The New Zealand Herald

Jackson: WWI film ‘stunning’

- Anita Singh in London — Telegraph Group Ltd

Were it not for the uniforms, it could be a scene from a modernday conflict: British soldiers sharing a joke and a cigarette as they enjoy a brief respite from battle. Remarkably, the footage is a century old. Peter Jackson, the Oscar-winning director best known for his Lord of the Rings trilogy, has created a film from the archives of the Imperial War Museum which promises a fresh perspectiv­e on World War I.

Jackson and his team have used digital technology to bring original footage from the Somme to life, for a film designed to reach a generation more acquainted with Jackson’s fantasy epics than British military history.

The results will be screened in cinemas, broadcast by BBC One on Armistice Day, and a copy sent to every secondary school in Britain.

Jackson said the remastered and handcolour­ised film is “stunning” to see. “We all know what First World War footage looks like: it’s sped up . . . jumpy, scratchy, and it immediatel­y blocks you from actually connecting with the events on screen,” he said.

“But the results we have got are absolutely unbelievab­le. This footage looks like it was shot in the last week or two, with high definition cameras. The faces of the men just jump out at you”.

The footage will be accompanie­d by interviews with veterans, some recorded more than half a century ago for the acclaimed 1964 BBC series The Great War. Jackson combed through 600 hours of audio and said he had chosen not to focus on “the strategy, battles, the historical aspects of the war” but to let the soldiers talk about their experience­s.

“One hundred years later we have made up our own minds about what the First World War was like.

“But it’s very surprising when you listen to the voices of the men who fought the war — how they had to live it, what they had to eat, how they slept at night, how they coped with fear,” the director said.

“It will give a sense of what it was like to be in this war 100 years ago [ from] the perspectiv­e of the people that [were there].”

Diane Lees, the director-general of the Imperial War Museum, said she hoped Jackson’s fame would help to draw in a young audience.

The film marks the culminatio­n of a fiveyear arts programme, 14-18 NOW, commemorat­ing the conflict.

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