The Hobbit 3 -

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.

The final act is pure catharsis: Bilbo says goodbye to the surviving dwarves, rides home to Bag End, and finds his belongings being auctioned off (the “missing presumed dead” moment from the book). The final line—“I think I’m quite ready for another adventure”—ties perfectly to the beginning of The Fellowship of the Ring , but there’s sadness in his eyes. He has seen too much. Here’s where many Tolkien fans bristle. In the novel, the Battle of Five Armies happens off-screen . Bilbo is knocked unconscious by a rock and wakes up after it’s over. The film invents the Tauriel/Legolas/Kili love triangle, Alfrid the sniveling servant (a widely hated comic relief character), and the prolonged Dol Guldur subplot where Gandalf, Elrond, Galadriel, and Saruman fight the Necromancer (revealed as Sauron). the hobbit 3

Richard Armitage’s Thorin, the dragon attack on Lake-town, and the heartbreaking farewell on the battlefield. Bard the Bowman, now the reluctant hero of