On 30 Dec 2004 at 13:05, Michael O'Connor wrote:

> In the one case that I know anything at all about, the Lord of the
> Rings trilogy used a large number of New Zealand tech folks as well as
> extras, (and some credited actors). The rest were UK people, so I
> don't know if American work rules had anything to do with the entire
> project. of course most studios are international companies now ...

Having just gone through the extended editions of all three movies 
and all the documentaries that come with them (11 hours of movies, 
15+ hours of documentaries), the New Zealand connection was much 
greater than you are suggesting.

So far as I can tell, *all* extras were Kiwis, as well as all the 
production crew with the exception of the management-level roles. All 
post-production was done in New Zealand with the exception of music 
recording, which was done in London because it was done by the London 
Philharmonic (easier to go to the orchestra than to bring the 
orchestra to NZ).

The remarkable thing about the whole endeavor was that Peter Jackson 
(the director) basically created the whole production mechansim from 
scratch, for the purpose of making his films. He built a new sound 
facility literally from the ground up for the purpose of mixing his 
films (the last two were done there). Weta Workshop basically ramped 
up its staff to whatever level was needed to support the film, and 
brought in whatever expertise was necessary to get the job done (as 
well as innovating on their own in a number of areas). Even the 
digital FX were "home-grown," with Weta Digital doing almost all of 
it (New Line, the distributors of the films, was not confident that 
Weta could successfully animate Gollum, and had to be convinced 
before signing off on turning over the wholesale creation of an 
entire critical character to the digital animators).

At the end Jackson remarks in one of the documentaries that the three 
films were basically made by amateurs.

There was, in fact, very little Hollywood involvement in the 
production. The cast was the most "Hollywood" part of the entire 
endeavor, and even that was heavily UK-based.

And, no, my eyes didn't fall out after watching all of this. I did 
this in the evenings over the holidays, and was riveted. I first 
rewatched the original versions of all three films. I then watched 
the extended versions with commentary from the director and writers. 
After each, I watched the 5+ hours of documentaries associated with 
that film before going on to the commentary for the next film. Last 
of all, I watched all three extended editions in succession (though I 
basically watched half a movie each night, as by this time, I was 
pretty worn out).

It's a pretty amazing accomplishment, over all, comparable, in my 
opinion, to Wagner's mounting of his Ring Cycle the first time at 
Bayreuth.

I think, though, that I'm going to wait a while before listening to 
the other commentaries!

-- 
David W. Fenton                        http://www.bway.net/~dfenton
David Fenton Associates                http://www.bway.net/~dfassoc

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