Of The Hobbit The Desolation Of Smaug - Index
A chronological index of every major action beat, including duration.
| Action Sequence | Start Time | End Time | Duration | Key Elements | |---|---|---|---|---| | Spider fight | 28:00 | 38:00 | 10 min | Bilbo’s first major Ring use; Sting glows blue. | | Dungeon escape | 60:00 | 65:00 | 5 min | Barrel loading; wine cellar. | | Barrel chase | 65:00 | 75:00 | 10 min | Legolas vs. Bolg; Tauriel archery; orc ambush. | | Torch fight (Laketown) | 100:00 | 105:00 | 5 min | Bard vs. orcs; Kili injured. | | Hidden door vigil | 115:00 | 120:00 | 5 min | Suspense; no combat. | | Smaug chase (forges) | 145:00 | 155:00 | 10 min | Dwarves melt a gold statue; Smaug doused. | index of the hobbit the desolation of smaug
If you love the concept of an indexed directory—clean, organized, accessible from any device—you can build a legal one for your personal media collection. This is a great project for home server enthusiasts. A chronological index of every major action beat,
Today, Google and Bing have largely de-indexed these open directories. But the search term lives on in niche forums—Reddit’s r/opendirectories, Telegram groups, and DHT crawlers. Searching for "index of The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug" now yields more articles about piracy than actual files. If you love the concept of an indexed
Interestingly, the phrase has also been reclaimed by Tolkien archivists who create legitimate topic indexes—fan-made spreadsheets cataloguing every character, location, and line of dialogue in the film. One such index on GitHub lists every time Legolas counts kills or Thranduil mentions the "serpents of the North."
Once you find a directory, look at the URL. A suspicious index might look like:
Red flags: