Hobbit - The Desolation Of Smaug -2013- Ext... - The

A Proper Story

The journey up the hidden stair is where the extended edition breathes. Thorin sends the others ahead and sits alone on a rock shelf, staring at the secret door. “My grandfather sat here,” he says to Balin, who has stayed behind. “He sat here and watched the sun set on Erebor. He was too proud to beg. And so we lost everything.” In a scene cut from theaters, Thorin weeps—not from sorrow, but from rage. “I will not be my grandfather.” The Hobbit - The Desolation of Smaug -2013- Ext...

Then the Wood-elves take them. Legolas, in the extended cut, is not merely a prince but a bored, cruel aristocrat. He toys with Thorin’s pride, forcing him to kneel before Thranduil’s elk. But the true jewel of the extended edition is the Dwarves’ Song in the Dark . As they rot in separate cells, Thorin begins a low, guttural hum. One by one, the others join—not through walls, but through stone. The song echoes up the great hall, and Thranduil, sipping wine, freezes mid-sip. It is not a plea for rescue. It is a declaration: we are not forgotten . A Proper Story The journey up the hidden

We rejoin Thorin Oakenshield and his company of dwarves—along with a deeply reluctant Bilbo Baggins—as they flee the Misty Mountains. They have no ponies, little food, and a pack of skin-changers on their trail. But the extended cut lingers here, in the muddy despair. We see Bofur share a stale crust with Bilbo, whispering of Thorin’s lost youth. We watch Gandalf study the dwarves’ exhaustion, his eyes betraying a secret calculus. This is not an adventure, Gandalf seems to realize. It is a death march. “He sat here and watched the sun set on Erebor

And as Smaug erupts from the mountain, wings blotting the moon, the extended edition’s final shot is not of the dragon turning toward Lake-town. It is a slow pan down the mountain’s flank to a hidden postern gate. There, in the darkness, a pale orc hand reaches out of a tunnel. Bolg smiles. “The mountain is empty,” he hisses. “Take it for Azog.”