Matt Smith (Prop Designer):Â
âA Dwarven pipe was one of the first things I got to draw on The Hobbit and I was imagining what it might be made out of. When it came back from being made it was stunning: beautifully crafted out of carved walnut wood with ivory and silver. I suppose I thought it would be carved in polystyrene or something, so my expectations were blown.â
Alex Falkner (Weta Workshop Props Model Making Supervisor):
âCounting all the various doubles, we made something like 500 weapons for Thorin and his companions, far more than we made for all the hero characters of The Lord of the Rings a decade earlierâŚâ
Emily-Jane Sturrock (Armour and Weapons Lead Stand-by):
"With Dwalinâs axes, for example, we had heavy versions for hitting with; mid-weight versions that gave an adequate sense of heft for an actor to hold in a scene, but which you wouldnât want to carry for a long time; a flexible, lightweight pair to be worn on the back for stunt work; and a lightweight pair for the actor to wear on his back or run with in his hands. Graham McTavish could tell the difference between them instantly.â
âI remember when we had our initial discussions with the Weta Workshop design team about dreaming up weapons for our characters to carry. It was marvellous in that abstract context and you found yourself thinking, âOh, I want this gigantic thing that can crush people!â Of course, a few weeks later when youâre shooting the eighth take of scene 88 the ideal weapon you want to be running with is a pen knife and you canât help wondering, 'Who was the genius that suggested I carry a giant hammer?ââ
âThorin had a royal Dwarf sword that represented his birth-right and past, the past in which he began the journey to re-claim Erebor. It was called Deathless in reference to Durin the Deathless, father of the line of Durin to which Thorin is heir.â
âThorin can wield a bow as well, but Kili seemed to have cornered the archery angle for most of the films as far as the Dwarves were concerned. Rumour around Middle-earth has it that heâs a better shot than that Legolas guy or Bard whatâs-his-name.â
âFili unloads a lot of gear to Bilbo when we first arrive in Bag End. Itâs quite funny because heâs a walking armoury, but in reality heâs more of a specialist. He might have his other blades as some kind of back-up, but his main weapons are his paired Dwarven swords and itâs them that he relies upon. Fili is a swordsman.â
âI  got to learn that my character wasnât about these high-tech weapons. Like all the boys in his family, Bombur is more of a scrapper and that shifted my understanding of the character. This Dwarf isnât a trained fighter like perhaps Fili or Kili might be. He hasnât had the kind of life experiences of someone like Nori and he hasnât been to war like Thorin or Balin and Dwalin. He is a working guy. He has a ladle and a pot, which can be effective weapons when push comes to shove, but theyâre tools. [âŚ] I think Bombur considers himself a bit of a weapon. Heâs not fussy. He picks up a few things along the way.â
âEven in our fight training I said to myself, Iâm just going to go crazy and keep punching and stabing until someone pulls me off. Thatâs Bifurâwhen he gets into it he loses himself completely. Heâs fearless and relentless.
Contrasting that, heâs also a craftsman of astonishing skill. He makes toys that are intricate and beautiful. I love that.â
âGloin carries a set of axes that anyone who has watched The Lord of the Rings and paid attention will recognize as Gimliâs. Itâs another of the many links between the trilogies that we have established and it makes perfect sense for the character, given how much family means to Gloin and to the Dwarves.â
âI forget where the idea came from originally, but the suggestion of a fighting stick seemed to be a good one to me. Putting a leather strap on it meant I could lean on it or rest it on the ground and hang on to the strap. It could be used for ligting, carrying or whacking. It turned out to be a wonderful weapon.â
âWe looked at the World War Two new recruits and how these young men with fresh faces had no idea about the war they had just signed up for.â
âI rather like that Oriâs slingshot is the kind of weapon that doesn't really look like a weapon. A kid could buy a replica and itâd really just be a good old-fashioned, wholesome pea-shooter.â
âSpeaking to Doriâs eccentricity is his choice of weapon. His signature weapon is absolutely extraordinary. Iâm only sad we lost the bolas at the Goblin caves. I loved my bolas!â
âIâm not sure Nori even knows who his father is. His father was probably some travelling Dwarf who came through and stayed the night and left. Iâm not sure what that says about Dwarf society. There arenât as many women, so there arenât as many opportunities!
I settled on the notion of a fighting staff. It was based on a Maori taiaha, a long wooden weapon with a pointed end and a flat, bludgeoning end. I imagined a weapon like this might actually be a tool that could be used by miners to dig out rock with one end and smash it with the other. If it worked on a rock itâd work just as well on an Orcâs skull.â
 Next pages: Weight, Heat, Safety & Comfort; Barrel Escape Dwarf Costumes
Collective tag link:Â The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug Cloaks and DaggersÂ
1600px versions: Dropbox repository (updated as I post more pages, might take a few days for new pages to show)Â
Notes:Â These photo excerpts are meant to be used by fans as references for the creation of The Hobbit fanwork (cosplay, art, fiction, nonfiction, etc.) Feel free to repost, use, and edit any of these photographs as you wish. Credit back to me is unnecessary.Â
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