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News Update December 7, 1999 
There have been a number of developments since our last update. USA
Today recently declared that Peter Jackson is working under a
mandate of delivering films capable of earning a PG-13 rating. On
another front, our friends at AICN News reported:  "It isn't
nailed down yet, but they are thinking and looking at casting Donald
Sutherland as Denethor. This hasn't been locked down in stone yet, and
he hasn't signed. It's just the thoughtline on who they may be going
with at the moment." 
No Hobbit Trespassing 
  
Not everyone down in New Zealand is thrilled with Peter Jackson's
production of the Lord of the Rings. 
 
The Forest and Bird Protection Society has issued a press release
wherein they declare that they are very concerned about the large
production possibly doing irreparable damage to sensitive land in the
country's Kahurangi National Park and Kepler Mire, an ancient string bog
in Fiordland.  
The press release was prompted by Conservation Minister Nick Smith's
recent announcement that the film production company had been given
permission to shoot on several areas of National Parks and Conservation
land, including the areas of concern. Forest and Bird's Southern
Conservation Officer Sue Maturin took issue with the permits saying,
"The processing of the concession has been done in secret, it was not
publicly advertised and neither the Nelson or Otago Conservation Boards
were consulted." 
 
 
From our friends at OneRing came the following: 
  
Flood Ruins Rings Set 
 
A Lord of the Rings film set has been washed away by floodwater near
Queenstown. About 300-400 crew and cast have been filming the $360
million film trilogy near Queenstown, Wanaka and Te Anau for the past 10
days and will be in the area until Christmas.  
Producer Tim Sanders said today filming was delayed in some locations
because of flooding and bad weather. Some locations could still be used
in the next few weeks when they dried out, but others wouldn't be ready
until the film crew returned next year. 
 
Mr Sanders said one set of some ruins had been washed away. "It wasn't a
huge set, but we had some ruins for one of our scenes along the Kawarau
River, built on a beach setting. The beach, and the ruins and the whole
area were suddenly 5m under water," he said. "The great irony in all of
this is that we had a set built in a studio here [in Queenstown] for wet
weather purposes. We couldn't reach it because we were cut off in Te
Anau. Now that we've finally made it to Queenstown, it's the only thing
we can shoot on because all our other sets have washed away. And [today]
it's beautiful weather." Filming in Wellington will resume about
mid-January. 
And finally, we are happy to pass on this story which ran in the
December 1 edition of The Wall Street Journal, written by author
Laura Landro. 
The George Lucas of Christchurch 
 
Move over, Darth Vader, Luke Skywalker and Han Solo. Sauron, Frodo
and Aragorn are ready for their close-ups. 
 
In a land far, far away from Hollywood, the cameras have started to roll
on one of the most ambitious movie projects ever undertaken: the
filming, more than 50 years after its publication, of J.R.R. Tolkien's
classic fantasy trilogy, "Lord of the Rings." 
 
New Zealand's verdant valleys, volcanic plateaus and snow-capped
mountains are being transformed into Tolkien's mythical kingdom of
Middle-earth, where his saga of the epic struggle between good and evil
unfolds. George Lucas borrowed some inspiration from Lord of the Rings"
for his "Star Wars" series; if little-known director Peter Jackson can
pull this off, he may well go global with his local reputation as "the
George Lucas of Christchurch." 
 
Peter Jackson, director, writer and producer of New Line Cinema's 'The
Lord of the Rings' 
But Mr. Jackson is trying something even Mr. Lucas never attempted:
completing physical production on three separate films in one marathon
15-month shoot. For New Line Cinema, which is financing the $180 million
project, that means an up-front commitment to three movies, rather than
waiting to see how the first one does before proceeding with the
others.   
That's a big risk for the maker of such tried-and-true series as the
"Nightmare on Elm Street" and "Austin Powers" films. "Could it backfire?
Sure, if the first film is a disaster it doesn't augur very well for the
next two," says Robert Shaye, the founder and CEO of New Line, the
feisty onetime independent that is now a unit of Time Warner Inc. "But
-- and I'm knocking on my desk here -- we feel very certain that this
has a universal currency in terms of interest, and we think it could be
a franchise right off the shelf."  
Steep as $180 million sounds -- and epic films do tend to go over budget
-- Mr. Shaye points out that the figure works out to $60 million a
movie, a little more than the current industry average. New Line is
covering its bets with a number of international financial partners, and
there could be serious lucre in merchandising and licensing deals.
Moreover, technology is economy: Thanks to a new generation of digital
effects, Mr. Jackson is able to embellish much of the world of Tolkien's
richly imagined creatures, from Orcs to Balrogs; to stage battle scenes
that would once have required a cast of thousands; and to make real
human actors such as Elijah Wood and Sean Astin look like pint-sized
Hobbits (they'll use good old-fashioned prosthesis for the big hairy
feet). 
 
There are no expensive megastars, though the cast ranges from such
classical actors as Sir Ian Holm, Sir Ian McKellen and Cate
Blanchett to young heartthrobs like Liv Tyler and Viggo Mortensen
(he signed on recently to play Aragorn after Stuart Townsend dropped out
in the first days of shooting). There are 85 speaking parts and, even
with effects, enough extra work to give the local economy quite a boost
for the next couple of years. 
 
Under Mr. Jackson's decidedly ambitious plan, filming will be finished
before the first movie is released, probably sometime in mid-2001. The
first, "The Fellowship of the Ring," will close with a trailer for the
second, "The Two Towers," which in turn will promote the third, "The
Return of the King." New Line expects to release them at six- to
nine-month intervals (avoiding any "Star Wars" prequels). "If we say
we're making 'Lord of the Rings,' we can't tell a third of the story and
then make people wait two years to see what happens," Mr. Jackson
says. 
 
Excitement is already at a fever-pitch among the rabid legions of "Lord
of the Rings" fans; the trilogy has been translated into 25 languages,
with more than 50 million copies sold world-wide in the past five
decades. 
My mother gave me the books when I was about 10, and I later shared them
with my two younger brothers. We spent most of our school years reading
and rereading all three until we could recite passages from memory. I
even used the Elven rune alphabet Tolkien provided in the glossary to
write deep dark secrets in my preteen diary, so as to thwart anyone who
might find and read it. 
 
But that's nothing compared to the "LOTR" obsessives who have been
swarming over the Internet for months buzzing about the movie, agonizing
over whether the film would be faithful to the text, debating the
casting choices and trading tidbits of gossip about the project. ("I've
been filming the books in my mind for the last fifteen years . . . " is
a typical posting.)  
Fans were in a state recently over the posting of an image said to be
"Sauron's Eye," the big peeper of the Dark Lord himself, and few seem to
be able to get it though their heads that Sean Connery is not going to
be in the movie. ("Never talked to him," says Mr. Jackson.) This week
the Internet buzz is about delays in filming caused by torrential rains
in New Zealand. At first somewhat agog over the Internet frenzy, Mr.
Jackson and New Line Cinema are shrewdly using it to their advantage,
bringing this built-in audience into the process from the very start.  
Mr. Jackson has already done two Web interviews with the Harry Knowles
"Ain't It Cool News" Web site, answering questions on everything from
how the evil Gollum creature will be portrayed (not a real human actor,
but a digital creation that will be scary, for sure) to whether the
Tolkien estate is involved (it isn't). New Line is also planning to
videotape interviews with Mr. Jackson, as well as conduct live remote
chats with him for broadcast over the Internet during production.  
It is thanks mainly to Mr. Jackson's determination and his embrace of
modern technology that "Lord of the Rings" is being made at all.
Producer Saul Zaentz acquired the movie rights from United Artists,
which had bought the rights from the author but never made a movie. Mr.
Zaentz produced a truncated animated version covering about half the
saga in 1978, but it was a critical and commercial bust, and the fans
hated it. Mr. Zaentz hung on to the rights for years. Though there were
a few offers to try a live-action feature, conventional Hollywood wisdom
said the trilogy was unfilmable, the costs of making three such movies
prohibitive. 
 
Cut to 1995, when Mr. Zaentz hooked up with Miramax Films and Mr.
Jackson, a fanciful and original director whose work included "The
Frighteners" and "Heavenly Creatures," the latter a sobering true tale
of a 1950s-era New Zealand matricide that blended live-action with some
rough but tantalizing fantasy sequences using Plasticine figurines and
some computer effects. Mr. Jackson and longtime production partner Fran
Walsh took a crack at Miramax's request to squeeze the trilogy into two
movies, but Mr. Jackson says he feared "any attempt to compress the
story or simplify it would disappoint" the millions of fans of the books
who were sure to be the core audience. 
  
Eventually Miramax agreed to give Mr. Jackson a little time to try and
set the project up at another studio.  
Messrs. Shaye and Lynne were impressed -- really impressed. "It was
amazing: things we hadn't seen before, that played tricks with
perception, with how vision works," says Mr. Lynne. "We were blown
away." Mr. Shaye says he was ready to take a "leap of faith" on three
movies, but his experiences with sequels, despite their financial
success, had been rough -- reassembling casts, settling on new scripts
and luring back directors.  
Universal Studios had made "Back to the Future" II and III at once; why
not film three "Lord of the Rings" movies in one fell swoop, and work on
postproduction and editing simultaneously? Mr. Jackson, meanwhile, was
already deep into the next generation of digital effects, having helped
start an effects company, WETA Digital, after an epiphany he had
watching Steven Spielberg's "Jurassic Park." "I thought, 'Oh my God,
I've got to get into the technology business. Otherwise I will be stuck
down here in New Zealand with old-fashioned techniques and never be able
to do the kinds of films I want to make,'" Mr. Jackson says.  
He and Ms. Walsh revised their two-movie script into three, returning to
the structure of the original books. WETA will create more than 1,000
special effects for the trilogy and has about 80 computer artists on the
project. 
Will the effects overwhelm the story? "'Lord of the Rings' is wonderful
source material, an amazingly intricate epic story with wonderful
characters," says Mr. Jackson. "We're just trying to take all the great
stuff from the books and use modern technology to give audiences a night
at the movies quite unlike anything they have ever seen before." Except
in their imaginations. 
 
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