Full spoilers for The Rings of Power episode 6 follow. You’ve been warned.
The Rings of Power has officially arrived. Sure, the high fantasy Prime Video show actually launched on September 2, but it’s needed a hugely significant episode to truly announce itself on the prestige TV stage.
Episode 6 is the epic and explosive entry Amazon’s Lord of the Rings TV series and audiences have been waiting for. It’s packed with frenetic and fraught set-pieces, tells a story with multiple twists and turns, and culminates in a stunning finale that’ll have viewers’ jaws on the floor long after the credits roll.
Unsurprisingly, a lot of work went into designing and crafting episode 6’s shock ending. And, as co-showrunners Patrick McKay and J.D. Payne told TechRadar at an exclusive preview screening, the episode’s final moments were planned as season 1’s tentpole moment as far back as 2018.
“[It took] four years,” McKay says. “We’ve known about that sequence for that long.”
“When we were blocking out season 1, we had a whiteboard of character arcs for Galadriel, Elendil, Isildur, Arondir, Bronwyn – all the main characters in this episode,” Payne adds. “All of those journeys were leading to this point when we finally introduce Mordor.”
That’s right, The Rings of Power episode 6 shows us how Mordor – and its iconic volcano, aka Mount Doom – were ultimately created.
Viewers had already speculated that Mordor’s introduction wasn’t too far away, with previous season 1 episodes teasing as much. In episode 3, Galadriel and Elendil pour over some old Middle-earth maps, which show that the region known as the Southlands sits right on top of where Mordor exists in J.R.R. Tolkien’s Hobbit and Lord of the Rings novels. Adar’s orc army is based in this location throughout season 1 – an area where they’ve dug tunnels and deforested large swathes of land – which had lent further proof to Mordor’s eventual arrival.
Read all of our Rings of Power recaps
What audiences didn’t expect is that Mordor and Mount Doom would be born this early in the series. However, those familiar with Lord of the Rings’ extensive history would’ve been able to work out that this iconic location would be part of episode 6. Its official title – Udûn – is also the name of a barren valley situated in northwest Mordor, so it wouldn’t have taken much for diehard Tolkien fans to make the connection.
Still, for casual Lord of the Rings fans and general audiences, the birth of Mordor and Mount Doom in The Rings of Power is a truly shocking and visually spectacular moment. So, how was the sequence developed?
The eruption of an idea
Udûn’s finale was a seismic undertaking for everyone involved in The Rings of Power. The explosive sequence’s final edit comprises multiple VFX shots, complete with a huge volcanic eruption, searingly hot rocks raining down from the sky, a storm-fuelled ash cloud, and fires breaking out as the Southlands and its inhabitants are consumed by the cataclysmic event.
Before its visually arresting effects could be added in post, The Rings of Power’s chief creative team had to make sure that events preceding the eruption could lead to the mountain – that becomes Mount Doom – violently blowing its top. After all, such a move is only possible via the collision of its vast lava pit with water from Ostilith’s deep reservoir. That happens after Southland turncoat Waldreg uses the sword hilt, which Adar reacquires from the Southlanders in episode 6, as a key to unlock part of Ostilith’s dam. It’s a move that allows a deluge of water to rush through numerous tunnels – dug by the orcs – and snake its way to the ice covered mountain, which becomes Mount Doom.
Could a combination of an expansive volume of water and a giant pool of lava, then, cause such an explosive eruption? According to real-world science, yes.
“One of our writers knows a geologist,” Payne explains. “So we asked them if water and lava could unite to create this gigantic explosion, and it could. They said ‘if you have enough steam pressure that builds up in a confined space, the entropy inside the volcano will increase, eventually causing it to blow.”
“We painstakingly studied what actually happens in volcanic eruptions,” VFX producer Ron Ames adds. “We looked at photographs and we read historical documents on Pompeii so we had a clearer idea of the scale of these naturally occurring explosions.”
Buoyed by the backing of real-life science, The Rings of Power’s huge crew set about creating a finale that would herald the show’s epic arrival on the world stage. Typical pre-production work, such as concept art, storyboards, and location scouting were carried out well in advance of principal photography. Once those elements were in place, multiple camera crews set out to film external shots – wide and sweeping landscape, as well as close-ups – to use during the sequence.
“It was important to us to use real world locations,” Ames reveals. “The actual mountain itself is based on a real location. The cliff that Ostilith sits on is an actual location. We went to those areas and shot backgrounds using helicopters. We also landed in those areas and took photographs and plates. Even the water you see in the final sequence is real – it’s just mixed in with some CGI elements to aid the flow of this massive deluge as it careens down the valley.”