Development Amazon acquired the television rights for
J. R. R. Tolkien's
The Lord of the Rings (1954–55) in November 2017. The company's streaming service,
Amazon Prime Video, ordered a series based on the novel and its
appendices to be produced by
Amazon Studios in association with
New Line Cinema. It was later titled
The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power. Amazon hired
J. D. Payne and Patrick McKay to develop the series and serve as
showrunners in July 2018, and Justin Doble joined as a writer by the following July. The series was originally expected to be a continuation of
Peter Jackson's
The Lord of the Rings (2001–2003) and
The Hobbit (2012–2014) film trilogies, but Amazon later clarified that their deal with the
Tolkien Estate required them to keep the series distinct from Jackson's films. Despite this, the showrunners intended for it to be visually consistent with the films. A
second season was ordered in November 2019, and Amazon announced in August 2021 that it was moving production of the series from New Zealand, where Jackson's films were made, to the United Kingdom starting with the second season. The season's all-female directing team was revealed in December 2022:
Charlotte Brändström, returning from the
first season;
Sanaa Hamri; and Louise Hooper. The series is set in the
Second Age of
Middle-earth, thousands of years before Tolkien's
The Hobbit (1937) and
The Lord of the Rings. Because Amazon did not acquire the rights to Tolkien's other works where the First and Second Ages are primarily explored, the writers had to identify references to the Second Age in
The Hobbit,
The Lord of the Rings, and its appendices, and create a story that bridged those passages. After introducing the setting and major heroic characters in the first season, the showrunners said the second would focus on the villains and go deeper into the "lore and the stories people have been waiting to hear". The season's seventh episode, titled "Doomed to Die", was written by Payne, McKay, and Doble, and directed by Brändström. The title references a line from Tolkien's
Ring Verse poem: "Nine [Rings] for mortal Men doomed to die".
Writing Star
Robert Aramayo said he was against the kiss between his character,
Elrond, and
Morfydd Clark's
Galadriel at first, but came around to the idea after discussing the scene with Clark. He explained that it is not romantic and is primarily a strategic move to give her the pin so she can escape, but that it is also an emotional goodbye. Clark suggested that kissing would not mean the same thing for
Elves as it does for humans. McKay reiterated these thoughts, saying they thought the kiss was "a delightful way to show that [Elrond] was sorry that he mistrusted [Galadriel] for so long, and he loved her, and he was going to have to leave her to her own fate. He needed to distract the room so that he could slip her a hope that maybe she could get out of there. A kiss means a different thing between Elves. Thousands of years of friendship mean a different thing to Elves."
Casting The season's cast includes Robert Aramayo as Elrond,
Owain Arthur as
Durin IV, Morfydd Clark as Galadriel,
Ismael Cruz Córdova as
Arondir,
Charles Edwards as
Celebrimbor,
Peter Mullan as
Durin III, Sophia Nomvete as
Disa,
Charlie Vickers as
Sauron, and
Benjamin Walker as
Gil-galad. Also starring in the episode are Amelia Kenworthy as
Mirdania,
Kevin Eldon as
Narvi,
Sam Hazeldine as
Adar, Kai Martin as Zhor,
Simon Haines as Malendol,
Selina Lo as
Rían, Robert Strange as
Glûg, Charlie Rix as
Vorohil, and
Jason Smith as the voice of
Damrod. Mark Archer, Bridie Sisson, and Stephen Shanly play unnamed
Orcs in the episode.
Filming Filming for the season began on October 3, 2022, under the
working title LBP. Episodes were shot simultaneously based on the availability of locations and sets. Alex Disenhof returned from the first season to work with Brändström as director of photography.
Vic Armstrong was the stunt coordinator and
second unit director for the season. The production
wrapped in early June 2023.
Visual effects Visual effects for the episode were created by
DNEG, Outpost VFX, The Yard VFX, Midas VFX, Monsters Aliens Robots Zombies, Untold Studios, Atomic Arts, and Cantina Creative. The different vendors were overseen by visual effects supervisor Jason Smith.
Music A soundtrack album featuring composer
Bear McCreary's score for the episode was released digitally on the streaming service
Amazon Music on September 26, 2024. McCreary said the series' episodic albums contained "virtually every second of score" from their respective episodes. It was added to other music streaming services after the full second season was released. A CD featuring the episode's music is included in a limited edition box set collection for the season from Mutant and McCreary's label Sparks & Shadows. The box set was announced in October 2025, and includes a journal written by McCreary which details the creation of the episode's score. == Release ==