
Lord of the Ring Movie in Order: Complete Viewing Guide (2024)
You’ve probably heard the debate: should you start with The Hobbit or jump straight into The Lord of the Rings? For anyone planning a Middle‑earth marathon, the correct order isn’t as simple as release dates. With two trilogies, extended editions, and a growing streaming catalog, finding the best sequence matters for the experience. Here’s a grounded look at every film and how to watch them for maximum impact.
Total films in the series: 6 (3 LOTR + 3 Hobbit) ·
Theatrical release years: LOTR: 2001–2003; Hobbit: 2012–2014 ·
Academy Awards won by LOTR trilogy: 17 (including 11 for The Return of the King) ·
Rotten Tomatoes average score (LOTR): 93% (Fellowship 91%, Two Towers 95%, Return 93%) ·
Combined runtime (theatrical): ~558 minutes (LOTR) + ~474 minutes (Hobbit) ·
Extended edition runtime (LOTR): ~726 minutes
Quick snapshot
- Six live‑action Middle‑earth films, all directed by Peter Jackson (Wikipedia)
- LOTR trilogy won 17 Academy Awards (Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences)
- Whether a future theatrical re‑release will combine all six films
- Exact streaming availability changes by region
- LOTR premiered 2001–2003, Hobbit 2012–2014 (Wikipedia)
- Choose your preferred viewing order (release vs. chronological) (MovieBase)
Six films, two trilogies, one director. The table below sums up the essential details.
| Label | Value |
|---|---|
| First film released | The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001) (Wikipedia) |
| Last film released | The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies (2014) (MovieBase) |
| Total Academy Awards (LOTR trilogy) | 17 (Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences) |
| Combined runtime (theatrical, six films) | Approximately 1,032 minutes (17.2 hours) (Wikipedia) |
| Combined runtime (extended, six films) | Approximately 1,260 minutes (21 hours) (Wikipedia) |
| Director | Peter Jackson (all six films) (Wikipedia) |
What is the correct order to watch Lord of the Rings?
Release order vs chronological order
- Release order: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001) → The Two Towers (2002) → The Return of the King (2003) → An Unexpected Journey (2012) → The Desolation of Smaug (2013) → The Battle of the Five Armies (2014). This is the sequence audiences experienced in theaters. (MovieBase)
- Chronological order (story timeline): The Hobbit trilogy (set ~60 years before LOTR) followed by LOTR. (MovieBase)
Each order delivers a different narrative experience. Release order preserves the mysteries and reveals of the original story; chronological order lets you follow the thread of the Ring from its discovery to its destruction.
The implication: your choice of order actively shapes how the story unfolds, making the decision as important as the films themselves.
Should you watch theatrical or extended editions?
- Theatrical editions: Tightly edited, ~3 hours each for LOTR. (The Fellowship of the Ring: 178 min, The Two Towers: 179 min, The Return of the King: 200 min) (Wikipedia)
- Extended editions: Up to 251 minutes for Return of the King; include many deleted scenes and plot expansions. Total LOTR extended runtime: 682 minutes. (Wikipedia)
The trade-off: extended editions deepen character arcs and add crucial context, but they also stretch the marathon by hours.
Which should you watch first, Hobbit or Lord of the Rings?
Arguments for watching Hobbit first
- Follows Middle‑earth chronology – you see the Ring’s discovery, Bilbo’s adventure, and the rise of Sauron in narrative sequence. (MovieBase)
Arguments for watching LOTR first
- Preserves the dramatic reveals of the original trilogy – the Ring’s history and Sauron’s return are treated as mysterious. (Rotten Tomatoes Editorial)
Official recommendations
- MovieBase explicitly recommends release order for first‑time viewers. (MovieBase)
- Rotten Tomatoes also groups the six films as LOTR (2001–2003) then Hobbit (2012–2014) in its guide. (Rotten Tomatoes Editorial)
For newcomers, release order delivers the intended emotional beats. Chronological order works best for a second‑time rewatch or a deep lore marathon.
The pattern: every source emphasizes that chronology suits the initiated, while release order prioritizes narrative craftsmanship.
What is the chronological order of the Lord of the Rings movies?
Complete chronological list
- The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey (2012)
- The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug (2013)
- The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies (2014)
- The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001)
- The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (2002)
- The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003)
Where the Hobbit movies fit
- The Hobbit trilogy is a prequel set about 60 years before the events of LOTR. (MovieBase)
The timeline of The Lord of the Rings
- The LOTR story takes place during the Third Age of Middle‑earth. The Hobbit is late Third Age. (Wikipedia)
The narrative timeline is clear: Hobbit → LOTR. But the viewing experience differs because of the production gap and the different tone of The Hobbit films.
Chronological order requires enduring the lighter, more juvenile Hobbit trilogy before the darker LOTR saga. Some viewers find that tonal shift jarring.
The catch: the chronological approach trades tonal consistency for a linear timeline, which may feel disjointed to first-timers.
What are the 6 Lord of the Rings movies?
The Lord of the Rings trilogy
- The Fellowship of the Ring (2001) – Rotten Tomatoes score: 91% (Rotten Tomatoes)
- The Two Towers (2002) – 95% (Rotten Tomatoes)
- The Return of the King (2003) – 93% (Rotten Tomatoes)
The Hobbit trilogy
- An Unexpected Journey (2012) – 64% (Rotten Tomatoes)
- The Desolation of Smaug (2013) – 74% (Rotten Tomatoes)
- The Battle of the Five Armies (2014) – 60% (Rotten Tomatoes)
Spin‑offs and series
- The Rings of Power (Prime Video, 2022–) is set thousands of years before both trilogies and is not part of Peter Jackson’s film cycle. (Wikipedia)
The pattern: critical reception favors LOTR heavily. The Hobbit trilogy, while commercially successful, scored lower across the board.
Which trilogy has 17 Oscars?
Record‑breaking wins
- The Lord of the Rings trilogy won 17 Academy Awards, more than any other trilogy in history. (Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences)
Breakdown of awards per film
- The Fellowship of the Ring: 4 Oscars
- The Two Towers: 2 Oscars
- The Return of the King: 11 Oscars (won every category it was nominated for) (Wikipedia)
Why The Return of the King swept the 2004 Oscars
- It swept all 11 nominations, including Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Adapted Screenplay, a feat matched only by Titanic and Ben‑Hur. (Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences)
Three key differences between the two viewing orders, one clear pattern: your choice determines the story’s pacing and emotional impact.
| Attribute | Release order | Chronological order |
|---|---|---|
| First film | The Fellowship of the Ring (2001) | An Unexpected Journey (2012) |
| Narrative experience | Preserves suspense and reveals | Linear timeline from start to end |
| Best for | First‑time viewers, newcomers | Rewatchers, lore enthusiasts |
Six films, six distinctive runtimes – the specs show how the extended editions nearly double the runtime for some entries.
| Film | Year | Theatrical runtime | Extended runtime | RT score |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Fellowship of the Ring | 2001 | 178 min | 208 min | 91% |
| The Two Towers | 2002 | 179 min | 223 min | 95% |
| The Return of the King | 2003 | 200 min | 251 min | 93% |
| The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey | 2012 | 169 min | 182 min | 64% |
| The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug | 2013 | 161 min | 186 min | 74% |
| The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies | 2014 | 144 min | 164 min | 60% |
How to watch the Lord of the Rings movies in order (step by step)
- Decide on your order: Release order for first viewing, chronological for a rewatch. (See comparison above.)
- Choose your editions: Theatrical for a tighter experience, extended for more context and scenes. (Wikipedia)
- Prepare your marathon: Release order takes ~17.2 hours theatrical, ~21 hours extended. Plan accordingly.
- Queue the films: For release order: Fellowship → Two Towers → Return of the King → An Unexpected Journey → Desolation of Smaug → Battle of the Five Armies.
- Optional: add The Rings of Power as a prequel series after the films, but note it’s a separate continuity. (Wikipedia)
The implication: your viewing order shapes how you perceive characters and plot arcs. Release order treats the Hobbit as a flashback; chronological order treats LOTR as the epic payoff.
Timeline of releases
- – The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring released (Wikipedia)
- – The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers released (Wikipedia)
- – The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King released (wins 11 Oscars) (Wikipedia)
- – The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey released (MovieBase)
- – The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug released (MovieBase)
- – The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies released (MovieBase)
What we know for sure – and what’s still unclear
Confirmed facts
- All six films are directed by Peter Jackson. (Wikipedia
- The Lord of the Rings trilogy won 17 Academy Awards. (Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences)
- Release dates as listed in the timeline above.
What’s unclear
- Whether a future theatrical re‑release will combine all six films.
- Exact streaming availability changes by region.
“The Fellowship of the Ring is a grand and powerful adventure that sets the stage for an epic fantasy saga.”
– Rotten Tomatoes Critics Consensus (Rotten Tomatoes Editorial)
“For first‑time viewers, release order is the clearest choice.”
– MovieBase (MovieBase)
For anyone planning a Middle‑earth marathon, the choice between release and chronological order defines how the story lands. Release order protects the reveals and pacing Peter Jackson intended. Chronological order weaves the full 60‑year backstory into one continuous crawl. For first‑time viewers in 2024, the recommendation is clear: start with The Fellowship of the Ring, or risk the Hobbit trilogy’s lighter tone undercutting the gravity of what follows.
Related reading: Lord of the Rings Movies in Order · The Lord of the Rings (film series)
For viewers seeking a deeper dive into the lore and viewing order, the complete Middle-earth viewing guide offers additional context on the races and casting secrets behind the films.
Frequently asked questions
Are the Hobbit movies necessary to watch before The Lord of the Rings?
No, they are not necessary. The Hobbit trilogy is a prequel, but the LOTR trilogy was designed to be standalone. Watching the Hobbit first provides background but can alter the dramatic pacing. (MovieBase)
What is the best format to watch: theatrical or extended editions?
Extended editions add crucial character moments and context (especially for the LOTR trilogy) but significantly increase runtime. Theatrical editions are tighter and better for first viewings. (Wikipedia)
Where can I stream the Lord of the Rings movies?
Streaming rights vary by region. In many markets, the LOTR and Hobbit trilogies are available on services such as Max (formerly HBO Max) or Prime Video. Check your local provider for current availability.
Do the movies follow the book order exactly?
Generally yes for LOTR, but some scenes are added or cut. The Hobbit movies deviate significantly from the book, adding subplots and characters not in J.R.R. Tolkien’s original novel. (Wikipedia)
How does The Rings of Power series fit into the movie timeline?
The Rings of Power is set thousands of years before both trilogies and is not part of Peter Jackson’s film continuity. It is a separate Amazon Studios production. (Wikipedia)
What is the correct order to watch the Lord of the Rings movies with the Hobbit movies?
The two recommended orders are: (1) release order – LOTR first, then Hobbit; (2) chronological order – Hobbit first, then LOTR. Release order is most commonly recommended for first‑time viewers. (MovieBase)
Is there a difference between release order and chronological order for first‑time viewers?
Yes. Release order preserves the mysteries and surprises of the original trilogy. Chronological order follows the timeline of Middle‑earth but reveals the Ring’s fate early. Most guides suggest release order for new audiences. (Rotten Tomatoes Editorial)