Middle-earth is calling again, and this time it is Gollum leading the way. Warner Bros. officially confirmed a December 2027 theatrical release for The Lord of the Rings: The Hunt for Gollum.
The movie comes with a returning cast of beloved characters, some bold new additions, and a story drawn from the footnotes and appendices of Tolkien’s books that was never fully dramatised – and that is exactly what makes it worth telling. Here is everything we know so far about the new LOTR spinoff.
Where does The Hunt for Gollum fit in the Lord of the Rings timeline?
The Hunt for Gollum is both a sequel and a prequel because it sits right between The Hobbit trilogy and The Fellowship of the Ring. For a better understanding, here’s the Lord of the Rings viewing order chronologically, once this movie is released:
So if you are planning a full Middle-earth marathon before its release, you know what to do.
What is The Lord of the Rings: The Hunt for Gollum about?
There is a stretch of Middle-earth history that LOTR fans rarely think about. What was Gollum actually doing between losing the One Ring to Bilbo Baggins in The Hobbit and turning up as a wretched shadow stalking the Fellowship in the Mines of Moria? That gap is the plot for The Hunt for Gollum.

The story picks up after Bilbo’s famous birthday disappearance from the Shire, in the shadowed years before the Fellowship is even formed. Gollum, once a hobbit-like creature called Sméagol, has lost his precious ring. Bilbo took it from him in a game of riddles deep in the Misty Mountains, and that loss unravels everything. With nothing left to cling to, Gollum crawls out of his cave and goes searching for the Ring. And that is where the plot of this movie lies.
Since Gollum knows about the Ring’s existence, he knows Bilbo has it, and if Sauron gets to him first, the Dark Lord will have everything he needs to track the Ring to the Shire. Gandalf understands this better than anyone. So he calls on Aragorn, still known at this point only as Strider, to find Gollum before Sauron does. What follows is essentially a manhunt across Middle-earth, through dangerous terrain and haunted wastelands, in a race against the shadow of Mordor.
The Lord of the Rings: The Hunt for Gollum full cast and characters
The full cast was recently revealed by Warner Bros at CinemaCon. The cast is a mix of beloved returning faces and some exciting new additions. Here is every LOTR character confirmed so far:
Andy Serkis as Gollum/Smeagol

Serkis is back as the creature he has played across five Middle-earth films, and this time he is also directing. Gollum is one of the most complex characters in all of Tolkien’s work, a being torn between his original self, the gentle Smeagol, and the corrupted wretch the One Ring turned him into.
Ian McKellen as Gandalf

There is simply no Middle-earth without Gandalf, and McKellen returning to the role is genuinely exciting. In The Hunt for Gollum, Gandalf operates largely behind the scenes, directing Aragorn’s mission rather than riding into battle himself. That is entirely consistent with how Tolkien wrote the character during this period, a wizard who sees the bigger picture long before anyone else does.
Elijah Wood as Frodo Baggins

Frodo’s inclusion is the one that raises the most questions about the plot. At this point in the timeline, Frodo is still living quietly in the Shire, completely unaware that the ring Bilbo left him will soon change everything. Elijah Wood’s appearance in the film may be brief, but it is a welcome return all the same.
Leo Woodall as Halvard

Woodall, who broke through with his role in The White Lotus, plays Halvard, a new character described as a fellow Dunedain ranger who joins Strider on the hunt. Not much is known about Halvard yet, but his presence suggests the Hunt for Gollum will flesh out the world of the Dunedain more than the previous movies had time to do.
Lee Pace as Thranduil

Pace returns as the Elvenking of Mirkwood, a role he played across the three Hobbit films. Thranduil’s inclusion makes complete sense because Gollum passes through Mirkwood during his wanderings after losing the Ring, and Thranduil’s realm controls all passage through that forest. His elves are also the ones who eventually hold Gollum prisoner after Aragorn captures him, making the Elvenking a key figure in the Hunt for Gollum.
Kate Winslet as Marigol

Winslet joins the franchise as Marigol, and the name is a clue worth paying attention to. “Marigold” is actually a common name in the LOTR universe, especially among Hobbits. Samwise Gamgee has a sister named Marigold in Tolkien’s books, and another Marigold appears in Prime Video’s The Rings of Power. But Winslet’s character has nothing to do with either of them.
There are multiple reports suggesting that Kate Winslet could be playing Gollum’s grandmother. Gollum briefly mentions his grandmother in The Fellowship of the Ring, but Tolkien never named her. What little we know is compelling: she was a powerful elder within her Hobbit community and a steward of Elven Rings of Power.
If Marigol is indeed Gollum’s grandmother, the film may jump between past and present to show us who Smeagol was before the Ring destroyed him. Nothing is confirmed yet, but it is one of the most intriguing open questions around the film.
Jamie Dornan as Strider (Aragorn)

This is the casting that has generated the most conversation. Viggo Mortensen’s Aragorn is one of the most iconic performances in blockbuster film history, so stepping into those worn ranger boots is no small task. Jamie Dornan, best known for The Fall and Fifty Shades of Grey, takes on the role here.
At this point in the story, Aragorn has not yet revealed his true identity as heir to the throne of Gondor. He is simply Strider, a rugged and mysterious Dunedain ranger of the North, and that version of the character suits Dornan’s quiet intensity well.
But why isn’t Viggo Mortensen returning as Aragorn in The Hunt for Gollum?

No official reason has been given, but the most likely answer is that Viggo Mortensen chose not to return. Back in 2024, he addressed the possibility, saying he would only reprise the role if he felt he was right for it physically and in terms of age. Aragorn is supposed to look younger in this story, and as a Dunedain with an extended lifespan, the character would need to appear meaningfully younger than Mortensen is today.
Putting him front and center of the film would almost certainly have required extensive CGI de-aging, a technique that has delivered mixed results across the industry. Recasting, in that context, is arguably the cleaner creative choice. The other returning actors have it somewhat easier: Gandalf is supposed to look ancient, and Frodo’s role is likely small enough that it is less of an issue.
When is LOTR: The Hunt for Gollum releasing?
After a delay, The Hunt for Gollum is set to release on December 17, 2027. Warner Bros. confirmed the date on their social channels, carrying the very on-brand message: “We’ve been waiting for you, precious.”
The timing isn’t accidental. Director Peter Jackson’s original trilogy all opened in December, with The Fellowship of the Ring hitting theaters on December 19, 2001, The Two Towers on December 18, 2002, and The Return of the King on December 17, 2003.
The last date is particularly notable because The Hunt for Gollum will be releasing on the exact same date, 24 years later, as the film that won 11 Academy Awards and closed out one of the greatest trilogies in cinema history. Whether that is a coincidence or a deliberate scheduling move, it is a date that holds significance for every fan of Middle-earth.
Are there more Lord of the Rings films coming after The Hunt for Gollum?
Yes, and this one is genuinely surprising. Stephen Colbert, the longtime host of The Late Show and one of the most devoted Tolkien fans in public life, is co-writing the next film in the series alongside Philippa Boyens and Peter McGee. Peter Jackson and Fran Walsh are also involved as producers, keeping the core creative team intact.

The film, currently titled The Lord of the Rings: Shadow of the Past, draws from chapters three through eight of The Fellowship of the Ring, focusing on a section of the book that Jackson’s original trilogy skipped entirely. It centres on “Fog on the Barrow-downs,” a chapter in which the Hobbits become trapped by a Barrow-wight in a supernatural mist.
More excitingly for book fans, it will finally bring Tom Bombadil to the screen, a beloved and deeply eccentric character who was left out of Jackson’s trilogy and has been a sore point for Tolkien purists ever since. No director has been assigned yet, but the pieces are already clearly in motion.




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