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Parallel Universe visits the set of 'The Hobbit' in New Zealand
By Don KayeSpecial to MSN Movies
"Hobbits are always the greatest heroes 'cause they're us. They're the unlikely hero who is thrust into this incredible danger, and they have no choice but to find the goodness within themselves and the strength within themselves and try to survive and get through it, so they're always the most interesting heroes. They're not flawed; they're just unlikely heroes."
Bing: More about 'The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey' | More about Peter Jackson
So speaks director Peter Jackson, who first brought the legendary adventures of four little human-like creatures known as hobbits to life on the screen in 2001, 2002 and 2003 with the three films that comprised the epic "The Lord of the Rings." Jackson says these words on the set of "The Hobbit," the film version of author J.R.R. Tolkien's 1937 novel that introduced the hobbits and Middle-earth to readers and set the stage for his much more ambitious "Rings." Like the "Rings" films, "The Hobbit," which started out as two movies and eventually expanded to three, had a long and complicated road to the screen, and almost didn't make it. But also like the earlier trilogy, there is almost a sense that the story is being willed onto the screen, largely thanks to the passion and determination of Jackson himself.
Like the "Rings" pictures, "The Hobbit" is being shot in New Zealand on location and at Stone Street Studios, the massive soundstage complex that Jackson owns. It is at this facility that we find ourselves, alongside reporters from several other outlets, for a secret set visit after a 14-hour flight from Los Angeles. Jackson's creative empire -- which also incorporates Weta Digital (CG special effects), Weta Workshop (makeup, costumes, creatures and weaponry) and several other companies -- is a large presence in this small yet beautiful city, giving "Wellywood" a far higher profile in the global film industry than it had previously. The residents we get to speak briefly with -- a van driver, a tour guide and so on -- are thrilled that Middle-earth has sprouted up again in town more than a decade after the "Rings" films first went into production.
Leaving the U.S. on a Sunday night, we have crossed the dateline and actually arrived in Wellington on Tuesday. On Wednesday and Thursday -- with some rain and a hint of the coming winter in the air (the seasons down here are reversed from ours) -- we make our way to both Stone Street and another large facility being used for filming in the suburb of Trentham (about 45 minutes away), as well as Weta Digital and Weta Workshop, for a close-up look at the filming of "The Hobbit" and interviews with members of the cast and crew.
Now, due to studio embargoes, we cannot actually describe the scenes we observe being filmed on either stage until a later time. That's because the initial plan to release "The Hobbit" in two parts -- "An Unexpected Journey" this December and "There and Back Again" at the same time next year -- has changed in the months since our trip. There will now be three films, with "The Desolation of Smaug" coming next December and "There and Back Again" pushed back to the summer of 2014. The scenes our little group gets to observe are all from, at the time we see them, the second movie -- but now one of them might actually be in the final part. Get it?
We still get to speak with Jackson, as well as cast members Martin Freeman (Bilbo Baggins), Ian McKellen (Gandalf), Richard Armitage (Thorin Oakenshield) and many others, including most of the other 12 dwarves, besides Thorin, who make up the expedition that takes Bilbo in search of gold and into battle against the fearsome dragon Smaug. We also speak with Richard Taylor, Jackson's longtime right-hand man at Weta, and several other key crew personnel.
A few facts that we know at the time of our visit: "The Hobbit" has a 254-day production schedule that begins in early 2011 and incorporates some timed breaks that will take it into mid-2012. Jackson is directing the entire first unit filming, while second unit is being handled by Andy Serkis, who also returns to essay the role of Gollum via motion capture. Speaking of which, Jackson is using a new computerized camera system called "slave motion control," which allows actors to be filmed doing the same scene on different sets. This comes in handy, say, during scenes where McKellen as Gandalf has to tower over the dwarves and Bilbo -- he is on a different stage from them, but the camera filming him and the device filming them will integrate them seamlessly.
McKellen himself, however, admits that he was not a fan of the process, also called SimulCam. "The 13 dwarves are over there in their set, and I'm over in my set, which is a little green screen cutout to make me look tall, with nobody else, because my camera's enslaved to the other one," he explains. "There isn't an operator. I can't see the people I'm talking to, so they're represented by pictures on top of poles, which light up when they're talking, and I hear them through a sound piece in my ear. I didn't feel like being back. I wanted to go away. I was very, very unhappy, miserable ... I think because my reaction was so strong to it -- it was very difficult and bewildering -- Peter has managed to cut down the number of times we've done that since."
The other technological breakthrough on "The Hobbit" is that Jackson is shooting the movie(s) not just in 3-D but at the speed of 48 frames per second -- until now, the standard for theatrical films since around 1927 has been stabilized at 24 frames per second. Critics say that 48fps makes film look like video when projected; supporters insist it provides a stunning clarity and depth to the image that makes it more lifelike than ever before (a reportedly unfinished preview of footage earlier this year to an audience of theater owners and press got mixed reviews, and the 48fps version of "The Hobbit" will be available on only 400 or so screens).
Whatever the final 48fps footage will look like, the method's ability to pick up far more visual information has required all the production personnel to ramp up the quality and realism of their contributions to the film, whether it is makeup, costumes or weapons. "The heightened level of resolution of the image -- that's what's changed for us," says Richard Taylor, head of Weta Workshop. "You can't trick light like you could on film. Film would capture the moisture in the air between the foreground and the background. Somehow digital camera work penetrates that and sees everything. And that's required us to step up our game, as it has everyone across the world. It's really challenging."
"Challenging" doesn't begin to describe the amount of creativity, craftsmanship and sheer productivity that has gone into the making of "The Hobbit." Weta Workshop created 8,000 digital paintings in addition to 500 conceptual sketches -- all before actually bringing them to life in front of the camera. That in itself required things in bulk quantities, like 800 different weapons for the 13 dwarves and all their stunt and effects doubles; 600 to 800 pairs of ears for the Elves; at least three wigs per character, with some of the hairpieces costing as much as $10,000.
"For the dwarves this time round, we've made six wigs and eight beards for each character, because we've had to cover them in so many different aspects," says makeup and hair designer Peter King when we visit him in a department filled wall to wall with hairpieces, fake hands, fake ears and fake hobbit feet (which now slip on easily like long slippers as opposed to being glued to the actors' feet in the "Rings" films). King goes on to drop the astonishing fact that each wig is assembled one hair at a time. "I think we've had something like 100- something beards made for the dwarves, and like 78 wigs made for 13 characters," he continues. "Every single principal actor in this film has got hair on that's a wig, and has prosthetics of some description."
It all adds up to a project that several of the people working on it agree is bigger than "The Lord of the Rings" itself. "Yeah, I think so," says art director Simon Bright. "It's like we didn't know quite where it was going on 'Rings' and we knew on this one, the scope of it, but it's always blown out bigger than you ever think it would turn out to be, so probably bigger, yeah."
Read part two of our set visit to meet Bilbo and the dwarves and learn more about the epic production of "The Hobbit."
Last year it was 'Hunger Games' nail polish, so this is a step up
Lionsgate surprised us today with the announcement of a new partnership between "The Hunger Games: Catching Fire" and Covergirl, the cosmetics giant:Bing: More about 'Catching Fire' | More about Covergirl
No word yet on when this makeup line will be in stores. I would imagine the display case would be very "Catching Fire."Today, Covergirl announced its first-ever major movie sponsorship of Lionsgate’s highly anticipated "The Hunger Games: Catching Fire", scheduled for release in North American theaters on November 22, 2013. Covergirl will launch a first-of-its-kind creative advertising campaign inspired by the film, featuring new products from the brand’s upcoming Capitol Collection from "The Hunger Games: Catching Fire," to be announced at a later date.
"With 'The Hunger Games: Catching Fire' partnership, we wanted to redefine cosmetics’ relationship to film with a fantasy-meets-reality beauty experience," said Esi Eggleston Bracey, VP and General Manager, Global P&G Cosmetics. "The film inspired Covergirl campaign coming out this fall truly will bring beauty transformation to life in an aspirational, dramatic fashion. All of us at Covergirl were captivated by Suzanne Collins' novels and the first film, so we’re thrilled to collaborate with Lionsgate on such a bold beauty partnership with the release of 'The Hunger Games: Catching Fire.'"
"We are excited to announce Covergirl as the exclusive makeup partner for 'The Hunger Games: Catching Fire'," said Paula Kupfer, Lionsgate's Vice President of Promotions and Consumer Products. "The exquisite beauty and style in the world of the Capitol is a focal point of this film. Partnering with an innovative brand like Covergirl to create an additional layer of beauty storytelling and inspiration for the fans is new territory that we're delighted to explore."
Covergirl's partnership with "The Hunger Games: Catching Fire" is the latest expression of the brand's passion and commitment to continue to break barriers in beauty.
Lionsgate and Covergirl will be celebrating the movie partnership at a Cannes Film Festival Gala on Saturday, May 18th.
Thoughts on this? Comment below.
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A spendy way to get people talking about the film seven months before its release
You cannot attend the 2013 Cannes Film Festival without seeing all the propaganda for "The Hunger Games: Catching Fire." Studios use many of the grand hotels' façades as backdrops or billboards to highlight their upcoming big ticket films, and Lionsgate is no different.Bing: More about 'Catching Fire' | More about Cannes Film Festival
The Majestic Barrière hotel's gorgeous building has been transformed, as you can see:

According to Deadline, Lionsgate is even throwing a beach blowout to promote "Catching Fire." Why is the studio spending so many Euros in Cannes?"Lionsgate co-chair Patrick Wachsberger whose wheelhouse is international also utilized Cannes to promote all the 'Twilight' movies when he ran Summit. Now that the two studios are merged, he says with candor that he's never done an event at this level." But because 'Hunger Games' is a "huge, huge, huge" franchise, this festival is "the perfect place" to start talking to distributors about positioning, he notes. Cannes events "are not cheap," he says. "And there is so much happening – like 10 parties the same night – so to do something that’s really out of the ordinary, you need the movie first and the talent and the event and the money," Wachsberger admits.""Catching Fire" is out in theaters Friday, November 22.
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Reception to pilot sealed series fate

Follow Don Kaye on Twitter @donkaye.
CW president says new prequel series is still in the works

Two-and-a-half glorious minutes of giant monsters and robots

Plus, DC superstar talks 'Justice League' comics, 'Arrow' and more

We spoke with Johns via phone and asked about ending his "GL" run, where his other books are headed, his thoughts on DC's "The New 52" relaunch, the "Arrow" TV series and DC's future on film, including the upcoming "Man of Steel."

Geoff Johns: Well, I've been working on the book for nine years, and since that time I've been really fortunate to work with as many great collaborators, both on the artist's side and the writer's side, as I have. I just got the final issue, and there are a lot of artists that we worked with over the course of the run that are in the issue, and I'm really proud of it. It's been a long run and it's been rewarding and, for me, the story -- the way the story was developing between Hal and Sinestro and what ultimately was going to happen in this issue -- it felt like the exact right time to close my run out and move on to new things.
How do you know when it is the right time to stop? Does the story feel like it's coming to a natural conclusion? What are the signs that it's time after a long run like that?
It's a bit of everything. For me, really, the story in this case really dictated it. I had been plotting the story out for quite a while and I knew that Hal was going to once again kind of sacrifice himself at this moment to attempt to use a black ring, and the whole idea was to get to rebirth once again, and Hal Jordan's "carpe diem" attitude is probably the best thing that describes that character: He lives for the moment. And he's so full of life that even death can't hold him down.
Once I got to the story line where it was really going to be kind of another return from the dead -- organically it felt like the perfect time to end the run. It felt very balanced. And the characters were in a similar spot at the end of this but very, very different characters. For me, with everything that happened between those it really ultimately just made perfect sense. It's always been about Hal Jordan and Sinestro, and this story line encapsulates that and pushes it one step further. This is the right story for me to bow out on.

Sure. With "Aquaman," we're in the middle of a story line right now where Aquaman is attempting to, you know, he's been forced to take the throne of Atlantis again after there was a war between Atlantis and the land. And he's a reluctant king. He grew up on land, he doesn't want to be king of Atlantis, but in this case he has no choice. They need a king and they need someone who's going to kind of heal the rift between land and sea, and that's his job. He's literally that and he's going to have to physically do that as well.
In Justice League right now we're building to a story line called "Trinity War" -- there's a couple of different teams that support the Justice League, and basically the death of a hero sparks some tension between these teams. Ultimately, as they go across the world trying to solve this murder the Leagues will face something else at the end of it that will head us into fall. We haven't really talked about that just yet ...

Well, I think like everything there's, you know, some characters, some titles that work and some that don't. But Dan (DiDio) and Jim (Lee) head up publishing, they've really spearheaded "The New 52" and I give them credit for it because it's been really strong. I think there are characters like Wonder Woman and Aquaman and Animal Man who've really benefited from kind of a fresh start. I look at "Aquaman" and Issue 1 did really, really well, partly because it was part of this big initiative. Everybody was looking at all these characters and all these "Number 1" issues. I think if you delivered on the book, you had a chance to find a bigger audience than you would have normally. There are a lot of great books out there.
What are some new writing projects that you can announce or talk about?
Well, I can say that Gary Frank and I are wrapping up "Shazam" right now. We've been telling the Shazam story and Justice League for just about over a year and Issue 21 of "Justice League" out at the end of June will be the final chapter of that story line. And then Gary and I will be moving on to Volume 2 of "Batman: Earth One." which is a graphic novel that will be due out late next year.
The first volume of "Batman: Earth One" was incredible.
The new one is going to be the next chapter in our "Batman: Earth One" saga. This volume is going to deal with Batman and how he learns to become a detective. He goes up against the Riddler and Killer Croc, and there's another villain in there. Plus, we continue the story with James Gordon and his daughter Barbara and Harvey Bullock and Alfred Pennyworth -- there's a very different Alfred Pennyworth in "Batman: Earth One" than people might know.
What are your thoughts on "Arrow"? It's a big success, but people were a little skeptical at first.
It started strong, but it got stronger and stronger over the course of the season. I'm really excited. Greg Berlanti and Andrew Crisford and Marc Guggenheim have taken the show in a great direction. It's fun to be part of the show and seeing success for a character like Green Arrow. I remember talking to some people and thinking, let people be skeptical. They should be skeptical because superhero shows are really, really hard to do. The fact that this one has found an audience is terrific. I'm excited because they've already started working on next season and I've heard a little bit about it and it sounds really great.
Are you going to do some writing for Season 2?
I should not say that yet.
Before we go, there's a lot of speculation about the DC Universe getting onto the big screen and "Man of Steel" possibly paving the way for "Justice League." Anything you can say about that?
I can't talk about that. Sorry, man.
Any general statements you want to make about "Man of Steel"?
I just can't wait until "Man of Steel" is out. I can't wait until people see it.
Vin Diesel back for third round as galactic anti-hero


Here's the lowdown on all your new 2013-2014 shows

"Believe": J.J. Abrams ("Lost," "Star Trek Into Darkness") and Alfonso Cuaron ("Children of Men," "Gravity") are executive producers on this program about a little girl (Johnny Sequoyah) with special powers like telekinesis and precognition who is pursued by interests who have their own agenda for her powers. So it's up to wrongly convicted prison escapee Tate (Jake McLaughlin) to protect her ... at all costs. Will this be another of Abrams' increasingly infuriating "mystery box" shows, or will Cuaron bring his magic to it as well? (Midseason on NBC)
"The Tomorrow People," "Star-Crossed" and "The 100": All three of these have been picked up by The CW, and their place on the network's schedule will be unveiled during its Thursday (May 16) presentation to the media. "The Tomorrow People" is based on a British series from the '70s about a group of young people who gain superpowers as part of the next stage of human evolution. "Star-Crossed" is about a teen romance between an alien boy and a human girl after he and several other of his people are assimilated into a high school -- boy, does this sound right up the CW's alley. Finally, "The 100" follows a group of young misfits who are sent back to a devastated Earth to recolonize the planet after nuclear war caused humanity to flee. And let's not forget "The Originals," a "Vampire Diaries" spin-off that will follow the Mikaelson clan as they head to New Orleans for more supernatural soap opera antics.
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