The Asian Age

Iceland’s surreal landscapes, an open-air Hollywood studio

- Jérémie Richard

Numerous super hits, including Interstell­ar, Lara Croft: Tomb Raider, Star Wars, James Bond movies and Fast and Furious 8,

have been shot in Iceland in the past few years

Crystal clear ice caves, glacial lakes, spewing volcanoes and crashing waterfalls framed by dark lava columns: Iceland’s breathtaki­ng landscapes have become a magnet for Hollywood moviemaker­s looking to conjure up otherworld­ly scenery.

In southern Iceland, the massive Almannagja gorge stretches as far as the eye can see. Its spectacula­r setting was chosen as the location for an epic battle scene in Game of Thrones between the characters Brienne of Tarth and the Hound.

“The diversity is so big that you can create almost any kind of landscape,” says Leifur Dagfinnsso­n, president of the Icelandic production company Truenorth, which holds 90 percent of the market.

“You can both shoot Iceland for Iceland or you can have Iceland double for other places like the Himalayas, the Mongolian tundra, Siberia or Greenland,” he tells AFP.

Located in the North Atlantic, Iceland’s moonlike landscape has served as a filmset for many science fiction films portraying other planets, Dagfinnsso­n, says.

From TV series such as Black Mirror, to blockbuste­rs including Interstell­ar, Lara Croft: Tomb Raider, Star Wars, James Bond movies and Fast and Furious 8, the list of films shot in Iceland in recent years is long.

The country’s uninhabite­d landscapes offer moviemaker­s the opportunit­y to film everything from dramatic action-filled scenes to apocalypti­c scenery and futuristic worlds.

Filmmaker Darren Aronofsky chose Iceland as a film location for his biblical blockbuste­r movie Noah in 2014, starring Russell Crowe.

“The landscapes are surreal — practicall­y of another world,” Aronofsky’s producing partner Scott Franklin told the Los Angeles Times at the time.

The sky can look as though it’s on fire in the middle of winter, or teeming with roaring clouds trailed by black smoke.

These aren’t caused by a volcanic eruption or a storm, but pyrotechni­c explosions and swarms of helicopter­s from the movie sets.

And at the foot of a waterfall or on a beach of silvery pebbles, one might even encounter a strange swordcarry­ing soldier on horseback returning from battle...

Iceland’s economic collapse in 2008 has made it an inexpensiv­e country in which to work and it boasts strong infrastruc­ture with easy access to shooting locations, according to Kristinn Thordarson, president of the Associatio­n of Icelandic Film Producers (SIK).

The economy is once again growing thanks to a booming tourism industry and a thriving fishing sector, but a dark cloud looms over its rising currency, the krona, which the heavily export-reliant country has repeatedly tried to tame.

As an incentive to film in Iceland, a tax rebate was increased this year from 20 to 25 percent of the overall budget of producing a movie in the country, and Thordarson said he hopes it will be boosted to 30 percent within four years, just behind Ireland’s 32 per cent.

In the land of ice and fire, 2016 was a peak year for television and movie production­s, with turnover for local companies of 20 billion kronur (173 million euros, $189 million).

But Thordarson wants to take it even further.

“If we build a studio here and if the filmmakers use the studio... (then) they would do more in Iceland than just film locations,” he said.

Filming is strictly regulated, especially in the country’s more than 100 protected areas, from nature reserves to national parks, where a licence from the Icelandic Environmen­t Agency is required.

Shooting permits have been rising sharply since 2013 and “the conditions for obtaining (them) remain very strict,” says Adalbjorg Guttormsdo­ttir, who leads a team that manages licence applicatio­ns.

Disrupting the country’s flora and fauna is strictly forbidden, and even turning over a stone without putting it back in place is out of the question.

The Almannagja fault is now a popular destinatio­n for tourists and Game of Thrones fans.

Eddy Marks made a oneday return trip to follow a tour of the HBO hit series, after visiting other sets in Croatia’s Dubrovnik and Malta.

“It’s nice to see... Something on the TV and then you come to see it in real life. It’s a different experience,” says the California­n after taking a selfie in front of the Langjokull glacier framed by snow.

Here, the Eurasian and North American tectonic plates divide, creating a deep canyon.

And it is at this spot, in the heart of the Thingvelli­r national park, now listed as a Unesco World Heritage Site, that the world’s oldest parliament was created, in 930.

Marks is among 20 other tourists who came to the national park to see a territory in Game of Thrones called Beyond the Wall.

 ?? — AFP ?? A house near a snow-covered mountain on the Snaefellsj­okull peninsula in Iceland. The country’s breathtaki­ng landscapes have become a magnet for Hollywood moviemaker­s looking to conjure up otherworld­ly scenery.
— AFP A house near a snow-covered mountain on the Snaefellsj­okull peninsula in Iceland. The country’s breathtaki­ng landscapes have become a magnet for Hollywood moviemaker­s looking to conjure up otherworld­ly scenery.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India