Ian Holm (Bilbo) has joined the impressive cast of Dougray Scott, Tim Roth, Emily Watson, and Rupert Everett in director Mike Barker’s (Best Laid Plans) ‘Cromwell & Fairfax’, set for a 2002 release.
John Noble (Denethor) will be playing ‘Paul Baylis’ in the TV series ‘Superfire’. The project also stars D.B. Sweeney of ‘Spawn’ and ‘Harsh Realm’ fame.
John Rhys-Davies (
Bride of Chucky (1998) UK 
De/th Machine (1995)
Color of Night (1994)
Amos & Andrew (1993)
Body Parts (1991) UK 
Jungle Fever (1991)
Hidden Agenda (1990)
Mississippi Burning (1988) UK 
Ragtime (1981)
Jim Rygiel (SFX)
Anna and the King (1999)
Cliffhanger (1993)
Batman Returns (1992)
Ghost (1990)
Solar Crisis (1990)
Last Starfighter, The (1984)
Howard Shore (Composer)
High Fidelity (2000)
Cell, The (2000)
Analyze This (1999)
Dogma (1999)
Game, The (1997)
Cop Land (1997)
Striptease (1996)
White Man’s Burden (1995)
Se7en (1995)
Moonlight and Valentino (1995)
M. Butterfly (1993)
Guilty as Sin (1993)
Prelude to a Kiss (1992)
Naked Lunch (1991)
Silence of the Lambs, The (1991)
Postcards from the Edge (1990)
She-Devil (1989)
Moving (1988)
Big (1988)
Fly, The (1986)
After Hours (1985)
Places in the Heart (1984)
Brood, The (1979)
Peter Jackson (Director)
Braindead (1992)
Meet the Feebles (1989)
To get more information, use the sites I use like:
mydigiguide.com, tv-now.com and IMDB.com
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Liv Tyler’s just one of the guys in Lord of the Rings.
by Lauren Weedon of Seventeen
Liv Tyler has the role of a lifetime in the Lord of the Rings trilogy. She plays Arwen, the elvish princess who’s in love with Aragorn, a human. As one of the few female characters, Liv had a ball making the flick with her cute co-stars, Elijah Wood, Sean Astin, Billy Boyd, Dominic Monaghan, Orlando Bloom, Sean Bean and Viggo Mortensen.
The epic fantasy was a big switch from Tyler’s previous movies — Empire Records, Stealing Beauty, That Thing You Do!, Inventing the Abbotts, Armageddon and One Night at McCool’s, among others. But Liv totally held her own and delivered a stellar performance.
On the boys club: “I brought my girlfriend with me, to be my assistant. So, I spent a lot of time hanging out with her at home when I couldn’t take the boys anymore!”
On being an elf: “They were the first creatures placed in Middle Earth, by the gods, so they’re very powerful and very knowledgeable.”
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Far from the madding crowds

Fran Walsh, Peter Jacksons partner in life and work, is happy to remain an enigma, writes Sarah Catherall.
When film maker Peter Jackson walked down the red carpet to the roar of adoring fans, his partner in work and life, Fran Walsh, was absent.
Those who have worked closely with the softly-spoken 42-year-old are not surprised The Lord of the rings scriptwriter missed the public walk along Wellingtons Courtenay Place. Walsh attended the premiere at the Embassy Theatre but was not at Jacksons side when he faced clicking cameras about 100 metres from where she lived about a decade ago in a noisy flat above a Chinese restaurant.
Walsh also missed the red carpet walks at LOTR premiers in London, New York and Los Angeles.
Since 1991, when she and Jackson won the rights to turn The Lord of the Rings into three films, her partner has been the protagonist, giving the interviews, while the photogenic Walsh has chosen a behind-the-scenes role in their amazing life and work story.
But Walsh played a vital role in getting the JRR Tolkien epic from the page to the giant screen. With Jackson and Auckland writer Philippa Boyens, Walsh transformed 1100 pages into three movies. She also directed part of the film and was a producer.
The dark-haired music lover, who plays the piano and sings in their rambling fort-like house perched on the edge of Wellingtons craggy Karaka Bay, also worked closely with Canadian composer Howard Shore on the nine-hour musical score.
Boyens says aside from the script, Walshs mark on The Fellowship of the Ring can be most felt in the music. Shes very musical and she has a beautiful voice. She was very concerned about the shape, form and flavour of the music. Also the emotional feeling of the film we both worked hard to make sure that happened.
New Zealands most successful film couple has been bound in work and life since meeting in 1987, during post-production of Jacksons first splatter movie, Bad Taste a NZ$250,000 film featuring exploding sheep, green vomit and leaking brains.
Described as a natural storyteller by those who have worked with her, Walsh has co-written with Jackson every script thats bounded on to the screen since their first low-budget splatter movie collaboration, Meet the Feebles in 1989, including the acclaimed and award-winning Heavenly Creatures in 1994. While Jackson has stood in the spotlight, Boyens says Walsh is respected in her own right as an incredible film maker and writer, particularly in the international film industry.
Ken Kamins, the couples Hollywood-based world-wide agent, says Walsh has been a talking point in Hollywood since she was nominated with Jackson for best screenplay at the 1994 Academy Awards with Heavenly Creatures. Last week, he was besieged with phone calls from Hollywood studios inquiring about her availability.
When it comes to the story of a couple who think almost the same, whose work and lives are so closely bound, they have chosen to leave Walsh out as much as possible. They have two children Billy, 6 and Katie, 5 whose privacy they want to protect and they have chosen to keep one half of their lives as tightly guarded as the high fence enclosing their Wellington home.
She regards her personal life as her personal life, especially as she is not someone who has sought publicity. She hasnt courted fame and she is very down to earth, Boyens says.
Walsh didnt grow up wanting to write films, according to a 1992 profile the only one written. Attending Wellington Girls High School, she most wanted to be a dress designer but when she sewed her first pair of trousers, they turned into shredded floppy things and she turned instead to music.
Walsh spent five years at Victoria University studying English literature, graduating in 1981, as she dropped out from time to time to pursue the destruction of my eardrums as a member of punk Band, The Wallsockets.
After graduating from university, Walsh began writing episodes for TVs Shark in the Park and Worsel Gummidge Down Under.
According to Costa Botes, an independent Wellington film producer, Walsh was dating Auckland writer Stephen Sinclair when Botes urged the couple to watch a rough cut of Jacksons film, Bad Taste. The trio began working together in 1989, they produced Meet the Feebles, an adult puppet show described as the Muppets on acid. Braindead, another cult classic that won fantasy film awards, followed three years later. The ideas behind Branded were spun in Walshs Courtenay Place flat.
When talking about her scriptwriting on Braindead, Jackson said at the time: She has an intuitive sense of scriptwriting for film. When she looks at other peoples scripts, she can immediately identify the problems and the way to fix them.
Since the early 90s, Walsh has also played a crucial role in helping emerging and established writers with scripts often without taking any credit. When Botes worked with Walsh and Jackson on Forgotten Silver, a fictitious tale of a New Zealand film pioneer released in 1995, Walsh refused credit, even though she helped rewrite the script and participated in long meetings.
She is modest to a fault, says Botes.
She has collaborated on plays and screenplays but says things like, I shouldnt be given credit for that. Walsh has been an incredible help to Harry Sinclair, an Auckland filmmaker, who says he consulted Walsh on the two feature film scripts he wrote Topless Women Talk About Their Lives and The Price of Milk.
She has been very helpful as a person to run ideas through. She has such fantastic ideas. She is very perceptive about scripts and a fantastic writer, says Sinclair, who plays Isildur on LOTR.
But Walshs name is there in the LOTR credits, on which she worked long hours, starting around 6.30am and watching rushes of the days filming until 11pm. During 453 days of filming, scripts had to be written, often for seven units filming at once, as actors waited for their lines.
Boyens recalls Walsh starting the day with he phone in her hand, as she dressed and discussed the days agenda.
Walsh, one of four producers, would attend all the rushes (viewing the days filming) and spend time with the actors. She would often direct a second unit that was shooting while Jackson was doing the main filming.
Walsh was easy to spend many working hours with Boyens lives on the same road and they became close friends. She is very even-tempered and she has the most fantastic sense of humour. She is so funny and she is one of the quickest people I know, she is so bright. She has a slightly wicked sense of humour.
Boyens said the work achievements of Jackson and Walsh were inextricably bound. There was an implicit trust between Peter and Fran and the level of understanding between the two Ive never seen that before. They were just incredible. They meshed brilliantly and in terms of their professional relationship, they were so in sync. Fran could answer something on Peters behalf and vice-versa. They trust each other and listen to each other.
As a writer, she has a wonderful sense of structure and character, says Kamins. Not only is the task of writing these films (huge) … she had to oversee the writing of the script and understand the implications when writing film one of films two and three. She couldnt make a decision that would impact negatively on the others.
Kamins says Walsh tends to view her storytelling from an emotional prism, imagining what it would be like to watch the LOTR as someone in the audience. I think she feels that the emotional part of a story, portrayed through either a male or female character, will make the story last longer for an audience.
Jackson has said that after years of working together, the couple has a shorthand. And it is good working with somebody you live with because film making is such a high-stress occupation and its nice when your partner understands. They know whats involved and what you are going through and can help share the burden.
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From: Ataahua

It appears that a number of New Zealand hair stylists are just itching to cut and tame PJ’s, er, rather ‘relaxed’ hair style. I say leave the genius alone! Any man who can bring Tolkien’s epic to the silver screen in such a masterly fashion has earned the right to wear his hair any way that he jolly well pleases!
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Brandon Gray
Boxofficemojo.com
12/23 – The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring ruled them all at the weekend box office, drawing an estimated $45.3 million over the Friday-Sunday period and lifting its five-day total to $73.1 million. In the process, it handily broke the December weekend record set by Ocean’s Eleven’s $38.1 million bow two weekends ago.
Breaking the weekend down, Rings grabbed about $14.3 million on Friday, $17 million on Saturday and projected to do about $13.9 million on Sunday. Its on track to do over $60 million for the five-day Christmas weekend (Friday-Tuesday), likely propelling its first week gross into the $90 million range and setting a course for around $150 million by the end of the year.
Overseas, Rings also pulled in an estimated $60 million in its first five days in 15 countries (13 in Europe plus New Zealand and South Africa). Leading the pack were the United Kingdom with $16 million, Germany with $13.5 million, France with $8.4 million and Spain with $4.8 million.
Add the two tallies together and Rings has around $133 million worldwide, which would make the 27th highest grossing picture of the year so far.
Actual three-day weekend numbers will be issued on Wednesday, 12/26 due to Hollywood taking the 24th and 25th off. (Normally, actual numbers are issued on Monday afternoons.) But the Wednesday figures will also include the five-day weekend actuals (Friday-Tuesday). [More]
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