Elfishboy writes: Kiwi actor Craig Parker (Haldir) will be attending as a special guest Slovak sci-fi convention Istrocon, September 12th to 14th 2003, Bratislava, Slovakia. Check official site. They don’t have English version for Craig Parker’s schedule yet but I have checked Slovak version: Friday, September 12th, 8.30 pm, Saturday, September 13th, 5.30 pm, Sunday, September 14th, 2.30 pm. [More]

Irascian writes: Collectormania have apparently announced a “good news and bad news” update. The good news … there will be a special extra “Hobbit Day” tacked on the end of the convention on Monday… [More]

Irascian writes: Collectormania have apparently announced a “good news and bad news” update.

The good news … there will be a special extra “Hobbit Day” tacked on the end of the convention on Monday, October 6th which Sean Astin, Elijah Wood, Andy Serkis and Dominic Monaghan will be attending and performing signings at. They will also be there on the already announced date of Sunday, October 5th.

The bad news is that they won’t be there at all for Friday, October 3rd or Saturday, October 4th other than to attend the screening panel (tickets already sold out) on the Saturday evening. Autographs etc will only be available on the Sunday and the newly-announced Monday!

Other cast members (eg Sala Baker) should be there for the whole event. [collectormania.com]

Italy's Ciak Magazine Talks ROTK - Cover
Italy’s Ciak Magazine

A HUGE thank you to Eleonora for doing a rough translation for us! In the article, Jackson talks about ROTK and states he knows from now on his career will always be divided into “before” and “after” LOTR. He explains he preferred to release a ROTK trailer after the summer because “summer was filled with big SFX films, X-men 2, Matrix 2, Terminator 3, Hulk, and it would have been a bit confusing. Plus, ROTK is so spectacular, it has so many special effects that many of the main sequences could not be used in a trailer yet.” !!!SPOILERS!!! [More]

Italy's Ciak Magazine Talks ROTK - Cover

A HUGE thank you to Eleonora for doing a rough translation for us!

In the article, Jackson talks about ROTK and states he knows from now on his career will always be divided into “before” and “after” LOTR.

He explains he preferred to release a ROTK trailer after the summer because “summer was filled with big SFX films, X-men 2, Matrix 2, Terminator 3, Hulk, and it would have been a bit confusing. Plus, ROTK is so spectacular, it has so many special effects that many of the main sequences could not be used in a trailer yet.”

He also speaks of how making the LOTR was both a blessing and a curse: “At first the obsessive love of the fans made them more suspicious than cooperative, we had to earn their trust. Had we made a good film, we would have had their forgiveness and those changes we had to do would have been considered betrayals of no big consequence. Had we sat at a table to write an original fantasy story, we would have never have come close to the majesty of LOTR.”

Of course, the article says, there are two big changes that were made in this last part of the trilogy: the final part of the book concerning the return to the shire was drastically cut, thus Saruman makes the same end, by the same hand, but in different circumstances.

The article explains what we have to expect in the third movie: Merry and Pippin become warriors of Rohan and Gondor, Aragorn has to give evidence of his heritage by defeating the Army of the Dead and the Pirates, Faramir tries to gain the trust of his father Denethor, steward of Gondor, who has no will to leave his throne to a “ranger”. At a certain point, the whole story becomes a chess game, meaning to distract Sauron from Frodo and the Ring. But there seem to be a few rogue pawns: Gollum, of course, but also Denethor. Betrayals, ambushes, and unexpected heroism, suicides, funerals, resurrections… Three of the main characters get married, and four die.

There’s Shelob, a giant spider, which was made as realistic as possible. Jackson says, “It had to scare me first.”

The reshoots were 5 weeks long (just like for the other two movies), but with a conceptual difference: “since story and characters are now familiar, I used them to give more drama and pathos to the story.” For the first time, Jackson dedicated two weeks to horses: 250 in battle are real, but many more were digitally created with motion capture. Every week one of the actors leaves with souvenirs from the set, usually a sword and a tape with his bloopers, chosen and edited by Jackson himself.

What remains unknown is the length of the film: “For the first two, New Line gave me a maximum length of 2 hours and a half, that I pretended to forget, and I reached three hours. This time, they asked me three, so…”

There’s also a page, entitled “From a King to a Kong”, which explains how Jackson wanted to make a film about King Kong since he was 12, how he used to dress as a gorilla to scare the villagers when he was 21, and how, while making the movie, he wants to completely forget the remake of 1976. There’s a nice picture of the model of Kong that Taylor made in 1996, when Jackson wanted to film this movie, but could not do it because of the recent disasters of ‘Mighty Joe Young’ and ‘Godzilla’.

Xoanon here, we may have posted this before, but I think it’s a great comparison of 2 formats that have caused a large debate. People write to us constantly asking which version is better widescreen (theatrical format) or fullscreen (“this film has been formatted to fit this screen” version). Take a look at a shot by shot comparison. Thanks to Matt for the link. [More]