Movie · 2013 · Fantasy, Adventure, Action · 2h 41m · PG-13 · English
Curator score: 4.8/10 (1.6M ratings)
Beyond darkness... beyond desolation... lies the greatest danger of all.
Overview
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.
Ratings
Curator score: 4.8/10
IMDb: 7.8/10
Letterboxd: 3.49/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 74%
Metacritic: 66
TMDB: 7.6/10
Director
Peter Jackson
Production
New Line Cinema, Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, WingNut Films
Cast
Ian McKellen, Martin Freeman, Richard Armitage, Benedict Cumberbatch, Orlando Bloom, Evangeline Lilly, Lee Pace, Luke Evans, Stephen Fry, Ken Stott, James Nesbitt, Mikael Persbrandt, Sylvester McCoy, Aidan Turner, Dean O'Gorman, Graham McTavish, Adam Brown, Peter Hambleton, John Callen, Mark Hadlow
Where to watch
Max
Curator Review
Verdict
A visually ambitious, often thrilling middle chapter that leans hard into spectacle, creature work, and momentum, but also carries the bloat and side-quest sprawl that make this trilogy divisive. If you want large-scale fantasy adventure with strong production design and a darker, more urgent tone than the first film, it delivers; if you want tight pacing or a faithful, streamlined adaptation, it may frustrate you.
Best for
fans of expansive fantasy worldbuilding
viewers who enjoy creature features and big action set pieces
people who like Peter Jackson's maximalist production style
audiences comfortable with long, serialized franchise chapters
Skip if
you want a lean, self-contained adventure
you are sensitive to padded subplots and tonal detours
you prefer practical pacing over spectacle
you disliked the first Hobbit film's expanded material
Overview
The Desolation of Smaug is the rare middle installment that feels both more exciting and more overstuffed than the film around it. Once the company gets moving, Jackson stages some of his most playful and kinetic fantasy action: barrel escapes, forest menace, and the long-awaited encounter with Smaug all have real cinematic swagger. The dragon sequence in particular is the movie’s selling point, and it earns it with scale, voice, and visual invention.
Worth noting
At the same time, this is very much a film of additions, detours, and franchise inflation. It stretches a relatively small source into a sprawling quest machine, and the result can feel like momentum is constantly being interrupted by side business, lore, and setup for later chapters. Some viewers will enjoy the extra texture; others will feel the seams more than the spell.
Bottom line
As a piece of fantasy entertainment, though, it remains easy to admire. The production design is rich, the creature effects are memorable, and the movie has a grim, autumnal energy that distinguishes it from lighter fantasy adventures. It’s best approached as a lavish serial chapter rather than a complete story, and on those terms it mostly works.
Top Letterboxd reviews
Jay (3.5★) · 4133 likes
gandalf takes up most of the space on the poster yet all he does is straight up dip from the quest unannounced just before the forest because he doesnt fuck with giant spiders
COBRARocky (1★) · 3698 likes
That Go Pro footage is the hardest I've ever been taken out of a film.
eely (4★) · 2728 likes
I love how everyone has their weapons on the poster and gandalf is just smoking weed.
kylie (5★) · 2422 likes
idk guys ed sheeran kinda went off with the credits song
shay (4★) · 1401 likes
just a bunch of men running around if you really think about it. pure vibes
1986 · Adventure, Family, Fantasy · 1h 41m · PG · Curator 6.1/10 (643.5K ratings) · Where to watch: Netflix, Hulu, fuboTV, Peacock Premium, Night Flight Plus, Netflix Standard with Ads, Peacock Premium Plus
A whimsical but perilous fantasy quest with striking production design and a strong sense of adventure.