A lavish, uneven, and often genuinely impressive fantasy epic that prioritizes scale, atmosphere, and mythic worldbuilding over momentum. It rewards viewers who want to linger in Middle-earth and don’t mind a slower, more ornamental approach, but it can feel overextended and emotionally distant when the plotting… Read more
25% ★☆☆☆☆ (441,927)
The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power
Where to watch: Amazon
TV Show · Action & Adventure · Sci-Fi & Fantasy
2022 · ★ 25% (442K)
Evil has had many names.
Starring: Charlie Vickers, Morfydd Clark, Robert Aramayo
Overview
Beginning in a time of relative peace, we follow an ensemble cast of characters as they confront the re-emergence of evil to Middle-earth. From the darkest depths of the Misty Mountains, to the majestic forests of Lindon, to the breathtaking island kingdom of Númenor, to the furthest reaches of the map, these kingdoms and characters will carve out legacies that live on long after they are gone.
Production
Amazon Studios, New Line Cinema
Cast
Charlie Vickers, Morfydd Clark, Robert Aramayo, Charles Edwards, Owain Arthur, Sophia Nomvete, Daniel Weyman, Markella Kavenagh, Megan Richards, Ismael Cruz Cordova, Sam Hazeldine, Benjamin Walker
Where to watch
Amazon Prime Video, Amazon Prime Video with Ads, Amazon Prime Video Free with Ads
Curator Review
Verdict
A lavish, uneven, and often genuinely impressive fantasy epic that prioritizes scale, atmosphere, and mythic worldbuilding over momentum. It rewards viewers who want to linger in Middle-earth and don’t mind a slower, more ornamental approach, but it can feel overextended and emotionally distant when the plotting stalls.
Best for
Lord of the Rings fans curious about the Second Age
viewers who love big-budget fantasy worldbuilding and spectacle
people who enjoy ensemble stories with multiple kingdoms and factions
watchers who are patient with slow-burn setup and lore-heavy storytelling
Skip if
you want tight pacing and constant plot progression
you prefer character-first fantasy with immediate emotional payoff
you’re looking for a fully self-contained story with a clear ending
you’re impatient with long setup, exposition, and prestige-fantasy solemnity
Overview
The Rings of Power is ambitious in a way few television fantasies are, with production design, landscapes, costumes, and visual effects that often feel genuinely cinematic. When it leans into the grandeur of Middle-earth, it can be transporting: Númenor, Lindon, Khazad-dûm, and the Southlands all have a distinct sense of place, and the series knows how to sell awe.
Worth noting
Its biggest issue is balance. The show often spreads itself across too many threads, and the result is a rhythm that can feel stately to the point of inertia. Some character arcs land better than others, and the dialogue occasionally carries the burden of explaining lore rather than dramatizing it. Still, there are enough strong images, mythic stakes, and intriguing long-game setups to keep fantasy devotees engaged.
Bottom line
As a watch, it’s best approached as a prestige worldbuilding project rather than a brisk adventure series. If you want a sprawling, expensive, occasionally uneven return to Tolkien’s universe, it’s worth sampling; if you need sharper momentum or more intimate character writing, it may test your patience.
The closest benchmark for sprawling fantasy television with competing kingdoms, political maneuvering, and large-scale spectacle, especially if you want the genre pushed into prestige-drama territory.
A tighter, more focused fantasy saga with court intrigue, dynastic conflict, and a stronger sense of momentum, ideal if you like the political side of Rings of Power.
A darker, monster-tinged fantasy series with a big mythic canvas and a more overt adventure engine, appealing to viewers who want action alongside lore.
For viewers drawn to political complexity, cultural detail, and immersive historical scale, this delivers the same sense of epic civilization-building with sharper dramatic focus.
A lush, literary fantasy with a strong sense of myth, atmosphere, and otherworldly design, suited to viewers who enjoy contemplative genre storytelling.
Not fantasy, but it shares the prestige scale, ensemble structure, and slow-burn political tension that make ambitious worldbuilding feel consequential.
For viewers who enjoy lavish production design, political maneuvering, and civilization-scale storytelling, this remains a gold-standard prestige epic.
2015 · Where to watch: Amazon Prime Video, Amazon Prime Video with Ads
A richly built ensemble saga with faction politics, long-form plotting, and a strong commitment to making its universe feel lived-in.
Themes
epic fantasy, good versus evil, mythic history, political intrigue, quest narrative, ancient civilizations, power and corruption, ensemble storytelling
Topics
epic fantasy, prestige television, worldbuilding, mythic, ensemble cast, slow burn, adventure, political intrigue, high production values, sword and sorcery