Parents' Guide to

The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies

Movie PG-13 2014 144 minutes
The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies Poster Image

Common Sense Media Review

Sandie Angulo Chen By Sandie Angulo Chen , based on child development research. How do we rate?

age 12+

Trilogy conclusion has thrilling, violent battle scenes.

Parents Need to Know

Why Age 12+?

Any Positive Content?

Parent and Kid Reviews

age 12+

Based on 19 parent reviews

age 12+

Extremely Violent - Disagree With 11 y/o Rating (no spoilers)

The violence in this movie could justify an R rating. It is nearly as violent as the movie "300". Decapitation after decapitation. My 10 y/o son and I read the book and watched the movies. 5 Armies is non-stop violence; more violent than the first two movies. I should not have let my son watch this. How does this film get an 11 y/o rating, while the late Harry Potter movies get a 12? Potter is extremely tame compared to this. This is one instance where the CSM editor got it wrong. I wouldn't be surprised to see them change the suggested age rating upward to at least 13. It would prevent other parents from making the same mistake I did.
age 18+

Tough viewing for adults

Aside from a couple of particularly graphic moments in the first two movies, we felt they were fine for our kid as long as we were watching with him and explaining things. I wish I'd read the reviews from all three movies before beginning, because we felt compelled to complete the story and honestly, it's the most obscenely graphic and horrific violence I think I've ever encountered on film. If the battle sequences were in another movie that wasn't based on a children's book and I was watching with my peers I would have loved it, but I definitely agree with an R rating for this final installment. From a values point of view, I have to say that it was mostly alright but Legolas' antics, Tauriel's forced romantic relationship and the incredible amount of damage that the main characters were able to withstand made it impossible to take things at all seriously.

Is It Any Good?

Our review:
Parents say (19 ):
Kids say (99 ):

The production design, cinematography, and music are as always, ethereal and evocative. Although it still seems unnecessary for Peter Jackson to have expanded The Hobbit into three films, this culminating installment brings on all of the drama of high-stakes battle, the heartbreak of characters sacrificing themselves for one another, and the thrill of seeing such an epic tale finally (finally!) come to an end. Purists may scoff at the added details, but for the average viewer, the inclusion of Legolas (Orlando Bloom) and Tauriel (Evangeline Lilly) -- and Tauriel's doomed inter-species romance with Kili (Aidan Turner) -- makes for a more emotional final story. Because there are so many characters converging on the Lonely Mountain -- and because Thorin is too miserly and consumed with his gold to be anything but a tyrannical embarrassment for most of the The Battle of the Five Armies -- it's the secondary characters like Thranduil and Bowman Bard who drive the drama this last time.

Whether or not you already know what's going to happen, the finale is more of a nail-biter than its predecessors, since it's clear that not everyone (well, at least those that we didn't meet in Lord of the Rings) will survive the dragon fire and Orc steel. Jackson is less adept at humor than at battle (a couple of lines lead to unintentional laughter), but it's amusing to see Billy Connolly play a wise-cracking dwarf chieftain, and it's entertaining to once again witness Legolas' over-the-top gymnastics during his fights. There are a few tender moments and a few more that are utterly heart-wrenching, which is fitting, since Bilbo's story is both hopeful and bittersweet.

Movie Details

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