Oscar night is almost upon us and with 11 nominations Peter Jacksons ‘The Return of the King’ is the big favorite. Of course we will debate, speculate and discuss all about what chances ‘our guys’ have in #thehalloffire. Will ‘The Return of the King’ win the Best Movie award? Will Peter Jackson finally get his Best Director Oscar? And what’s this years competition like?
Times: Saturday Chat: 5:30pm ET (17:30) [also 11:30pm (23:30) CET and 9:30am Sunday (09:30) AET]
Sunday Chat: 7:00 pm (19:00) CET [also 1:00pm (13:00) ET and 5:00am (05:00) Monday morning AET]
ET = Eastern Time, USA’s East Coast CET = Central European Time, Central Europe AET = Australian East Coast
Do you have a possible topic for Hall of Fire? Drop us a line at halloffire@theonering.net
KCET TO LAUNCH CINEMA SERIES 16 ON MARCH 2 WITH ETERNAL SUNSHINE OF THE SPOTLESS MIND, STARRING JIM CARREY, KATE WINSLET & ELIJAH WOOD
KCET has announced the line-up for Cinema Series 16, the popular film series that will start its spring run on Tuesday, March 2, highlighting a hand-picked selection of new motion pictures and a nightly special guest who will discuss the behind-the-scenes of the films production and take part in an audience Q&A session. Screenings take place at the Leonard H. Goldenson Theatre at the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, 5230 Lankershim Blvd. in North Hollywood.
The series, which runs Tuesdays at 7:00 p.m. from March 2 to April 27 (except for Passover, April 6) kicks off with a screening of the much anticipated comedy Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, starring Jim Carrey and Kate Winslet. Producer Steve Golin will be the evenings guest in an interview session hosted by Pete Hammond. On March 9, the series continues with the drama, The United States of Leland, starring Ryan Gosling, Don Cheadle and Kevin Spacey in the story of a young juvenile center detainee and the consequences of his violent crime upon himself, his family and his community.
The Lady Killers, screening March 16, starring Tom Hanks and directed by Joel and Ethan Coen, is a remake of the classic British comedy in which a bungling gang of thieves attempts to pull a heist from the house they are renting. Believing that their elderly landlady may know about their plot, they make numerous attempts to kill her — with hilarious consequences.
The March 23 film, Dogville, starring Nicole Kidman and directed by Lars Von Trier (Breaking the Waves) is the story of a beautiful fugitive running for her life from the mob. The citizens of the small, backwater town agree to hide her but for a price.
The Alamo, screening March 30, stars Dennis Quaid and Billy Bob Thorton, among many others in the much anticipated action epic about the battle for the famous fort. Additional guests and the titles for April screenings will be announced at a later date.
The cost for the eight-part series is $130 per person, $240 per couple. KCET members enjoy a 10% discount and all proceeds go to benefit the stations activities.
Additional screening information is available at KCET Special Events or by telephone at (323) 953-5800.
EA Games’ worldwide premiere for The Lord of the Rings(tm), The Battle for Middle-earth(tm) PC game trailer.
This Sunday will be a big day for all the PC gamers out there. The lucky fans who will be attending the Return of the One Party on Oscar Sunday are in for an extra treat. EA Games will be having their worldwide premier for a 2-minute, 100% gameplay trailer for their upcoming The Lord of the Rings(tm), The Battle for Middle-earth(tm) PC game. Executive Producer Mark Skaggs will be on hand to present the trailer.
Immerse yourself in the fully interactive 3D world of Middle-earth with The Lord of the Rings(tm), The Battle for Middle-earth(tm), an all new strategy game from the award-winning team responsible for Command &Conquer(tm) Generals. Control the heroes and armies of Middle-earth in the epic battles based on all three films of The Lord of the Rings(tm) trilogy. Will you lead the fellowship in its quest to save Middle-earth, or unleash the armies of darkness in an attempt to conquer it? The fate of Middle-earth is in your hands.
The video will be covered live on TORN’s live webcast of the Return of the One Party event and everyone in attendance will actually get to take home the exclusive game trailer DVD.
For more information about The Lord of the Rings(tm), The Battle for Middle-earth(tm), visit www.lordoftherings.ea.com
From: “Academy Publicity Department” February 25, 2004 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Additional Presenters Named to Sunday’s Oscar(R) Telecast
Beverly Hills, CA -Adrien Brody, Pierce Brosnan, Scarlett Johansson, Ian McKellan [sic], Jada Pinkett Smith, Ben Stiller, Liv Tyler and Owen Wilson will be presenters at the 76th Academy Awards(R) on Sunday, producer Joe Roth revealed today.
Brody took home the Best Actor Oscar at the 75th Anniversary Academy Awards for his role in “The Pianist,” his first nomination for an Academy Award. He will be seen next in “The Village” and currently is filming “The Jacket.”
This will be Pierce Brosnan’s third appearance as a presenter on the Oscar telecast. His film credits include “Die Another Day,” “The World is Not Enough,” “The Thomas Crown Affair,” “Tomorrow Never Dies,” “Goldeneye” and “Mrs. Doubtfire.”
Scarlett Johansson will make her first Oscar show appearance as a presenter. She currently can be seen in “Girl with a Pearl Earring” and “Lost in Translation.”
Ian McKellen was nominated in 1998 for his leading role in “Gods and Monsters” and for his supporting role as Gandolf in 2001’s “The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring.” He currently can be seen in “The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King,” followed later this year by “Asylum” and “Emile.”
Actress Jada Pinkett Smith, who will make her first appearance as an Oscar show presenter, recently was seen in “The Matrix Revolutions” and “The Matrix Reloaded” and will be seen next in “Collateral.”
Actor-director-producer Ben Stiller’s appearance on the show will be his third as an Oscar presenter. He currently can be seen in “Along Came Polly” and will be seen next in “Starsky and Hutch.”
Actress Liv Tyler, who is making her second Oscar show appearance, can be seen in “Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King” and will be seen next in “Jersey Girl” with Ben Affleck.
Actor-writer Owen Wilson has just wrapped “The Life Aquatic” and will be seen in “Starsky & Hutch” this March. In 2001, he received an Oscar nomination for co-writing the original screenplay for “The Royal Tenenbaums.” His acting credits include “The Royal Tenenbaums,” “Zoolander” and “Meet the Parents.”
Academy Awards for outstanding film achievements of 2003 will be presented on Sunday, February 29, 2004, at the Kodak Theatre at Hollywood & Highland(R) and will be televised live by the ABC Television Network beginning at 5 p.m. (PST) with a half-hour arrivals segment. Information about the 76th Annual Academy Awards can be accessed on line at oscar.com.
Juliet Waldron’s essay “Downsizing Frodo” has produced more thoughtful responses from TORN readers. Tiel Jackson wrote: “I was reading the Juliet Waldron essay and some of the replies that you posted on the web, and it got me thinking. I’m not sure if I’m for or agin it, but– it seems to me a lot of what’s going on with the Frodo/Sam/Gollum storyline is that Jackson & Co. recast it as a romance.
“Before I go any further with that, I should say I don’t believe that relationship was meant to be seen as being at all sexual– I frankly think it’s a sad comment on our society, that people aren’t able to see love and affection without reading sex into it. Be that as it may. A romance in which the principal’s devotion and unanimity never wavered would be… well… boring. That’s pretty much how Frodo and Sam are in the book– even though Frodo has these flashes of Ring-induced paranoia, they never last for more than a couple minutes.
“Instead, Jackson & Co. give us a classic love triangle, leading to jealousy, separation, betrayal, rescue and reconciliation. This is very much a standard adventure/romance novel formula. I think this may account for some of the movies’ popularity with female moviegoers, which apparently has a lot of industry people scratching their heads– it’s the kind of story we’re used to reading, once you get past the fact that the “lovers” are both guys, the dynamic is very familiar.
“The other thing that comes out of that is that Frodo’s injury by Shelob and capture by the Orcs appear as direct consequences of– and maybe punishment for– his having trusted Gollum over Sam. In the book it seems like, if Sam had been first out of the tunnel, he’d have been stung instead of Frodo. There’s no particular moral lesson there. Does that make Frodo a “stronger” or “weaker” character? I dunno.
“Clearly Jackson & Co. chose to put Frodo through some different and more visible set of trials than what he’s described as going through in the book. (That slow wasting of the will would be very difficult to portray in movie terms, I think.) Part of that is that Frodo gets his heart broken by Gollum. Like I said at the beginning, I’m not sure if I’m for or agin it, but I can see why they might have chosen to play it that way. I don’t think it was a cheap decision, and in the end that’s all you can really ask.”
Melilot tended to confirm that the discussion raised by Juliet’s essay is an important one:
“I found the essay by Juliet Waldron very interesting. I translated it into spanish and posted it in a local Tolkien forum and it has certainly caused a stormlike reaction! The funny thing is that most of the members in such forum didn’t seem to be that much interested in Frodo until I posted that… odd. They are more into the discussion of, shall I say, “stronger” characters, and specially into elf warriors and the race of men. I’m one of the very few whose all time fave characters is actually Frodo, or any other hobbit for that matter, so I thought I was going to be quite ignored by posting that, but, boy was I wrong!.
“I must say that I partially agreed with some of Ms. Waldron’s comments about Frodo (who coincidentally, is my favourite LoTR character, alongside with Faramir). It’s been really very hard for me to cope with PJ’s Frodo. It’s all become a bit of a mess in my head, because, also coincidentally, I happen to really enjoy Elijah Wood as an actor, yet somehow I cannot seem to reconcile his Frodo with mine. I have watched the three films countless times. I read Tolkien 27 years ago for the first time and in the latter years I have become sort of a diehard “analyst” of his works.
“I very much agree than in this now “post PJ” era for Tolkien readers, the once famous “Frodo Lives!” has turned into “Frodo Failed!” and that is nothing short of shocking and worthy of analysis. I have encountered lots of “new” LoTR fans who seem to practically ignore Frodo’s role and, more bitterly, Frodo’s aura and particularities after watching the movies. I find this somewhat hard to cope with, I actually hardly ever thought that this beautiful, quiet, pious and insighftul character would be getting such a dismissive treatment, and for as much as I completely adore all three movies, I believe this new thread is closely related to the treatment Frodo was given in them.”
Marlene B. found a new interpretation of the scene where Frodo appears to offer the Ring to the Ringwraith on the walls of Osgiliath:
“Both rebuttals are great and well circumstantiated. Now I have to totally agree with EVERYBODY (sigh!). Truth be told, the basic conflict is as it always was- book vs. film. It cannot be solved. The media are too dissimilar cannot be compared and each one follows a different logic.
“But having read many versions of the Osgiliath scene I feel I might as well volunteer (inflict?) my own.
“Although Frodo is not quite himself at that point, due to the call of the Nazgul, I don’t think he goes up that building completely against his will (note purposeful gait). I think his action (and intention) indicate the deep desperation and hopelessness of Frodo at this point in time. What we could consider his lowest point (he has finally realized how desperate the whole thing is but hasn’t yet found in himself the bravery he will later display).
“You will notice the Nazgul is not expecting him up there. It arrives called in by the ring. Also significant is the fact that the only way the Nazgul could actually see Frodo clearly, would be for him to put the ring on. He actually wants the wraith to see him and quite simply kill him and put him out of his suffering. Of course, (as with on impulse suicide attempts) the whole thing has not been thought over or planned ahead. He is just answering the wild desire (arguably half his, half infused by the wraiths) to “end it all.”
Finally, Parmendiriel talks about the difference between Sam’s more visible physical heroism, and Frodo’s internal struggle which is harder to portray on film, in her weblog entry here. She links to Juliet’s essay, in case you’re wondering what everyone’s talking about.
I don’t know. That is the way I read it first time I saw it.”
This is such an interesting topic. I’m away travelling for the next 2 weeks so the topic is regretfully closed as far as I’m concerned, however. Tehanu over and out.
Bruce Hopkins [Gamling the Old] is in LA for a few days prior to the Oscars. He wrote in about his involvement with Project Read:
“I decided I wanted to visit a school in LA ( did a similar thing for Air NZ here after the premier, and it went incredibly well).So on Friday 27th at 9.52am ( a specific time stipulated by the principal ! ) i am going to go to Tetzlaff Middle school for and hour to talk and answer questions, sign autographs and hand out gifts from AirNZ. There may be another school when I come back through LA at the end of March, or even on Monday 1st March before I leave to London.
“I don’t know if you have heard of Project Read, but it is a brilliant initiative that came from the LOTR films. I came across it when emailing the NZ consul general in LA Darryl Dunne, here’s what he sent to me about it:
“Our connection with LOTR and schools has been through Project Read, a school literacy program heavily backed by the LA County authorities. Kids aged 10 – 17, many from at risk situations (including probationers) were given donated copies of each book in the trilogy and the deal was if they read the book and wrote an essay on it, they got to see the film free before anyone else courtesy of New Line and AMC Theatres. In the first year, 1,000 kids saw the film, in 2002 it was 4,000 and in December last year 12,000 kids saw the film over three days in a multiplex cinema in LA. While engaging on the book/film side, the organisers found out about the NZ connection and as a result my office got involved together with other NZ interests here. We mounted exhibitions at the screenings. In 2002 Prime Minister Helen Clark met with a group of kids (including probationers) and principals/supervisors involved in Project Read, during a visit to LA. A school party visited NZ courtesy of Air NZ and Newmans in 2003 and met the PM and Peter Jackson. They included a student film maker who covered the whole visit. Arising from that visit we have been trying to establish an ongoing exchange between schools in LA (who are very keen on it and well set up) and New Zealand, but the NZ side has proven problematical.
“We and the LA organisers are aware of the forthcoming production of the Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe in NZ and keen to promote the literacy and awareness exchanges round the book/film to extend past LOTR – if we can get any interest from NZ!”
That’s from NZ’s Consul General in LA. From me, Tehanu, here in NZ, I’d like to suggest that any New Zealanders involved in the education sector who are reading this might like to consider how NZ schools could get involved.