First Time Watching The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies *Commentary/Reaction*
Vložit
- čas přidán 8. 03. 2024
- Become a Patron! / angelinakim
twitch: / anotherangelina
.
Rees (Editor)
twitch: / ri1eous
more ange:
Gaming Channel: / @anotherangelina4450
Vlog Channel: / @angevstheworld113
Instagram: @ngelinakim
Tiktok: @ngelinakim
Discord: / discord
. - Zábava
Master of Laketown had a lot more poetic death in the book. He actually manages to escape with the gold, but then starves to death in the wilderness because he doesn't know how to survive on his own and can't eat the gold.
Heh, that sounds like something Tolkien would write alright xD
Haven't read the books since I was a teen, so much has been forgotten.
Let them eat cake?
Actually he steals the hold given to them by Dain and then starves to death after fleeing.
Gandalf didn’t know Bilbo had the one ring at this point. He only knew he had one of many magic rings.
yes. It took Gandalf 17 years to find out that it was the one ring in LOTR
@@jbrnsek in the book yeah but in the movie it seemed just a year.
I actually liked how Thorin stopped his madness. Dwalin telling him how he and the rest of them were not following him anymore really hurt him, Thorin always cared for them and that stared to make him aware of what was happening to him and it shows how strong he was to be able to break free from the sickness his ancestors were never able to recover from. That's what made him different, that's why he deserved and will always be the king under the mountain
So true an the reason thror never snapped out of it is because no one ever stepped up
He was falling into it for so long and it was shown so powerful that he snapped out too quick.
Not to mention, he also had a VERY real hallucination where he was consumed by gold, cold uncaring gold that he loved so much. Just consumed him into nothing.
Hallucination or not, that has to be jarring.
Say what you will about this trilogy, but that final scene between Bilbo and Thorian is so well done and emotionally bittersweet
I ugly cry at that scene, no matter how many times I've watched it lol
Thorin: "You should never underestimate Dwarves.."
Bilbo: "I've literally just saved your ass like 6 times in a row."
The scene where Thorin comes out of Erebor and his cousin shouts "to the king, TO THE KIIIIIING" 😭😭😭
Balin is dwarf shoes tomb we see in the fellowship of the ring. Ori is holding the book
And Oin was killed by the Watcher. (The water monster that attacks at Moria's door.)
We also get a brief glimpse of a much older Gloin arriving at Rivendell with Gimli.
In the books Azog was killed at Moria, and it was Dain who landed the final strike. He then told Thorin not to enter, because he had seen the Balrog within the mines.
Azog had beheaded Thror and thrown a purse of money at his steward to pass a message to the dwarves to stay away. When Dain beheaded him, Thorin shoved the purse in his mouth and tossed it into the mines before shutting the door
Thats a different Azog.
@@marko199981
Elaborate
God the deaths if Thorin and his nephews hurt me personally so much when I read the book as a child. When I found out that they gave Kíli a love interest in the films I was both happy and hurt even more because I knew it was going to end in tears.
You sit in these vast halls, with a crown upon your head. And yet you are lesser now then you have ever been.
Hits so fucking hard!
33:50 Gandalf didn’t know Bilbo had The One Ring…he thought it was one of the others or some low power ring…which is why he went crazy with his investigations and search in the events of LOTR
There is a deleted scene(unfinished and not in the extended version(which I definitely suggest you watch all versions of, as they add so much more!)which explains why Thranduil wants those white gems. They were his wife's jewels and were stolen by Thror. Gandalf states she also left him a son and questions which he values more, which convinces Thranduil to aid the dwarves.
Can't believe The Hobbit Trilogy concluded 10 years ago now, and Battle of The Five Armies is the most underrated movie of 2014!
Me too
Wasn't John wick in 2014?
Half this movie is a waste of time CGI clusterf*ck. There is like half an hour worth of a movie in here. Its a lot of things, underrated is not one of them.
Wow, I feel old.
Absolutely is not underrated.
he didnt just realize on his own... it took Dwalin standing up to him to realize that he lost the people closest to him and his most trusted allies.
In the book, the fifth army is the Wargs (wild wolves). "Goblins" and "Orcs" are used interchangeably in Tolkien's world.
So began a battle that none had expected; and it was called the Battle of Five Armies, and it was very terrible. Upon one side were the Goblins and the wild Wolves, and upon the other were Elves and Men and Dwarves.
- The Hobbit, The Clouds Burst
In the 1977 Rankin/Bass animated film, the fourth army is "Goblins and Wargs", while the fifth is the Eagles.
In the 2014 film, the fourth and fifth armies are Orcs from Dol Guldur and the Orcs from Gundabad as mentioned in the behind the scenes Documentry “Beneath the Thunder: Forging a Battle of Five Armies” part 12.
Thank you
I still enjoy the Hobbit films. I honestly don't understand the absolute disdain hatred a lot of people have for them.
the Lord of the Rings movies are undoubtedly master pieces, so people were expecting master pieces with the Hobbit. Good or even great movies are disappointing when your expectations are higher. And for book nerds, who want to stick close to the source material, this last movie was basically one chapter. The Hobbit is also more of a children's story, so some of the depth is inherently lacking. I was initially on the negativity express, but now I think that they're mostly good movies, if you take them for what they are :)
@@SimplyConeh These are very good points and I'd say I agree with them. The og lotr trilogy will always be my favorite above all other lotr media, but I still find the Hobbit as an entertaining trilogy. I've personally never read the books, but I can definitely understand some disappointment from that perspective.
the hobbit film trilogy is over 50% filler, they really didn't need to go down a river in barrels fighting orcs for 20 minutes, hell they didn't need to fight orcs at all, it adds nothing to the story, they could have skipped straight to the bard scene. they also didn't need to run through goblin town for ten minutes straight while cutting in between a far better scene. but those pale in comparison to how much filler the battle of five armies takes up, which is mind-numbingly, most of the movie. this battle in the book, takes up a very small part of the book and is described as "pointless", and now that they mention it, yeah, all of this filler is pointless indeed.
also, they added entire unnecessary subplots that takes attention completely away from the hobbit himself, bilbo baggins. are these even hobbit movies? might as well call them the prequels to lord of the rings, because that is what it is.
I always enjoyed the Hobbit movies. The reason they got so much negativity was because too many people were expecting a second "Lord of the Rings" level of epic from them and they fell far short of that. I went in as someone who had read the books many times over before the movies were even made, and knew not to expect the same level of greatness. As a result of not expecting too much, I wasn't disappointed overall (there were a few small things that disappointed me here and there, but not enough to dampen my enthusiasm) and had a good time watching the movies in the theater when they were new, and at home in the years since.
They could be good movies if they weren't half filler garbage, watch the M4's movie cut and it becomes a good movie
After the first movie came out I saw a comment online saying "what if they end the 3rd movie going back to older Bilbo as Gandalf shows up at his door" and my reaction was omg if they do that I will lose my entire mind and sob my eyes out so when it happened omg I was in bits like I cried just watching it in this reaction i love it so much.
Mentioning Aragorn is pretty amusing in light of the book canon, since in Tolkien lore Aragorn is 10 years old during the events of The Hobbit.
The movies didn't have 17 years between Bilbo's birthday and Frodo leaving on the quest, so Aragon should be in his early 20s
noo omg that is freaking adorable *sobbs *
A great book to start the journey through middle earth with is Children of Hurin.
It's story plays in the first age of middle earth, almost six thousand years before the Lord of the Rings... so our won't find Hobbits.
And the Dark Lord will not even be Sauron, but his predecessor.
But, it's an awesum read. A single book, just a few hundered pages.
The only warning would be this: Do not read the preface, or any other things about this story. You might find heavy spoilers.
So, to avid that... Just get the book and start with chapter one 😉
1) Elves, 2) Dwarves, 3) Men unite against 4) Goblins (on Wolves) and later come 5) The Eagles.
The goblins and wolves are considered two different armies, and the eagles are for some reason not. We see the goblins and wolves meet in the book to determine that they will fight together since they are two different entities
Wasn’t it Elves Dwarves Men Goblins and Orcs? That’s five armies there
The adaptations change how the Five Armies are counted. In the book, it's:
1 Goblins / 2 Wolves / 3 Elves / 4 Men / 5 Dwarves
The Eagles aren't counted as an army, perhaps because they arrived near the end of the battle.
In the old animated Rankin/Bass movie the armies are counted as:
1 Goblins on Wolves / 2 Elves / 3 Men / 4 Dwarves / 5 Eagles
Goblins and orcs are just two different names for the same creature. "The Hobbit" mostly calls them "goblins" and refers to them as "orcs" only twice, while "The Lord of the Rings" usually calls them "orcs" but occasionally refers to them as "goblins".
No. The official 5 armies for this movie version is
1. Dwarves of the Iron Hill
2. Silvan Elves of Mirkwood
3. Men of Laketown
4. Orcs of Dol Guldur
5. Orcs of Gundabad
The goblins are just mercenaries in this movie and not an entire army.
Also both tolkien and jackson didnt count the eagles and the woodland beasts as part of the 5 armies even though they were the one who turned the tide of battle.
Orc and Goblins are the same thing, and the wargs are just beasts they use and not their own army. It is the eagles that are the fifth army, they can speak and think and they act in the service of Manwë.
Beef between elf and dwarfs are much older than what they show here. Ancient dwarfs (Second age i think) killed elf king and stole some treasures, then elf took revenge and nearly extinguished dwarfs clans
Thorin's dying words to Bilbo are directly from the book. Beautiful words by the master, J.R.R. Tolkien. The trouble with the weak writing of Thorin's madness/recovery in the movie is that it's not from the book, it's the adaptation stretching the story too thin. There was no Azog, there was no romantic subplot. After the end of the battle (the eagles were the fifth army), Bilbo was found by a scout and brought to Thorin's side. The Arkenstone was used as a bargaining chip, but did not drive Thorin mad. It was considered such a minor plot point that the Arkenstone was left out of a previous animated adaptation altogether.
This adaptation also went overboard building up the idea of the special arrows. In the book, a thrush (iirc) flew down and whispered in Bard's ear the secret of Smaug's missing scale, and the dragon was then brought down with an ordinary arrow hitting the mark.
Lord of the Rings had to be condensed and reduced to fit within three movies, while the one book The Hobbit had to be built on and built on to pad out to three movies.
Thorin sees his bad self being swallowed by the gold as a symbolism that the greed and dragon sickness will be his death, that makes him snap back into reality and get cured of the dragon sickness.
The Dwarves of the Iron Hills, Men Of Lake Town, Orcs Of Gundabad, Orcs of Dol Guldur, and the Forest Elves: Those Five Armies.
Actually, there were only one Orc Army (the Gundabad one), the 5th Army are either the Wolves or the Eagles.
@@ladvargleinad7566 What wolves? How can you fact check me if there wasn’t any wolves?
@@ogbunb622 There were in the extended edition.
@@ogbunb622the Wargs were the 5th army, they were omitted in the movie but they are still supposed to be the 5th Army. Peter Jackson changed it to have the Eagles as the 5th Army. Both Orc armies are still one army.
@@user-xx6vy9ri8punfortunately they were not, she watched the extended edition. They only had a few Wargs in the movies.
"He was my friend." alwayyyyyyyys gets to me. Wonderful.
1- Elfs, 2 - Mans, 3 Earf, Wind & Fire, 4 - ???, 5 - Profit.
I see what you did there...
Orc = gets killed by 3 layers of love
Orc: "WTF KIND OF LOVE TRIANGLE IS THIS?!"
I hope you watch the Pirates of the Caribbean movies ❤❤❤
Yess me too!
Thorin, FIli and Kili dies in the book as well but under different circumstance. The brothers dies defending their uncle against Bolg's (he is the leader of the orc and warg armies, Azog died at Moria) bodyguards and then Thorin was mortally wounded but Beorn in bearshape drags him out from the battle before crushing Bold and his bodyguards to death.
33:48 - "Gandalf must know that he still has it. He knows that it's probably safest here in the Shire, in an unassuming place."
At this stage, Gandalf only knows that Bilbo has found a magic ring- of which there are a few here and there. It doesn't need hiding, if it's nothing particularly special. He does NOT realize that the plain ol' magic ring that Bilbo found is THE "One Ring" until the events of the LOTR unfold. After Bilbo's 111th birthday party: When we see him go off on his own, reading old books and parchments about the history of Middle Earth: that's when he rides back to confirm the hidden writing that only fire can reveal: THEN he knows!
But at this point, he just thinks that the ring Bilbo's been playing with is a regular, run of the mill ring-with-some-magic-properties. Not a toy to be played with, is his warning! But not AS dangerous as it later turns out to be.
Yeah, I mean. What's the chance that the ONE Ring will just end up in the hands of a hobbit after 3000 years!
I think the four armies are 1. Laketown 2. Elves 3. Dwarves (Thorins company and Dains army) 4. Azogs Orcs and 5. Bolgs Orcs. In the book it's Dwarves, Elves, Men of Laketown, Orcs (Bolgs army because Bolg is Azogs son and Azog isn't involved in this story in the books) and Wargs/Wolves I believe
After watching Castelvania on Netflix, I can't listen to Thorin anymore without hearing Trevor Belmont. (Voiced by the same actor) 😂
As several others have said the 5th army was omitted in the movie, the Wargs were reduced to a minor role and they made the Eagles and Beorn into the 5th army. The Gundabad Orcs were not the 5th army, it's just extra forces.
Erebor was barely mentioned in the LOTR books. Dain became King Under the Mountain and ruled until the War of the Ring when the Woodland Realm, Lothlorian and Erebor were attacked by Sauron's forces. Galadrian held forces back from Lothlorian wirh just the power of her ring, Thranduil defended Mirkwood while Dain was slain in combat outside of Erebor but the Dwarves still were victorious when the Ring was destroyed. Erebor remained a Dwarven realm until the end of time.
This was a good movie, there were comments that the whole series could have been in two parts, but Hollywood loves a trilogy. :D
One of the reasons many people don't like these movies are because they - just like you - watched the theatrical editions (not the finished movie honestly) instead of the extended editions. And also because of the uncanny valley feel that the 48 fps versions shown at the movies has, which the first blu-ray and dvd's also are based on. The later editions and especially the newly remastered and re-color graded 4k editions does look amazing.
I saw BOTFA in the theater. Sitting a few rows in front of me were a squad of girls who had their phones out TikTok-ing thru the whole picture. But when the credits started rolling, they left with the crowd - and I got to hear Billy Boyd's farewell.
THAT was when I broke down; because to me, the lyrics were saying goodbye. There were going to be no more movies of Middle-earth, the tales had been told. I sat there in the theater alone, quietly weeping, bidding them a very fond farewell.
Ang, you've completed a wonderful journey with me, and thank you for letting me come along.
Namárië...
The five armies are described as Elves, Men, Dwarves, and two armies of Orcs - one from Dol Guldur and the other from Gundabad. Azog acts as commander, rather than Bolg, and set up a signal post on Raven Hill to coordinate the battle.
Por fin tenemos reacción y final de esta trilogia. Gracias Angelina.
SO SAD YOU DIDN’T END UP WATCH THE END CREDIT SONG 😭
It’s sung by Billy Boyd, who’s the actor for Pippin, and its basically the last farewell to Middle Earth and it literally brings me to tears almost every time I listen to it
Lord of the Rings was written after The Hobbit. When Tolkien wrote The Hobbit, the ring was just a magic ring.. but when he wrote LotR, thats when it became the One Ring
There are two Orc armies, the ones from Moria, led by Azog, and the ones from Mount Gundabad in the north, where Legolas said his mother died.
Only one orc army.
In movies without extended scenes: 1. Black forest elf 2. Esgaroth humans 3. Ironhills dwarf 4. Dol guldur orc/goblin
In movies with extended scenes and book: 1. Black forest elf 2. Esgaroth humans 3. Ironhills dwarf 4. Dol guldur orc/goblin 5. Eagles and Beorn (nature creatures)
There're five armies dear Angelina
Dang you should have watched the extended version for this one. I find the extended makes the Hobbit better.
same with lotr, and honestly most movies xD
She did watch the extended edition, the elves jumping over the Dwarves is one of the scenes cut from the Theatrical version and we see it here.
The elves jumping over the dwarves were in the theatrical release, too. When the dwarves show up, the dwarves lines are right in front of elven lines in the theatrical release. Which happens here. In the extended version, the dwarves fight the elves. The theatrical release, the elves and dwarves have a stand-off.
Peter Jackson's extended Versions are ALWAYS better than the 'Studio Edited, Run Time for Theaters' editions. King Kong had a lot more depth in the Extended Cut as well. No other filmmaker does Extended Cuts Like Peter Jackson. And the "Behind the Scenes" content is impressive too.
Nerdy channel.... Actually there is not so much nerds in this world!
THANK YOU!
In this movie the armies are men, elves, dwarves, and two orc armies but in the book the armies were men, elves, dwarves, goblins, and eagles
The "men, elves, dwarves, goblins and eagles" were the armies in the animated Rankin/Bass version of "The Hobbit". In the books, it was the goblins, wolves, men, elves and dwarves. Tolkien didn't count the eagles for some reason, maybe because they arrived near the end of the battle.
Notice how, even when he was under the influence of the dragon/gold sickness, Thorin did not trust anyone except Bilbo? He seemed to almost snap out of his delusions when Bilbo was there, he was LESS insane than he usually was.
The Battle of the Five Armies consisted of: 1) Dwarves; 2) Sylvan (Wood) Elves; 3) the Men of Esgaroth (a.k.a. "Lake-Town"); 4) the Eagles of Manwë; and 5) Beornings (skin-changers). The Five Armies faced both Goblins from the Misty Mountains and Orcs from Mount Gundabad and Khazad-dûm.
It's a shame you didn't see the extended edition cuz there are more stuff, such as some references to the Three Elven Rings, we see the guardian orc getting reduced to wet chunks by Galadriel, The elvs and the dwarves starts to fight before the orcs arrive, a lot of extra fighting stuff with the dwarves, including Fili, Kili, Dwalin and Balin ride a war chariot as they follow Thorin to Ravenhill, slaughter many orcs and wargs on their way and getting prusued by a troll on a frozen river and finally when wargs attack the goats dragging the chariot, forcing Fili, Kili and Dwalin to cut loose and ride the remaining goats while Balin fends for himself with a machine gun-like cross bow on the chariot (Dwalin uses it a lot during the ride), Bofur jumps up on Stumpy the Troll, kills the orc controlling him and takes over, using it to attack the orc forces similiar to how Chewbacca in Return of the Jedi hijacks the Chicken Walker and attacks the Imperials with it. Bifur headbutts an orc which causes the axe in his forehead to get stuck in the orc's, Bofur and Bombur helps him getting dying orc off which results Bifur's axe being pulled off and he's able to speak common tounge again (because of the axe he could only speak dwarvish) saying "You know where you can stick that!" when Bombur gives him the axe back, which he throws to the ground. After Alfrid runs away he hides in a dead troll's catapult while Gandalf tries to fend against a troll but the staff he got from Radagast acts up (the Brown Wizard warns him of this), Alfrid drops one of the gold coins in his panic, causes it to hit the lever on the catapult which sends him flying right into the troll's mouth which suffocates it and when it dies, it lands hard on the ground, snapping Alfrid's spine off and the coins pours out from the troll's mouth (he inadvertily saved Gandalf from the troll while died by his greed, simliar to The Master in the book). The last scene is Thorin, Fili and Kili's funeral with Dain Ironfoot being crowned king as he's the only heir left as his nephews also died and Thorin had no kids.
When Bilbo saying goodbye to his fellow dwars, it's the last time they are seeing each other
I still cry even if Ive seen the movies many times and different reactions many times😭 Good job reacting❤
So the bad blood between Elves and Dwarves goes way deeper than the Battle of the Five Armies. It goes back to the creation of Middle Earth. The elves were supposed to be the First Born but Aule A Valor created Dwarves before Eru Illuvatar brought forth the Elves. Illuvatar almost destroyed them but when he saw them cower he gave them the flame of life and put them to sleep in the earth until he sent Elves and Men to Middle Earth. For a while they traded for metals and gems and weapons but soon arguments and war broke out over payment.
Galadriel rips Dol Goldur down to it's very foundation after they chase Sauron away. She singlehandedly crushes the entire fortress and throws it down into ruin to the point it can never be rebuilt, she tore up the very bedrock foundation of it.
The Five Armies are: The Dwarves of The Iron Hills, The Elves of Mirkwood, The Men of Lake Town, Azog's orc forces from Dol Guldur and Bolg's orc forces from Gundabad. In the book the last two armies are The Orcs and the Wargs.
It’s counted differently in the books, but in this movie the five armies are noted as:
1) Humans
2) Elves
3) Dwarves
4) Dol Guldur Orcs
5) Gundabad Orcs
With respect, the fifth army are the Eagles, with Beorn.
@@MichaelLee-tt7gm You are correct, the eagles are labeled as the fifth army according to Tolkien in the book. But in the movie the orc reinforcements are explicitly stated to be an additional army.
Gandalf didn’t know it was “the ring” he thought bilbo found “A ring”, gandalf himself owned a ring, in the right hands they’re not evil, only when given to people in positions of power.
Granted in the books, Gandalf had no idea bilbo found the ring
The four agreed upon armies are the Dwarves, the Elves, the Humans of Lake Town, and the Orcs/Gundabad. The fifth army has been debated. Ive heard the eagles referred to as the fifth army but also wizard or hobbit as the fifth even though there is one. If anyone has ither fifth armies, please correct me
Lake men
Dwarves
Elves
Orcs of Dol’guldur
Orcs of Gundabad
@@bluemonger No, the Orcs only have one Army (the Gundabad one), the 5th is Wolves, Eagles or the Company.
@@ladvargleinad7566according to the books, yes it is the wolves, according to the 1977 Rankin Bass animated film, it is the Eagles, but in the 2014 film they counted the orc armies as separate armies, this is mentioned in the Behind the scenes Documentary “Beneath the Thunder: Forging a Battle of Five Armies” part 12.
In the book, the wolves were counted as one of the "Five Armies" but the Eagles were not. In the Rankin/Bass animated film, it was the other way around, as the wolves were counted as part of the goblin army and the eagles were counted as one of the "Five Armies".
finally been waiting!
The 5 armies canonically are men, elves, dwarves, goblins, and wargs. Orcs are technically goblins because there was no word yet in the books for what they were. And the wargs are their mounts, so it's actually 4 armies. Men, elves, dwarves, and orcs(on wargs). On an unrelated note, it's okay to be silent sometimes and let the thoughts stay inside. Feeling compelled to speak is a common disorder for young people. It's driven by vine, tiktok, and other social media where you have to express everything in 7-60 seconds.
The five armies are Elves from Mirkwood, Dwarves from Iron Mountains and Erebor, Lake's Men, Orcs and Wargs. In the book, this difference is much more clear as Wargs are considered as a different army from orcs, but in the film this aspect has been changed, so instead we have to types of Orcs, orcs from Gundabad lead by Bolg, and orcs from Dol Guldur lead by Azog. Hope I helped to understand more, great job with this video. You're great🤩🤩
In the extended edition, the elves do fight the dwarves. Only for a few minutes but the extended edition adds at least 18 minutes of battle footage. Also, not sure if you know this but Benedict Cumberbatch voices Smaug
6:30 in the movie: its called "dragon sickness" dwarves suffer it.. no different when when anyone puts on the ring of power. if you are like gandalf,lord elrond, lady galadriel .. or even balin(cousin to gimli/gloin) persona magical rings with the ring of power will rule over that individual s.."
It’s finally here!
The five armies are 1: the dwarves, 2: the elves, 3: humans, 4: orcs and 5: wargs (the wolf like creatures that some of the orcs are riding on)
Awesome reaction of my favorite The Hobbit movie!!!!!!!😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊
When Sauraman said "Leave Sauron to me", he meant it. He was still good.
If more of us valued food and cheer and song above hoarded gold, it would be a merrier world
🥹
In Fellowship, in Moria, they find Balin's tomb. You can see the bodies of Ori and Oin there as well. The song at the end of the movie is The Last Goodbye and the singer is Billy Boyd (Pippen). The song is a goodbye song sang from Bilbo's perspective. Here is the official video and it is absolutely a must watch: czcams.com/video/q8ir8rVl2Z4/video.html
Peter Jackson will be producing new Tolkien films. The first film - The Hunt for Gollum - will be directed by and star Andy Serkis, and is due for release in 2026. The news of Peter Jackson's involvement first announced by Warner Bros.
What happened afterwards? Dane becomes the new king while some of our dwarves (as well as some of Dane's) go and recapture the MINES OF MORIA and make their kingdom great again... Only for them to all die and the Lord Of The Rings Fellowship scene to happen. Thats the tomb from that movie, Balin from this movie.
During the time of the last movie of LOTR Sauron also sent the Easterlings to attack the mountain because he couldn’t risk dwarves and men uniting against him. His armies would’ve been wiped out so he kind of separated them.Thorins cousin becomes the king under the mountain.
Balin (the oldest dwarf) and the Youngest dwarf we see the dead in the mines of Moria where Gimli mourns them in the first LOTR movie.
Youngest dwarf named Ori
And we know they attacked the dwarves because the dialogue between Gimli and Legolas.
Gimili says he wish he could summon an army of dwarves armed cabs filthy and Legolas replies by saying he fears war is already being waged on their lands
I still keep watching the Hobbit and LOTR. It never gets old.
The main thing that drew Bilbo and Thorin so close was they had one main goal: the need to go home.
Richard Armitage (Thorin) had said that why Thorin sacrificed himself was, protecting this world from Azog was more important than his own life.
Should have done the extended edition...
first minute: "this might just cure me and make all my problems go away"
me: *sobbs in flashbacks * "it probably won't"
Tolkien fought in WW1. He knows there are things that need to be fought for, but there is a cost to the fight , and war is not something to glorify. The way he writes these big battles reflects that.
Aw heck yeahhh excited!!
The books will offer you so much more, Ange. If it's great epic writing you want, Tolkien's your man. Back In the day he was all we had and many craved the day when technology was advanced enough to do his mighty vision justice on the big screen - about half a century as it turned out. The books also help you appreciate the film-makers' astute condensations and redactions, Love your vibrant and entertaing work. Happy reading, honey chile..
ok so the 5 armies are the elves, men, dwarfs, orcs, and goblins. With orcs and goblins joining together and men, elves and dwarfs together to defeat Azog and his forces. Hope this helps 😃
Lord of the Rings, the Hobbit, and Middle Earth in general--I LOVEEEE. To this day it's one of my most favorite world, series, franchise, whatever. Harry Potter, Star Trek, and ATLA are a few others but none has topped LOTR. The world, the characters, everything was just written out so well and leaves a lot of room for imagination.
Not Angela predicting everything in this movie😂❤
the extended cut explains that Thorin's cousin inherits everything so take a look at that
Can't wait for Star Trek reactions on Your channel. 🖖😌
this is my fav hobbits film icl also love watching ppl react to see how they react to how I react
I really enjoy watching your reactions, you're so funny, charming, and sweet. This movie is AWESOME ❤
All Fallen Dwarves, Men and Elves, Rest in Peace.
Kili, Son of Dis, Rest in Peace.
Fili, Son of Dis, Rest in Peace.
Thorin, Son of Thrain, Son of Thror, King Under the Mountain, Rest in Peace.
Press F to Pay Respect.
F
F
F
I think the extended edition is even more important for this trilogy than LotR. The theatrical cuts for Lord of the Rings were still pretty good movies. For this trilogy though, the theatrical cuts were not quite as bad as the 2000 Dungeons and Dragons movie, and the extended cuts bring it up to "watchable/a fun time."
If you're interested in the extended lore of Middle-earth, you can always check out channels that retell Tolkien's writings like Nerd of the Rings or Men of the West.
There's the humans from lake town, azog/bolg and his orc plus his goblin armies then theres the elves and the dwarves.
The orcs, the elves, the dwarves, the men of laketown, and the eagles
Thank you for such great content Ange.
I can suggest you to check the rings of power if you are eager to get back into middle earth.
Although, not for a reaction since it caught a lot of hate.
However, there is many things to save from the rings of power and you can enjoy it !
And for the books, I would start with the hobbit and then the lotr, then silmarillion, and I hope that if you read them, you are able to share your thoughts in your socials or stream l, why not ? Even a small blog.
Again, thank you for all the great content !
Dwalin (the dude who talked some sense into Thorin) was played by Graham McTavish. He is an excellent and highly underrated actor in my opinion. He's in show Lucifer (I believe season 4-5) and several other shows that are too long to list here.
Ser Harold Westerling in HOTD
Technically the Five armies were supposed to be Elves, Dwarves, Humans, Orcs and Wargs, but since Wargs were kind of made equivalent to horses with teeth in lord of the rings instead of super intelligent in the Hobbit, they swapped Wargs for a second army from Gundabad. Honestly I felt it was a good repair to make it fit in with the Lord of the Rings films.
Lol, Fili is the blonde-haired one, Kili is the dark-haired one. Fili was older so he would have been next in line to be king after Thorin
If you want to get into the books now: there's a relatively new audiobook series read by Andy Serkis (Smeagol). It's the best rendition I've listened to so far.
There is another LOTR film coming out
Peter JAckson is filming it
ive always said this, people would love the hobbit triology if it didn't have to follow the lord of the rings. its not just a tough act to follow, it's an imposible act to follow and i genuinely think no movie will match it
edit: if you want more middle earth tho then the rings of power TECHNICALLY exists but is generally considered utterly awful by everyone whos seen it. also i highly recommend the audiobooks read by andy serkis (he played gollum) theyre extremely good and, as someone with adhd, reading the lord of the rings is pretty challenging to stay paying attention
Andy Serkis is quickly becoming one of my favorite chameleon actors, didn't know he narrated an audiobook!
@@SimplyConeh hes done most of tolkiens work i think he has the unfinished tales and letters to read
they also did the very bold (and in hindsight, a stupid) move of creating a new character out of scratch, then sticking her in a love triangle between an elf and a dwarf. oh yeah, and sauron has to be in these movies as well because they are more like prequels rather than the hobbit itself.
@@CursedAnqxl mm especially considering the hobbit already lacks female characters, adding one to just be a love interest is... a choice
5 armies:
dwarves
elves
humans (laketown)
2x orcs
The re established kingdom of Dale and Erebor together with the Elvish Kingdom of Lorien and Mirkwood were all attacked during the events of the Lord of the Rings along with the Kingdom of Rohan and Gondor.
This is why no help came to them from the north during the assault on Mordor.
King Dain cousin of Thorin would die defending the body of his friend King Brand grandson of Bard the Bowman.
You are so kind!
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
You should watched the Lion, the witch and the wardrobe and also the chronicles of narnia