New Zealand. — After almost three decades of creative conception, filmmaker
Peter Jackson will finally see an idea that has accompanied him since the late 90s materialized: a film centered on the hunt for Gollum, a story that connects the events of
The Hobbit with
The Lord of the Rings.
The production, titled The Hunt for Gollum, stems from a concept that Jackson already contemplated in 1998, even before starting the filming of the original trilogy. Back then, the director acknowledged that several key scenes from the universe created by J.R.R. Tolkien had been left out of the film adaptations, including the passages where Gandalf and Aragorn pursue Gollum to obtain crucial information about the One Ring.
Although the trilogy of
The Lord of the Rings became a worldwide phenomenon, the possibility of filming these additional scenes was ruled out for economic reasons. However, the idea of a "bridge" film never left the mind of the New Zealand director.
Years later, during the development of
The Hobbit, Jackson resumed the project with filmmaker Guillermo del Toro, who showed interest in expanding the story beyond the original novel. However, a legal dispute between Tolkien's heirs and the New Line Cinema studio in 2008 —related to the distribution of profits— halted any attempt to explore additional narratives within Middle-earth. The conflict was later resolved with an out-of-court settlement exceeding 100 million dollars, but by then the idea had been shelved again.
The project suffered another setback in 2010, when Del Toro left the direction of
The Hobbit. Jackson then took full control of the production, which ended up becoming a trilogy, an experience that the director himself later recognized as creatively complex.
After the premiere of
The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies in 2014, it seemed that Jackson's time in Middle-earth had come to an end. However, a decade later, the official announcement of
The Hunt for Gollum confirms the closing of a creative cycle that had been long postponed.
This time, Peter Jackson will participate as a producer, while the direction will be in charge of Andy Serkis, an emblematic actor of the character Gollum. The film promises to explore one of the most intriguing and, until now, unpublished episodes of Tolkien's cinematic universe, finally fulfilling a vision that had been waiting 28 years to reach the big screen.