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November 28, 2001
The LOTR follows a mainly outdoor story line. It goes through many
landscapes, from the snow and mountains of the Misties, to the great river
Anduin, to the forests of Lorien. All these scenes needed to show the raw
ruggedness and wilderness that is Middle-Earth. In this week's column I
will discuss New Zealand, the site of the film, and some aspects of set
construction.
To make a LOTR movie true to Tolkien there needs to be a background
full of texture and detail. The driving principle behind the film-makers
has been a desire to achieve authenticity: 'It has been remarkable,' says
Peter Jackson, 'that if you want to know more about any aspect of the
story of LOTR, you simply scrape away from the surface and you'll find
more information, going back thousands of years. Tolkien created all that
historical material and whilst it is difficult for us to put that into a
movie, it is vital that the film is seen as being more than just
characters in costumes walking around in a New Zealand landscape. On the
practical side there has been a vast amount of unsung creativity.
| 'There is not a buckle,' says Richard Taylor of the special
effects group WETA, 'that isn't branded with the coat of arms of a
particular army. Every rivet head is detailed in some way. Every
belt is hand tooled to feel like it has been touched by the
craftsmen of the species that wears it. And, hope fully, by doing
this, the audience will gain a richer, more fulfilled, perspective
of the cultures that have gone on for thousands of years.' |
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The sense of wonder and
discovery, of vast distances and long journeys is central to the book
and to the films. For the director, Peter Jackson, the landscapes depicted
in the trilogy needed to fit with Tolkien's vision of middle-earth. 'The
Lord of the Rings is not a fantasy per se,' he explains,
'Tolkien wrote the book as a mythic pre-history of
a Europe existing in a dark age, long since forgotten. So I
wanted to set the film in a slightly surreal version of a European landscape
- which is exactly what New Zealand offers.' Ian McKellen, who
plays Gandalf, says 'Everything here is more magnificent.
| The landscape is familiar in the sense that it's been formed by
rain - just as Tolkien's Oxfordshire was - but the vegetation is
unusual and the mountains seem so much sharper. If you're looking
for what the poets call "the awful" - a sense of awe - then that is
what you find in New Zealand. And it's wild in a way that England
isn't.' Other cast members had similar things to say about New
Zealand. |
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'New Zealand is the ideal place to shoot these films,' notes Cate
Blanchett (Galadriel), 'the land mass is so young, so savage, so
untamed and unruly.' Elijah Wood (Frodo) agrees saying 'New Zealand
is gorgeous! I don't think that there's anywhere else we could had
filmed this movie unless we had travelled to lots of different
places around the world. Every element of Middle-earth is contained
in New Zealand. It is perfect. There are so many different
geographical landscapes: mountains, woods, marshes, desert areas,
rolling hills - and the sea. Everything, in fact, described in
LOTR.' In the end the film crew filmed at more than seventy
locations, not counting studios, during the making of the trilogy.
From rural farmland to sweeping rivers and snow-capped
peaks. |
New Zealand offered an unspoiled
environment with landscapes relatively uncluttered with the impedimenta of human civilization: no power
pylons straddling the hills (which may explain why Auckland, a
city of 3 million went without power for 2 weeks a
couple of years ago.. hehe!), no motorways ripping great tears of tarmac
across farmland.
| As Conceptual Artist John Howe observes, New Zealand has fewer
indications of ancient human presence that are so familiar with in
the European landscapes: 'Here there were no castles, no ruins,
nothing to be taken into account; just this ancient ecosystem with
its slightly odd-shaped rocks and trees. Whatever places were needed
- age-old building, the remnants of lost civilizations- they had to
be created from scratch and that gave us wonderful
freedom.' |
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From personal experience I can whole heartedly agree with all the
film-makers say. I have visited New Zealand 3 times (1982, 1993 and 1994),
and the environment is striking. The snow capped peaks in the distance is
contrasted with lush forest and raging rivers. It is a truly beautiful
place. I would recommend it as a holiday destination to all!
Preparations for building Rivendell began eighteen months before the
start of filming, with the planting of trees and vines that would be
incorporated into a landscape that includes wooded glades and
artificially-constructed waterfalls. While with the shire, a large empty
sheep field is transformed in to Hobbiton. The existing lake is extended,
rolling hills were enhanced by the moving of 5000 kilolitres of soil,
fields were ploughed and 500m of hedges were added to the 10 acre Hobbiton
site. Real flowers and vegetables were planted in the the gardens of the
hobbit-holes over 12 months prior to filming. One tree that was planted
was the massive oak which stands above Bag End. Winched into place and
secured with steel cables and concrete, its outstretched branches were
then clothed in 250000 hand painted leaves and artificial
acorns.
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Bag End, with its traditional hobbit-style round doors and
windows, was constructed in polystyrene artfully painted to look as
if built from stone and wood. A year's exposure to the elements,
combined with some authentic looking 'repairs', would eventually
give the village the appearance of having been established
generations ago. In fact, there were two Bag Ends: one built for
those scenes in which only hobbits are featured, and another,
meticulously scaled down, for shots of Gandalf and the hobbits, or
to be precise, the hobbit's "scale doubles".
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Did you know.... - The song Lament for Gandalf,
from the Lothlorien track on the soundtrack CD, has verses in
Sindarin and Quenyan. Other tracks
appearing the in movie have Khuzdul, Morbeth and
Adunaic
in them. Time to get my % in Adunaic up!
- The TV series Hercules and Xena both use the
New Zealand wilderness as the background
landscape.
- The length of the journey of Frodo from the
time he leaves the shire to when he reaches Mt Doom is 6 months and 2
days.
- New Zealand actor Marton Csokas, who plays Celeborn
went straight from shooting LOTR to a part in Star Wars Episode
II. Not a bad rise to fame for a little known actor!
- Pictured on the table in Bag End during a
conversation between Gandalf and Frodo is some cake like creations with
some honey next to them. Could this be bannocks???
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