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The Hobbit-Sauron.jpg|Fiery Form
 
The Hobbit-Sauron.jpg|Fiery Form
 
</gallery>
 
</gallery>
|fullname = Mairon (Since Morgoth existed in this universe) <small>
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|fullname = Mairon
 
|alias = Sauron <br>
 
|alias = Sauron <br>
 
The Dark Lord of Mordor<br>
 
The Dark Lord of Mordor<br>
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|type of villain = Tyrannical Warlord}} {{Quote|You cannot hide. I see you. There is no life in the Void. Only '''death'''.|Sauron taunting Frodo when he puts the One Ring on.[[File:DeathEvil.ogg|noicon]]}}
 
|type of villain = Tyrannical Warlord}} {{Quote|You cannot hide. I see you. There is no life in the Void. Only '''death'''.|Sauron taunting Frodo when he puts the One Ring on.[[File:DeathEvil.ogg|noicon]]}}
   
'''[[Sauron (Middle-earth)|Sauron]]''' is the main antagonist of Peter Jackson's ''Middle-earth'' live action film saga, appearing as the overarching antagonist of [[Wikipedia:The Hobbit (film series)|''The Hobbit'']] trilogy and the main antagonist of [[Wikipedia:The Lord of the Rings (film series)|''The Lord of the Rings'']] trilogy.
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'''[[Sauron (Middle-earth)|Sauron]]''' is the main antagonist of Peter Jackson's ''Middle-earth'' live action film saga, appearing as the overarching antagonist of ''{{w|The Hobbit (film series)|The Hobbit}}'' trilogy and the main antagonist of ''{{w|The Lord of the Rings (film series)|The Lord of the Rings}}'' trilogy.
   
 
He was once the servant of [[Morgoth]] and was the dark lord of Mordor who forged the One Ring To Rule Them All in ages past in order to conquer all of Middle-earth. After losing the Ring and his physical form and being vanquished for an Age, he eventually regains much of his former power in the Third Age and once again wages war on the Free Peoples of Middle-earth, seeking to be reunited with the One Ring and thus rule Middle-earth. He is the archenemy of the Fellowship of the Ring, especially [[w:c:hero:Aragorn|Aragorn]].
 
He was once the servant of [[Morgoth]] and was the dark lord of Mordor who forged the One Ring To Rule Them All in ages past in order to conquer all of Middle-earth. After losing the Ring and his physical form and being vanquished for an Age, he eventually regains much of his former power in the Third Age and once again wages war on the Free Peoples of Middle-earth, seeking to be reunited with the One Ring and thus rule Middle-earth. He is the archenemy of the Fellowship of the Ring, especially [[w:c:hero:Aragorn|Aragorn]].
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He was portrayed by {{w|Sala Baker}}, who also played an adult [[Firefist (X-Men Movies)|Firefist]] in ''Deadpool 2'' and voiced by the late {{w|Alan Howard}} in ''The Lord of the Rings'' trilogy. In ''The Hobbit'' trilogy, he was portrayed by {{w|Benedict Cumberbatch}}, who also portrayed [[Smaug]] in the same trilogy, [[Dormammu (Marvel Cinematic Universe)|Dormammu]] in ''Doctor Strange'', [[Strange Supreme]] in ''What If...?'', [[Frankenstein's Monster]] and [[Dr. Victor Frankenstein|Victor Frankenstein]] on stage, [[Shere Khan (2018)|Shere Khan]] in ''Mowgli: Legend of the Jungle'', [[The Grinch (2018)|The Grinch]] in the 2018 film of the same name, [[William Ford]] in ''12 Years a Slave'', and [[Khan Noonien Singh (Alternate Timeline)|Khan Noonien Singh]] in ''Star Trek: Into Darkness''.
 
He was portrayed by {{w|Sala Baker}}, who also played an adult [[Firefist (X-Men Movies)|Firefist]] in ''Deadpool 2'' and voiced by the late {{w|Alan Howard}} in ''The Lord of the Rings'' trilogy. In ''The Hobbit'' trilogy, he was portrayed by {{w|Benedict Cumberbatch}}, who also portrayed [[Smaug]] in the same trilogy, [[Dormammu (Marvel Cinematic Universe)|Dormammu]] in ''Doctor Strange'', [[Strange Supreme]] in ''What If...?'', [[Frankenstein's Monster]] and [[Dr. Victor Frankenstein|Victor Frankenstein]] on stage, [[Shere Khan (2018)|Shere Khan]] in ''Mowgli: Legend of the Jungle'', [[The Grinch (2018)|The Grinch]] in the 2018 film of the same name, [[William Ford]] in ''12 Years a Slave'', and [[Khan Noonien Singh (Alternate Timeline)|Khan Noonien Singh]] in ''Star Trek: Into Darkness''.
   
== Roles==
+
==Roles==
 
He is the main antagonist of ''The Lord of the Rings'' trilogy, serving as the overarching antagonist of ''The Fellowship of the Ring'' and ''The Two Towers'' and the main antagonist of ''The Return of the King''. He is the overarching antagonist of ''The Hobbit'' trilogy, serving as one of the two overarching antagonists of ''An Unexpected Journey'' (alongside [[Smaug]]), and the overarching antagonist of ''The Desolation of Smaug'' and ''The Battle of the Five Armies''.
 
He is the main antagonist of ''The Lord of the Rings'' trilogy, serving as the overarching antagonist of ''The Fellowship of the Ring'' and ''The Two Towers'' and the main antagonist of ''The Return of the King''. He is the overarching antagonist of ''The Hobbit'' trilogy, serving as one of the two overarching antagonists of ''An Unexpected Journey'' (alongside [[Smaug]]), and the overarching antagonist of ''The Desolation of Smaug'' and ''The Battle of the Five Armies''.
   
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==Quotes==
 
==Quotes==
 
{{Scroll box|{{Quote|Radagast.|Sauron seeing Radagast in Dol Guldur for the first time before sending his bats to attack him.}}
{{Scroll box|
 
{{Quote|Radagast.|Sauron seeing Radagast in Dol Guldur for the first time before sending his bats to attack him.}}
 
   
 
{{Quote|We grow in number. We grow in strength. You will lead my armies.|Sauron to Azog.}}
 
{{Quote|We grow in number. We grow in strength. You will lead my armies.|Sauron to Azog.}}
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{{Quote|I see you!|Sauron to Pippin through the Palantir.}}
 
{{Quote|I see you!|Sauron to Pippin through the Palantir.}}
   
{{Quote|Aragorn Elessar!|Sauron as he faces Aragorn.}}
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{{Quote|Aragorn Elessar!|Sauron as he faces Aragorn.}}}}
}}
 
   
 
==Trivia==
 
==Trivia==
 
 
*Various changes were made for Sauron's role in Peter Jackson's ''The Lord of the Rings'' 2001-2003. For example, Sauron did not take the form of an Eye in the book. Instead, he still had a physical form with his cut finger missing. The Eye atop Barad-dûr is is exclusive to the film series and was done to give Sauron more of a presence.
 
*Various changes were made for Sauron's role in Peter Jackson's ''The Lord of the Rings'' 2001-2003. For example, Sauron did not take the form of an Eye in the book. Instead, he still had a physical form with his cut finger missing. The Eye atop Barad-dûr is is exclusive to the film series and was done to give Sauron more of a presence.
** In the book, Sauron is inside the tower, spying through "the window of the Eye in his shadowy fortress." In Peter Jackson's movies, the humanoid form of Sauron appears one last time when Aragorn looks in the palantír in the extended edition of ''The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King'', and Pippin makes a brief and terrifying encounter with the Eye after looking into the palantír of Orthanc.
+
**In the book, Sauron is inside the tower, spying through "the window of the Eye in his shadowy fortress." In Peter Jackson's movies, the humanoid form of Sauron appears one last time when Aragorn looks in the palantír in the extended edition of ''The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King'', and Pippin makes a brief and terrifying encounter with the Eye after looking into the palantír of Orthanc.
 
*Sauron was originally planned to take physical form and battle Aragorn at the Battle at the Black Gate in ''The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King'', but it was cut and replaced with a troll.
 
*Sauron was originally planned to take physical form and battle Aragorn at the Battle at the Black Gate in ''The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King'', but it was cut and replaced with a troll.
** In the cut scene, Sauron also takes his fair form of Annatar.
+
**In the cut scene, Sauron also takes his fair form of Annatar.
 
*While his past before the 2nd Age is largely unknown, Galadriel refers to Sauron as a "servant of [[Morgoth]]", confirming that, like in the book, Sauron did once serve Morgoth. However, he no longer serves Morgoth as he now desires dominion over all life on Earth.
 
*While his past before the 2nd Age is largely unknown, Galadriel refers to Sauron as a "servant of [[Morgoth]]", confirming that, like in the book, Sauron did once serve Morgoth. However, he no longer serves Morgoth as he now desires dominion over all life on Earth.
 
*Sauron's role in ''The Hobbit'' prequel trilogy was greatly expanded, with more focus on his role as the Necromancer of Dol Guldur, as well as showing that he desired the Lonely Mountain for its strategic position and that he initiated the Battle of the Five Armies. Although Sauron appears little throughout the story, his presence, like in ''Lord of the Rings'' before it, is constantly felt, and he is an active threat in the story through his servant [[Azog]]. He never appears in the original ''The Hobbit'' novel and is only given mention as the Necromancer.
 
*Sauron's role in ''The Hobbit'' prequel trilogy was greatly expanded, with more focus on his role as the Necromancer of Dol Guldur, as well as showing that he desired the Lonely Mountain for its strategic position and that he initiated the Battle of the Five Armies. Although Sauron appears little throughout the story, his presence, like in ''Lord of the Rings'' before it, is constantly felt, and he is an active threat in the story through his servant [[Azog]]. He never appears in the original ''The Hobbit'' novel and is only given mention as the Necromancer.
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==External Links==
 
==External Links==
 
 
*{{Wiki|Sauron (Peter Jackson)|Sauron|pure-evil-villains|Pure Evil}}
 
*{{Wiki|Sauron (Peter Jackson)|Sauron|pure-evil-villains|Pure Evil}}
   

Revision as of 03:34, 24 October 2021

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NOTE: This article is about the version of Sauron from the Peter Jackson continuity. You may be looking for information on his mainstream counterpart, his Lord of the Rings: Conquest counterpart, or his Shadow of Mordor counterpart.
Villain Overview

You cannot hide. I see you. There is no life in the Void. Only death.
~ Sauron taunting Frodo when he puts the One Ring on.

Sauron is the main antagonist of Peter Jackson's Middle-earth live action film saga, appearing as the overarching antagonist of The Hobbit trilogy and the main antagonist of The Lord of the Rings trilogy.

He was once the servant of Morgoth and was the dark lord of Mordor who forged the One Ring To Rule Them All in ages past in order to conquer all of Middle-earth. After losing the Ring and his physical form and being vanquished for an Age, he eventually regains much of his former power in the Third Age and once again wages war on the Free Peoples of Middle-earth, seeking to be reunited with the One Ring and thus rule Middle-earth. He is the archenemy of the Fellowship of the Ring, especially Aragorn.

He was portrayed by Sala Baker, who also played an adult Firefist in Deadpool 2 and voiced by the late Alan Howard in The Lord of the Rings trilogy. In The Hobbit trilogy, he was portrayed by Benedict Cumberbatch, who also portrayed Smaug in the same trilogy, Dormammu in Doctor Strange, Strange Supreme in What If...?, Frankenstein's Monster and Victor Frankenstein on stage, Shere Khan in Mowgli: Legend of the Jungle, The Grinch in the 2018 film of the same name, William Ford in 12 Years a Slave, and Khan Noonien Singh in Star Trek: Into Darkness.

Roles

He is the main antagonist of The Lord of the Rings trilogy, serving as the overarching antagonist of The Fellowship of the Ring and The Two Towers and the main antagonist of The Return of the King. He is the overarching antagonist of The Hobbit trilogy, serving as one of the two overarching antagonists of An Unexpected Journey (alongside Smaug), and the overarching antagonist of The Desolation of Smaug and The Battle of the Five Armies.

Biography

Background

Sauron was once a servant of the 1st Dark Lord, Morgoth. Following the latter's defeat, Sauron took his master's place during the second age and became the Dark Lord of Mordor, and forged the One Ring of Power to Rule Them All in the fires of Mount Doom within the land of Mordor. He conquered many lands in Middle Earth using the ring, until the Last Alliance of Men and Elves fought against him on the slopes of Mount Doom. They defeated his army of orcs easily, but Sauron proved to be a bigger challenge. He slaughtered many of the men and Elves and killed the Gondor King, Elendil, with a huge mace.

Elendil's son Isildur grabbed his father's sword, but Sauron stepped on it, breaking it, but Isildur cut off Sauron's fingers, including the one with the One Ring on it with what was left of the blade, destroying Sauron's body, but he survived as a spirit, unable to die unless the One Ring was destroyed, which could only be done if it was thrown into the fires of Mount Doom where it was forged. Eventually, Sauron would disguise himself as a sorcerer, known as the Necromancer.

The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey

Sauron necromancer dol guldur

Sauron as The Necromancer.

Thousands of years later, Gandalf accompanied the dwarf Thorin Oakenshield and his band of kinsmen (as well as reluctant "burglar" Bilbo Baggins) on a quest to reclaim the kingdom of Erebor from the dragon Smaug. Unbeknownst to Thorin and company, Gandalf had an ulterior motive; he had come to suspect that Sauron had returned, and wanted to destroy Smaug to prevent Sauron from using him as a weapon.

Meanwhile, Radagast the Brown discovered Dol Guldur, and the Witch-King of Angmar, Lord of the Nazgûl and Sauron's chief servant, attacked him and vanished. Radagast then saw Sauron in shadow, and fled. He told Gandalf about the encounter, and Gandalf eventually told the White Council; the other members reacted with skepticism, except for Lady Galadriel, who sent Gandalf on a quest to confirm that this Necromancer was indeed Sauron returned.

The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug

SauronTDOS

Sauron reveals himself within a flaming eye.

After Gandalf, Bilbo and the Dwarf company escaped a pack of Orcs led by Azog the Defiler, Gandalf parted ways with them and travelled with Radagast to Dol Guldur to discover the truth. Gandalf sent Radagast back to send a message to Galadriel, while he went in alone. After unsuccessfully trying to convince the evil inside to reveal itself, he was ambushed by Azog and several Orcs. After defeating and escaping them, Gandalf fled deeper into the ruined fortress, where he encountered the Necromancer and confirmed his worst fear: that this mysterious sorcerer was indeed the Dark Lord returned.

Sauron revealed to Gandalf that he was gathering all his forces and regaining his strength, enough to prepare for war. He planned to first take over Erebor, and then reclaim the kingdom of Angmar, and on and on until he once again controlled all of Middle-earth.

Gandalf tried to fight off the Dark Lord, and although he accomplished repelling him a few times, he eventually proved to be no match for Sauron. After defeating Gandalf, destroying his staff and imprisoning him, Sauron sent his minions to Erebor to find Thorin and his company inside the mountain, where they were currently facing a conflict with Smaug the Dragon, who was on his way to destroy the nearby town of Esgaroth.

The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies

Sauron Flaming

Sauron attacks the White Council.

Galadriel, Saruman and Elrond entered Dol Guldur to save Gandalf. Elrond and Saruman battled the spirits of the Nazgûl, while Gandalf escaped with the help of Radagast the Brown.

Sauron once again took the form of the Eye and appeared before the group and foretold the fall of the East and the rise of the ancient Kingdom of Angmar. He declared that "the time of the Elves is over, the Age of the Orc has begun." He attempted to corrupt Galadriel, who nonetheless resisted and used all of her power to banish Sauron's spirit out of Dol Guldur. Moments later, Saruman said that he would deal with Sauron personally, foreshadowing their alliance.

Sauron's armies eventually met with defeat at the hands of the armies of elves, men, dwarves and the Eagles during the Battle of the Five Armies, which ended with the deaths of Azog and Bolg.

The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring

Eye of Sauron

Sauron in his Eye form as he later appeared as an eye in Jackson's films.

After the One Ring was found by Gollum, and later taken by Bilbo Baggins, Sauron himself became obsessed with finding the ring. Over the 15 years after Bilbo gave the ring to Frodo, Sauron regained much of his former strength, though unable to take physical form, he existed as an eye, called the Eye of Sauron, shown as a real manifestation on top of Barad-dûr. Saruman also went over to his side and he sent the Ringwraiths after Frodo to kill him and take the One Ring back. They failed.

The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers

Sauron's servant, Saruman, sent an army of 10,000 Uruk-hai to invade Rohan, but eventually they were defeated when Gandalf, the Rohirrim and the Ents of Fangorn Forest arrived. Saruman himself was killed by Gríma Wormtongue at Isengard and Wormtongue was killed by Legolas. Sauron's defeat at Helm's Deep showed him that the men were still able to resist him.

The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King

After the defeat at Helm's Deep, he decided to attack Gondor with another powerful army of orcs, led by the hideous orc Gothmog and the Witch-king of Angmar. The men of Gondor and Rohan fought against them, but it wasn't until Aragorn, Legolas, and Gimli showed up with the Army of the Dead that Sauron's army was defeated. In the battle, the Witch-King was killed by Éowyn, and Gothmog was killed by Aragorn and Gimli.

In the meantime, Frodo and Sam were making their way into Mordor with the One Ring to destroy it. Gandalf, Aragorn, Legolas, Gimli, Éomer, Merry, Pippin, and what remained of the men of Gondor and Rohan went to the Black Gates to draw Sauron's army out and his attention away from the two hobbits after a meeting with the Mouth of Sauron. Gollum attacked Frodo and Sam as they made their way up Mount Doom. In the end, Frodo decided to keep the ring for himself, and put it on, thus attracting the attention of Sauron and the eight remaining Nazgûl.

Before anything else could happen, however, Gollum bit Frodo's finger off and took the ring back. Frodo fought Gollum, resulting in them both falling over the cliff. Frodo held onto the edge and survived and he and Sam escaped, but Gollum fell into the lava with the One Ring. With the ring destroyed, Sauron could no longer survive. Barad-dûr collapsed, and Sauron was destroyed in a shock wave of energy that collapsed the foundations of Mordor and in the process, the majority of the Orcs were all destroyed whereas the surviving Orcs run away, never able to form such great armies again, while the eight remaining Nazgûl were all destroyed by the fires of Mount Doom therefore, freeing Middle-earth from slavery and destroying the ancient threat to Elves and Men.

Appearance

Main-qimg-40f655a340cedb75d5728341c4fc6e29

Sauron as the Eye.

Sauron is originally portrayed as a black armored knight carrying a huge black mace. He's represented there in human form when the Ring is forged and so until it loses the latter, then it is represented in the limited form of an eye dissociated from any body in the rest of history. Sauron loses this body after Isildur cuts his fingers with a piece of Narsil. In this version, the Dark Lord seems to be more or less unharmed until he loses his ring since at that moment, his body disintegrates by exploding. After his defeat, he is represented in the form of an eye, acting as a body. Later in the first film, Saruman points out to Gandalf that Sauron cannot yet take physical form, implying that Sauron's fiery Eye is his bodiless mind. This eye dominates Barad-dues.

Personality

Dark Lord Sauron 1

Sauron forging the Ring.

Spreading nothing but darkness and suffering wherever he went, Sauron was nothing more than a cruel, power hungry tyrant. All he desired was rule over all life, forging the One Ring in order to corrupt the ring bearers into mindless slaves, which succeeded with the Nazgul, and waging wars against all the free peoples of Middle-earth for total conquest. He valued no-one but himself, only using the Orcs in his army

Sauron was extremely sadistic and enjoyed psychologically tormenting others, threatening Aragorn with Arwen's life whilst they confronted each other via the Palantir, torturing Pippin when he refused to answer him, mentally agonizing Frodo whenever he saw him through the Ring and ordering the Mouth of Sauron to lie to the Fellowship about Frodo being dead and having endured great pain in order to break their spirits. He may have also been somewhat humorous due to "bidding them welcome" at the Black Gate.

Sauron despised the race of Men more than all others, wishing to destroy the world of Men by destroying the Kingdoms of Gondor and Rohan. He was completely merciless, desiring the extermination of the entire city of Minas Tirith, including the women and children. Due to his hatred of Men, Sauron feared and hated Aragorn, the rightful King of Gondor, more than any other being. Sauron was so fearful of Aragorn, he sought to destroy Minas Tirith itself to ensure he never becomes King.

He was highly intelligent and manipulative, deceiving kings of Men with the great Rings, appealing to their greed and then transforming them into loyal slaves, the Nazgûl. Yet he was also arrogant and prideful, mocking Gandalf and Galadriel for being incapable of defeating him and demanding Mordor (and therefore himself) have a worthy army. He looked down on all other beings as beneath him. Sauron thought so lowly of Hobbits that he couldn't even tell Frodo and Pippin apart. Ironically, it was two small Hobbits, Frodo and Sam, who were largely responsible for his final downfall.

Sauron was not a coward and was willing to stare down an entire army alone at the height of his power and engage battle with them. He used fear and intimidation to his advantage during warfare.

Quotes

Radagast.
~ Sauron seeing Radagast in Dol Guldur for the first time before sending his bats to attack him.
We grow in number. We grow in strength. You will lead my armies.
~ Sauron to Azog.
War is Coming. Death will come to all!
~ Sauron dismisses Azog as he discusses Thorin Oakenshield.
There is no light Wizard, that can defeat darkness.
~ Sauron to Gandalf (while speaking in Black Speech).
Three Rings for the Elven-kings under the sky, Seven for the Dwarf-lords in their halls of stone…
~ Sauron chanting the One Ring Poem.
You cannot fight the shadow. Even now you fade. One light…alone in the darkness.
~ Sauron to Galadriel
It has begun. The East will fall. So shall the Kingdom of Angmar rise. The time of the Elves is over. The Age of the Orc has come.
~ Sauron (speaking in Black Speech).
Build me an army worthy of Mordor!
~ Sauron orders Saruman to bring forth a Great Army of Orcs.
Ash nazg durbatulûk. Ash nazg gimbatul. Ash nazg thrakatulûk. Agh burzum-ishi krimpatul!
~ Sauron speaking the One Ring's inscription in Black Speech in the Extended Edition of The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring. (Gandalf speaks the same thing at the same time.)
I see you!
~ Sauron to Pippin through the Palantir.
Aragorn Elessar!
~ Sauron as he faces Aragorn.

Trivia

  • Various changes were made for Sauron's role in Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings 2001-2003. For example, Sauron did not take the form of an Eye in the book. Instead, he still had a physical form with his cut finger missing. The Eye atop Barad-dûr is is exclusive to the film series and was done to give Sauron more of a presence.
    • In the book, Sauron is inside the tower, spying through "the window of the Eye in his shadowy fortress." In Peter Jackson's movies, the humanoid form of Sauron appears one last time when Aragorn looks in the palantír in the extended edition of The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King, and Pippin makes a brief and terrifying encounter with the Eye after looking into the palantír of Orthanc.
  • Sauron was originally planned to take physical form and battle Aragorn at the Battle at the Black Gate in The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King, but it was cut and replaced with a troll.
    • In the cut scene, Sauron also takes his fair form of Annatar.
  • While his past before the 2nd Age is largely unknown, Galadriel refers to Sauron as a "servant of Morgoth", confirming that, like in the book, Sauron did once serve Morgoth. However, he no longer serves Morgoth as he now desires dominion over all life on Earth.
  • Sauron's role in The Hobbit prequel trilogy was greatly expanded, with more focus on his role as the Necromancer of Dol Guldur, as well as showing that he desired the Lonely Mountain for its strategic position and that he initiated the Battle of the Five Armies. Although Sauron appears little throughout the story, his presence, like in Lord of the Rings before it, is constantly felt, and he is an active threat in the story through his servant Azog. He never appears in the original The Hobbit novel and is only given mention as the Necromancer.
  • Sauron is the only antagonist of the Middle-earth film series to appear in some form in every installment.

External Links

Navigation

Template:Warner Bros. Animation Villains Template:New Line Cinema Villains

           Middle earth sbg-1-1024x257 Villains

Ainur
Dark Lords
Morgoth | Sauron

Balrogs
Gothmog | Durin's Bane | Tar-Goroth

Others
Saruman

Men
Nazgûl
Witch-king of Angmar | Khamûl

Black Númenóreans
Mouth of Sauron | Queen Beruthiel | Agandaur | Black Hand of Sauron | Hammer of Sauron | Tower of Sauron

Others
Alfrid Lickspittle | Master of Laketown | Gríma Wormtongue | Bill Ferny | Ar-Pharazôn | Lheu Brenin | Hwaldar | Easterlings (Balcoth) | Corsairs of Umbar | Dunlendings | Haradrim | Karsh | Hill-men of Rhudaur

Elves
Orcs
Azog | Torturer of Dol Guldur | Bolg | Fimbul the Hunter | Lagdush | Brogg the Twin | Mogg the Other Twin | Gimub the Slaver | Yazneg | Morgash | Grishnákh | Gothmog | Guritz | Slugat | Luga | Gorbag | Rogash | Morun | Snaga | Narzug | Gartor | Sharku | Radluk | Gordmúl | Zog the Eternal | Gazmog | Grublik the Flogger | Goroth Caragor Tamer | The Blacksmith | Dark Tribe | Outlaw Tribe | Feral Tribe | Slaughter Tribe | Machine Tribe

Goblins
Gorkil the Goblin King | Great Goblin

Others
Fëanor | Celegorm | Caranthir | Curufin | Maeglin | Celebrimbor

Hobbits
Gollum | Lotho Sackville-Baggins | Ted Sandyman

Dragons
Smaug | Ancalagon | Scatha | Drogoth the Dragon Lord | Glaurung

Great Spiders
Shelob | Ungoliant

Werewolves
Carcharoth | Shade of the Wolf

Uruk-hai
Uglúk | Lurtz | Shagrat | Hodhvarz | Mauhúr | Dhar | Morflak | Mog | Daskila | Grimbosh | Mauhúr (Uruk Scout) | Vrasku | Talons of the Black Hand

Trolls
Olog-hai (Brûz the Chopper)

Others
Barrow Wights | Fellbeasts | Gûlavhar | Mountain Giants | Old Man Willow | Watcher in the Water | Wargs | Wyrms

Alternate Continuities
Peter Jackson
Sauron | Saruman | Smaug | Azog | Morgomir | Helm Hammerhand | Suladân | Isildur | Nazgûl Sisters | Rogash | Denethor

The Rings of Power
Morgoth | Sauron | Adar

Animated Films
Sauron | Witch-king of Angmar

Rankin/Bass
Smaug | Lord of the Lash

Ralph Bakshi
Saruman

Gene Deitch
Slag