Anborn1 writes: A friend who knows my obsession well found this and gave it to me, tho’ my birthday is long past. I just love the thought and greeting (can relate to it completely), and they even got the lingo right — “geek”, not “nerd,” if you please! [More]
Month: September 2003
From Stuff.co: “No admittance except on party business” said the sign at the entrance to Bilbo Baggins’ “eleventy-first” birthday party. Now Wellington is about to hang out the same sign, as fans book out city venues to celebrate the world premiere of the final Lord of the Rings movie. [More]
Pippin Skywalker Jedi Hobbit writes: I had the most wonderful of chances to go to the New York Tolkien Society Birthday Celebration for Bilbo and Frodo’s late summer birthday and let me tell you it was awesome, awesome, AWESOME! 🙂 [More]
Hullo my hearties! Time to join me, Pippin Skywalker Jedi Hobbit for another tale of wonder and adventure!
I had the most wonderful of chances to go to the New York Tolkien Society Birthday Celebration for Bilbo and Frodo’s late summer birthday and let me tell you it was awesome, awesome , AWESOME! 🙂
I arrived at a few minutes to 11:00 am and was disappointed at seeing only couple people there. My concerns soon dissipated after I briefly left to pick up a little cake for my two best friends Bilbo and Frodo and also a present to drop in the “Giftses” basket. I returned with the goodies and behold! MORE Tolkien fans! The whole Shire had been set loose!
The event was divided up into three rooms each with different activities and purposes. The first was a classroom (the event took place at a Marymount college). This is where the Trivia, Costume Contest, and announcements were to take place. A second room was a Internet center with about 20 Macs around where could surf for all things Tolkien (yes TORN included).
This room also featured a TTT strategy game being exhibited by Vinnie Tobia of Workshop. They also were running the Ralph Bakshi versions of the Hobbit and ROTK. 🙂 Anyway! Now for the events!
First…the place crowd was 40% under 12…so it made for a cute hobbit element. 🙂 We gathered a little after 11:00 in the main room and they had some opening comments and announcements about “The Gathering” in December.
Expected attendees include Mark Ferguson (Gil-Galad), Craig Parker
(Haldir) and Bruce Hopkins (Gamling). More stars have been invited and might attend but they don’t want to get everyone’s hopes up so they won’t tell us who else MAY come. It should be a great event with panels,seminars and workshops,and a triple feature showing of ALL THREE LOTR films (first two are EE)as well as many special guests including Jane Chance and Ted Nasmith.
I had the good pleasure of meeting Burdge Anthony, head chairmen of the NY Tolkien Society and all round jolly, nice guy. I told him I was with TORN (reporting anyway)and my nickname here was Pippin Skywalker. He suddenly became (jokingly) nervous saying “Your going to tell all the bad things we say about TORN in your report right.” LOL.
Anyway when things got underway even though this gentleman had my real name right in front of him for those signed up a trivia contest he STILL persisted (obstinate fellow) in calling me by my nickname at TORN (Well I RSVP’s with that lol). First he announced in front of all that PippinSkywalker from TORN was there and had everyone clap (thankfully I’m not the nervous type lol), and later during Trivia he addressed me as Miss Pippin Skywalker, LOL! The insanity never stops. 🙂
We had a very funny Trivia contest where the goal was to stump the staff to win prizes. There were many hilarious incidents and questions such as German fan who was living in NY and knew an entire Dwarf poem by heart; cute little children attempting to stump the Geek Panel (this was Stump The Geek Trivia Contest), and many more funny little things you just had to be there to hear and see. There was a nice little table full or various LOTR goodies including Sting, Art of the Two Towers, Bilbo and Frodo busts, Games, and a talking Sauron figure (ABSOLUTELY, POSITIVELY NOT FOR SALE! LOL).
After this I meandered over a few times to the Internet Room where Vinnie Tobia of Game Workshop was demonstrating a TTT strategy game. This was a truly marvelous piece of work. It was a miniature set of Helms Deep with hand painted action figures which you role the dice to move. You can be Aragorn and the elven warriors or the Uruk Hai army.
There were several people playing the game at one time and they had several rounds of play (I just watched). Vinnie was really nice and courteous and aside from extensively explaining and showing people the game, he answered all my questions for this report. Apparently there is ANOTHER strategy game coming out in 3-4 months for ROTK which is a set of the last major conflict in ROTK (probably Gondor/Pellenor Fields)and will include Easterling Warrior figures. For info on this and other games go to: www.gameworkshop.com/lotr. All figures you have to hand paint…the game can be assembled in a few hours.
Also during the course of the day there was a “Book Toss” where everyone takes their old, unwanted and even downright despised books to slam them on the floor and then pick them up to be sent to a library.
Later on there was a magnificent costume contest where people of all ages showed off their costumes representing all the peoples of Middle Earth (save dwarves lol). There was a 12 year old dressed as Aragorn, several dressed as elves (including a 6 year old dressed as Legolas), a couple of hobbits, and a delightful as well as hilarious boy dressed as a Nazgul with his head totally covered in a black shirt (poor feller probably couldn’t tell night and day apart lol).
Among the winners was a young boy dressed up in the best fan Frodo Baggins costume I’ve ever seen complete with brown vest and matching velvet cape, elven leaf brooch, Sting, and even hairy hobbit feet!
After this we filed in for the birthday celebration complete with a charming birthday cake for Bilbo and Frodo with candles lit after the familiar chant of “Speech, speech!” We sang to happy birthday to our dear hobbits and then blew out the candles.
While everyone still had their mouths filled with the hobbit goodness, the raffles began (all of which I was entered into lol);one was for a replica of Sting,another for a signed Brothers Hildebrandt signed painting of Gandalf the White, and lastly to tickets to the Gathering, a big event happening in December in Toronto.
This overall was a marvelous, MARVELOUS event, not only for the activities but most importantly for the wonderful people there who created such a wonderful ambiance and camaraderie that can only be found among fans of JRR Tolkien. It was a wonderful celebration and I believe Tolkien’s spirit was there wandering among the halls of Mandos smiling down on his beloved fans below.
I’ll never forget the ecstatic lady who walked up to me when I was online in the Internet and room and asked merrily “Are you Pippin?” and hugged me like I was family because I was with TORN. 🙂 Another funny story was on the elevator down to the ground floor a girl exclaimed, “Is anyone thinking of going to the TORN LA Oscar Party?” to which I replied I was interested. They were trying to gather people from NY to go to LA. 🙂 (Watch out guys! More flow of fans this year lol!)
Thanks to all the staff of the New York Tolkien Society Heren Istarion: Burdge Anthony, Anne (aka Lightwards for the NY Line Party), Jessica and Stephanie. You all were great!
Well that is all my sweet hobbits! May you all have wonderful dreams of elves, and far away lands free of nasty orcses.
A Very Happy Birthday to Mr. Frodo and the honorable Mr. Bilbo. Happy 111th year dear Tolkien.
Cheers! your Roving Jedi Hobbit Reporter,
PippinSkywalker 🙂
The multibillion-dollar question and a burning thought in so many minds of the fans of Peter Jacksons Lord of the Rings film trilogy is, Will there be a movie made of JRR Tolkiens Lord of the Rings prequel, The Hobbit?
My answer, pure speculation: how can there not be?
It seems inevitable that Tolkiens Hobbit will be turned into a movie, or if not a feature length film, then some similar incarnation. Personally Im holding out for a television series, at least two seasons in length: Id love nothing better than to come home after a long day at work and settle in to an hour of my favorite childrens story each week (as if I really have time for that, but you get the picture). If not a film feature, or TV series, then perhaps a cable television miniseries is in the offing.
Please note that I have no factual information indicating that such a project is underway. Over the years I have had the great fortune of meeting many individuals involved in the LotR films and not a one of them has breathed so much as a whisper that The Hobbit is in the works. Oh, Ive asked, but the answer is always in the negative.
The number one reason I feel pretty sure that this 300 +/- (depending on the publication) page adventure will travel from page to screen is simple. It has the potential to make money. Lots of money. Piles of money. If Balin and company returned to Moria for mithril, you better believe that the profit minded suits of New Line or another such corporation will go back to Tolkien text for its weight many times over in gold.
For readers who ask, Whats The Hobbit? a brief background is in order. First published in England by George Allen & Unwin, Ltd. in 1937, the text of The Hobbit has undergone alterations, illustrations, translations and transformations from the first; although in text it is nearly the same as the original. It is the story of Bilbo Baggins first adventures with wizards, dwarves, elves, goblins, eagles, and other beings inhabbiting Middle-earth. Here we meet Bilbo, Gandalf, Gollum, Elrond and other characters for the first time (readers of The Silmarillion might argue against this assertion for some characters) as Bilbo and his 13 dwarf companions quest for the destruction of the dragon Smaug and the liberation of the dwarves kingdom in Lonely Mountain.
In true prequel fashion, foundations are laid for a future story, and histories connecting many Middle-earth tales percolate to the surface of The Hobbit. Frodos sword Sting and his mithril shirt originate in this story, as does Bilbos possession of the Ring. The Lord of the Rings itself started out as a sequel to build on the success of The Hobbit and (not only in my own opinion) reads much like it in tone at the beginning. While it was being written and in the decades following its publication, The Lord of the Rings grew to overshadow its predecessor in many ways and rightly claims the chief position in rank of popularity, publication, and yes profit.
Just how popular is The Lord of the Rings? Its been translated into over fifty languages, is second in sales only to The Bible, and has enthralled nearly 4 decades of readers. Peter Jacksons film trilogy has raked in over $640,000,000.00 US and as of this writing the third movie has not yet been released! The mind boggles at a movie franchise pulling in a trillion dollars but whoop, there it is or will be.
Which brings me back to my prime assertion: How can they not make a movie of The Hobbit?!
Fans of JRR Tolkien can claim credit for proving that his works are a lucrative investment. The genius of Jackson in creating and successfully pitching a risk-worthy Lord of the Rings film script and the vision of New Line to gamble on the investment during the late 1990s (not the most favorable economic times to sink over $300,000,000 into one product) have seemed to many a pairing that will not be repeated. On the flip side, however, to continue the success of a movie trilogy that will likely realize a better than 300% return doesnt just make financial sense, it literally screams and wails from the bean counters domain.
Are there problems and challenges facing a second transformation of The Hobbit from book to film? Certainly. Some may argue that the target audience will differ greatly in age from the demographics of LotR movie fans. Others may say that the market for Tolkien films is saturated; the plot too lengthy and unwieldy for a decent script; or perhaps the rights too expensive. Each of these and in my mind, any arguments can be defeated with undeniable counterpoints: heard of the Harry Potter films? Asked the fans if theyre tired of Tolkien films, and if so, how they will feel in a couple years without one? Perhaps the greatest obstacle at the moment is ownership over the movie rights rumor has it that PJ would love to make the film but New Line and the owner of the movie rights to The Hobbit (which was made into an animated feature by Rankin Bass in 1977, as was a rather scary LotR) are wrangling over the deal. These desktop rebuttals dont pack an ounce of research either: something the real debate will include.
Recently I asked a friend of mine who was heavily involved in the New Zealand end of making LotR how they felt about making The Hobbit into film. The reply:
“I would jump at the chance to be involved in a film of The Hobbit, though if there are plans for PJ or New Line to do it, I haven’t heard anything. The opportunity to go back to Middle-earth and expand and improve upon what we did last time would be a dream come true for me. And let’s not forget that there’s a dragon in The Hobbit! That would be a great assignment!”
Another indicator of the popularity of this concept is a rogue internet trailer for a potential Hobbit movie. Here at TheOneRing®.net we continually receive emails from excited fans who are convinced that this trailer is legitimate and that the film is due out in December of 2006. TORn website founder Xoanon included it in his article LOTR Urban Legends just this month due to the high volume of interest this trailer generates. You can download the trailer from its source Latha Film, which indicates that over 26,000 people have downloaded this creation.
The same person I quoted above was able to respond to a question about the trailer as well:
“Yeah, I’ve seen it. I thought it was awesome. My reaction was, when do I get to see the movie?! Whomever did it, did a fantastic job. It looked incredible, and had a great atmosphere- perfect for a film version of The Hobbit. The fantastic Phil
Tippett-designed dragon that appeared in it is probably the best dragon design in any film so far too, so kudos to the guy who cut the trailer together for his great taste in movies too!”
Finances aside, the prospects for a Hobbit film are exciting to say the least. If PJs company Three Foot Six teamed up again with Weta and Weta Digital well, I think the world would be full of some happy campers waiting for the dawn of another Tolkien movie day. If a movie is too big of an enterprise, Weta and the New Zealand television industry demonstrate with series like Xena and Hercules that such sustained efforts are well worth the gamble.
My mother likes to say Im often wrong but never in doubt. Shes often right about that too but this time around, logic dictates the outcome: How can they not make a movie of The Hobbit?!
Sources
Anderson, Douglas (2002). The Annotated Hobbit, Revised and Expanded Edition. USA: Houghton Mifflin Company.
Gray, Brandon (2003). Box Office Mojo. Retrieved September 21, 2003 from http://boxofficemojo.com
Latham, Steve (2003). Latha Film Digital Video and Audio. Retrieved September 21, 2003 from http://www.lathamfilm.com
Oorshot, Leo (TORn staffer and editor in chief of TheFellowship.nl)
Regina, Michael (2003). TheOneRing®.net. Retrieved September 21, 2003 from http://www.theonering.net
Thanks to TheOneRing®.nets Leo, Jincey, and Pippin Skywalker for their input, and of course, to the late great JRR Tolkien for his many literary gifts to the world.
Each week I scour Ebay looking for the hot Tolkien items up for sale. I post the most interesting here for you to bid on! [More]