Many years ago, theDwarf king Thrór led his kin to prosperity under theLonely Mountain until thedragonSmaug arrived. Smaug destroyedDale, drove the Dwarves from their mountain, and took their gold. Thrór's grandson,Thorin Oakenshield, appealed toElf kingThranduil for help, but was denied, causing him to foster a hatred for Elves.
Sixty years before Bilbo's above celebrated birthday, in theShire, 51-year-old Bilbo is tricked by thewizardGandalf the Grey into hosting a dinner for Thorin and his company of Dwarves:Balin,Dwalin,Fíli,Kíli,Dori,Nori,Ori,Óin,Glóin,Bifur,Bofur, andBombur. Gandalf aims to recruit Bilbo as the company's "burglar" to assist them in their quest to enter the Lonely Mountain. Reluctant at first, Bilbo changes his mind after the company leaves without him the next day, racing to join them. Traveling onward, they are captured by threeTrolls. Bilbo delays the Trolls from eating them until dawn, and Gandalf exposes them to sunlight, turning them to stone. The company discovers the Trolls' cave and finds treasure and Elven blades. Thorin and Gandalf each take an Elf-made blade,Orcrist andGlamdring, respectively; Gandalf gives anElven dagger to Bilbo.
The wizardRadagast the Brown finds the company and tells Gandalf about his encounter with theNecromancer, a sorcerer who has been corruptingGreenwood with dark magic, atDol Guldur. Chased byOrcs, Gandalf leads them through a hidden passage toRivendell. There,Lord Elrond discloses a hidden indication of a secret door on the company's map of the Lonely Mountain, which will be visible only onDurin's Day. Gandalf approaches theWhite Council — consisting of Elrond,Galadriel andSaruman the White — and presents aMorgul blade, theWitch-king of Angmar's weapon, which Radagast obtained from Dol Guldur as a sign that the Necromancer is linked to an eventual return ofSauron. Saruman expresses concern about the Dwarves' quest and requests Gandalf to end it. However, Gandalf secretly reveals to Galadriel that he anticipated this and had the Dwarves move forward without him.
The company ventures into theMisty Mountains and evades fighting Stone Giants. They seek refuge in a cave but are captured byGoblins and taken to their leader, the Great Goblin. Bilbo becomes separated from the Dwarves and falls into a crevice where he meetsGollum, who accidentally drops agolden ring. Bilbo pockets the ring and confronts Gollum. They play a riddle game, wagering that if Bilbo wins, he will be shown the way out; if he loses, Gollum will eat him. Bilbo tricks Gollum and wins, but Gollum realizes his ring is missing. Chased by Gollum, Bilbo discovers the ring grants him invisibility. As he escapes, Bilbo briefly considers killing Gollum, but spares him out of pity.
The Great Goblin informs the Dwarves that Azog, an Orc war-chief who killed Thrór and lost a hand to Thorin outside ofMoria, has placed a bounty on Thorin. Gandalf arrives, helps the Dwarves escape, and kills the Great Goblin. Bilbo reunites with the group and hides his new ring. The company is ambushed by Azog and takes refuge in trees. Thorin charges Azog but is injured by hisWarg. Bilbo saves Thorin and confronts Azog, just aseagles summoned by Gandalf to rescue them arrive.
The company escapes toCarrock, where Gandalf heals Thorin, who then renounces his disdain for Bilbo. They see the Lonely Mountain in the distance, where the sleeping Smaug is awoken by athrush knocking a snail against a stone.
The characters of Galadriel, Saruman, and Frodo Baggins appear in the novelThe Lord of the Rings, but not in the novelThe Hobbit. (Radagast was also dropped from the film version ofLord of the Rings, merely being mentioned in passing). Gandalf, Gollum, Bilbo Baggins, Elrond and the Necromancer appear in both novels, although the latter is referred to inLord of the Rings asSauron. Only Bilbo is portrayed by a different actor in the two sets of films, as the age difference affects his character more. The older Bilbo (Ian Holm) appears in the prologue section of this film.
Mark Hadlow asDori: Nori and Ori's brother. He is described in the novel as "a decent fellow, despite his grumbling", while Thorin described him as being the strongest member of the company. Hadlow also plays Bert theStone-troll.
Hugo Weaving asElrond: the Elven-Lord ofRivendell, who gives shelter to Bilbo's party, despite Thorin's great suspicion of Elves. He was also portrayed by Weaving inThe Lord of the Rings film trilogy.[13]
Manu Bennett as Azog the Defiler: the Orc chieftain of Moria who beheaded King Thrór in the battle of Azanulbizar and now hunts for Thorin and his company after taking an oath to break the line of Durin. He leads a band of Hunter Orcs and rides a huge white warg.
Stephen Ure as Fimbul, one of Azog's Orc hunters, and lieutenant to Yazneg. After Yazneg is killed, Fimbul becomes Azog's right-hand man. Ure also played a goblin, named Grinnah, who acted as the Great Goblin's acolyte.
Michael Mizrahi asThráin II: the last Dwarf-King of Erebor and Thorin's father.
Benedict Cumberbatch as the voice of the dragonSmaug, as well asThe Necromancer, a mysterious sorcerer residing inDol Guldur with the ability to summon the spirits of the dead. Cumberbatch provided performance capture for the character's brief appearance in this film.[18]
Cameos in the film include directorPeter Jackson and editorJabez Olssen asErebor Dwarf refugees running from the dragonSmaug in the opening prologue; picture double Hayden J. Weal as a dwarf carrying gems during Thranduil's visit in Erebor;James Nesbitt's then-wife Sonia Forbes-Adam as Belladonna Took, Bilbo's mother; Nesbitt's daughters Peggy and Mary as children ofDale;Luke Evans as Girion; and production designerDan Hennah as the Old Took, Belladonna's father.Peter Jackson's daughter,Philippa Boyens's second son, andAndy Serkis' children appeared in the Old Took's party; andJabez Olssen's wife and children,Weta Workshop founderRichard Taylor's children, and set decoratorRa Vincent's children can all be seen in the market scene. Writer for Ain'tItCoolNews.com, Eric Vespe, portrays Fredegar Chubb, the fish seller at the market. The appearances in the Old Took's party and the market scene are shown only in the extended edition.
A film adaptation ofJ. R. R. Tolkien's novelThe Hobbit (1937) was in development for several years after the critical and financial success ofThe Lord of the Rings film trilogy (2001–2003), co-written, co-produced, and directed byPeter Jackson. Jackson was initially going to produce and write a two-film adaptation ofThe Hobbit, which was to be directed byGuillermo del Toro.[19] Del Toro left the project in May 2010, after about two years of working with Jackson and his production team, due to delays caused in part by financial problems atMetro-Goldwyn-Mayer.[20] Jackson was announced as director that October.[20]The Hobbit films wereproduced back to back, likeThe Lord of the Rings films.Principal photography forThe Hobbit films began on 21 March 2011 in New Zealand[21] and ended on 6 July 2012, after 266 days of filming.[22]Pick-ups forAn Unexpected Journey were filmed in July 2012 as well.[23] Work on the film was expected to be completed on 26 November, just two days prior to the film's Wellington premiere.[24]
Jackson had said that del Toro's sudden exit created problems as he felt he had a very little preparation time remaining before shooting had to begin, with unfinished scripts and withoutstoryboards, which increased the difficulty to direct it. Jackson stated, "Because Guillermo del Toro had to leave and I jumped in and took over, we didn't wind the clock back a year and a half and give me a year and a half prep to design the movie, which was different to what he was doing. It was impossible, and as a result of it being impossible I just started shooting the movie with most of it not prepped at all. You're going on to a set and you're winging it, you've got these massively complicated scenes, no storyboards and you're making it up there and then on the spot."[25][26][27]
Jackson also said, "I spent most ofThe Hobbit feeling like I was not on top of it. Even from a script point of view, Fran [Walsh], Philippa [Boyens] and I hadn't got the entire scripts written to our satisfaction, so that was a very high pressure situation".[28][29][30] However, Jackson goes on to explain in the DVD/Blu-ray featurettes the various ways in which he and his crew overcame the obstacles encountered during filming. They found ways of making things work, even in a "very high pressure situation" in which he and his crew found themselves, especially the shooting of the Battle of the Five Armies which was shifted from 2012 to 2013 to be properly planned and shot.[31][32][33]
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey used a shooting and projectionframe rate of 48 frames per second, becoming the first feature film with awide release to do so.[34] The new projection rate was advertised as "High Frame Rate" to the general public. However, the majority of cinemas projected the film at the industry standard 24 fps after the film was converted.[35][36]
Themusical score forAn Unexpected Journey was composed, orchestrated, conducted and produced byHoward Shore. It was performed by theLondon Philharmonic Orchestra,London Voices and Tiffin' Boys Choir and featured several vocal soloists. The score reprised many themes from theLord of the Rings trilogy but also introduced numerous new themes, including Shore's orchestral setting of thediegetic "Misty Mountains" song.[37]
At the facility where about 150[38] animals were housed for the production ofThe Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, up to 27 animals died.[39][40] The animals in question were horses, goats, chickens and one sheep.[38]
The first trailer forAn Unexpected Journey was first screened before the Jackson-producedThe Adventures of Tintin in the US on 21 December 2011,[41] and released on the Internet on the same day.[42] Geoff Boucher of theLos Angeles Times said, "While it was all too fleeting there was enough in it to stir the heart of fans."[43] Jen Chaney ofThe Washington Post stated, "Visually and tonally, this preview for [An Unexpected Journey] looks like a perfect match for the Frodo Baggins tales that released in 2001, 2002 and 2003. […] But plot isn't the main matter at hand in the trailer… This clip is all about reacquainting us with Middle-earth."[42]
Jackson, Freeman, McKellen, Armitage, Serkis, Wood, and co-screenwriterPhilippa Boyens appeared at the 2012San Diego Comic-Con promoting the film and screening 12 minutes of footage.[44]
On 8 October 2012, Wellington MayorCelia Wade-Brown announced that for the week of the premiere ofThe Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, the capital of New Zealand would be renamed the "Middle of Middle-earth".[45]
Guardians of Middle-earth, which was released with the special disclaimer on the front art, marking the connection to the feature film and contains models and characters from The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, includingNori,Gollum,Dwalin and others.
Lego The Lord of the Rings, which was released around the same time as the motion picture and contains a Lego model ofRadagast, based on his portrayal inThe Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey.
The Hobbit: Kingdoms of Middle-earth, which features characters and locations as well as the elements of the official soundtrack.
The world premiere ofThe Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey took place on 28 November 2012 at theEmbassy Theatre inWellington, New Zealand,[46] with a full theatrical release in New Zealand on 12 December. The film was released 13 December 2012 in Europe, 14 December 2012 in India, Canada and United States,[47][48] and 26 December 2012 (Boxing Day) in Australia. It was also screened at the 65thRoyal Film Performance in London on 12 December 2012, an event that was held in aid of theFilm & TV Charity and sawPrince William in attendance, who spoke with Martin Freeman about his enthusiasm for Tolkien's works.[49][50][51][52][53][54]Prince Charles had visited Peter Jackson, theWētā Workshop and met members of the cast a week before the New Zealand premiere.[55][56]
Around 100,000 people lined the red carpet onCourtenay Place for the film's premiere, and the entire event was broadcast live on TV in New Zealand, as well as streaming over the internet.[57]
An extended edition of the film had a limited re-release on 5 October 2015, accompanied by a special greeting from Peter Jackson.[58]
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey was released on DVD, Blu-ray and Blu-ray 3D on 19 March 2013,[59] with an extended edition, with 13 minutes of additional footage and three bonus discs containing approximately nine hours of special features, released on 5 November 2013.[60][61][62][63]An Unexpected Journey's home video sales made a revenue of $99 million with 6.2 million copies sold, making it the third best-selling title of 2013 behindDespicable Me 2 andThe Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 2.[64] In the United Kingdom, the film was released on 8 April 2013.[65]
An Unexpected Journey was released inUltra HD Blu-ray on 30 November 2020 in the United Kingdom and on 1 December 2020 in the United States, along with the other films of the trilogy, including both the theatrical and the extended editions of the films.[66]
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey grossed $303 million in the United States and Canada and $718.1 million elsewhere for a worldwide total of $1.017 billion,[6] becoming the 15th film in history to reach $1 billion. It is thefourth highest-grossing film of 2012.[67] It scored a worldwide opening weekend of $222.6 million,[68] including $15.1 million from 452 IMAX theatres around the world, which was an IMAX opening-weekend record for December.[69]
An Unexpected Journey earned $13.0 million during its midnight run, setting a December midnight record[70] (previously held byAvatar).[71] It then topped the box office on its opening day (Friday, 14 December 2012) earning $37.1 million[72] from 4,045 theatres (midnight earnings included), setting a December opening-day record (previously held byThe Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King).[73] By the end of its first weekend it grossed $84.62 million, finishing in first place and setting a then December opening-weekend record (previously held byI Am Legend).[74] 3D showings accounted for 49% of weekend ticket sales while IMAX showings generated $10.1 million (12% of the weekend gross).[74] The film held onto the top spot for a second weekend, despite declining 57% to $36.7 million.[75]An Unexpected Journey remained at the top of the box office during its third weekend, dropping only 11% to $32.9 million.[76]
An Unexpected Journey earned $11.2 million on its opening day (Wednesday, 12 December 2012) from 16 markets.[77] Through its first Sunday, it managed a five-day opening-weekend gross of just under $138 million. It topped the box office outside North America on two consecutive weekends. In Sweden, it scored the second-largest five-day opening with $6.2 million (behindHarry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2). Its three largest openings occurred in the UK, Ireland, and Malta ($18.8 million); Russia and the CIS ($17.8 million), and Germany ($17.1 million).[78][79]
After the New Zealand premiere,Television New Zealand noted that critical responses were "largely positive" but with "mixed responses to the film's technological advances".[80] After the film's international release,Forbes called reviews "unenthusiastic" and theLos Angeles Times said the critical consensus is that the film "stumbles".[81][82]
The film holds a 64% rating onRotten Tomatoes based on 303 reviews, with an average score of 6.60/10. The site's consensus reads "Peter Jackson's return to Middle-earth is an earnest, visually resplendent trip, but the film's deliberate pace robs the material of some of its majesty."[83] OnMetacritic, the film has a score of 58 out of 100 based on collected reviews from 40 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[84]
The main contention of debate was regarding the film's length, its high frame rate, and whether or not the film matched the level of expectation built fromThe Lord of the Rings film trilogy, while the film's visual style, special effects, music score, and cast were praised, especially the performances ofMartin Freeman,Ian McKellen,Richard Armitage, andAndy Serkis.[85] Audiences polled byCinemaScore, during the opening weekend, gave the film an "A" grade on a scale from A+ to F.[86]
Peter Travers ofRolling Stone criticised the film's use of "48 frames per second… Couple that with 3D and the movie looks so hyper-real that you see everything that's fake about it… The 169 minutes of screen time hurts, since the first 45 minutes of the film traps us in the hobbit home of the young Bilbo Baggins," but continued with "Once Bilbo and the dwarves set on their journey… things perk up considerably. Trolls, orcs, wolves and mountainous monsters made of remarkably pliable stone bring out the best in Jackson and hisRings co-screenwriters Fran Walsh and Philippa Boyens."[87]
Robbie Collin ofThe Daily Telegraph gave the film two stars out of five and said "Thank heavens for Andy Serkis, whose riddling return as Gollum steals the entire film. It is the only time the digital effects and smoother visuals underline, rather than undermine, the mythical drama of Bilbo's adventure. As a lover of cinema, Jackson’s film bored me rigid; as a lover of Tolkien, it broke my heart." He thought the film was "so stuffed with extraneous faff and flummery that it often barely feels like Tolkien at all – more a dire, fan-written internet tribute."[88]
Time Out magazine's Keith Uhlich called the film "a mesmerizing study in excess, Peter Jackson and company's long-awaited prequel to theLord of the Rings saga is bursting with surplus characters, wall-to-wall special effects, unapologetically drawn-out story tangents and double the frame rate (48 over 24) of the average movie."[89]
The Guardian magazine'sPeter Bradshaw commented on use of high frame rate technology and length of the film, writing "After 170 minutes, I felt that I had had enough of a pretty good thing. The trilogy will test the stamina of the non-believers, and many might feel ... that the traditional filmic look ofLord of the Rings was better."[90]
Richard Lawson fromThe Atlantic Wire commented on the film's "video game"-like visual effects, saying "this is a dismally unattractive movie, featuring too many shots that I'm sure were lovely at some point but are now ruined and chintzified by the terrible technology monster."[91]
Matthew Leyland ofTotal Film gave the film a five-star rating and said that it is "Charming, spectacular, technically audacious… in short, everything you expect from a Peter Jackson movie. A feeling of familiarity does take hold in places, but this is an epically entertaining first course."[92] Ed Gonzalez ofSlant Magazine awarded the film three stars out of four and called it "The first of an arguably gratuitous three-part cine-extravaganza."[93]
Todd McCarthy ofThe Hollywood Reporter said that "Jackson and his colleagues have created a purist's delight… [And leads to] an undeniably exciting, action-packed climax." McCarthy did however think that "Though there are elements in this new film that are as spectacular as much of theRings trilogy was... there is much that is flat-footed and tedious as well, especially in the early going."[94]
Kate Muir ofThe Times gave the film four out of five stars, saying Martin Freeman "perks up" the film as Bilbo Baggins and that Jackson's use of 48 frames per second 3D technology gives the film "lurid clarity".[95]
Dan Jolin ofEmpire gave the film four out of five stars and thought "The Hobbit plays younger and lighter thanFellowship and its follow-ups, but does right by the faithful and has a strength in Martin Freeman's Bilbo that may yet see this trilogy measure up to the last one" and he stated that "There is treasure here".[96]
An Unexpected Journey also earned five nominations at the18th Empire Awards, winning in two categories, Best Actor forMartin Freeman and Best Science Fiction/Fantasy Film.[101][102][103] It also earned two nominations at the2013 MTV Movie Awards in the categoriesBest Scared-as-S**t Performance and Best Hero forMartin Freeman.[104][105] Freeman won the latter award for his performance.[106] It has gathered 6 nominations at the 2013 SFX Awards, including Best Film, Best Director for Peter Jackson and four acting nominations.
^Masters, Kim (17 October 2012)."'The Hobbit:' Inside Peter Jackson and Warner Bros.' $1 Billion Gamble".The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved21 December 2013.A knowledgeable source says the first two installments cost $315 million each, and that's with Jackson deferring his fee. A studio source insists that number is wildly inflated and, with significant production rebates from New Zealand, the cost is closer to $200 million a movie.