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Posts tagged The Hobbit

Here are all of the Dwarves in a line, ready to do battle on The Hobbit. (Click for full size)
What do you think? Are you as excited as I am?
Here’s the link to the full size image!

Here are all of the Dwarves in a line, ready to do battle on The Hobbit. (Click for full size)

What do you think? Are you as excited as I am?

Here’s the link to the full size image!


Today we have the first image of John Callen as Oin and Peter Hambleton as Gloin. (The latter being the father of Gimli from The Lord of the Rings, hence a certain resemblance.) 
Are you getting excited about it yet?

Today we have the first image of John Callen as Oin and Peter Hambleton as Gloin. (The latter being the father of Gimli from The Lord of the Rings, hence a certain resemblance.) 

Are you getting excited about it yet?

Source Yahoo!


totalfilm:

First image of The Hobbit’s dwarves
The first image of Nori, Dori and Ori, The Hobbit’s sibling trio of badass dwarves, has just been revealed.
With  filming well underway for Peter Jackon’s return to Middle-earth, the  release of this tantalising press shot is practically mouth-watering.
We  especially like all the hair, facial and otherwise. Hairdressers should  probably expect ‘star-shaped’ to be the in-look next season…

totalfilm:

First image of The Hobbit’s dwarves

The first image of Nori, Dori and Ori, The Hobbit’s sibling trio of badass dwarves, has just been revealed.

With filming well underway for Peter Jackon’s return to Middle-earth, the release of this tantalising press shot is practically mouth-watering.

We especially like all the hair, facial and otherwise. Hairdressers should probably expect ‘star-shaped’ to be the in-look next season…

Source totalfilm


All I had to decide was what to do with the time that is given me.

I’m 71 and fit: though at my age who knows what accident is ‘round the next corner? For a year or more, I have been arranging my professional commitments around the possibility of The Hobbit films starting at almost anytime. We brought the Waiting for Godot tour of Australia to New Zealand early 2010, assuming I would stay on to start shooting soon after. Then there was yet another delay: but in Wellington I met with Guillermo del Toro and later read his script for Part One, written with the LOTR writing team. It was true to the style, the fun and the romance of the trilogy.

When Peter Jackson, already producing, resumed the director’s chair, he kept me in touch with developments. A second screenplay was sent over, on the understanding that I would not talk about what I read in it.

After the ruckus over trade union expectations and unlikely rumours of filming outside New Zealand, suddenly crucial casting was announced, plus a start date in February 2011. Martin Freeman as Bilbo sounds perfect. As my agent continued to negotiate with Warner Brothers, I kept wondering was Gandalf what I most wanted to do, more than a new play for instance or indeed a new part? Sequels aren’t necessarily as rewarding to act in as their originals.

Could I let Gandalf go? Would anyone else care if I did? Elsewhere, does anyone care that Michael Gambon was not the first to play Dumbledore?

The deciding negotiation was not about money but about dates. Gandalf is needed on set over the next 18 months but with sizeable breaks when I can work on other projects. My worry that I could not easily escape from Middle Earth was lifted.

I am happy to say I start filming in Wellington on February 21 2011.

—Ian McKellen, London, January 2011

Ladies and Gentlemen, Mr. Gandalf The Grey will BE BACK!!

Source mckellen.com


Peter Jackson’s ‘The Hobbit’ is slowly building with casting news coming out like a trickle since it was green lit. Well, today I have learned that Elijah Wood has officially been recast to reprise his role as Frodo Baggins.

If you are wondering like I did about how he will fit in since the story of The Hobbit takes place before he was born, TheOneRing.net has cleared it all up:

As readers of “The Hobbit” know, the tale of “The Downfall of The Lord of the Rings” and “The Hobbit or There and Back Again,” are contained in the fictional “Red Book of Westmarch.” In Peter Jackson’s LOTR films, the books are shown on screen and written in by Bilbo and Frodo and handed off to Sam Gamgee. (Not explained on film are Sam’s progeny later having the book and being Wardens of the Westmarch — hence the book’s title.) The fictional book, and either the telling from it or the reading of it, will establish Frodo in the films experiencing Bilbo’s story. Viewers to learn the tale of ‘The Hobbit’ with a familiar Frodo getting the tale as well.

So basically it means that Frodo will be in the opening sequences of the films as Bilbo shares “his stories” with his nephew…so we as the audience will be finding out the stories the same time as Frodo. Make sense?

At any rate, I am glad to hear that the films are shaping up and I can’t wait to see how they will look!

Source slashfilm.com