The Morning Call

Jackson franchise transforme­d New Zealand

Country has become major player in movie industry since ’03 release of ‘Return of the King’

- By Kevin Baxter

New Zealand was primarily known abroad for its sheep, its wine and its rugby team on the September day in 1998 that filmmaker Peter Jackson’s helicopter landed on a sprawling family farm about 100 miles south of Auckland.

The country’s film industry was another matter. Though New Zealand had produced crossover successes like Jackson’s “Heavenly Creatures” and Jane Campion’s Oscar winner “The Piano,” it was nearly as far from the thinking of Hollywood studios as it was from Hollywood itself.

But that was about to change.

The lush farmland on which Jackson’s crew alighted would soon become the backdrop for “The Lord of the Rings,” one of the most ambitious, influentia­l and profitable film series ever made. And in the two decades since the Dec. 17, 2003, release of “The Return of the King,” the Oscar-winning final film in Jackson’s trilogy, New Zealand has become a major player in the global motion picture industry.

“It absolutely put us on the map,” said Jasmine Millet, head of creative industries at Tataki Auckland Unlimited and an advocate for the region’s filmmaking industry. “People started thinking about New Zealand, wanting to visit New Zealand en masse in a way that they never would have without those films.”

The three films, adapted from J.R.R. Tolkien’s novel “The Lord of the Rings,” combined for 30 Academy Award nomination­s and 17 wins and earned nearly $3 billion in worldwide box-office receipts. It also pioneered new technologi­es in special effects and software systems and advancing the use of motion capture to animate digital characters.

The movies were so popular they inspired a second Oscar-nominated trilogy, “The Hobbit,” a decade later, which spurred its own tourism industry. The farmland that Jackson’s crew turned into Hobbiton, the fictional Middle-earth village where the films are set, has drawn as many as 650,000 visitors a year.

“The trilogy is just a big advertisem­ent for New Zealand,” said Shayne Forrest, general manager for tourism at the 12-acre Hobbiton movie set.

“The filmmakers that made these movies, Peter Jackson and all his team, they’re all New Zealanders. So it really got to showcase New Zealand as being a creative hub that could punch well above its weight in the internatio­nal arena.”

In 1998, the year Jackson began scouting locations for his Tolkien films, just five features made in New Zealand were released in theaters. Less than a decade later, the country was turning out twice as many annually; among the major production­s that followed “The Lord of the Rings” were “King Kong,” “Mission Impossible — Fallout,” Disney’s live-action “Mulan,”

James Cameron’s two “Avatar” films and the first two installmen­ts of “The Chronicles of Narnia.”

“The Lord of the Rings” series brought Richard Taylor’s Wētā Workshop — founded alongside his wife, Tania Rodger, and Jackson and named after a species of giant flightless cricket endemic to New Zealand — the first of its five Academy Awards.

Taylor and a staff of 36 were working out of a building they shared with an ice cream manufactur­er when Jackson gave him his choice of creative department­s for “The Lord of the Rings.” Taylor chose to look after the design and creation of armor, weapons, miniatures, special makeup effects and prosthetic­s, and though the average age of the Wētā Workshop staff was just 22 when they got going and only one-eighth of the crew had ever worked on a film or TV show before, the studio built more than 48,000 separate items for the trilogy.

“You teeter toward the edge of the cliff, and you can either leap off with faith (and) hope the wind catches under your wings, or step back from the edge of the cliff,” Taylor said. “So yeah, it’s where ‘LOTR’ all started for us, when Peter gave us that magical phone call.”

Wētā Workshop now has a staff of approximat­ely 400 working out of multiple buildings on Wellington’s Miramar peninsula, making everything from movie props to museum exhibits, consumer products, video gaming, sculptures and collectibl­es. For Taylor, the workshop’s growth in both size and prestige was born of the same innovation and can-do spirit that fueled the rise of New Zealand’s film industry.

It was the country that made the movie, Taylor insists, not the other way around. “There’s no doubt that you could have made an adaptation of ‘The Lord of the Rings’ in any country with any film company with any populace. It just wouldn’t have been this ‘Lord of the Rings,’ ” he said.

“… New Zealand crew still get together for the love of making a movie. They don’t get together because of the good business of working on a film. There’s a very fundamenta­l difference in that.

“That’s something that resonates with film directors and producers that come from overseas. That can-do Kiwi spirit. There’s no ‘that’s impossible.’ You just don’t have that.”

Nature, however, may have provided New Zealand’s filmmakers with their most valuable asset.

“The geographic benefit of New Zealand is that you can be in Wellington, with all the infrastruc­ture necessary to make a major feature film (and with) one-and-a-half hours’ flight, you can reach anywhere in the world ... visually. The only thing that New Zealand doesn’t really do is sand-swept deserts,” Taylor said.

“Somewhere as diverse as Middle-earth, we’re on a journey from pastoral Hobbiton to apocalypti­c Mordor. That demands that you are able to traverse an incredible diversity of environmen­ts. That’s what New Zealand could offer.”

What Jackson’s team was looking for the day their helicopter circled the Alexander family’s 1,250-acre sheep and beef farm, located at the base of Kaimai Range on New Zealand’s North Island, were unspoiled pastures, green rolling hills, gnarled trees and wet, foggy weather to stand in for the fictional Shire of the Tolkien novels. What they found was a location so remote, so pristine, that the New Zealand army was enlisted to build roads to get the filmmaker’s equipment in and out. The soldiers were then recruited to act in the movies’ battle scenes.

Soon enough, the films were inspiring fans to make pilgrimage­s to the tiny town of Matamata, a two-hour drive from Auckland, to pad around the farm — even though the sets built for the original trilogy were demolished when filming was finished.

When Jackson returned 10 years later and asked the Alexanders for permission to film “The Hobbit” on their property, it came with a condition: This time, the structures built for the project had to be permanent. So the filmmakers left behind 44 hobbit holes, the Green Dragon Inn and dozens of other props.

The hobbit films helped make Wētā Workshop a tourist destinatio­n as well. Years ago, when Taylor noticed tour buses were making regular trips to the workshop’s campus, he would step out of his office to answer questions from visitors. Someone on his staff quickly suggested a better way to get the Wētā Workshop story out would be to let the visitors in. The workshop now welcomes more than 165,000 visitors a year to its facilities in Wellington and tens of thousands more to Wētā Workshop Unleashed, an immersive look at the special-effects process, in Auckland.

Twenty years after the epic’s conclusion, the internatio­nal interest Jackson’s trilogy sparked in New Zealand continues.

“We get people from all over the world,” said Kate Malone, a Hobbiton tour guide. “Some of them are really big fans, and some of them have never seen the movies.”

 ?? NEW LINE PRODUCTION­S ?? Director Peter Jackson gives instructio­ns during production of “The Return of the King,” the final film in “The Lord of the Rings” trilogy that was released Dec. 17, 2003.
NEW LINE PRODUCTION­S Director Peter Jackson gives instructio­ns during production of “The Return of the King,” the final film in “The Lord of the Rings” trilogy that was released Dec. 17, 2003.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States