The Hunt for Gollum is a 2009 British fantasy fan film based on the appendices of J. R. R. Tolkien’s 1954–55 book The Lord of the Rings.
The film is set in Middle-earth, when the wizard Gandalf the Grey fears that Gollum may reveal information about the One Ring to Sauron. Gandalf sends the ranger Aragorn on a quest to find Gollum. Filming took place in North Wales, Epping Forest, and Hampstead Heath. The film was shot in high definition video, with a budget of £3,000 (equivalent to £5,083 in 2023 or US$5,000, equivalent to $7,101 in 2023 The production is completely unofficial and unauthorized, though Bouchard said he had “reached an understanding” with Tolkien Enterprises in 2009.
The Hunt for Gollum debuted at the Sci-Fi-London film festival and on the Internet, free to view, on 3 May 2009. By 20 October 2009, it had been viewed by 5 million people. Viewings had risen to over 15 million by 2020. The film is set during the timespan of The Fellowship of the Ring. It takes place 17 years after Bilbo Baggins’s 111th 𝐛𝐢𝐫𝐭𝐡day party and just before Frodo Baggins leaves the Shire for Rivendell (an interval which was not outlined in the motion picture based on that story).
The wizard Gandalf fears that Gollum may reveal information about the One Ring to the Dark Lord Sauron, and sends the Ranger Aragorn, heir of Isildur, on a quest to find him. The story opens with a brief prologue about the ring’s disappearance before cutting to Aragorn (Adrian Webster) and Gandalf (Patrick O’Connor) at an inn (presumably the Prancing Pony) in Bree. Gandalf explains his concerns about Gollum’s knowledge of the Ring falling into enemy hands, and asks Aragorn to find the creature with his tracking s𝓀𝒾𝓁𝓁s. After initially having little luck, Aragorn crosses paths with a fellow ranger and distant kinsman named Arithir (Arin Alldridge), a Ranger of the North, who reports hearing rumours about a creature that has been stealing fish from open windows in local villages; the movie cuts to a scene of Gollum doing just that, and eating his ill-gotten gain atop the roof.