
The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug
The Dwarves, Bilbo and Gandalf have successfully escaped the Misty Mountains, and Bilbo has gained the One Ring. They all continue their journey to get their gold back from the Dragon, Smaug.
Director(s)
Peter Jackson
Carolynne Cunningham
Veronique Lawrence
Victoria Sullivan
Carolina Jiménez
Where to watch

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Cast & crew

Stephen Fry
The Master of Laketown

Orlando Bloom
Legolas

James Nesbitt
Bofur

Greg Ellis
Net Mender

Lawrence Makoare
Bolg

Benedict Cumberbatch
Smaug / Sauron

Martin Freeman
Bilbo Baggins

Jed Brophy
Nori

Nick Blake
Percy

Peter Hambleton
Gloin

Ken Stott
Balin

Cate Blanchett
Galadriel

Ian McKellen
Gandalf the Grey

Richard Armitage
Thorin Oakenshield

Sylvester McCoy
Radagast the Brown

Dean O'Gorman
Fili

Aidan Turner
Kili

Graham McTavish
Dwalin

Adam Brown
Ori

John Callen
Oin

Mark Hadlow
Dori

William Kircher
Bifur

Stephen Hunter
Bombur

Lee Pace
King Thranduil

Manu Bennett
Azog the Defiler

Stephen Ure
Fimbul

Katie Jackson
Betsy Butterbur

Terry Notary
Goblin (uncredited)

Peter Jackson
Albert Dreary (uncredited)
Victoria Sullivan
-

Carolynne Cunningham
-

Carolina Jiménez
-

Luke Evans
Bard / Girion

Evangeline Lilly
Tauriel

Mikael Persbrandt
Beorn

Ryan Gage
Alfrid

John Bell
Bain

Peggy Nesbitt
Sigrid

Mary Nesbitt
Tilda

Ben Mitchell
Narzug

Kelly Kilgour
Soury

Craig Hall
Galion

Mark Mitchinson
Braga

Robin Kerr
Elros

Sarah Peirse
Hilda Blanca

Eli Kent
Lethuin

Simon London
Feren

Brian Sergent
Spider

Peter Vere-Jones
Spider

Allan Smith
Orc Underling

Dallas Barnett
Bill Ferny Snr

Matt Smith
Squint
Richard Whiteside
Butterbur Snr

Ray Henwood
Old Fisherman

Tim Gordon
Stallkeeper

Jabez Olssen
Fish Monger

Stephen Colbert
Laketown Spy

Evelyn McGee-Colbert
Laketown Spy
Jack Binding
Laketowner (uncredited)
Peter Colbert
Laketown Spy
Terry Binding
Laketowner (uncredited)
John Colbert
Laketown Spy
Norman Kali
Laketown Spy
Carter Nixon
Laketown Spy
Zane Weiner
Laketown Spy

Frank Edwards
Dock Worker (uncredited)

Emma Smith
Dead Dwarf (uncredited)
Phoebe Gittins
Prancing Pony Wench (uncredited)

Alaina Wilks
Laketown Girl (uncredited)
Veronique Lawrence
-
Details
Reviews
Per Gunnar Jonsson
7 out of 10 stars would normally be considered quite okay and I guess you could say that this movie is quite okay. However, it has a reputation to live up to. As a movie in the Tolkien universe and with LOTR and The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey this movie have a lot to live up to and, as far as I am concerned, it does not. As an action/adventure/fantasy movie it is a quite okay movie. It has a lot of action of course, a lot of adventure and a lot of special effects. Of course everything plays out with the Tolkien universe as a back-drop. I guess it is rather superfluous to mention that the movie is based on the book The Hobbit by Tolkien. However it is here the problems start. In my review of The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey the first thing that I mentioned was that you should be aware of the fact that the movie did not follow the book in any great detail and that this was quite okay since the extensions were well made. Well, it should be no surprise that the first part of this statement is valid for this movie as well. Unfortunately, whereas the first movie felt like a fluid extension of the book this one feels like it is just full of fillers. There are a lot of cool scenes and a lot of action but it really feels like it was just put in there as fillers to showcase the special effects. Speaking of special effects, quite a few of them where rather unimpressive I have to say. The scenes where the dwarfs went down the rapids in barrels frequently looked plastic and artificial. The scenes with Smaug was not too bad even though he was quite overused but the parts around the forges was just plain ridiculous. I know it is fantasy but come one, getting them started and producing tons and tons of molten gold in a few minutes not to mention riding on molten metal without getting burned was just silly. On the whole I found it an enjoyable movie but I was expecting more.
Tom Goetz
Jackson turned a great story into just another Prates of the Caribbean. Jumping, sliding, gags, etc. All the thinking parts are gone.
CinemaSerf
I'm afraid I still really struggled with the lightweight casting here, but once I'd convinced myself to get over that, I found this to be a far more characterful and entertaining adventure. With the dragon "Smaug" now safely in possession of the gold, it falls to "Thorin" (Richard Armitage) and his band of dwarves to make their way - via the misty mountains and the realm of the elves - to the human settlement of "Laketown" where the nimble-fingered "Bilbo" (Martin Freeman) must find and use a secret way into the lair so he can try to repossess the "Arkenstone". Meantime, the mischievous "Gandalf" (Sir Ian McKellen) is off having escapades of his own in the South? Will they rendezvous in time to thwart the increasingly narked fire-breather. What is clear here is that some of the philosophising from the book is very much on the back burner. This is an out-and-out action movie with loads of combat scenes, some very clever visual effects that almost rendered me a bit sea-sick at times - all built around a solid story of companionship and determination. Characters are playing to their strengths and weaknesses; relationships are being forged and challenged; courage is being found - and lost and it's all enjoyable and engaging to watch on the big screen. Maybe I could have been doing without the romantic interludes (yuk!) but for the most part this is a great looking and visionary interpretation that just happens to have a cast that really should have been so much better. A good, not a great, watch that tees us up nicely for the finale.
Andres Gomez
The second part amends the fiasco of the first one. Spectacular and, again, with several moments of the already classic "platform-like" fights on the run from these series of movies that could be enhanced if some sense would be given to them. Still, the staging of every location and, remarkably, Smaug, is worth seeing.
Gimly
I'm happy to be back in this world, but _Empire_ this ain't. _Final rating:★★★ - I liked it. Would personally recommend you give it a go._
r96sk
Still very good, but I found <em>'The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug'</em> to be a step below the preceding 2012 release. The conclusion is what affects it the most, in my opinion. It isn't anything bad, but it goes on for too long - yet the ending itself comes out of nowhere a little. It's iffily crafted, with the entertainment value not enough to cover it up. Again, nothing anywhere near terrible... just not as great as I wanted/expected. I also kinda wanted more scenes with Martin Freeman (Bilbo) across the midway point. I like the focus on Richard Armitage (Thorin) & Co. but I felt there needed to be more with the lead - and with Ian McKellen (Gandalf), for that matter. I've led with my negatives first, but I have many positives too. I enjoyed the scenes in Esgaroth with Luke Evans (Bard), all of the stuff there looks awesome. The character of Tauriel, played by Evangeline Lilly, is cool. Orlando Bloom (Legolas) remains fun to watch. Everything else, including the score, is very nicely done - as anticipated. Love the end credits song ("I See Fire") by Ed Sheeran, by the way. Not quite as grand and great as "May It Be" from LOTR, but it's pretty close!

![The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug - Sneak Peek [HD]](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fi.ytimg.com%2Fvi%2Flfflhfn1W-o%2Fmaxresdefault.jpg&w=3840&q=75)
![The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug - Official Main Trailer [HD]](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fi.ytimg.com%2Fvi%2FOs1G8RtqY2c%2Fmaxresdefault.jpg&w=3840&q=75)
![The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug - Official Teaser Trailer [HD]](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fi.ytimg.com%2Fvi%2FfnaojlfdUbs%2Fmaxresdefault.jpg&w=3840&q=75)

