SFX

The Hobbit: The Battle Of The Five Armies

End of the road

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Release Date: OUT NOW!

12A | 144 minutes Director: Peter Jackson Cast: Martin Freeman, Ian McKellen, Richard Armitage, Luke Evans, Evangeline Lilly, Orlando Bloom, Aidan Turner, Billy Connolly

Of all the Hobbit

trilogy, The Battle Of The Five Armies was arguably Peter Jackson’s biggest challenge. With most of the standout moments from the book already out of the way ( Gollum, the spiders, the barrel chase, the natter with Smaug), this was a film based around a skirmish many consider a footnote that takes place after the real story is done. How could Jackson possibly base an entire epic movie on such narrow foundation­s? Surely this would be where the folly of splitting a brief source novel into three movies would be well and truly exposed?

We needn’t have worried. While it’s not up there with his Tolkien cycle’s best, this is a fitting end ( or should that be middle?) to Jackson’s saga, one that manages to mix blockbuste­r spectacle with some intimate, tender character moments. That it works at all is down to two key filmmaking decisions: making sure this is the shortest jaunt to Middle- earth yet ( there’s no room for unnecessar­y filler here), and holding back the end of Smaug’s story to open this movie, even though dramatic logic tells you it should have been wrapped up last time out.

It’s a choice that proves bang on the money, because while it left us with an unsatisfyi­ng cliffhange­r for The Desolation Of Smaug, the dragon’s assault on Lake- town opens this third film with the killer hook it needs. Without wasting time on any kind of flashback or prologue, we’re launched straight into the silvertong­ued lizard’s fiery bombing raid, as the soon- to- be- former resident of the Lonely Mountain lays waste to the town below. It’s a wonderful sequence ( albeit one that’s over too quickly) that instantly seizes your attention, even though it feels like it’s a leftover from a different movie – it’s like opening The Empire Strikes Back with Luke Skywalker blowing up the Death Star.

And there’s the conundrum. Had the dragon not been in The Battle Of Five Armies, the movie wouldn’t have hung together. Once Smaug departs ( and surely that can’t still be a spoiler after nearly 80 years), we’re launched into nearly an hour of posturing, arguing and reflecting as various armies get ready for war. ( We know they’re getting ready for war because they say so. Many times.) It’s an effective crescendo to battle, but in a film that’s effectivel­y one long final act, it would have made for a pretty mediocre opening.

When things do finally kick off, the fight proves worth the wait. With several factions camped outside the newly freed Dwarf stronghold of Erebor, the scale is pitched somewhere between the tense siege of Helm’s Deep and the sprawling scrap of Pelennor Fields. Okay, there’s a little bit of Anchorman 2 to the way more and more groups join the battle – you almost expect Wes Mantouth and his Channel 9 Evening News team to trash talk an Orc – but it’s marshalled effortless­ly by Jackson, who pulls all the disparate elements together in a way few directors could match.

The battle is endlessly inventive, with the Orcs, Elves, Men, Dwarves and Eagles displaying numerous ingenious tactics, and riding enough steeds to sustain pretty much every verse of “Old MacDonald”. Also, Jackson knows when to punctuate the carnage with a gag or a tender moment, making this the antithesis of Michael Bay’s humourless, confusing Transforme­rs: Age Of Extinction.

Yet despite the warmongeri­ng title, focusing on the action would be doing The Battle Of The Five Armies a disservice. Even at its most talky, it’s compelling stuff, reaping the rewards of characters built- up over two- and- a- bit movies

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