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Worthy mentor for worthy cause
NZ filmmaker Christine Rogers helped a group of Broadmeadows Secondary School
(Melbourne) students make the short film By the Light of the Moon. The
film tells the stories of two refugees who have settled in Australia, and was
written, produced, acted, and filmed entirely by the students. “The school has a
lot of children from the Middle East, Iran and Iraq,” says Rogers, a sessional
teacher in media at Victoria’s RMIT. “I
think telling these stories verifies
them and makes them important. When you come to a strange place and none of the
stories on TV reflect your reality, I imagine that's very strange.” On her role
as a NZ filmmaker she is equally eloquent: “When you're in NZ you feel like
you're falling off the end of the world. There's this incredible sense of
cultural isolation. And I think that that's made NZ artists strive harder to
find their own voice - you see it with novelists, painters, poets, artists of
all sorts.”
(6 December 2004)


All-conquering Conchords
US network giant NBC (home to Seinfeld and Friends) has signed
Kiwi comics Bret McKenzie and Jemaine Clement, better known as Flight of the
Conchords. Casting
executive Marc
Hirschfeld was won over by the duo's recent show in Montreal, which he
described as "hilarious songs accompanied by hilarious stage banter." Although
music will play a major role in the upcoming series, Hirschfeld insists "it will
be all based in character comedy, [as] that's what we love about them."
(8 October 2004)

The money or the bag?
Scott Smith of Auckland became the 7th contestant to face the million dollar
question on hit Australian quiz show, Who Wants to be a Millionaire. The
aspiring minister ended up taking $500,000 as opposed to a gamble. The million
dollars has yet to be won.
(4 October 2004)

Just don’t ask him to assume the brace position
Auckland armour maker, Warren Ormsby-Green,
made Web India’s ‘What in the Weird’ equivalent with his air travel
exploits. Ormsby-Green, who created pieces for LotR and The Last
Samurai, wears a full set of armour when travelling by plane to avoid excess
baggage charges. “The reactions I get can be pretty amusing,” he says. “Some
people are very interested, some people laugh and some people can't even look at
me.”
(30 September 2004)


Jolly green giant
It’s official: Shrek 2 is the
third highest-grossing film of all time, behind Titanic and the first
Star Wars. Directed by Kiwi Andrew Adamson, Shrek 2 was the surprise
hit of the US summer, beating out heavyweight competition from Spiderman 2
and Troy.
(5 September 2004)

Shifting mythology
A study of Peter Jackson’s LotR trilogy by the University of Wales has
been extended due to an unexpectedly large public response. More than 25,000
people from all over the world have completed the online questionnaire, which
centres on the question, ‘Where, in your imagination, is Middle Earth?’
(24 August 2004)


The world hears our stories
Fracture, an adaptation of Maurice Gee’s novel Crime Story by
Larry Parry, is to make its North American debut at the
28th Montreal World Film
Festival (26 August – 6 September). Starring Kate Elliott, Jared Turner,
John Noble, and Cliff Curtis, the film has already shown at Sicily’s Taormina
Festival and will feature in Germany’s Hof Festival in October.
Four other NZ films
were selected for Montreal; Fleeting Beauty (Virginia Pitts), My
Father’s Shoes (Samantha Scott), Tiga e le Iloa (Popo Lilo), and
Boy (Welby Ings).
(30 July 2004)


Short & sweet
Two NZ short films have been selected to
compete at both the Montreal
World Film Festival in August and the
Valladolid
International Film Festival in Spain in October;
Boy, a silent film about a teenage male prostitute by AUT professor
Welby Ings, and
Fleeting Beauty, a dialogue between an Indian immigrant and her Pakeha
lover written by Auckland University film lecturer Shuchi Kothari.
(21 June 2004)

Jackson gets the youth vote
The Return of the King won the
coveted prize for Best Film at this year's MTV Awards in LA. Other big winners
were Pirates of the Caribbean and Kill Bill Vol.1.
(7 June 2004)


Greenbacks for green ogre
Shrek 2 (directed by Kiwi Andrew Adamson) confounded US box office
analysts by taking an incredible US$104.3 million on its first weekend of
release - $20 million more than predicted. This makes it the second largest film
debut in history, behind Spider Man in 2002. In addition, 70% of
moviegoers planned to see Shrek 2 a second time, according to a Dream
Works survey. The film
repeated its
success across the Atlantic, debuting at No.1 in UK box office rankings and
taking £16.2 million in it opening weekend.
(24 May 2004)


Lest we forget
Russell Crowe provided the narration for
a “ground-breaking”
documentary series on Anzac soldiers, recently aired on NZ television and
screening in Australia later this year. The series celebrates the bond between
NZ and Australian soldiers, from WW1 to Vietnam. “Russell was the perfect
choice,” said writer/director Paul Rudd. “His late grandfather (Stan Wemyss) was
a war cinematographer for the NZ film unit. He has a broad and detailed
knowledge of the Anzac experience as well as a personal link to the war. He
identifies very clearly with both Australia, where he lives, and NZ, where he
was born.” Crowd numbers at this year’s Anzac Day
dawn service in
Gallipoli were believed to be the greatest ever, despite international warnings
against travel to Turkey.
(25 April 2004)


Homecoming King
2,500 fans took part in a "low-key"
ceremony to honour Peter Jackson and fellow Oscar winners at the Wellington
Events Centre. Jackson and co each received a glass goblet to add to their
already overflowing mantlepieces, as well as a glowing mayoral address. Jackson
has been profiled by almost every major news source since his triumph at the
Oscars, including
CNN and the
BBC. Said
the BBC, "[His]
native
NZ has always reserved its greatest adulation for sporting giants like Richard
Hadlee and Jonah Lomu
but a place must now be found on the victory dais for director Peter Jackson."
(February - March 2004)

Aotearoa in demand
New York Times article asks
‘what’s next?’ of the post-Rings NZ film industry. Insiders predict a slew of
big budget international projects, thanks to the government’s recent promise
that it would reimburse 12.5% of the production costs of films with budgets
exceeding $10 million. First to benefit from the grant is The Lion the Witch
and the Wardrobe, directed by New Zealander Andrew Adamson (Shrek)
and
co-financed by Walt Disney Studios and Walden Media.
(12 February 2004)

Call of the wild
A combined BBC and ABC
production team has spent 3 years filming the first comprehensive nature program
on Australasia. The 6-part series - Wild Australasia - uses
state-of-the-art technology and daring camera-work to bring virtually
unexplored regions to the screen. The Age mentions infra-red footage of
foraging kiwis, and kea terrorising parked cars at NZ ski-fields as two
particular highlights.
(28 January 2004)


Addicted to Jackson
Empire offers hope to fans
experiencing panic attacks at "the thought of a year without a Peter Jackson
film." Shooting on the next Jackson-helmed epic - King Kong - begins in
August of this year, with a projected December 2005 release date. Jackson plans
to treat the film "as a drama ... not as a fantasy ...
It has to have a sense of
reality – an island with dinosaurs and a gorilla, set a little bit in the past
to try and make people believe it."
(2004)
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Connolly lost for words?
Billy Connolly’s World Tour of New
Zealand screened in Scotland over December, to widespread appreciation.
“Driving his three-wheeled motorbike through some of the world’s most dramatic
scenery with the sun blazing overhead, Connolly looks like he’s having the time
of his life … [If] Connolly the performer is as rude and lewd as ever, the
offstage persona is a world apart. Climbing through the Waitomo caves with their
stalagmites and visiting a volcano, Mount Tarawera, he seemed humbled by nature
and genuinely interested in everything going on around him.”
(28 December 2004)


Accidental winner
Sally Andrews won Best Actress at this
year’s San Diego Film Festival for her
starring role in NZ feature, Her Majesty. The 15-year-old Hutt Valley
High School student is a self-described “accidental actress,” who only joined a
talent agency because her younger cousin did and almost didn’t bother
auditioning for her award winning part. Her Majesty is set in NZ in 1953,
against the backdrop of Queen Elizabeth’s royal tour.
(24 October 2004)


Melancholy masterpiece
The Australian mainstream release of
In My Father’s Den has seen writer/director Brad McGann dubbed “NZ’s answer
to Ken Loach.” Features in the Sydney Morning Herald and
The Age
focus on the humble manner in which McGann overcame his “new kid on the block
status” to create a masterpiece of NZ film. So far, In My Father’s Den
has won the International Federation of Film Critics prize at Toronto and the
Youth Jury Prize at the San Sebastian Film Festival in Spain. It also made the
cover of Australia’s Inside Film
October edition, which described it as simply “superb.” “What was wonderful
about In My Father's Den was that it was like coming back to a little
patch of land in NZ,” says McGann in The Age. “When you start digging in
your own soil, it's interesting how satisfying it is to realise the wealth of
material you become conscious of.”
(22 October 2004)


Scene stealer
Star feature on veteran US stuntwoman Jeannie Epper makes mention of her
NZ protégé, Zoë Bell. Bell’s career to date includes doubling for Lucy Lawless
in Xena, Uma Thurman in Kill Bill, and Halle Berry in Catwoman.
She specializes in fights and harness work, and has experience with air rams,
fire burns and high falls.
(19 September 2004)

Kong’s first fan-club
The three principal stars of Peter
Jackson’s King Kong are raving about the film and its Wellington location
before shooting has even begun. Adrien Brody: “The facilities here [in Mirimar]
are incredible … I didn't know what I expected, but [Jackson has] created a
studio and post-production house that rivals anything elsewhere.” Naomi Watts:
“It's like nothing I've experienced before, that's for sure. There's a lot of
genius at work.” Jack Black: “I think it's going to be gorgeous … It could be
the greatest film of all time.”
(1 September 2004)


Hollywood’s latest bad boy
Karl Urban (LotR, Chronicles
of Riddick) has won over US critics with his portrayal of “malignant hit-man
Kirill” in the critically acclaimed action sequel, The Bourne Supremacy.
According to the Chicago Tribune, “Urban, playing Kirill like an Olympic
athlete of death, has blood-freezing moments,” making him a key figure in “a
crack supporting cast.” Also starring Martin Csokas as another evil doer.
(August 2004)

Neill on board
Sam Neill is to star in a BBC Two
adaptation of William Golding’s acclaimed sea trilogy, To the Ends of the
Earth. Directed by David Attwood, the three 90-minute programs will be
filmed in South Africa. Executive Producer Justin Bodle: “[This] is event
television in its purest sense, an ambitious production that brings together a
highly respected team that have the talent and tools to realise William
Golding's vision magnificently on screen.”
(16 July 2004)


Harry Potter gets Edge makeover
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of
Azkaban has received reviews far outstripping the first two films in the
franchise, thanks largely to its radical new director cinematographer team of
Alfonso Cuaron (Y
Tu Mama Tambien) and NZ's Michael Seresin (Bugsy Malone, Angela's
Ashes, Midnight Express).
Cuaron explained his "unexpected but
inspired" choice of partner in an American Cinematographer profile on
Seresin: "I've been a fan of Michael's work for a long time. I always like his
reliance on a single light source, and the fact that he's pretty uncompromising
[...] He grounded
the whole film in reality. It doesn't have a storybook kind of look; it's
something grittier."
(June 2004)

Kiwi cuisine
The NZ Film Commission party provided
the best food at Cannes, according to a festival in the Age. The
NZFC flew in six top chefs from Auckland for the event.
(23 May 2004)


Something to Crowe about
Russell Crowe's Maximus (Gladiator) is the greatest movie
hero of all time, according to a poll by a British video rental company. Crowe
beat Christopher Reeve in Superman, Mel Gibson in Braveheart, and
Sigourney Weaver in Aliens to take top honours.
(24 April 2004)

King of the consoles
Peter Jackson has joined yet another
elite Hollywood club: director’s who earn as much – if not more – from
helping create video games as they do from making movies. Riding on the success
of the
LotR video games, Jackson has signed a deal with Ubisoft and Universal
Pictures which gives him significant creative control over (and financial reward
from) the future King Kong game. In the US last year, video games
created $10 billion in revenue in comparison with movie tickets’ $9.5 billion.
(12 April 2004)


Hidden treasures
Time Asia recommends Marlborough’s Old St Mary’s Convent,
Wanganui’s Bridge to Nowhere
lodge, and The Station in
Paekakariki to readers wishing to stay off the beaten track. “There's plenty
of the country's dreamscape left for those who want wide-screen scenery but
don't care for Middle Earth hype.”
(29 March 2004)


Riding her wave of success
Whale Rider star, Keisha
Castle-Hughes, spoke to the New York Post about her week spent in
Hollywood prior to the 2004 Academy Awards - for which she was the youngest ever
nominee in the Best Actress category. Her engagements included presenting The
Simpsons creators with an animation prize at the Screen Actors Guild Awards,
featuring as a guest on Oprah, and attending the Independent Spirit
Awards with Peter Jackson. Castle-Hughes wore a dress by NZ designer Liz
Mitchell to the Oscars, with a whale pin in her hair for good luck.
(28 February 2004)


Stopping traffic
Cliff Curtis is one of the key
protagonists in the US miniseries Traffic - an adaptation of the
Oscar-nominated film by the same name. Ever the ethnic chameleon (previous roles
include Cuban, Iraqi, and Colombian characters), Curtis plays an illegal
immigrant from one of the former Soviet states. Indy Star: "This
is an explosive role, cast with a strong actor."
(25 January 2004)


King of the castle
The Return of the King has ruled them all at this year's awards season,
having won Oscar glory with 11 Oscars,
including Best Picture and Best Director. The final film in the Lord
of the Rings trilogy won 4 awards at the
Golden
Globes (Best Movie Drama, Director, Original Score, and Movie Song), 4 at
the
Critics Choice Awards (Best Film, Director, Score, and Ensemble Cast), 5 Baftas
(Best Film, Best Cinematography, Adapted Screenplay, Special Effects, and Film
of the Year), and the
Producers Guild of America's (PGA)
Darryl F. Zanuck
Award for Theatrical Motion Picture. Peter Jackson received the
Modern Master
award at the Santa Barbara Film Festival and became the first filmmaker in
history to be nominated for the prestigious
Directors Guild of America
(DGA) award three years in a row.
(2004)
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Return of the cast
If Peter Jackson ever decides (and has
the time) to make a film version of The Hobbit, he has the backing and
blessing of his LotR cast. “People want it so much,” says actor Billy
Boyd (Pippin). “There was talk of us playing our characters' relatives. I'm sure
we'd all make ourselves free for that.” Cast members including Elijah Wood (Frodo)
have expressed interest in buying communal property in NZ to help Jackson cut
down on-set costs.
(11 December 2004)


Next stop Oscar?
Taika Waititi’s Two Cars, One Night won the Grand Jury Prize for best
international short at the AFI Los Angeles Film Festival. The story of a
relationship which develops between two children in the car park of a rural NZ
pub beat 50 other contenders in the international short category. Two Cars
has already won a slew of international awards, including best drama at the
Aspen Shortsfest, best short film at Berlin’s Panorama Film Festival and best
fiction short at the Melbourne International Film Festival, and is now eligible
for Oscar contention.
(18 November 2004)


From South Korea with love
NZ launched its inaugural South Korean
Film Festival in Auckland on October 22. Actresses Chang Mi-hee and Park Sol-mi,
directors Kang Je-gyu and Kwak Jae-yong, and critic Yu Gi-na attended the week
long event, which featured such films as Tae Guk Ki, Yopkijogin Kunyo
and Untold Scandal.
NZ
will also host its first major
Korean art exhibition at the Waikato Museum of Art and History next year.
Entitled 'Poetics of Line and Color: Korean textiles and costumes of the Choson
Dynasty,' the show focuses on traditional Korean wrapping cloths (bojagi).
(27 October 2004)


Kiwi scoops top Australian award
Slow Water by Annamarie Jagose won the prestigious AU$30,000 fiction
prize at the Victorian Premier's Literary Awards in October. Jagose has lived in
Australia for 12 years and is currently on leave from the University of
Melbourne to teach film, TV, and media studies at Auckland University. Slow
Water is a fictional account of the trial William Yate; an English
missionary charged with the capital crime of homosexuality in colonial
Australia. The novel has also been shortlisted for the
Miles
Franklin award.
(19 October 2004)


International acclaim for national story
NZ/British co-production In My
Father’s Den won the prestigious
Fédération Internationale de la Presse Cinématographique (FIPRESCI) award at
this year’s Toronto International Film Festival. Directed by NZer Brad McGann
and based on the novel by Maurice Gee, festival judges praised the film for its
“emotional maturity, striking performances, and visual grace.”
(19 September 2004)

A weighty story
A feature-length biopic of NZ sporting icon
Precious McKenzie is in the
works, with London-based Precious UK
Ltd and South Africa’s Unital
Films International already on board. The screenplay, written by Tauranga’s
Lance and James Morcan, was promoted at this year’s Cannes Film Festival,
earning widespread interest from investors. McKenzie was born in South Africa
but won weightlifting medals for England and NZ at the Olympic and Commonwealth
Games respectively. He currently lives in Auckland. See
Scoop
story for further details.
(1 September 2004)

Stopping traffic
Cliff
Curtis earns praise across the Tasman for his gritty performance in
Traffic: The Miniseries. Australian: “By far the best performance is
from Maori actor Cliff Curtis. His dark complexion means he is slated for the
ethnic roles in Hollywood – so far he has been Hispanic in Training Day,
Colombian in Blow and Arab in Three Kings. Here he's an unhappy,
illegal Chechen cab driver, Adam Kadyrov, whose dogged search for his missing
wife and child induces a high level of sympathy and anxiety.”
(3 August 2004)

Snakes alive
NZ company Silverscreen is collaborating with British and Taiwanese financiers
on a film version of an ancient Chinese legend. Lady White
Snake will be filmed in English with a budget of US$40 million. Cast and
crew are at present under wraps, but a "leading-edge
woman from New Zealand" is rumoured to be in the director's seat.
(13 July 2004)


Prime slot for Kiwi production
In My Father's
Den opened this year's Sydney Film Festival - the first time a NZ
feature has done so in the event's 50-year history. Directed by Brad McGann, the
film is based on Maurice Gee's novel of the same name and stars British actor
Matthew MacFadyen, Australia's Miranda Otto, and Kiwi newcomer
Emily
Barclay. "It
really is one of the best films that I have seen for a very long time," says
festival director Gayle Lake. "It examines the bigger questions in relation to
how we feel about family, how you can never run from the past and at some point
to achieve a level of redemption in your life, you have got to face up to the
music."
(10 June 2004)


Go speed racer
NZ director Roger Donaldson is bringing the life of Invercargill's legendary
motorcyclist Burt Munro to the silver screen, with Sir Anthony Hopkins in the
starring role. Entitled The World's Fastest Indian (after the 1920 Indian
bike Munro spent decades building), the film is a tribute to the man who broke
numerous land-speed records in Utah in the 1960s, and continued racing until the
age of 76. Production begins in August.
(21 May 2004)

More than just a pretty face
The NZ High Commission in India hosted a festival promoting cultural exchange
between the two nations in Delhi, April 5-28. Entitled Aotearoa: The Land of
the Long White Cloud, the event included a film festival, art exhibition,
lecture program, and a musical concert. NZ High Commissioner to India, Caroline
McDonald: “There are a couple of reasons for organising Aotearoa in Delhi. One,
we want to showcase aspects of NZ beyond its cricket and picturesque locales.
Secondly, despite rapid developments in the Indo-NZ relationship, there has
hardly been any interaction at the cultural level.”
(5 April 2004)


Crowning glory
Return of the King - the third and final film in Peter Jackson's Lord of the
Rings series - made a clean sweep of the 2004 Academy Awards, winning 11 Oscars
including Best Picture and Director. It is the only film ever to win in every category for which it
was nominated.
The total number of awards won brings it level with record-holders Ben Hur
(1960) and Titanic (1998). Said an
elated Peter
Jackson, "I'm so honoured, touched and relieved that the members of the
Academy have supported us, that they've seen past the trolls, wizards and
hobbits (by) recognizing fantasy this year. Fantasy is an F-word that hopefully
the five-second delay won't do anything with." The number of Kiwi accents
on stage prompted host Billy Crystal to quip, "It is now official: There is
nobody left in New Zealand to thank … You know people are moving to New
Zealand, just to be thanked."
(1 March 2004)

Another award for the kete
Niki Caro’s Whale Rider was named
Best International Film at the 2004 IFP Independent Spirit Awards in Los
Angeles. The IFP
website calls Whale Rider a “radiant story of an exceptional
little girl's coming of age, and of a proud Maori community's struggle to
embrace new ways of thinking.”
(28 February 2004)


A delightful upset
Peter Jackson
may have been a shoe-in for an Oscar nomination, but the inclusion of first-time
thespian Keisha Castle-Hughes (Whale Rider) in the Best Actress category
came as a welcome surprise. At just 13 years of age – 11 at the time of filming
- Castle-Hughes is the youngest ever actor to be nominated in her category. Her
agents had been plugging for a Best Supporting Actress nomination, but instead
Castle-Hughes is up against the formidable competition of Diane Keaton, Charlize
Theron, Samantha Morton, and Naomi Watts. Castle-Hughes recently won the Young
Actor gong at the
Critics Choice Awards in LA.
(27 January 2004)


From Hollywood to Bollywood
NZ actor Martin Henderson is currently starring in Torque, the big-budget
Hollywood motorcycle flick by the makers of 2 Fast 2 Furious and xXx.
He
describes Torque as a movie that "doesn't take
itself too seriously. It's like a cartoon, we're taking the piss out of the
(action) genre ... we're kind of winking at the audience."
Henderson also plays Britney Spears' cheating boyfriend in the pop star’s
latest music video,
Toxic.
(12 January 2004)
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Big shoes to fill
Peter Jackson unveiled some of his models and sketches for King Kong at the
CineAsia movie convention in Bangkok. “It's not a love story; it's a story about
love,” he told the convention audience, before promising that the film’s sets
and FX would rival those used in the award-winning LotR trilogy.
(10 December 2004)


Breaking new ground
Phil Keoghan’s US profile continues to climb, with a hit TV series and
inspirational book -
No Opportunity Wasted: Creating a List for Life – under his belt.
Currently in his fifth season presenting Emmy Award-winning reality show, The
Amazing Race, Keoghan’s next starring role is fronting the highly anticipated
serialised TV adaptation of No Opportunity Wasted for the Discovery Channel.
(16 November 2004)


Two for Parr
Larry Parr’s Fracture
scooped two major awards at the St Tropez Film Festival in October. Auckland’s
Kate Elliot won Best Actress and the film was voted most popular festival entry
by the audience. “We are delighted by Fracture's success,” says NZ Film
spokeswoman Kathleen Drumm in
Stuff.
“These awards have substantially increased its chances of being picked up by a
US distributor in Los Angeles.”
(28 October 2004)

On top of the Down Under world
Is It?, a co-production by Emily
Ansell (NZ) and Leonie Blignaut (SAF), won first prize at the UpOverDownUnder
film festival in London. The annual event promotes independent film making in
Britain's Antipodean and South African community. The festival website describes
Is It? as "a dream-like journey through London that explores the question
every visitor has to ask: is the grass really greener on the other side?"
Ansell and Blignaut won £500 and a 4-week 16mm film course at the New York Film
Academy.
(4 October 2004)


Comedy with a conscience
The Ball, an Australian spoof of
The Piano by Anny Slater, has been nominated by the UN for a Media Peace
Prize. According to Canada’s St Johns Film Festival, “The Ball is a
hilarious homage to and critique of Jane Campion's The Piano … In a few
brilliantly crafted images, The Ball manages to score major laughs of
recognition, as the mute heroine, Ada, travels to NZ to meet her new husband
with her Scottish terrier and her soccer ball. Mistaking refugee-challenged
Australian Prime Minister John Howard for her husband, Ada must deal with his
strange demands and the loss of her precious ball.”
(12 September 2004)


Wellywood in the spotlight
The world’s eyes are on Wellington once
again as production steps up on Peter Jackson’s King Kong remake. Jackson
promises to make a “wonderful, mysterious adventure film” worthy of the iconic
1933 original, which he claims “inspired [him] to want to become a film-maker”
when he first saw it as an 8-year-old.
(3 September 2004)


King of the jungle
20-year-old Turanga Merito has assumed
the lead role of Simba in the Sydney production of The Lion King, after
fellow Kiwi Vincent Harder bowed out for family reasons. The Disney blockbuster
draws a minimum of 16,000 viewers a week. “I'm so humbled by all of it but it
gets a little scary sometimes,” said Merito to the
NZ Herald. “Sometimes I wonder how did this Maori boy from Okere Falls
in Rotorua get here?” NZ performers play five of the nine principal roles in the
show, as well as two ensemble parts.
(14 August 2004)


Miramar Mentor
Peter Jackson was ranked 20th in pay and
12th overall in Forbes' annual Celebrity 100 List. The
accompanying feature was full of praise for NZ's newest national hero. "Filmmaker
Peter Jackson - assiduously disheveled, frequently barefoot and barely
5-and-a-half feet tall - is a giant in Hollywood [...] Now NZ's favorite native
son is betting it all on his homeland. He is ploughing upwards of $50 million of
his own money into building a studio empire here ... "I could go to Hollywood and I wouldn't have to build any
of this," says Jackson. "I value being a New Zealander who is able to make
films in his own country. So we've had to spend our own money to increase the
infrastructure."
(5 July 2004)


“The estimable John Clarke”
Telemovie adaptations of Shane Maloney’s
novels Stiff and The Brush Off by NZ comic John Clarke were a
critical and ratings success in Australia, the former netting more than
1.3 million
viewers on its one-off screening. Age: “Both films exhibit an
infectious sense of the absurd and are graced by the especially tasty flavour of
Clarke's distinctive writing. Not only does it spice both films but much of the
time [David] Wenham even appears to be channelling Clarke in his performance (in
much the same way that Kenneth Branagh does Woody Allen in Celebrity).”
Clarke scripted both films and directed Stiff; fellow Kiwi Sam Neill
directed The Brush Off.
(29 June 2004)


Taking Maori stories to the world
Whale Rider
star Rawiri Paratene visited Hawaii in mid-April to discuss
cultural themes in the film and NZ as a tourist destination. “Whale Rider
has been a boom for Maori filmmakers,” said Paratene, who is now writing
dramatic segments for the newly instated Maori television network. “It’s a
validation that our stories can reach the world and affect people.” To
conclude his Star Bulletin interview Paratene described co-star and
Oscar nominee, Keisha Castle-Hughes, as “New Zealand’s best marketing tool.”
(14 April 2004)


Jane and the Weta
Weta Workshop is collaborating with
Toronto-based animation house Nelvana to produce a CGI television series of
Martin Baynton's popular Jane and the Dragon books. The 26-episode series
is Weta's first foray into children's programming. "We
have enjoyed a wonderful opportunity to create a fantastical world around the
writings of J.R.R. Tolkien," says Weta Workshop founder Richard Taylor. "It is
therefore a great treat to be able to create our own world for Jane and her
Dragon."
(2 April 2004)

Just in case you missed that one..
The Return of the King picked up
yet another prize en route to the Oscars; Best International Film at the
inaugural Directors Guild of Great Britain awards.
(22 February 2004)


Two Cars, too beautiful
Two Cars, One Night by Taika
Waititi was named Best Short Film at Germany’s prestigious Berlinale festival.
The film, which also showed at
Sundance 2003, explores
the relationship which develops between two children while waiting for their
parents at a rural NZ pub. Said the Berlinale judges; “This beautifully
photographed black-and-white film reflects human codes and behaviour in a
charming and poetic way.”
(10 February 2004)

Under Gollum's skin
The latest must-have for LotR
enthusiasts is Gollum: How We Made Movie Magic. Written by Andy Serkis –
who played Gollum in the trilogy – the book includes extracts by Peter Jackson,
Fran Walsh, and several of the animators who helped bring the character to life.
“It's like my diary of the past four years, which was such an unusual journey,”
says Serkis. “I was the strand that held Gollum together, the emotional strand.
But the animators, directors, they were the pearls.”
(20 January 2004)

Taranaki’s Hollywood ambassador
Tom Cruise sang the praises of Aotearoa to the US on his promotional
tour for The Last Samurai, the Japanese military epic filmed largely in
Taranaki. As well as the beautiful scenery and friendly locals, he was
particularly taken with the adventure tourism the region had to offer, namely
surfing, caving and sea kayaking. Age: “Qantas has John Travolta as its
Hollywood face. Perhaps New Zealand should sign up Tom Cruise.”
(12 January 2004)
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