Warner Bros. has turned months of speculation into a formal casting reveal: Jamie Dornan will play Aragorn, billed here as Strider, in The Lord of the Rings: The Hunt for Gollum, the live-action film Andy Serkis is directing and headlining as Gollum/Sméagol. The studio’s CinemaCon presentation also confirmed the return of Ian McKellen as Gandalf, Elijah Wood as Frodo Baggins and Lee Pace as Thranduil, with the film set for theatrical release on December 17, 2027.
The casting lands after Serkis had already made clear that Viggo Mortensen would not reprise Aragorn, saying the production was recasting the role for a younger version of the character. That reset mattered because writer-producer Philippa Boyens had said late in 2024 that Aragorn held a prominent place in the story and that the filmmakers hoped Mortensen might return. Instead, the studio has chosen a clean handoff, with Dornan taking on one of the franchise’s most closely guarded legacy roles.
The project itself has shifted shape since Warner Bros. announced it in May 2024 as the first of two new Middle-earth films from Peter Jackson, Fran Walsh and Boyens, with Serkis directing and starring. By early 2025, Serkis was saying the release had moved from 2026 to late 2027, a sign that the studio was giving the film extra runway while it rebuilt a piece of the original trilogy’s cast and locked its place in the current franchise calendar. McKellen added fuel last year when he teased fans that “there’s a character in the movie called Frodo” and “another character called Gandalf,” hinting at the reunion that is now official.
That leaves the new film carrying two pressures at once. It must sell audiences on a recast Aragorn while leaning on familiar faces to reassure longtime fans. It also arrives as Warner Bros. presses ahead with a fresh Middle-earth pipeline after The War of the Rohirrim, banking on nostalgia, continuity and a tighter story set between The Hobbit and The Fellowship of the Ring. Dornan’s casting tells you where the studio has placed its biggest bet: not on replaying the past beat for beat, but on finding a new way into it.















































