THE LORD OF THE RINGS: THE RINGS OF POWER Taps All-Female Directing Team For Season 2

THE LORD OF THE RINGS: THE RINGS OF POWER Taps All-Female Directing Team For Season 2

Prime Video has announced that The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power season 2 will feature an all-female team of filmmakers, while we also have confirmation of how many episodes we can look forward to.

By JoshWilding - Dec 14, 2022 11:12 PM EST
Filed Under: Lord of the Rings
Source: SFFGazette.com

The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power, a series which has been viewed by more than 100 million people worldwide since launching on Prime Video earlier this year, has confirmed (via SFFGazette.com) three directors for the upcoming second season, currently in production in the UK. 

That trio - Charlotte Brändström, Sanaa Hamri, and Louise Hooper – will each be at the helm of multiple episodes for season two which is now confirmed to consist of eight episodes (the same episode count as season one). 

Brändström, who helmed two highly acclaimed episodes of The Rings of Power’s first season ("Udûn" and "The Eye"), will be directing four episodes and will also serve as co-executive producer for the series this season. Hamri and Hooper will each be directing two episodes. Brändström and Hamri also both have overall deals with Amazon Studios.

Brändström's television credits include Jupiter’s Legacy and The Witcher, while upcoming projects include The Continental with Mel Gibson for Starz, The Consultant with Christoph Waltz for Prime Video, and Shōgun for FX.

Hamri recently completed executive producing and directing The Wheel of Time's second season for Prime Video, and counts Empire, Shameless, Rectify, Nashville, Elementary, Glee, and Desperate Housewives among her many credits. 

As for Hooper, we're sure you'll recognise her name from her impressive work on The Sandman and The Witcher

Season two of The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power is produced by showrunners and executive producers J.D. Payne & Patrick McKay.

They are joined by executive producers Lindsey Weber, Callum Greene, Justin Doble, Jason Cahill, and Gennifer Hutchison, along with co-executive producer Charlotte Brändström, producers Kate Hazell and Helen Shang, and co-producers Andrew Lee, Matthew Penry-Davey, and Clare Buxton. 

There's been a lot of scepticism surrounding the decision to shift production from New Zealand to the UK, with many fans wondering if it's some sort of cost-cutting measure that will negatively impact the show's visuals. We'll see, but it's hard not to be excited about returning to Middle-earth, even if it's just to learn more about Charlie Vickers' Sauron!

The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power season 2 is expected to premiere on Prime Video in 2024.

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TUD
TUD - 12/14/2022, 11:02 PM
Based. Can't wait to see who finds an issue with this though. Plenty of shows have had all-male directing teams and that was never an issue.
HAILHYDRA
HAILHYDRA - 12/14/2022, 11:04 PM
Make sense. Since LOTR is such a popular franchise for with women.
Clintthahamster
Clintthahamster - 12/15/2022, 11:04 AM
@HAILHYDRA - Tell me you don't have any female friends without saying you don't have any female friends.
MrDandy
MrDandy - 12/14/2022, 11:17 PM
Make, female….it doesn’t matter so long as it is halfway to watchable.

I’m a diehard LotR fan and couldn’t finish season 1. Maybe if I hear good things about season 2 I will come back. But it has a long way to go.
ThorArms
ThorArms - 12/14/2022, 11:36 PM
I mean their credits are good. I'm a fan of most of the things on the list so I'm not sure why this needs to be news
AmazingFILMporg
AmazingFILMporg - 12/14/2022, 11:38 PM
Ugh I hate this! I don't want women directing my testosterone driven content!



ARRRRRGGGHHHHH!!!!!!
















-SMALL PEEPEE PORG🙆
EnergyVamp
EnergyVamp - 12/15/2022, 1:16 AM
@AmazingFILMporg - People who love, support, and fight for women can have small peepees too. Big dicks arent exclusive to good people.
globaltravels
globaltravels - 12/15/2022, 12:02 AM
As long as they improve the writing.
AnthonyVonGeek
AnthonyVonGeek - 12/15/2022, 12:22 AM
IcePyke
IcePyke - 12/15/2022, 12:36 AM



This show must be destroyed!
EgoEgor
EgoEgor - 12/15/2022, 12:40 AM
TV is a writer's medium and not a directors so I'm not sure why people are pissed off about this other than the obvious? Fix the writing.
EnergyVamp
EnergyVamp - 12/15/2022, 1:18 AM
Cool, but wouldve been better if they got rid of the showrunner and writers room.
All-female directors? Cool.
SheepishOne
SheepishOne - 12/15/2022, 1:35 AM
I really dislike when media praises stuff like this as some sort of big triumph.

Don't get me wrong, I don't have any problem with an all-women directing team. But if the ultimate goal is progress and diversity behind the camera, wouldn't it be better to just do this without reporting it as an achievement on its own? Who are these types of announcements for? The most vocal responses will likely be those against the idea of all-women directors, and they likely would have never known if it wasn't reported. Everyone else is either like "okay, that's neat", or they don't care at all.

I don't know if I'm articulating my point well, but as far as knee-jerk responses go, you're only going to get negative "big" responses here. I don't see anyone showing up in the comments to give an enthusiastic praise for something that should be fairly normalized.

And as big negative responses would be indicative of a resistance to women directors, wouldn't it be better to just not report this and not indulge? Otherwise, and especially becauae of anti-woke backlash this show has already gotten, it feels like negative engagement bait.

Idk. Maybe it's just me.
ScaryTerry
ScaryTerry - 12/15/2022, 7:50 AM
@SheepishOne - I see what you mean. I was having a similar discussion with my brother about gay pride the other day. At what point does it go from normalizing something to be a social standard to becoming narcissism? It’s a fair perspective.
Moriakum
Moriakum - 12/15/2022, 2:02 AM
Fogs
Fogs - 12/15/2022, 2:41 AM
You guys fall so easily for it... Some criticizing it as if this news was a bad thing, others stating all men are pissed with this decision as if it was something novel.


My only point is:


Do they know Tolkien's work? Will they minimally respect the canon AND essence?

Odds are against that.
Urubrodi
Urubrodi - 12/15/2022, 4:56 AM
@Fogs - That'd be more to do with the writers and producers.
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