From Oslopuls.no and Ringer Sharon:

Cold night – hot tickets

Last night LOTR fans got out their sleeping bags. Again. This morning they woke to the best tickets. Again.

And they woke with butterflies in their stomachs. They pack up the sleeping bags and the sleeping mats. The final battle for middle earth takes place first at Oslo Spektrum. There LOTR:ROTK will be shown in a charity viewing on the 15th of December, two days before the cinema premiere. It is 20 minutes until the ticket sales open at 8am.

“We haven’t slept that much,” says Kine Schulz (17).

“Doesn’t matter. We came here to have fun, because we’ll see the film one way or another anyway,” says Stephan Andreas Jensen (17).

“Hardly! It is awesome to see the film two days before everyone else!” replies Kine.

“Yes, it would have been a crisis of Homeric proportions to not have gotten tickets to the world’s biggest film showing,” says Jan Erik Haavet (17).

Third film best

Behind them snakes a 100 metre long queue of expectant and morning-tired faces. It is underway.

“I have very high expectations,” says Sara Smiseth(17).

“Actually I have such high expectations that it is actually fine. It is already determined that the film is good. It is actually a bit spooky,” says Stephan.

“Everyone says the third film is best,” says Ole Eivind Siggerud (17).

“It is practically impossible for Peter Jackson to make anything bad,” says Jan Erik. They have been here since 11pm. They have places 5 to 9 in the queue.

It is 7:50, now. Right at the front, nearly stuck to the glass door, stands Number One in the queue and counts her money. Number one is an elf. In fact, the only one who has dressed up in this queue. Carita B.
Løsnes came here 7pm yesterday.

“I thought there would be lots of people, so I thought I’d be way back in the queue. But there was no one here!” she says. No one has slept here more than one night. It isn’t such a wild situation as has been before in the ticket queues when LOTR has been shown in ordinary cinemas. Some fans are boycotting the showing in Spektrum, because they think it is too expensive and exploiting Tolkien fans.

515 shiny kroner

“515 kroner for a ticket is terribly expensive; I’ve saved for a week. But I’m looking forward to it insanely much,” says Aron B. Løsnes, number two.

“Yes, it’s a bit hysterical. To sleep out to pay a heap of money the next day to see a film,” says Carita.

“I have heard rumours that Peter Jackson and Viggo Mortenson will come when the film is shown. Then it is worth it!” says Aron. The clock ticks over to 07.58.

“I have butterflies in my stomach. They have to open soon!” bursts out Rebekka B. Løsnes.

An orc in jeans runs around snarling in the ears of the people in the queue. So after a night of waiting, the door finally glides open. Now.

Great moment

They jump up and down, hug each other, outside the ticket office. They dance, they yell. A strip of tickets is clutched. They are distributed.

“This is a great moment,” says Sara with a smile.

“This is going to be framed,” says Ole Eivind.

“The tickets are irreplaceable. Worse than losing anything else,” says Kine.

“This is going straight in my underpants,” says Stephan.

“It is a strange feeling, really crazy. I’m going to hold this ticket the whole time until the showing,” claims Jan Erik. Then he will have to hold it all the way until the 15th of December, 7:30pm. For those with tickets hot off the press, it will be an awful lot of
minutes to wait.

From Ringer Marina: The Tacoma News Tribune in Tacoma, Washington is predicting The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King is the one movie to come out on top.

“Handicappers are predicting this is the one to beat. The thinking is that academy voters have held off showering the series of statues in the major categories (the first two won a combined total of six in techinal areas) until all three parts are out in the world. If The Return of the King matches the scope and excellence of its predecssors (and since they were filmed back-to-back, there’s little reason to think it won’t), director Peter Jackson can probably look forward to a very pleasant evening next year at the Oscar academy.”

From Ringer Marina: The Tacoma News Tribune in Tacoma, Washington is predicting The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King is the one movie to come out on top.

“Handicappers are predicting this is the one to beat. The thinking is that academy voters have held off showering the series of statues in the major categories (the first two won a combined total of six in techinal areas) until all three parts are out in the world. If The Return of the King matches the scope and excellence of its predecssors (and since they were filmed back-to-back, there’s little reason to think it won’t), director Peter Jackson can probably look forward to a very pleasant evening next year at the Oscar academy.”

From Ringer Marina: The Tacoma News Tribune in Tacoma, Washington is predicting The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King is the one movie to come out on top.

“Handicappers are predicting this is the one to beat. The thinking is that academy voters have held off showering the series of statues in the major categories (the first two won a combined total of six in techinal areas) until all three parts are out in the world. If The Return of the King matches the scope and excellence of its predecssors (and since they were filmed back-to-back, there’s little reason to think it won’t), director Peter Jackson can probably look forward to a very pleasant evening next year at the Oscar academy.”

Radagast sends in these excepts from the latest issue of Starbusrt Magazine (#302) featuring some great interviews! Take a look at these 2 with Richard Taylor and Grant Major.

Fans the world over are anticipating the final part of the Lord of the Rings trilogy, The Return of the King. And as Richard Taylor from New Zealand’s Weta Effects workshop explains, the best is yet to come…

Richard Taylor is the head of New Zealand’s Weta special effects workshop, which has produced such dazzling effects for the Lord of the Rings films. As we anticipate the third part of Jackson’s epic trilogy, Taylor takes a moment to tell us some secrets of the new film…

LAWRENCE FRENCH: By making these films in New Zealand, do you think you brought a certain freshness of style to the effects work, just as you did by using all the varied and beautiful New Zealand locations?

RICHARD TAYLOR: Oh, yes very definitely. Our workshop has a very specific style and the style we try to bring to the film is a very specific New Zealand style. Being part of the British commonwealth, and being on the furthest edge of the world, there is in a certain mindset, or time-warp, that has the sensibility and the subtlety to understand Tolkien’s writing of fifty years ago. And we choose to create five departments for the film, so we could create an integrated design aesthetic over all the aspects of the film. The process encapsulates the design in a way that feels like we’ve woven the different threads into a very fine tapestry. So for the backdrop of the film, rather than grandstanding specific effects shots, we’ve tried very much to create a tapestry, in front of which the actors can play out the main story. We’re just trying to do our best in our own unique and particular way. We haven’t won Oscars because we’re better or worse than anyone else in the world, we won them because we’ve produced a uniquely different film. I think there’s a sensitivity and a harmony to the work, and that it comes across in the film. I was adamant from the outset, that unless we felt completely in our hearts that we could do justice to Tolkien’s writing, we shouldn’t take on the project at all. And to do justice to it, you have to take the viewer out of the darkened cinema looking at a movie screen, and place them in front of a picture window, so they can look out a world that is revolving in front of them. The way to create that illusion, is to create cultural inheritance, to try to create the feeling that the characters that you’re watching may be existing at that very moment, but behind them is thousands of years of cultural inheritance. Their armor, their weapons, their insignia, the graphic design, even their breed and their race, has come about due to a culture that has existed over many, many centuries. In the process of doing this, pursing that level of design aesthetic, the audience will be transported somewhere other than a darkened cinema, and can watch the film unfold, as if they are watching the real world rolling past them.

LAWRENCE FRENCH: You went through quite an elaborate design process not only for all the cultural details, but for all the various creatures, making many hundreds of drawings and maquettes for each one, as well as creating back-stories for them. So while you had a cave-troll in the first film, in The Return of the King we’ll see mountain trolls at the Battle of Pelennor fields.

RICHARD TAYLOR: Yes, there’s no doubt, along with the heighten reality we tried to create for the armor and weapons and the culture of the different races of Middle-earth, we also wanted a physical reality for the different creatures. So a character like the cave-troll, as bizarre as it is, is still based very strongly within the confines of the skeleton of a bi-pedal humanoid creature. Likewise, in The Return Of The King, we have tried very hard to rationalize all the creatures, so at no time are they so fantastical, that the audience is forced into a leap of the imagination. We don’t want people to have to suspend their disbelieve to a great degree. We want people to expect the creatures to exist, as if they were an integrated part of this world. With the M{makil or Oliphaunts, we have created these huge, hulking 45 foot tall elephants, but they are not any ordinary elephants. They’re amazing creatures that carry the Haradrim into the battle at Pelennor fields, with these huge battle platforms on their backs that have 50 or 60 soldiers on the upper battlements of these huge platforms. They were designed in the workshop, and maquettes were made of them, which we then scanned and replicated as digital creatures, which were then integrated into the film. We even built a fallen Oliphaunt for Pelennor field and it was the biggest thing we made. And all of the creatures become more and more visceral and real and gritty as they take on the mantle of Sauron’s world. We have six young New Zealand designers, who were primarily responsible for designing all the creatures, the weapons, the armour and the cultures of Middle-earth, and of course, they took great inspiration from Alan Lee and John Howe, watching them develop the architecture of Middle-earth.

LAWRENCE FRENCH: Will we see Gandalf’s confrontation outside the Black Gates of Mordor, with the mouth of Sauron  the Lt. of Barad-d{r?

RICHARD TAYLOR: Yes, and remembering that in the book, the emissary is blind, he is played by Bruce Spence  best known as the gyro-copter pilot from The Road Warrior  heavily made-up and Helmeted. Our concept was that he has spoken so much evil over the years, that the infections of the evil and the poison from his words have begun to affect his mouth, and split open his lips, all achieved with very subtle gelatin appliances. Bruce Spence was fantastic, a wonderful person to work with, and an incredible character, very focused on the role and very much enjoying bringing that character to life.

Production Designer GRANT MAJOR on creating

MINAS TIRITH

for

THE RETURN OF THE KING

LAWRENCE FRENCH: Minas Tirith, Gondor’s ancient city of the Kings, looks like it will be an incredible set. And in the book it was originally the home of the seven Plantir, or seeing stones.

GRANT MAJOR: Yes, I think Minas Tirith is the largest set ever built in the Southern hemisphere. The scale was just massive, and we had scaffolders working on the set for six months, just trying to keep ahead of the building crew. It was built on the ruins of Helm’s Deep, in the same rock quarry outside of Wellington, and we built some parts of it from the leftover pieces of Helm’s Deep. In the book, Minas Tirith is supposed to be at the base of Mount Mindolluim, and it’s built around this 700 ft high knoll. There is this sort of rock arm that juts out like a ship’s prow which comes from the citadel heights, all the way down to the bottom. Given that Minas Tirith is so vast in the book, we were only building parts of it, but all these parts were linked together with a road that winds it’s way up the hill through seven gates, which allowed us to do these big traveling shots through the city. The city itself was built in seven terraced levels around the side of the mountain, with the court of the Kings and this 300 foot white tower of Ecthelion – the tower of the sun – on the top level. It’s a very bold design, with all this interesting medieval architecture. The buildings are made of white stones that are beautifully wrought, but are now crumbling a bit, and becoming tarnished with age.

Natalie sends us word that Russian Publishing house Rosman are selling all types of LOTR goodies in the coming school year. Take a look.