Warner Bros. Pictures
Even a sharp-eyed elf can be forgiven for missing these Easter eggs that Jackson inserted in the movie for his fellow nerds: Moviegoers may remember the scene in Balin's tomb from the first 'Lord of the Rings' movie in which one of the hobbits accidentally knocks a skeleton of a dwarf holding a book down a well.
Since that film is set 60 years after the events in 'The Hobbit' trilogy, it's only now revealed whose remains they were. 'That skeleton is actually Ori, played by actor Adam Brown,' Jackson told the News. 'Which I find hilarious because we didn't have a clue when we were filming the first one.'
During the epic fight between Galadriel (Cate Blanchett) and the nefarious Necromancer, she uses the same magical light that she gives Frodo in 'Fellowship of the Ring.'
'I don't know if the fans will notice but she banishes him with the light of EƤrendil,' says co-screenwriter Philippa Boyens, which is what she gives to Frodo when she says, 'Let it be a light for you in dark places when all other lights go out.' And I think it's kind of cool because she knows its power, since she had to use it.'
Todd Eyre
Toward the end of the movie, Orlando Bloom's Legolas gets some marching orders from his kingly father: go and keep an eye on a promising young ranger.
That human's name? Strider, the hero played by Viggo Mortensen in 'Lord of the Rings.'
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