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LOTR News Update February 8, 2000
Lord of the Rings news comes to us this update courtesy of
The Weekender in New Zealand which reported the following:
Filming of outdoors scenes in the Matamata region of New Zealand's'
North Island has concluded as production now moves back onto the sound
stages in Wellington.
As the filming of the panoramic rural scenes around Matamata comes to an
end, locals are left pondering just which of the "extras" were getting
paid. With a cast of not just humanoid creatures, questions arose as to
just how much the assorted goats, sheep, chickens and horses used in
some scenes were getting paid.
Said LOR publicist Claire Raskin with tongue firmly in cheek, "of course
they were getting paid, "They all had their own umbrellas, "It was very
Hollywood!"
The introductory scenes to all three movies are now being shot indoors,
with this filming set to continue until April when, as winter
approaches, expect to see some winter scenes starting to be shot.
Other news comes to us by way of two interviews, of sorts. The first is
from Sir Ian McKellan who is keeping something of a journal online at
his official website. Here are his latest observations:
What a congenial country New Zealand is for visitors from what used to
be called "the home country." So far from home but the language is the
same and you can buy Marmite and Cadbury's chocolate. The Queen is on
the banknotes (although they are made of a non-creasable, washable,
transparent plastic) and there is scandal about Prince Edward in
"Women's Weekly" which would be considered too racy for even the UK
tabloids. It all seems half-familiar with a style of friendliness that
is a change from English reserve. I feel very much at home.
I am staying for a few days in Cambridge in the centre of the North
Island - close to the thermal jollity of geysers and sulphurous springs
and within easy reach of Coromandel peninsula where I paddled in the
South Pacific last weekend. The string of Bali Hai's across the green
ocean couldn't entice me from my reason for being here, which is to film
Gandalf's arrival in Hobbiton at the opening of Peter Jackson's film The
Lord of the Rings.
We are on location an hour's flight north of the Three Foot Six studios
in Wellington. The village has weathered nicely since it was built a
year back. The flowers have had a chance to settle in and bloom.
Nasturtians, sunflowers, daisies and a fieldful of allotments where
communal gardening has produced rows of vegetables and fruit. Hobbiton
looks itself, settled-in and cosy. It has been tucked in and around the
curving farmland, surrounded by green low peaks and gentle valleys. The
lone poplars on the horizon look as if placed by the art department but
I'm told were not. You can never be sure.
The smoke rising from the domesticated holes where the hobbits live is
provided by a oil-burning machine. The front door of Bag End itself
where Gandalf knocked last week opens onto a space no larger than a film
camera needs. The interiors are set up, awaiting our return next week.
The produce on sale by the Green Dragon, just across the bridge from the
mill with its electrically run wheel is real enough.
Between each take I watched the billy goat snatch from a stall a real
cabbage to chew in the hot sunshine. I was sheltering under the marquee
"Video City" where Peter Jackson examines each shot with Victoria
Sullivan supervising the script, continuity and accuracy of the text. On
film I am spending my opening days shooting on board the cart laden with
fireworks for Bilbo's "long expected party."
The novel's title for the first chapter has been slipped into Gandalf's
chat with Frodo, who has jumped up beside him. Fun as it is guiding the
friendly brown 13-hand high Clyde and bantering with Elijah Wood, most
of the time I am nowhere near the camera.
David Brunette (recent graduate in computer design) collects me before
dawn and drives me the 30 minutes to the set. By the time the sun is up
Rick Findlater (from the Gold Coast in Australia) is half way through my
3-hour makeup, which was designed by Peter Owen. This took three screen
tests to perfect.
Peter Jackson has ensured that Tolkien rules the enterprise. So, in
working out Gandalf's appearance we went back to the few terse
descriptions in the novel. We agreed that the cover illustration of
Gandalf on the HarperCollins complete edition of "The Lord of the Rings"
had captured too much of our collective imaginings to be ignored. John
Howe painted it and he has for 18 months been crucial to the "conceptual
art" of the movie, along with that other formidably imaginative
illustrator, Alan Lee.
At the first screen test the beard was too long and cumbersome for
Gandalf the man of action - he is forever tramping and riding and on the
move. I didn't want a beard which hampered me with a life of its own
once the winds blew. Alien visages stared back at me from the mirror -
hirsute offbeats like Fagin and Ben Gunn. Even Rasputin for a moment.
For the second test, the beard was care-freely slashed by Peter Owen,
who hadn't had much confidence in it nor in the whiskers that hid my
cheeks. Once he had trimmed it all back, I saw a glimmer of the old
wizard's sternness. I smiled and tried a Gandalf twinkle, the friend of
the Hobbits who admires their spirit and sociability.
Peter Jackson suggested a droopier moustache. I suddenly looked like a
double for the Beatles' Maharishi. So the eyebrows, over-faithful to
Tolkien's description, were plucked thinner and shorter. The old guru
was still there but you couldn't put a name to him. At last Ngila
Dickson placed her pointed, blue/grey Wizard's hat on top. Out of the
blue, I remembered the silver scarf that he wears in the book. Somehow
it had been overlooked or decided against. Until I looked the part I
hadn't missed it either.
And there's a thing to ponder - what does a man with an umbrella for a
hat and a warm cloak need with a scarf? The book starts in autumn. We
are filming in summertime. Weather conditions aside I thought he might
have the silver scarf much as he has the pointy hat - to disguise
himself. The Gandalf who visits his old friends Bilbo and Frodo has lots
of props. Already I have had to cope with his staff, his toffees, his
pipe, as well as Clyde - why not a scarf to do some magic with?
Only when Peter Jackson was certain that Fran (co-screenwriter Frances
Walsh), Philippa (co-screenwriter Philippa Boyens), Alan Lee, Peter
Owen, and I liked what peered back at us through the various
applications, did he give his own approval. He's a director who likes to
share decision making. It's a large crew and cast but we are all
encouraged to contribute.
It's very impressive how New Line supports such an eccentric enterprise.
I haven't been here long enough to judge whether Peter is a national
hero but he should be up there with Sir Edmund Hillary for his
enterprise. Apart from the artistic audacity, he is bringing employment
and international attention to his country. He says of his Everest that
it's the biggest film ever made technically and logistically. He is not
so foolhardy as to think he could ever make these three films by
himself. We are all on his team.
They had been filming without me for three months and I felt like the
new boy at school as they re-grouped two weeks into the year. Term
started with a rough cut of the action so far - those that didn't need
major special effects added. A videotape was projected onto the screen
of the cinema near the WETA workshops where the dailies are viewed. The
soundtrack was uneven. The music was from other movies. And so the
audience began by cheering their hard work like a home movie until the
story took over and through the silence they watched Boromir die and the
hobbits weep as they lose Gandalf to the Balrog. Peter had provided beer
and wine but I'm off the alcohol and had two candy floss (cotton candy)
and popcorn.
Then a party at the house of Barrie Osborne (Producer) and his partner
Carol Kim (Production Manager.) At the end of the evening Billy Boyd
("Pippin") persuaded me to follow him down the fireman's pole that falls
twenty feet to the hall. And I wasn't even drunk. Two more days in
Hobbiton - the forecast is for sunshine which will sparkle on my silver
scarf.
And finally, we offer this interview as conducted by E! Online:
Frodo Speaks: An Exclusive Q&A with Elijah Wood
February 1, 2000
Frodo is relieved. Elijah Wood, the 19-year-old star who plays Frodo
Baggins--the primary character in Peter Jackson's Lord of the Rings
saga--has been dying for a chance to talk about this hush-hush project.
Now he can. Relaxing between takes on the Hobbiton set, in his first
interview since filming began, Wood opens up about Frodo, his costars,
the technical demands of this massive trilogy--and big furry feet and
little pointy ears.
Frodo goes on an enormous physical and spiritual journey--what part
of that journey are you most interested in exploring?
What's it like to explore the dark side of Frodo?
So, you see Frodo as being possessed by evil, rather than making a
conscious choice to engage the Ring's power?
What do you admire about Frodo... or not admire?
What about the physical aspects of the production--the prosthetics,
the makeup...
They look comfortable.
Hobbits are similar to humans, but they're not human. How do you
develop a character who isn't human?
What kind of journey are you on as an actor?
How do you maintain your character amid all the technical
demands?
What's it like working with Peter?
You seem to have a good working relationship with your Hobbit
costars. Tell me about that.
Were you a Tolkien fan before you joined the project?
What are the differences between the novel and the scripts?
You've been filming in New Zealand for about four months now.
Has it been frustrating to maintain such strict
confidentiality?
Is it difficult being so far away from your friends and
family?
E! Online - 02/02/00
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