“The wild is no place for gentle folk who can neither fight nor fend
for themselves.”
These days director Peter Jackson is now so firmly
identified with the world of J. R. Tolkien it seems hard to believe there were doubts
back in the late 90's when it was announced he would adapt The Lord of the Rings. Back then Jackson
was best known for making gory low-budget horror films, although Heavenly Creatures (1994) based on a notorious
matricide in New Zealand
showed a more serious side. Adapting Tolkien's epic trilogy had already
defeated a number of filmmakers notably John Boorman, while an animated version
by Ralph Bakshi in 1978 was abandoned halfway through. The Lord of the Rings may have been larger in scale than anything Jackson had attempted but
the signs were there he could deliver. These early films might feature ridiculously
gory scenes of aliens being dismembered with chainsaws, or sheep getting blown
up by rocket launchers, or a kung-fu kicking priest beating up zombies, but
they also show Jackson ’s
flair for special effects and his gift for the fantastical.
After the success of the Lord
of the Rings movies which culminated in a Best Picture Oscar for Return of the King (2003) it seemed likely The Hobbit would be next. Jackson
initially intended only to produce the film. Mexican director Guillermo del
Toro (Hellboy, Pan's Labyrinth) was
hired but left the project after two years of pre-production so Jackson once again resumed
directorial duties. The Hobbit is
naturally enough for a film based on a children's novel lighter in tone to The Lord of the Rings though it feels
very much like a return to the world created by Jackson and his team over a
decade ago.
The cast is largely made up of television stars and trying
to recognise them under their makeup is part of the fun. Martin Freeman is
impressive as Bilbo Baggins, the Hobbit persuaded by the wizard Gandalf (Ian
McKellen) to help a group of dwarves regain their homeland, but see if you can spot
former Doctor Who Sylvester McCoy, Richard Armitage (Spooks), James Nesbitt (Cold Feet), Ken Stott (Rebus), Aidan Turner (Being Human), and Brett Mackenzie (Flight
of the Conchords). Barry Humphries, better known as Dame Edna Everage, Benedict
Cumberbatch (Sherlock), and Manu
Bennett (Spartacus: Blood and Sand)
are in all in there as well although their performances are motion captured and
then recreated by computer generated imagery.
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