Sir Ian also talks about getting ready for the new Hobbit movie which starts shooting next year.
The Prisoner- Sir Ian McKellan and Jim Caviezel talk about the upcoming mini-series
Monday, November 9th, 2009‘Lord’ fellowship signs on for ‘Hobbit’
Wednesday, August 20th, 2008Peter Jackson, Fran Walsh and Philippa Boyens have officially signed on to collaborate on “The Hobbit” and its sequel with director Guillermo del Toro.
The announcement, from exec producers Jackson and Walsh and New Line president Toby Emmerich, came four months after del Toro confirmed he had signed on to direct both pics.
Jackson, Walsh and Boyens teamed on penning the three screenplay adaptations of J.R.R. Tolkein’s “The Lord of the Rings.” The third pic, “The Return of the King,” won an Oscar for adapted screenplay.
The announcement said the production’s tentatively set to begin in late 2009, with the releases set for 2011 and 2012.
Del Toro is directing the two films back to back, with the first pic centered on a young Bilbo Baggins swept off by the wizard Gandalf to recover a lost treasure. The sequel deals with the 60-year period between “The Hobbit” and “The Fellowship of the Ring,” the first of the “Lord of the Rings” trilogy.
Warner Bros. susbisdiary New Line is overseeing development and will manage production. Both pics are being co-produced and co-financed by New Line and MGM, with Warner distributing domestically and MGM handling international.
Jackson and del Toro to pen “Hobbit” screenplays
Wednesday, August 20th, 2008LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) – Peter Jackson and Guillermo del Toro’s search for writers for “The Hobbit” and its companion film has ended, with the filmmakers deciding that no one is better suited for the task than they are.
Del Toro (“Hellboy,” “Pan’s Labyrinth”), who is directing the movies, will team with the “Lord of the Rings” filmmaker and “Hobbit” executive producer Jackson to adapt the J.R.R. Tolkien book and write its follow-up. Also joining them in the writers’ room are Frank Walsh and Philippa Boyens, both of whom collaborated with Jackson on the “Rings” trilogy.
The news caps an eight-month search for a scribe to adapt the literary classic to the big screen.
“Hobbit,” written by Tolkien for his children years before the “Rings” trilogy, follows a young Bilbo Baggins, who finds his comfortable life turned upside down when the wizard Gandalf takes him on a journey for a hoard of treasure that involves trolls, humans, Gollum and his ring of invisibility and a dragon named Smaug.
After Jackson and New Line resolved their differences over profit participation in the “Rings” films, Jackson said he would not write the scripts for the “Hobbit” movies because of other commitments. But in his role as executive producer, he does have approval over creative elements of the productions.
After del Toro came aboard the project, the two began a search for writers. Three factors came into play:
* The filmmakers saw their schedules open up.
* During the general discussions about the films, they realized how much affection they had for the material. Continued…
Del Toro, Jackson Talk Hobbit
Friday, May 30th, 2008
Peter Jackson and Guillermo del Toro, who will respectively executive-produce and direct two upcoming films based on J.R.R. Tolkien’s novel The Hobbit, interacted with each other and fans during an international Internet chat dubbed “An Unexpected Party,” answering dozens of the 6,000-plus questions sent in and offering tidbits about things to come.
According to the filmmakers, 2009 will be dedicated to preproduction on both movies, with the films set to be shot back to back in New Zealand in 2010. The Hobbit will open in December 2011, followed by the tentatively titled Film Two in 2012. Several actors and behind-the-scenes figures from Jackson’s Lord of the Rings trilogy are confirmed or likely to return, among them co-stars Ian McKellen and Andy Serkis, writer-producers Fran Walsh and Philippa Boyens, composer Howard Shore and conceptual designers Alan Lee and John Howe.
Del Toro and Jackson confirmed that the first film will tell the story of The Hobbit, while the second will be an original tale bridging the period between The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring. And, they said, del Toro’s films will be designed to stand on their own while syncing up with Jackson’s Rings trilogy.
“I believe that it’s a little bit of both; the world must feel like the same world, [in] the aspect ratio, music, essential established costume and production design trademarks,” del Toro wrote from England. “But I would love to bring a lot of new flavors to the table. The Hobbit is, in essence, an overture to a massive symphonic work, so main themes are reprised, but new modulations and new colors are introduced, thematically and texturally.”
Jackson, who was in New Zealand, added, “I love Guillermo’s symphonic allusion. The ‘overture’ can have a different flavor, a different texture, yet be a carefully crafted introduction to what’s to follow. Film Two is perfect to dramatize the shift in Middle-earth that propels us into the dark days of LOTR. If LOTR is World War I, then The Hobbit is like an Edwardian adventure tale, set in the days before [the] world notices the looming storm clouds.”
Jackson, responding to a question about why he chose not to direct the Hobbit films, explained that “essentially competing against my own movies” seemed to be an unsatisfying way to spend the next five years. However, he wrote, “I love Tolkien and care deeply about the movies we made. I couldn’t bear the idea of somebody else making them without our involvement. Being a writer and producer is the perfect way for me to work here. Guillermo has the ultimate responsibility of directing, and for him it’s easier to make these movies feel different, simply because he’s not me, and he therefore has an original vision, with new ideas to offer.”
Del Toro, meanwhile, explained that The Hobbit was the only one of Tolkien’s works with which he connected as a youth and that he dreamt of Mirkwood and Smaug for “ages.” However, once he saw that Jackson had undertaken the Lord of the Rings trilogy he assumed that The Hobbit “would never come to be” for him. When it did, he leapt at the opportunity.
“The proposition of spending half a decade [to] craft these films received, as Peter will attest, a five-second ‘YES’ from me,” del Toro wrote. “To people in my industry I’m usually a guy that tries to generate his own projects, and I remain very elusive when people try and attach me to big projects. For decades I have passed on films of enormous scope, but this is a fantastic privilege and I immediately said, ‘Yes.’” –Ian Spelling
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