When The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies hit theaters in December 2014, it arrived with a mix of anticipation and exhaustion. After the sprawling, slower-paced An Unexpected Journey and the contentious but enjoyable The Desolation of Smaug , audiences braced for a finale that promised exactly what its title delivered: war.
Not entirely. The Dol Guldur sequence gives Ian McKellen, Cate Blanchett, and Hugo Weaving a chance to shine. But Alfrid’s slapstick (dressed as a woman, hoarding gold) feels tonally wrong for a film about war and loss. Final Verdict: Flawed but Moving The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies is the weakest of the three Hobbit films, but it’s also the most emotionally resonant. It suffers from franchise bloat—clearly stretched from a 100-page book section. Yet, when it focuses on Thorin’s tragic fall, Bilbo’s quiet bravery, and the mournful aftermath of battle, it soars. the hobbit 3
You hate CGI armies, long battles with no dialogue, or deviations from Tolkien’s text. Lasting Thought The Battle of the Five Armies reminds us that in Middle-earth, the real battle isn’t orcs vs. dwarves—it’s the battle inside the heart: between greed and fellowship, pride and humility. And for a film that ends an often-criticized trilogy, that’s a surprisingly profound note to leave on. When The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five
Only when Thorin looks into Bilbo’s eyes and sees genuine, non-transactional loyalty does the gold-lust crack. His final redemption—riding out to face the goblin army, whispering, “Will you follow me, one last time?”—is arguably the most emotional beat in the entire trilogy. Let’s address the elephant in the room: the Battle of the Five Armies (Elves, Dwarves, Men, Goblins/Wargs, and Eagles). It is a staggering achievement in digital scale. Thousands of orcs, spinning Legolas physics-defying stunts (including the infamous “boots on falling bricks” moment), and Dain Ironfoot’s hilarious, pig-riding dwarf cavalry. The Dol Guldur sequence gives Ian McKellen, Cate
Bard the Bowman, now the reluctant hero of Lake-town, slays the dragon not with a grand speech but with a simple, brutal black arrow. The dragon’s fall crushes the town, leaving refugees fleeing toward the ruins of Dale. This opening sets the tone: winning isn’t clean. For all its epic battles, the film’s true engine is character drama. Richard Armitage delivers a powerhouse performance as Thorin Oakenshield, consumed by “dragon-sickness”—a metaphor for extreme greed and paranoia. Seated upon the vast treasure hoard of Erebor, Thorin refuses to share a single coin with the survivors of Lake-town, even as they freeze and starve.