Things get underway when Freka (Shaun Dolley), leader of the Dundelings, offers his son Wulf (Luke Pasqualino) to marry Hera and take the throne. After a swift refusal, a fight ensues, and with a mere punch, Helm accidentally kills Freka. Given how extreme Wulf’s vengeance is following this punch, it’s fair to wonder if The War of Rohirrim could have been started just as easily with a slap or, perhaps, an overly aggressive noogie.
But only self-seriousness reigns in this Lord of the Rings adventure. When the battle begins, Hera must save her people, which she strives to do by retreating to a fortress dug into a mountainside. Hera’s story is said to be one lost to history in the opening narration, but The War of Rohirrim is just as much an origin story for the stronghold that will later be known as Helm’s Deep.
I don’t begrudge any Tolkien addict a little anime fun — and maybe these references and callbacks will be enough to conjure some of the majesty of the books or Jackson’s movies. You can tell Rohirrim was made with sincere belief in the world Tolkien created. But I found the connective tissue, like the few notes from Howard Shore’s original score that float in, only reinforced how such grander movie ambitions once came to Rohan. The War of the Rohirrim does manage to recapture one trait of the earlier films: at 134 minutes, it’s long.
‘The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim’ is released nationwide on Dec. 13, 2024.