathon at our local theater when the third film dropped. I'm so happy you both are enjoying these and I'm glad you're both now addicted to Middle-earth.

    • @SuperMonkeeGirl
      @SuperMonkeeGirl Před měsícem +3

      Yes! I did this! I took the day off work and I think they started around 8am in the morning. What an amazing time that was

    • @HC1701
      @HC1701 Před měsícem +1

      @@SuperMonkeeGirl I actually started a new job the day after the marathon. I used the last of my cash to go see it.

    • @pip5667
      @pip5667 Před měsícem +1

      I was born barely a year after ROTK released, so I never saw the original trilogy in theaters, but I saw all 3 hobbit movies in theaters after reading the book as a lil kid and falling in love!

  • @amiraitallouache4377
    @amiraitallouache4377 Před měsícem +18

    In the Fellowship, Gandalf sits in front of the fire after Bilbo leaves the shire and when Frodo comes in he whispers "riddles in the dark". He's referring to Bilbo's game with Gollum

    • @Overlord734
      @Overlord734 Před měsícem +1

      It wasn't. It was a name of the chapter of the book. LotR movies actually included a lot of the chapter names as easter eggs.

  • @XionDarkblood13
    @XionDarkblood13 Před měsícem +15

    well, as far as your, very fair, criticisms go, a lot of it is just how different in tone The Hobbit and LOTR is. The Hobbit is a bedtime story for children. LOTR is an epic adventure. Even Tolkien tried to "rewrite" the Hobbit in the same tone as LOTR and gave up in frustration. His son recalls hearing a loud crash in his fathers office and when he checked on his dad, Tolkien had thrown his papers and book against the wall in frustration. SO imo Jackson is to be commended for doing such a great job translating the Hobbit story into a very similar tone to LOTR.
    Jacksons solution to changing the tone of the Hobbit story to a more "epic" style is to include a lot of what is going on in the background of the world as a whole. In the Hobbit things are very loosely alluded to as a vague hint of something going on, mainly to help Bilbo (and the audience) understand that the world is much bigger than their experience. In this trilogy, we get to see what is going on in the world rather than it just being alluded to. Jackson did an amazing job staying true to the actual timeline of Middle Earth. Small tweaks and changes were made but only where needed to fill in the blanks and details or to make it more "movie friendly". Like when he sped up the time between Gandalf and Frodo learning what the ring really was and when Frodo leaves the shire (in the book it was like 30 years or so between the Party and Frodo leaving the Shire).
    The lack of practical effects was most likely budget and time constraints. You will likely see people talk about Sir Ian McKellen breaking down on set and actually crying in frustration because he was acting in a green room, talking to tennis balls and thats not why he got into acting. A very sad thing and understandable. What most people forget to mention, or are just unaware, after that Jackson worked with McKellan and the rest of the crew to change their method of recording so that he could act and interact with actual people and Sir Ian McKellen was very happy with how things worked out. Also to cut modern recording a tiny amount of slack, Sir Ian is a classically trained actor from a different era. The man is an amazing human being and a wonderful person I am sure but we all can get a bit frustrated with changing times. Not to say he was in the wrong or anything but just remember that its not as simple as "CGI bad, practical good".
    So as for the lack of villain action... This is based on a relatively short book and is split into an epic trilogy. Some people complain about that but IMO its amazing to get to see the opposite side of things. Getting to learn and know characters a lot better because there is so much extra time to fill! Usually movies have to cut stuff out to fit into their timeframe but in this case we get way more character building and time to spend with these characters. The villain of the original book is Smaug. He's an evil dragon they have to go kill and thats about it. In making this an epic trilogy... Jackson had to get creative with villains and did so amazingly. In the next films. So any addressing the lack of clear villain and villains screentime would be spoilers. Also, I think the white council showed why, Gandalf thinks at least, there is a larger threat than Smaug going on. And maybe rewatch that intro with Smaug taking down two kingdoms in an afternoon to understand why a dragon is a pretty big threat that should be dealt with. lol Though I do understand what you guys meant. There is a lack of urgency or at least it feels that way.
    Overall I am so happy when people watch and enjoy the Hobbit! Especially when they have an open mind to it. It really gets a lot of undeserved negativity and I think it is amazing and I think you are right that its kinda the little brother to a much bigger more successful movie and so gets unfairly compared.

    • @soniciris
      @soniciris Před měsícem +2

      Very well said! In a way comparing these films to LotR is setting them up for failure...they aren't the same level of iconic-epic-legend, but they are a rollicking good time and I have fun any time I watch them :D

  • @RuhuttaDwarf
    @RuhuttaDwarf Před měsícem +2

    Seeing the end where Smaug's eye opens what CRAZY in the theatre, gave me actual chills. Loved the reaction, and I'm a huge fan of both trilogies. Can't wait for more!

  • @bj0urne
    @bj0urne Před měsícem +27

    Out of all 6 LotR and Hobbit movies, Martin Freeman as Bilbo is the single best casting they could've ever done. He was born to play Bilbo

    • @charizard6969
      @charizard6969 Před měsícem +5

      Honestly that's so hard to say, I feel like there is so manny perfect castings in lord of the rings, hard to choose 😅 bilbo us up there for sure tho, but for me I actually think gandalf is the best casting

    • @jawo8754
      @jawo8754 Před měsícem +5

      Also think Viggo as Aragorn was perfect once they let go of Stuart Townsend.

    • @FrenchieQc
      @FrenchieQc Před měsícem

      @@jawo8754 To think they had been considering Nicolas Cage as Aragorn..

    • @jawo8754
      @jawo8754 Před měsícem

      @@FrenchieQc right?! I like Nick Cage but he lends more to the manic characters.

  • @davidgarcia1163
    @davidgarcia1163 Před měsícem +7

    One of my favorite scenes in the Lord of the Rings books is at the council of Elrond. It's not in the movies, but when it's decided that the ring had to be taken to Mordor, Bilbo was the first one to volunteer. "I know what you're thinking, Bilbo started this mess, so he might as well finish it." I think that was the line. Boromir chuckled when he saw his small size, but then he saw Gandalf, Elrond, Gloin, and others look at him seriously, because they knew what he had done before, and that he really meant it.

  • @ravensdark99
    @ravensdark99 Před měsícem +33

    I have watched that movie with Ukrainians from Mariupol and the line "But always he remembered the mountain smoke beneath the moon, the trees like torches blazing bright, for he had seen dragon fire in the sky and a city turned to ash. And he never forgave... and he never forgot." came up...and that was one of sadest experiences in my life watching their faces...I know this is a bit out of place, but I cant shake that every time I hear that again. Oh and btw the white haired dwarf..that is Balin..you have heard the name before..you have seen his tomb

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Před měsícem +12

      Wow, thank you for sharing. It is truly heartbreaking to see people lose their homes. Homes that have been there for generations and would’ve been home to generations to come. Nobody should have to go through that but unfortunately we don’t live in a perfect world. It’s bittersweet seeing some of these characters knowing where they’ll end up! That scene that followed though with the troll was spectacular!

    • @ravensdark99
      @ravensdark99 Před měsícem +1

      @@OfficialMediaKnightsI apologize for bringing the mood down of course and that was not to meant as political statement by me just to clarify..my point is that sometimes movies mean even more to people than expected. You never know how close to home something hits (for me it is for example the start of "Up"), and this makes it even more massive to watch movies and appreciate the work that goes in even more

    • @adamscott7354
      @adamscott7354 Před měsícem +2

      @@ravensdark99 No you're right, after all,
      twas evil from the land of Mordor, where the soviet shadows lie...

    • @ravensdark99
      @ravensdark99 Před měsícem

      @@adamscott7354mate I watched "The Darkest Hour" in Kyiv..you cannot imagine the crowd reaction to the end speech of Churchill..that was the most insane stuff I have ever seen in a cinema

    • @adamscott7354
      @adamscott7354 Před měsícem +3

      @@ravensdark99 You're goddamn right, also Tarantino had to point out how vs in US cinemas, the London UK premiere with actual Dunkirk vets including some of the boat captains, crews just lost it with tears during the "Home came for them" scene,
      about Darkest Hour, on a lighter note,
      on a comment of a YT vid of it, I fully replicated that opening parliamentary scene in text but with English phonetic sound emphasis to make it funnier lol

  • @alextu_Music
    @alextu_Music Před měsícem +4

    Remember, Gandalf said the elven swords were made in city of Gondolin, by the Elves in the First Age. Elrond's father, Earendil, was one of the survivors who fled the fall of Gondolin when Morgoth (the first dark lord and master of Sauron) launched his attack on it. it stands to reason how he might recognize these blades.
    Also, by this point, Saruman is already searching for the One Ring. As the leader of the White Council (Elrond, Galadriel, Saruman & Gandalf), he deliberately prevents actions from being taken, so he can continue his search in secret.
    A little fun fact regarding the White Council, Galadriel originally recommended Gandalf to be the council's leader, but Gandalf passed on the offer, not wishing to set down roots in any one location. Instead, it's given to someone Galadriel doesn't trust - Saruman.
    By the way, if you're wondering who has the 3 Elven Rings, Galadriel has one. Elrond has another. They use their rings to protect their respective realms of Lorien and Rivendell. As for the third, Gandalf has it.

    • @rio20d
      @rio20d Před měsícem +3

      I wish one day they can make a movie out of the Siege of Gondolin that led to the fall of Gondolin...1st age elves are just badass, I really would like to see Glorfindel in action slaying Balrogs and even see Etchtelion killing three Balrogs and even killed the Lord of Balrogs ( Gothmog) , though the last one it costed his life.

    • @alextu_Music
      @alextu_Music Před měsícem +1

      @@rio20d Same, though I doubt the rights for the Fall of Gondolin or the Silmarillion will ever be given to a company that actually respects the lore. And I 100% don't want another Rings of Power incident. Keep the rights away from Amazon.

    • @rio20d
      @rio20d Před měsícem

      @@alextu_Music yeah totally agree, RoP is an abomination to Tolkien lore, its like Amazon just wanted to give a middle finger to Tolkien and his fans.

  • @IgorMuratikov
    @IgorMuratikov Před měsícem +13

    Great that you decided to carry on with Peter Jackson's Tolkien movies😊 Whatever other people may say, The Hobbit trilogy was brilliant and had a lot of memorable moments. Personally I was hoping for Hobbit adaptation from Peter Jackson right after the Return of the king came out. When it finally happened I wasn't disappointed and enjoyed the new trilogy. Hope you'll enjoy it as well

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Před měsícem +1

      That's so awesome to hear, we love when people enjoy movies - that's what they're made for!
      We had such a great time with this one and cannot wait to continue our journey into Middle Earth! Thank you for your support!

  • @igorpodemski9596
    @igorpodemski9596 Před měsícem +11

    YES!!!! FINALLY. This movie is SOOOO UNDERRATED. Genuinely the most entertaining movie out of all Middle Earth movies.

    • @Jenna-nk7ml
      @Jenna-nk7ml Před měsícem +1

      Oh boy, obsessive lotr fans are gonna come for you, they can't bear the thought of someone enjoying these films and having an opinion of their own.

    • @igorpodemski9596
      @igorpodemski9596 Před měsícem +1

      @@Jenna-nk7ml TRUE LOL. By the way im not saying this is the best Middle Earth movie. I'm just saying that if i have free time i would watch the movie more often than LOTR, because it is way more fun and entertaining.

    • @igorpodemski9596
      @igorpodemski9596 Před měsícem

      And im just talking about Unexpected Journey.

    • @silver9wolf6
      @silver9wolf6 Před měsícem

      ​@@igorpodemski9596 Ah, this makes more sense, i was a little confused at first 😂 My mom and I used to turn this one on when we just wanted to be in the shire/rivendell but didnt have the time to watch the full trilogy :P

  • @skyblue8705
    @skyblue8705 Před měsícem +4

    I forgot if it was mentioned in the first movie but Fili and Kili are Thorin's nephews.
    I remember watching it for the first time and being a little confused as to why Thorin was only calling out for Fili during the thunder giants fighting scene. Later realised Fili is his nephew and heir.

  • @matthewkirkhart2401
    @matthewkirkhart2401 Před měsícem +6

    One of the interesting schools of thought about both the book but in particular the movie The Hobbit is that The Hobbit is more of a traditional fairy tale that is literally being told to us by Bilbo. We as the audience/reader are the same as the hobbit children in The Fellowship of the Ring when Bilbo is telling them about his adventurer at his birthday party. So things like trolls talking and being concerned about how to prepare food properly is a projection by Bilbo, an addition to the story by him, to make the story more fantastic. Hobbits talk and care about food preparation. Trolls do not. Even their clothing is like a hobbit's, not what every other troll we see or hear about in the other tales from Middle Earth wears. Same thing for the battle with the goblins being so over the top and defying physics by falling that distance and not being significantly harmed. We are watching/hearing Bilbo's story, we are not watching or hearing a "historical account" of events like we did in The Lord of the Rings trilogy. For me, even the higher use of CGI in this movie falls in line with this idea. It's more fantastic and less realistic than practical effects would be, but again that fits with the notion that it is a fairy tale being told to us, and elaborated on/added to, by Bilbo as he is telling it to us. Sort of like a fish story where the size of the fish caught gets bigger and bigger each time you tell the story.

  • @teximexi836
    @teximexi836 Před měsícem +2

    Something yall missed in reference to the fact Bilbo met Golem and retrieved the ring. Was the fact that in LOTR, Golem was captured and tortured by the orcs and screamed out, "Baggins, Shire!" He only could have said that by having ran into him and having shared that information at some point in the past.

  • @daryllyew62
    @daryllyew62 Před měsícem +8

    Sylvester McCoy (the Seventh Doctor) as Radagast completes the trifecta of perfectly cast wizards!

    • @alexandrelightoftheunivers9584
      @alexandrelightoftheunivers9584 Před měsícem +1

      they are five istari .....

    • @daryllyew62
      @daryllyew62 Před měsícem +1

      @@alexandrelightoftheunivers9584 The two Blue Wizards haven't made it to the screen yet. Maybe in the Rings of Power.

    • @alexandrelightoftheunivers9584
      @alexandrelightoftheunivers9584 Před měsícem

      false because the only thing we know there are disepeared in the east probably in mordor @@daryllyew62

  • @HeathsHarleyQuinn
    @HeathsHarleyQuinn Před měsícem +6

    Riddles in the Dark is my favourite chapter of the book!

  • @jingtroc23
    @jingtroc23 Před měsícem +5

    Me and my son loved these hobbit movies and still watch them. My son is a lotr fanatic and even he thought maybe it's just the purists who say these movies were bad. They're fun movies, and you will enjoy them I guarantee, so ignore any grumpy comments about these movies and enjoy the ride🎉

  • @susyperez8445
    @susyperez8445 Před měsícem +3

    These are some of my favorite movies, I absolutely LOVE The Hobbit trilogy, easy to watch, nostalgic in many ways, the new characters we get to meet are amazing and their stories… amazing as well, and maybe some people dislike them, but I like to think I’m one of the few that really enjoys them, I hope you like them as well!

  • @mousitsoula
    @mousitsoula Před měsícem +17

    3:24 That is Legolas' father!
    15:26 Balin, is Gimli's cousin!
    46:01 That's a hard NO! At that moment, Saruman had nothing to do with Sauron! He followed him much later!

  • @ianaustin5012
    @ianaustin5012 Před měsícem +43

    I dunno why people hate on the hobbit. Peter Jackson put his spin while keeping true, just like he did with LOTR. He was forced to change parts of the story but still followed it

    • @vercoda9997
      @vercoda9997 Před měsícem +6

      It was a derivative cash grab, cynically spun out into three films. Dwarves who mostly didn't look like dwarves, who nobody could name. Legolas, looking noticeably older. Cheap-looking CGI. Alfred scenes. It's a long, long list. The Hobbit trilogy shat all over the legacy of the original trilogy.

    • @NastyCupid
      @NastyCupid Před měsícem +2

      1:13:20 , In this part they play the Nazgûl theme... Completely out of context.. To me, that is such a good example of how lazily and/or hastily these movies were put together... Such a shame

    • @ianaustin5012
      @ianaustin5012 Před měsícem +4

      @@vercoda9997 the originally trilogy (P.Jackson) Shat all over those movies as well when you look at how much he changed. If you looked into how much the Tolkien estate was suing him for he wouldn’t have the money to make it. Plus when you look at how rushed the book is the movie would be incredibly fast paced. Azog is mentioned in the book so I thought it’s great to bring him in more

    • @ianaustin5012
      @ianaustin5012 Před měsícem +6

      @@NastyCupid you’re complaining over theme music? 😂😂
      Well let me explain that many have complained but it’s not the Revelation of the Ringwraiths. It’s very similar buts it’s not..Howard Shore is known for using the same theme music for movies and slightly tweaking them. If you watch all of the middle earth cinema a lot of the theme music is the same depending on the area. Think of the Eagles theme: used first in Fellowship when the moth first appears. Then it's used in Two Towers to signify the ents. Then in Return of the King, it's Rohan's war theme AND the eagles theme. Then in An Unexpected Journey it's the eagles again. Howard Shore does this and it's fine. I listen to the soundtracks a lot.

    • @di3486
      @di3486 Před měsícem +4

      The hobbit is not a complete failure because of him! It could have gone very wrong.

  • @andrealara994
    @andrealara994 Před 29 dny +1

    I love Martin Freeman in this, his dialogues, performance, line delivery, FACIAL EXPRESSIONS AND BODY LANGUAGE. He definitely carries this movie on his back.

  • @shadowthief9918
    @shadowthief9918 Před měsícem +2

    Yes, that is the story Bilbo was telling to the young hobbits. And in the extended edition of fellowships of the ring there is a scene when Frodo is stabbed in the shoulder by the Witch kings blade. You see the trolls in their statue state and Sam makes a reference about them being the trolls in Bilbos story while Frodo is struggling with being poisoned.

  • @mrremovedbycleo
    @mrremovedbycleo Před měsícem +85

    Loved these films, never understood why other LOTR fans hated on them and were vile to people who enjoyed them. The Hobbit films were never in competition with LOTR so it was so weird and pathetic of them to compare, also if you liked the hobbit films other LOTR fans assumed that meant you thought it was better than LOTR and would get defensive... 😂 The trilogies are like brothers, no need to compare just enjoy. Plus without The Hobbit story JR might not have gone on to write LOTR. I'm thankful for the films and liked that Peter expanded on the book, plus he was probably forced to anyway by the studios to get more money. 80% of LOTR fans really ruined the releases of these films and made sure to kill anyone's love of them. Proud fan of both ✌️

    • @Whowearsshort_shorts
      @Whowearsshort_shorts Před měsícem +27

      If I don't like something I avoid it but the dedication certain lotr fans have to go on every reaction video and drop the same criticism to ruin the reactor's experience is nuts and so sad. Like they're terrified a few people might also enjoy the hobbit. When these films came out I'm surprised they didn't go protesting outside cinemas they were so pathetic, IT'S THE SAME UNIVERSE THEY'RE A PAIR NOT IN COMPETITION. It's the same as saying a sibling copied the other just by being born, so stupid.

    • @royalexodus2666
      @royalexodus2666 Před měsícem +12

      @@Whowearsshort_shorts yeah seriously. If someone, as a LOTR fan, does not like the hobbit... it's ok. But that person doesn't have to go around the internet ruining the experience to everybody else before they even got to judge by themselves.

    • @wal6377
      @wal6377 Před měsícem +3

      While I agree with the bulk of what you've said, it was the director's choice to make the hobbit into three movies, he added scenes only to make it more drawn out, and thus ruined what might have been better (?), if he had left it as the original.
      Did they cut out a whole lot out of lord of the rings, heck yeah, and I did not quibble over that, because you can understand why. However, did the director need to dump a ton of new scenes and story lines and stuff to make the hobbit?
      I cant answer that. Resentment occurred for this movie, WHILE it was being made (!) because it was released that the director was bulling his way into making the hobbit into three movies, and adding new material never in the original source.
      I imagine these fans arent LotR fans, they are fans of the original source material.

    • @XC11301991
      @XC11301991 Před měsícem +5

      It's simple, the first film is the least offensive of the 3 films but the problems comes that it never needed to be 3 films and the problems become more apparent as the next two films release. The Hobbit's original story was always a much simpler fun tale that the '77 film actually carries out much better. The Hobbit trilogy actively tries to force a connection to the LOTR when it never needed it, and ends up making up portions to the story that ends up being worse for it. Lackluster forced love story and a forgettable 2ndary antagonist included. The Hobbit films are not outright terrible like say the Star Wars prequel or sequel trilogies, as it still carries the original Hobbit storyline. However a lot of the great parts just ends up getting bogged down while watching the the later films by all the unnecessary additions. There even exists a Hobbit edit that cuts out the unnecessary portions and shortens the movie quite a bit.
      Vitriol on the otherhand is just fanbases in general, you'll get those people in any IP. Just ignore the ones that actively are being rude to you about it.

    • @Jamie__1
      @Jamie__1 Před měsícem +13

      I loved every minute of the extended hobbit trilogy, scenes were added that was not in the source material but it was still a well told and engaging story in my opinion and thats what matters most. Hell if Peter Jackson decided one day to make a new trilogy set in the LOTR universe i would be down for it so long as it made sense within the established universe.

  • @ambrosewilliam33
    @ambrosewilliam33 Před měsícem +2

    That last line from Thorin always gets me in the feels.. Such a remarkable delivery that showcases just how good of an actor he is.

  • @chronolynx360
    @chronolynx360 Před měsícem +2

    I missed them both Christopher Lee and Ian Holmes. Rest in peace.

  • @justAman548
    @justAman548 Před měsícem +4

    When he said he got as far as Frogmorton once, I was curious so I looked it up just now. He walked 14 miles, so he would only have to walk approximately 946 more miles to get to his destination.

  • @adamyalahow1992
    @adamyalahow1992 Před měsícem +5

    7:52 gotcha crying in the first 10 mins 😂😅

  • @Mantis_Toboggan_MD.
    @Mantis_Toboggan_MD. Před měsícem +1

    19:57 - Gandalf says "But home is now behind you, the world ahead"
    Remember the first line of Pippin's song in ROTK that he sings for Lord Denethor "Home is behind, the world ahead..."

  • @lorig-ski
    @lorig-ski Před měsícem +2

    It makes my heart smile to see you both loving Tolkien's stories! I read The Hobbit when I was in sixth grade, back when dinosaurs roamed the earth, and became completely hooked on Middle Earth and every book that followed❤ The movies are amazing and I could not be happier with the screen adaptations!

  • @adamnewton4679
    @adamnewton4679 Před měsícem +6

    I never understood the hate for the hobbit but I loved them

    • @GreatOldOne9866
      @GreatOldOne9866 Před měsícem +1

      Ehh people don’t like the extra content that wasn’t in the book and all the CGI over practical effects. Which personally, I don’t mind, but I do get it. They’re okay, just not as memorable as LOTR. I think all six films are great in their own way.

    • @Dumbodwarf
      @Dumbodwarf Před měsícem +1

      It's mostly because of alot of the stuff that was added in with alot of it not really making sense at all along with the CGI. While I don't hate these films, I am also not the hugest fan either.

  • @kuribayashi84
    @kuribayashi84 Před měsícem +7

    I think this Trilogy gets entirely too much hate. Sure, it may not be of the same level as _Lord of the Rings_ (although many individial Scenes certainly are IMO). But there is too much to like about these Films, be it the Cast, the Music, the Cinematography, Ambition, Scale, Production Design and the aforementioned *fantastic* Moments, for be to dismiss them. They may not archive perfection the way LotR did, but honestly, what does? _The Hobbit,_ for all its flaws, still stands above damn near everything else this Genre has to offer.
    And I'll always be thankful for the feelings the opening Scenes of _An Unexpected Journey_ gave me back in 2012: The New Line Cinema-Logo, accompanied by Howard Shore's familiar music, followed by the opening Scenes in the Shire and Bilbos' narration... it was like coming home.

  • @alexandrerocha6265
    @alexandrerocha6265 Před měsícem +1

    I just love the vibe you two bring to the table. I feel like a friend in the room watching with you.

  • @Emsky1989
    @Emsky1989 Před měsícem +1

    What most people don't know about Thorin, is that during the battle at Moria, not only did Thorin lose his grandfather and his father go missing, but his younger brother, Frerin, died that day too

  • @spaceballone2301
    @spaceballone2301 Před měsícem +4

    It’s funny how watching something with friends can make it better, I remember not liking this movie but it was fun today

  • @shanenolan5625
    @shanenolan5625 Před měsícem +3

    When gandalf found the shire. It was during a terrible winter. A magical winter ( like how saruman made bad weather for the fellowship) .
    He found a little girl ( bilbos mother) belladonna. As a child saved her from wolves, and help the shire folk survive the winter with his fires . He visited regularly after that . . He is one of the few outsiders allowed in .
    At gandalfs request the rangers protect the shire . Stop anything evil or other men from entering. .
    There is a road that dwarfs and elves use but thats it . .
    Aragon granted the hobbits more land , and made it a law than no man, not even himself msy enter the shire. ( and he was invited) and he set up a trade relationship. Via sam .

  • @D0S81
    @D0S81 Před měsícem +2

    the misty mountains song has lived rent free in my head since i first saw this film, as has ''i'm going on an adventure!!!''

  • @maryannweitzel5636
    @maryannweitzel5636 Před měsícem +2

    I have Misty Mountain as the ring tone for my cell. It's such a mournful, hauntingly beautiful melody that I always notice. 💙
    The Hobbit came from Tolkien telling his children stories. I think it was published in the 1930s, but he didn't write and publish TLOTRs until the 1950s. So it was TLOTRs that was the follow-up. I read the books in the 60s and have been a fan every since as well as my kids and grandkids.

  • @gorankellett732
    @gorankellett732 Před měsícem +3

    I'm proud to say your the firt people ive subscribed to, absolutely amazing content.
    Lovely people, also omg your so good together and she is so cute 🥺

  • @roudkaross
    @roudkaross Před měsícem +4

    Gotta remember that Smaug (this dragon) is one of the smallest of this world

    • @grunztiertransmutator770
      @grunztiertransmutator770 Před měsícem

      See Ancalagon The Black... Godzilla himself would SH*T his pants!

    • @Dumbodwarf
      @Dumbodwarf Před měsícem

      He was also the last of the great dragons of this world.

    • @l0sts0ul89
      @l0sts0ul89 Před měsícem

      ​@@grunztiertransmutator770 until well Godzilla lasers him

    • @l0sts0ul89
      @l0sts0ul89 Před měsícem

      ​@@Dumbodwarf before Alduin shows back up of course lmao

    • @Dumbodwarf
      @Dumbodwarf Před měsícem

      @@l0sts0ul89 Eh? Alduin is from Elder Scrolls not Lord of the Rings. Now if he somehow got transported into Middle-Earth and the whole of Arda then yeah, Arda would no doubt be destroyed.
      The only equivalence I guess to Alduin in LOTR would be Ancalagon but even he would be defeated by Alduin.

  • @MsSophie33
    @MsSophie33 Před měsícem

    I discovered you two from your Society of the Snow reaction - that movie has had me in a chokehold since its release!! I love your reactions, you do so much more than simply “ooh” and “ahh” - sharing what you know and guessing what is coming is so fun to watch. As a huge Tolkien fan and someone who watches the OG trilogy yearly, I had so much fun experiencing it through your eyes. Even your reaction to this has given me a better appreciation for the hobbit trilogy (mess that it is). I’m so excited by your excitement for this world, and for more installments from you two! 🎉❤

  • @NezyVenus
    @NezyVenus Před měsícem

    Omg watching one of my favorite movies along with you guys was such a pleasure! Many reaction people are too busy trying to please the viewers and don't actually care about the content they're reacting to. You were both so into it and paid attention which I appreciate 🥰

  • @andrecontente6370
    @andrecontente6370 Před měsícem +4

    Ppl nowdays just like to complain about everyting... I love this movies too, and even if i didnt tink theyr were good enough like many ppl i would still prefer them to exist since i love the lore and to know/see more about this franchise :)

  • @alexhaas9653
    @alexhaas9653 Před měsícem +3

    Thanks for the reaction. Even though the LOTR Trilogy is way superior and the story here is a bit too stretched over three movies, it still is good fun and has lots of loveable characters and great actors. The 48 frames per second aren't really my thing, I like LOTR better in this aspect. Martin Freeman was an excellent choice. He came a long way since "The Office" and "Ali G in da House". Brillant in the wonderful "Sherlock" movies/series alongside Benedict Cumberbatch.

  • @honeybeastie1
    @honeybeastie1 Před měsícem

    I love watching your reactions to movies.....especially the Tolkein stories. The fact that you pick up on so many of the positive and compassionate gems the characters reveal is special. Thank you❤

  • @adamfrat
    @adamfrat Před měsícem

    Yet again one of my FAVORITE reactions of these movies on CZcams! I really get the feeling that you both truly understand the world. You both get emotional and happy when the time is right. Thank you guys!

  • @user-zx9jq4pv1w
    @user-zx9jq4pv1w Před měsícem +6

    Part of Thrain's problem, if you will, is that he has one of the seven Dwarven Rings of Power. It makes him a lot greedier than he might otherwise be. That won't come up here since the Hobbit was written before the Lord of the Rings so it was a plot point brought up in LotR at the Council of Elrond.
    These films are a lot of fun. Their major problem would be using a lot of extended action scenes to fill out three films based on a book not 1/3 the size of LotR. Their second is odd tonal shifts. The Hobbit is a children's book hence the playful comedy so often while LotR is aimed at adults. The Hobbit films shift between the tones making them feel discordant as stories. That said, I find these more re-watchable than LotR since the changes there annoyed me far more than the ones in this film.

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Před měsícem +3

      Ohhh interesting!! I wonder if they tried to make those ties to LOTR stronger, retroactively, in these films?
      Honestly thus far we have had a great time with all of them, and are excited to watch the second one asap!

    • @user-zx9jq4pv1w
      @user-zx9jq4pv1w Před měsícem +3

      @@OfficialMediaKnightsThey added a lot to these films to tie into LotR. Those additions annoy many but I enjoyed what they did. The studio wanted a LotR's length trilogy so Jackson and team did their best with what they had.
      I do have a personal schadenfreude wish that they had kept the songs the elves sing when the gang gets to Rivendell if only to have seen the conniptions the LotR film Elf Worshiping fans would have had. This is just the first verse:
      O! What are you doing,
      And where are you going?
      Your ponies need shoeing!
      The River is flowing!
      O! Tra-la-la-lally
      Here down in the valley!

  • @piphead
    @piphead Před měsícem +4

    The Media Knights: An Unexpected Journey... Two CZcamsrs decide to react to amazing movies. They did not expect such a reaction, such a following. Their channel grew and grew and everyone loved their channel and even more themselves. They responded to all their fans and their fans responded back to them in kind. A fellowship was formed and we await their reactions every week for the foreseeable future. Have a great weekend guys ❤️👍

    • @OfficialMediaKnights
      @OfficialMediaKnights  Před měsícem +1

      Haha aww! You guys have truly been the best of the best. We are beyond lucky to be part of this fellowship. We wish you an amazing weekend as well! ❤️

  • @brettrobertleasure
    @brettrobertleasure Před měsícem

    thoroughly enjoyed your lotr reactions and this is just as good. i also appreciate how you edit these and show alot of the important scenes. it flows well and is enjoyable to watch.

  • @divifilius
    @divifilius Před měsícem

    I could understand Thranduil's temperament- He is one of the oldest Elves still alive in Middle Earth together with Galadriel and her husband Celeborn (also distrust the Dwarves for something they did in the First Age). These were people who have seen all the three ages of Middle Earth. Galadriel was actually born in the Undying Lands to the West during the Years of the Trees and is the granddaughter of Finwe, the First High King of the Noldor who led the Elves to the Undying Lands from Middle Earth during the Years of the Trees after their awakening and discovery by the Valar(Dieties) . Thranduil was born in the first age and after the defeat of Morgorth, he and his father moved east to form the Woodland Realm. Similarly, Galadriel and Celeborn moved to form Lothlorien and Eregion (which later became the realm of Celebrimbor, the greatest smith of the Second Age whose works include forging of the 3 elven rings of power and building the Gate of Moria with Durin, Thorin's ancestor; He is also Galadriel's nephew). Elrond came later and formed the last elven realm, Imladris/ Rivendell at the behest of the last High King of the Noldor Gil- Galad(grand nephew of Galadriel) who was fortifying the Elfrealms against Sauron.
    P.S Elrond is both son in law and Grand Nephew to Galadriel through Elrond's grandmother Luthien who married a man called Beren being the sister to Galadriel's mom Earwen. the line of Elrond are considered half elves. Elrond had a twin Elros who upon being given a choice by the Valar chose to be mortal making him the first Numenorian King and thus an ancestor to the Kings of Gondor and Arnor.
    These elves saw Arda(the planet) in the form it was like after its creation, that is, before the destruction of Beleriand (western half of Middle Earth was sunk into the ocean by Morgoth the first Dark Lord), before the Changing(Iluvitar, the supreme diety and creator of Men and Elves willed Arda to be a circulant planet from its initial flat form and the Valar his children desroyed the Islands that once connected the Undying Lands and Middle Earth due to the defiance of the Men of the West/ Numenorians / Dunedains who sort immortality by attempting to sail to/ invade the Undying Lands which is only open to Elvenkind and those chosen like Frodo and Bilbo and even before fall of Gondolin, the Kingdom mentioned in the movie). Gondolin was a hidden Kingdom/ city within Middle Earth that was for a time the most powerful Elven nation, albeit it being just a city state, and was active in fighting Morgoth who was also in turn obssessed with finding the hidden city.
    I think Elrond hunting orcs in the film is an attempt at mirroring his twin sons who are not featured in the franchise and are the ones in lore actively hunting orcs together with Aragon still the Captain of the Dunedain rangers in retaliation for what they did to their mother Celebrian, the daughter of Galadriel. Celebrian was once ambushed by orcs on her way to visit her parents and it was her sons that saved her and Elrond healed her but she was too emotionally and spiritually scared that she already left for the Undying Lands.
    Elrond, Galadriel, Saruman and Gandalf formed the White Council with Saruman as the Head. Galadriel had suggested that Gandalf lead the council but her suggestion went unheard.

  • @hweori
    @hweori Před měsícem +5

    A lot of people hate these movies, but I will forever treasure them. For me they're good, and enjoyable- that's all I want

  • @Tralman1965
    @Tralman1965 Před měsícem +3

    The Necromancer IS Sauron!

  • @zorigooleo
    @zorigooleo Před měsícem +1

    The academy should add a nomination for best motion capture performance. The great Andy Serkis and Benedict Cumberbatch performed awesomely in this trilogy.

  • @nataliasuarez428
    @nataliasuarez428 Před měsícem +1

    Gandalf's presence make things go easier because of Narya, his ring of power. That was described as having the power to inspire others to resist tyranny, domination and despair.

  • @4ever2good
    @4ever2good Před měsícem +1

    Peter Jackson had this "crazy" idea that the scenes with Gollum should be directed by someone who understands the character, so they were directed by Andy Serkis. Truly some of the best in the Trilogy

  • @vincentsweargen8436
    @vincentsweargen8436 Před měsícem +1

    I read all these books for enjoyment and for literature classes. As a kid, I watched the animated features. Seeing you two delighted by the movies is soooo enjoyable. Your old Uncle Vinnie would share meal and pint of ale with you anytime.😊

  • @andrewichigo
    @andrewichigo Před měsícem +2

    The older looking one, Balin, is the one who later returns to Moria, and the one whose tomb Gimli cries before when the Fellowship arrive in Moria in the original movie

  • @pepperje11y
    @pepperje11y Před měsícem

    PepperJelly here! Thanks for the shout out. This is my comfort movie. I watch it weekly, at least. I'm so stoked my name is on my favorite movie. Made my day, so unbelievably, after a very intensely difficult week. Much love!

  • @ciri_riannon235
    @ciri_riannon235 Před měsícem

    I always put your videos on my TV and it's like I'm watching these movies with you guys. That's amazing, I feel like I'm watching with my friends 🥹💗 love you so much, you are the best at making reactions, I'm addicted to your videos ❤

  • @vert2552
    @vert2552 Před měsícem +2

    If i recall correctly actually the 'king's stone' was mined in Moria, that's why dwarves woke Barlog while mining in biggest depths of the mountain. Then the stone was moved to Erebor

    • @lestatdelc
      @lestatdelc Před měsícem

      This is incorrect. The origin as depicted in the film is accurate to Tolkien's writings, (specifically The Lord of the Rings, Appendix A, "Durin's Folk")
      The Arkenstone was discovered soon after the establishment of the Dwarf-kingdom in the Lonely Mountain, and the Dwarves used all their skill to work the gem into a shimmering multi-faceted jewel. In the centuries after its discovery, the Arkenstone became an heirloom of the Kings of Durin's Folk.
      Thráin's son Thorin I carried it away into the Grey Mountains where it remained for some generations, until in time King Thrór brought it back to the Great Hall of Thráin. When the Dragon Smaug sacked Lonely Mountain, the Arkenstone was lost to the Dwarves of Durin's Folk - it lay among Smaug's booty in the halls of Erebor.

    • @l0sts0ul89
      @l0sts0ul89 Před měsícem

      ​@@lestatdelc so what IS the Arkenstone? Just a shiny rock? Nothing special beisdes its cool looking

    • @vert2552
      @vert2552 Před měsícem

      @@lestatdelc ah, you are correct
      It was in the erebor but then it was in the grey mountains, but i am 100% sure there was some connection in the lore also to barlog :P
      (What i xould google but well.. i didnt ;P )

    • @lestatdelc
      @lestatdelc Před měsícem

      @@l0sts0ul89 - According to the Tolkein's writings, not too long after the Kingdom under the Mountain was founded in Erebor in TA 1999, a team of Dwarves working under Thráin I discovered a "great white gem" underneath the roots of the Lonely Mountain. They considered this gem to be the "fairest of all", naming it both the Arkenstone and the Heart of the Mountain.
      After the Dwarves dug it out and "cut and fashioned" it into a multi-faceted jewel, the great jewel became an heirloom of the Kings of Durin's Folk and was set in the Great Hall of Thráin. It was later taken by Thorin I to the Grey Mountains when he removed his people there.
      Many centuries later, King Thrór returned the Arkenstone to the Great Hall after dragons drove his people out of the Grey Mountains. When Smaug came to the Lonely Mountain, the Arkenstone of Thráin became a part of his "bed of gold" in the Great Hall of Thráin.
      In TA 2941 during the Quest of Erebor, the Arkenstone of Thráin was among the many objects that Thorin II and Balin remembered and pondered on whether or not it was still in the Great Hall.
      The gem was the object most prized by Thorin II of all the treasures of the Lonely Mountain.

  • @farengeit902
    @farengeit902 Před měsícem

    Another lore fact: a place of Azog's Warg base in this film is a Weathertop hill itself, also known as Amon Sul, where Frodo was stabbed by Witch King of Angmar.
    Back in the past it was one of the three great watch towers of the Kingdom of Arnor. They were built for observation and used Palantir stones for interconnection. Arnor was also known as Kingdom of the North amongside with Gondor - Kingdom of the South. They were founded by people of Numenor, who survived it's cataclysm

  • @1827Beethoven
    @1827Beethoven Před měsícem

    YES!! Thanks for reacting to this, can't wait to see you react to the other two! I watch both trilogies every year 😍

  • @Svadilfare
    @Svadilfare Před 6 dny

    Lots of ppl miss the callback at 19:55. Gandalf's words "Your home is now behind you. The world is ahead," are the opening lyrics from the song "Edge of Night," which Pippin sings to Denethor, as Faramir rides to his death. "Home is behind, the world ahead."

  • @jonhstonk7998
    @jonhstonk7998 Před měsícem +1

    Smaug is very large but he is considered one of the smallest dragons in the legendarium, Ancalagon the Black who was slain by the hero Eärendil in the first age was the size of a mountain chain, other dragons were also quite large such as the first dragon and father of all dragons Glaurund who was slain by the tragic hero of the first age whose name was Turin Turambar the son of Hurin.
    I wholeheartedly recommend you read the books specially the hobbit since it’s such a nice enjoyable and self contained story within the universe, I re-read that book alongside “my first summer in the Sierra” by John Muir at the start of every summer to get myself in an adventurous mood to go hiking, hunting, camping, kayaking and fishing.

  • @saidincontent
    @saidincontent Před měsícem +1

    A very depressing fact to remember for LotR: in Moria, the tomb they find is for Balin, the oldest looking Dwarf, and the skeleton holding the book that Gandalf reads from when Pippin knocks the bucket into the well is Ori, the youngest looking Dwarf. So there's some sadness for you

  • @helmutvogel901
    @helmutvogel901 Před dnem

    The symbol Gandalf puts on Bilbo's door is the Elvish script for the letter G. When I was 16, I took the time to figure out the elvish alphabet, using the deciphered messages found in the actual book. In fact, I showed some friends in school, and we memorized it, and had a secret code between us. Used it to hand in math homework, (numbers stay the same) and the only thing our teacher asked us was if it was foul language or not, took our word that it wasn't (we were all good students).

  • @Pingkonk
    @Pingkonk Před měsícem +1

    Great reaction! Loved your Lotr-reactions so that’s why I subscribed. I think you guys have a good approach to, respect and understand of this world so it’s very enjoyable watching you guys see these things.
    And ofc The Hobbit is not on par at all with Lotr but on its own, without comparing anything, it’s still a highly entertaining, extremely well made trilogy. Plus for me, just the fact of being back in Middle Earth and breathing in the world is enough to put a big smile on my face!

  • @sheeps1495
    @sheeps1495 Před měsícem

    Only recently came across your channel and I am enjoying your genuine and great reactions, to my favourite movies. Thank you for the lovely journey! ❤️ from the UK 🇬🇧

  • @wal6377
    @wal6377 Před měsícem +1

    "There's no Sauron right now..."
    Technically, not true. This was one of those creative adjustments that Peter Jackson took with the storyline.
    Sauron didn't just turn into a puff of smoke when his ring/fingers were cut off. He lost a lot of his power because he put so much of himself into the ring, so he had to "Odin sleep" himself better before he could try to dominate middle-earth once again.
    It was easier for Jackson to say he turned into a puff of smoke, and there was just a lidless eye wreathed in flame. That was partly correct in LotR.
    Anyways, technically incorrect. Sauron WAS around at the time, but he wasn't awake nor aware, to notice when someone was using his ring, yes, so basically correct.

  • @danieldegraaf1217
    @danieldegraaf1217 Před měsícem

    The hobbit an unexpected journey was what got me into the entire middle earth thing at first, so for me it’s just really that nostalgic feeling and gratefulness for it is what makes this one of my favorite films and trilogies.