Jenn writes:

Thought your readers might be interested in our short (but interesting!) interview with actor Rob Inglis, who has narrated unabridged audiobook versions of THE HOBBIT and THE LORD OF THE RINGS. Also includes reviews of his audiobook performances. [More]

We also have a comprehensive “Listener’s Guide to Middle-earth.” (It requires a password to access, but TORn readers can temporarily get in for free with the password AccessEars. Scroll down to the bottom of the main Access page for the Tolkien article. [More]

It features in-depth information on the many versions of LOTR to be found on audio, and a complete Tolkien audiography with selected sound clips and reviews of everything from the BBC’s dramatization of THE LORD OF THE RINGS to Martin Shaw narrating THE SILMARILLION and Derek Jacobi reading Tolkien’s wonderful LETTERS FROM FATHER CHRISTMAS.

Thanks for all you do with TORn–it’s an indispensable resource!

Everytime I try to get out, you guys keep pulling me back in! πŸ˜‰ I arrived home to find EIGHT more Ticket Offerings in my inbox. If there is anyone else out there thinking “I’ll just wait until last minute and then send them in,” THIS is the last minute. Friday night is the last opportunity offer tickets in time for Trilogy Tuesday. All sellers and buyers from here on out MUST include their phone number in their e-mail, in order to be participate. And now, on with the tickets!

Please include your e-mail address, real name, AND PHONE NUMBER in your response.

* * *

Boise, ID: WE HAVE A WINNER! No more e-mails please!

This offering is for TWO tickets to the Boise Stadium 21 in Boise, ID. The first person to e-mail maegwen@theonering.net with the following subject line will be put into contact with the ticket seller. The price is $70 + postage. The subject line MUST read: “Bring on Boise Tickets.”

* * *

Vancouver, BC
This offering is for TWO tickets to the Capital 6 in Vancouver, BC. The first person to e-mail maegwen@theonering.net with the following subject line will be put into contact with the ticket seller. The price is $101.90 (Canadian) + postage. The subject line MUST read: “Vancouver Tickets Please.”

* * *

Rochester, NY: WE HAVE A WINNER! No more e-mails please.
This offering is for ONE ticket to the Tinseltown Cinema in Rochester, NY. The first person to e-mail maegwen@theonering.net with the following subject line will be put into contact with the ticket seller. The subject line MUST read: “Ready for Rochester Ticket.”

* * *

Fresno, CA: WE HAVE A WINNER! No more e-mails please.
This offering is for THREE tickets to the Edwards Frenso Stadium 21 in Fresno, CA. The first person to e-mail maegwen@theonering.net with the following subject line will be put into contact with the ticket seller. The price is $108 + 8.40 postage. The subject line MUST read: “Finally! Fresno Tickets!.”

* * *

Chicago, IL: WE HAVE A WINNER! No more e-mails please.
This offering is for TWO tickets in Chicago, IL. The first person to e-mail maegwen@theonering.net with the following subject line will be put into contact with the ticket seller. The price is $60 + postage. The subject line MUST read: “Crazy for Chicago Tickets.”

* * *

Tampa, FL
This offering is for TWO tickets to the AMC Veteran’s theatre in Tampa, FL. The first person to e-mail maegwen@theonering.net with the following subject line will be put into contact with the ticket seller. The price is $51.50 + postage. The subject line MUST read: “Time for Tampa Tickets.”

* * *

Orange, CA: WE HAVE A WINNER! No more e-mails please.
This offering is for ONE ticket to the AMC Block in Orange, CA. The first person to e-mail maegwen@theonering.net with the following subject line will be put into contact with the ticket seller. The price is $30 + postage. The subject line MUST read: “Oh, Orange Tickets!”

* * *

Richmond, BC, Canada
This offering is for TWO ticket to the Silvercity Riverport in Richmond, BC, Canada. The first person to e-mail maegwen@theonering.net with the following subject line will be put into contact with the ticket seller. The price is $100 (Canadian) + postage. The subject line MUST read: “Richmond BC Tickets.”

* * *

OK, Good luck everyone!

Though every fan will hate to admit it, the thought of what will become of the cinematic universe post-Lord of the Rings has at one time or another crept into the mind of many a hardcore fan ever since The Two Towers credits began to roll and we collectively realised that we only had one more film between us and the world after The Lord of the Rings. Hence, just like last year, we at TOR.n have decided to turn our attention to next year’s cinematic line-up and see what the cast and crew of The Lord of the Rings have in store for us in 2004.


50 First Dates50 First Dates

USA: February 13th – UK: May 7th – SonyPictures.com/50FirstDatesIMDb – Adam Sandler, Drew Barrymore, Sean Astin, Rob Schneider

A story best described as what happens when a rom-com meets Groundhog Day, 50 First Dates sees Adam Sandler as the guy unlucky enough to fall in love with a girl who suffers from short-term memory loss and as a result must woo her over on a day to day basis. With Sandler riding high last year on the successes of Punch Drunk Love and Anger Management, critical and box-office respectively, could Sandler make it a hat-trick of hits? More importantly, can Sean Astin pull off some laughs with a script that contains not one reference to him as ‘the fat Hobbit’.


The AviatorThe Aviator

Worldwide: December 2004 – WBMovies.comIMDb – Leonardo DiCaprio, Cate Blanchett, Kate Beckinsale, Sir Ian Holm

If one were to look at the list of movies for the coming year and had to pick candidates for the Best Picture Oscar at the 2005 awards, it would be hard to look past Martin Scorsese’s bio-pic of entrepeneur Howard Hughes. Beginning with Hughes’ life in the early 1930s and concluding with the test run of the Spruce Moose in 1947, the film portrays both Hughes many and varied business ventures his many and varied romances, with celebrities such as Cate Blanchett’s Katherine Hepburn and Kate Beckinsale’s Ava Gardner. With an ensemble cast so stellar it has to be seen to be believed and a director who has so far been criminally ignored by the Academy, this film’s future looks blindingly bright.


The Bourne SupremacyThe Bourne Supremacy

USA: July 23rd – UK: September 3rd – UniversalPictures.comIMDb – Matt Damon, Franka Potente, Joan Allen, Karl Urban

After the success of the first installment, Matt Damon returns to reprise his role as Jason Bourne, the CIA operative who comes to terms with his past life as a trained assassin for the US government after he regains from his temporary amnesia. The second installment in the series sees Bourne’s life once again in danger as the Chinese government believe him to be the man behind the assassination of the Vice-Premier. Bourne soon finds himself in a race against time to prove his innocence and find the actual assassin who is killing using his identity – played by Karl Urban.


The Chronicles of RiddickPitch Black 2

USA: June 11th – UK: August 20th – PitchBlack.comIMDb – Vin Diesel, Dame Judi Dench, Colm Feore, Karl Urban

When Pitch Black completely snuck under the radar in 2000 and proved itself to be one of the best science fiction movies of 2000, it instantly gained cult status and a devout following. On that basis, Vin Diesel returns to star as the surgically enhanced anti-hero Riddick, in what will now be the second in a four-part saga. Based five years after the events of Pitch Black, Riddick not only has to contend with being once again on the run from the law but inadvertantly finds himself embroiled in the middle of a Galactic war between two rival factions, with Karl Urban featuring somewhere in all the chaos.


Eternal Sunshine Of The Spotless MindEternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind

US: March 19th (Limited) – FocusFeatures.comIMDb – Jim Carrey, Kate Winslet, Kirsten Dunst, Elijah Wood

The latest masterpiece from the desk of Charlie Kauffman, who cemented his reputation as one of the finest screenwriters in Hollywood with recent efforts Confessions of a Dangerous Mind and Adaptation, which was frankly robbed of the Best Original Screenplay Oscar at the Academy Awards. Focusing, on a man (Carrey), who after discovering his ex-girlfriend (Winslet) had all memory of him wiped from her mind, decides to undergo the same procedure, the movie is as intricate as you would expect from a Kauffman script, with the narrative constantly jumping from one timeline to another. With a quality cast, including Elijah Wood in his first role after Mr.Frodo as the memory-wiping scientist, ‘Sunshine looks certain to be a fantastic film, but can Carrey & Winslet bring Kauffman into the mainstream?


Check back tomorrow to see the second half of the must-see list, including Viggo Mortensen riding horses in Hidalgo, Sean Bean and Orlando Bloom doing battle in Troy and David Wenham fighting evil in Van Helsing. Nice to see the cast branching out after The Lord of the Rings, isn’t it?

By Amy Longsdorf

As the regal warrior Aragorn, Viggo Mortensen finally fulfills his destiny and ascends the throne of Gondor in ”The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King.”

In real life, Mortensen is finding his destiny, as well, as a Hollywood A-lister. But being a star is about the fartherest thing from his mind.

”I only start to think about work when I run out of money,” he says quietly. ”Whatever I’m looking at when I need to pay the rent, that’s what I do. Then every once in a while you get lucky. Every once in a while you get a phone call about a movie in New Zealand.”

Ah, New Zealand. Mortensen has grown so found of the country where he and his fellow Middle-Earthlings spent 15 months filming the ”Lord of the Rings” trilogy that he’d rather rhapsodize about the Land Down Under than talk about himself and his career.

Not for nothing is this guy nicknamed ”No Ego Viggo” by his castmates. In person, Mortensen is unassuming. When he arrives for an interview at a Beverly Hills hotel, he’s carrying a backpack, a steaming cup of Starbucks and a big silver pipe filled with greenish tobacco.

He is wearing a Fruit-of-the-Loom tweed shirt carefully tucked into his brown Wrangler cords. His hair is a few inches shy of a buzz-cut.

True to form, Mortensen points out that ”The Return of the King” is, like ”The Fellowship of the King” and ”The Two Towers,” an ensemble movie. But there’s no denying that in this grand finale, Mortensen’s Aragorn is king.

Aided by his buddies Gimli (John Rhys-Davies ) and Legolas (Orlando Bloom), Aragorn awakens the Army of the Dead and joins forces with the Riders of Rohan against the forces of Isengard.

Meanwhile, in another part of the forest, Frodo (Elijah Wood) and his traveling companions Sam (Sean Astin) and the duplicitous Gollum (voiced by Andy Serkis) continue on their journey to destroy the ring. Only when the bauble is hurled into the Cracks of Doom can it be annihilated.

Based on the book by J.R.R. Tolkien, ”The Return of the King,” opening Wednesday, is the third and final chapter in a series that has netted 17 Academy Award nominations and six Oscars. ”Fellowship” earned $860 million globally, while ”Two Towers” raked in $919 million. ”Return,” the longest of the movies at 3 hours and 20 minutes, is an epic in itself.

In ”The Return of the King,” Mortensen assumes the mantle of leading man. With his long hair whipping in the wind, brandishing a sword forged by elves, Aragorn saves the world.

Leave it to Mortensen to illuminate Aragorn’s weaknesses along with his strengths.

”Aragorn is very unquestioning in his willingness to sacrifice himself for the common good, but nevertheless he’s afraid many times in the story,” notes the actor. ”It’s how he deals with his fear, and overcomes his personal reservations in order to do what’s right for Middle Earth — that’s what we can learn from.”

In many ways, Mortensen and his fellow cast members have become their own private fellowship. They vacation together, and visit each other on movie sets. Many credit Mortensen with imbuing the production with his one-for-all, all-for-one spirit.

”Viggo leads by example,” notes Dominic Monaghan, who plays the hobbit Merry. ”He was so physically good at everything he did, he raised the bar for all of us. He’s also unassuming and quiet, yet very commanding. He brims with dignity.”

Ironically, Mortensen was a last-minute addition to the cast of ”The Fellowship of the Ring.” Director Peter Jackson was three days into shooting when he realized that Stuart Townsend wasn’t working out as Aragorn. Jackson made a phone call to Mortensen, who was wary of the long commitment.

The deciding factor for Mortensen was his then 11-year-old son Henry’s comments that the trilogy was ”too cool” to pass up. Mortensen repaid Henry, whose mother is the actor’s ex-wife, punk rock legend Exene Cervenka, with getting him a role in ”Return of the King” as an Orc.

Jackson recalls Mortensen’s first day on the set. ”He arrived in New Zealand and had 24 hours to get over his jet lag before he had to shoot the Weather Top scene where he defends the Hobbits. It was one of the bravest things that I’ve ever seen any actor do.”

Not unlike Aragorn, who seems equally at home with humans, Elves, Dwarves, Wizards and Hobbits, Mortensen considers himself a citizen of the world.

Born in Manhattan to a Danish father and an American mother, Mortensen moved with his family as a boy to Venezuela, Argentina and Denmark. When his parents split up, the actor, his two brothers and mother moved to upstate New York.

Before becoming involved in the Tolkien trilogy, Mortensen was best known for his supporting roles in diverse movies. He made his film debut as an Amish farmer in Peter Weir’s ”Witness” before playing a gas-station cowboy in ”Leatherface: The Texas Chainsaw Massacre” and a troubled Vietnam vet in Sean Penn’s ”Indian Runner.”

Next, Mortensen landed a showy role as Demi Moore’s uncompromising sergeant in ”G.I. Jane.” He was the con-man artist who romanced Gwyneth Paltrow in ”A Perfect Murder” and the bohemian blouse salesman who swept Diane Lane off her feet in ”A Walk on the Moon.”

Up next for Mortensen is ”Hildago,” the $80 million real-life story of Frank T. Hopkins, a cowboy and dispatch rider who competes in a 3,000 mile race across the Arabian Desert. The film is due in March.

At 45, Mortensen has suddenly become a sex symbol, although he tries to downplay the buzz.

”Doesn’t the sex symbol business happen to anybody in a popular movie?” muses the actor, who’s single since his split from Lola Schnabel, 23, the daughter of painter Julian Schnabel.

An avid poet, photographer and painter, Mortensen recently started a small company called Perceval Press to publish artwork by himself and others.

Director Peter Jackson says Mortensen’s artistic ambitions are very much in keeping with his determination to live in the moment and create art out of everyday experiences.

Ian McKellen, who plays the Wizard Gandalf, was surprised at Mortensen’s degree of dedication. ”He was very protective of Aragorn. He slept in his costume and kept his sword in the back of his car on days when he wasn’t filming. It was quite remarkable, really.”

With ”The Lord of the Rings” at its end, Mortensen is unwilling to let Aragorn go.

”You hear a lot of actors saying, ‘Oh, I can’t wait to get rid of that character.’ Well, we’re all going to forget things. We’re all going to lose our memories. That’s just what happens in life, right?

”So why be in such a hurry to forget, especially if you’ve learned something valuable.”

TORN broke the internet yesterday. Sales for ‘The Return of the One Party’ went on sale at exactly noon PST time yesterday and we sold out in about 15 minutes. This, needless to say, was unexpected. Last year it took us 2 weeks to sell out. We are currently swamped with processing orders.

However we have made it through half of the approvals and people who hav ebeen approved will be receiving an email from TORN in the next day or two. So please be patient.

We have another half to go. If people didn’t make the cut off, they will be added to the waiting list in the order they came in and we will email them to update their status. Remember, we all work on this in a volunteer capacity, we all have full time jobs, wives/husbands, or babies/pets. We will get to you soon.

As for double orders, refunds, or anything else please see our FAQ Section or email oscarparty@theonering.net. Please be aware that we will take a while to get back to you.

Thanks!

Badali's 'TORN LP3' Pin
Badali’s ‘TORN LP3’ Pin

The last two telecasts of the Academy Awards have featured, if fans looked closely at Peter Jackson’s jacket lapel, two “good luck” pins from TheOneRing.net made by the hand of Paul Badali.

Badali is a long-time fan of J.R.R. Tolkien’s books and has always been fascinated with the Middle-earth jewelry.

“Near as I can remember I was 15-years old when I read the Hobbit.” He discovered later in life that he had dyslexia as a child. “The Hobbit was the first book I ever read that I wasn’t required to read in school. It was an impressionable age to be reading Tolkien. It captured imagination and heart.”

Tolkien’s magnum opus caught Badali in college sparking a life-long love affair with fantasy and science fiction, but the love of jewelry stuck with him from his teen-aged first exposure to Middle-earth.

“That is part of why I became a jeweler.” A college course and friendly competition with another student prompted the pair to open a shop. Badali changed his business model several times but never his passion. “I choose to do what I love.”

Susan and Peter JacksonJim and Randy
Peter Jackson, Jim Rygiel & Randy Cook wearing Badali Pins at TORN’s ‘The One Party’ in 2002

His love of Tolkien and jewelry prompted him to take a “crude” stab at the One ring in 1975. Later he acquired the licence from Saul Zaentz to make the rings into fine pieces of art which he continues to do. It was natural then for Badali to find TheOneRing.net and tap into the Tolkien on-line fandom.

He doesn’t hold the rights to reproduce any of the jewelry in the films and that doesn’t bother him at all.

“The jewelry I design is the way I envision Tolkien having envisioned it when he wrote the books. I believe our customers are book-reading, life-long, true fans. I am used to real quality jewelry – heavy enough to be worn. I don’t care if I am making it in brass or silver. People producing movie replicas are producing movie souvenirs for people who say “oh that is cool”.”

Badali, who lives in Layton, Utah has been a part of the TORn line party activities since they started two years ago for “Fellowship Of The Ring.” This year, he felt that he wanted to do something a little bit extra so he created a comemorative pin for the thousands of TORnados who participate in line party activies around the globe.

Singing Gandalf with Dan HennahLord of the Pins II
Dan Hennah, Joe Letteri, Randy Cook & Ethan Van der Ryn
with Badali Pins at TORN’s ‘Two Towers: One Party’ in 2003.

“It is more a labor of love than a project I thought I was going to get rich off of. I wanted one myself and I was in contact with folks making it happen and folks participating.”

So he created a quality pin at an affordable price for LP3 events the world over and a slightly different version for Salt Lake City, the line he participates in.

“I guess the reason I am doing two different pins, a little bit of home grown pride. Several of the other people that are running line parties are envious of Salt Lake for having its own pin. It might be the folks here in Salt Lake don’t appreciate what a good line party we have got.” (Thanks Paul!)

He sent a few around the U.S. as a line party prize along with some of his rings and offers the rest at a website. So far Salt Lake City’s pin is being outsold at a pretty brisk pace.

“Why are we doing this? Why jewelry from (Tolkien) and why are we making line party pins? This is not the biggest audience. I choose to do what I love to do.

“I guess basicly making the good luck for TORn for them to give to the folks that did the movie the last couple of years, it seemed like that was for the important people, but fans wanted to have something too. First for the line party in Salt Lake, we have had so much fun with those things.”

The doing is not easy. He sends the design to a photo engraver in Los Angeles who does the original in magnesium while Badali does the winged helmet in the center of the pin by hand. Later he joins the two parts together to make the original piece. Then it is molded and cast in bronze and finally gold plated, by hand.

“Clean-up is all done by hand,” he said. “The kind of jewelry that we make is what we call hand-crafted mass production or mass-produced hand crafted. It is made in quantity but finished by hand. If there are little flaws that need to be done by hand to bring it up to quality, the mass producers miss it. During the last 10 to15 years people are used to accepting stuff that way. People have been lulled into accepting less than excellent. We feel jewely needs to be finished by hand and inspected closely to get it as closely perfect as possible.”