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The Hunt For Gollum is the name of a fan film set in the Lord Of The Rings universe, which follows Gollum as the main plot and his knowledge of the One Ring while Sauron readies his armies. In 2024, it was revealed that Warner Bros. was releasing an official movie of the same name, resulting in the fan film being taken down for copyright violations. Following the immense backlash, the studio then reversed its decision and the copyright claim was rescinded, allowing the fan-made film to stay up online.

History

On May 3rd, 2009, the fan film The Hunt For Gollum was released. A fan-made film written and directed by Chris Bouchard, the film was intended to put a spotlight on the character Gollum and the lead-up to the original trilogy of films by Peter Jackson. The YouTube channel Independent Online Cinema later uploaded the film to YouTube[1] on May 8th, 2009, where it went on to amass over 15 million views in 15 years (shown below).

Online Presence

Fifteen years later, on May 9th, 2024, it was announced by Warner Bros. that a new film set within the LoTR franchise, called The Lord Of The Rings: The Hunt For Gollum was being written and had an expected release in 2026.

The same day that the film was announced, it was noted that YouTube had taken down the fan-made film which shared the same name, with many fans calling foul. On May 10th, X user @Olessan[2] uploaded a screenshot of the film being taken down by YouTube (shown below).

Content creators in the Lord Of The Rings space began to talk about the movie announcement and speculate as to what the movie would show shortly after the announcement.

On May 10th, 2024, YouTuber and content creator The Broken Sword[3] uploaded an 11-minute video in which they detail what the books say happened on the quest for Gollum, earning over 25,000 views in two days and fueling more talk about the angle the movie might take (shown below).

Following the rapid and prominent backlash against WB for issuing a copyright claim on the fan-made movie, the studio retracted the DMCA strike on May 10th, 2024.[4]

That same day around noon, the film's director, Chris Bouchard (@ChrizBouchard), made a post to his Twitter[5] / X account acknowledging that the claim had been removed and included a screenshot from YouTube, which received over 54,100 views and 1,000 likes in three days (seen below).

Also on May 10th, the Independent Online Cinema YouTube channel posted a comment about the retraction and pinned it to the comment section of the film (shown below).

We’re back, thanks to WB for being so understanding to us as fans and artists. We’re very positive and excited for what the new movie will be at fan film THFG HQ.

Search Interest

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