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  • Hello, welcome to the first of our blogs on the making of "The Hobbit." It's amazing to

  • be back here again. This is Bag End exactly as it was in "The Lord of the Rings." It was

  • actually built in our B-stage here in Wellington, which is exactly the same stage as it was

  • built 12 years ago. We've been shooting for a few days now, and I just wanted to take

  • this opportunity to give you a little look at the lead-out of filming and some of the

  • pre-production that lead up to the first day of our shoot. And I look forward to keeping

  • you up-to-date as we go through the next two or three years. See you soon! Oh, you're in

  • 3D - looking good. See ya. And this pulls beautifully. This look great when it's drawn

  • - and it actually works. And he could also go fighting with the remnants, sort of hanging

  • on to his body and be impaling people. We wanted to create a very non-human shape. We

  • do need to do a little blog. You might want to say "hi" to the fans of "The Hobbit." Shy

  • artists... my dear, my dear. So we're going up to wardrobe, and we're having a look at

  • a couple of dwarf wardrobe and makeup fittings, which is always exciting - not that we'll

  • show you much in this particular blog because we'll save them for the future. But at least

  • you'll get to see a little bit of our wardrobe department. A lot of very busy people working

  • on a lot of costumes. A lot of interesting textures and detail and leather and embossing,

  • and it's all pretty cool, yeah? It's like sort of a big wizard's workshop. Hello. Oh

  • my God - hello. You can use it like a mase. You can just swing, knocking, and cut their

  • throat, and whacking like this. Let me say, there's a nice bit were he goes, and takes

  • out about ten orcs with those. Now this is a familiar set. It's "Elron's Chamber," so

  • it's an exact copy of the one we had in "The Fellowship of the Ring." In fact, just over

  • here on the balcony, is where the Council of Elrond took place - where the fellowship

  • was formed, and Frodo wanted to take the ring to Mordor. Also in "The Hobbit" is going to

  • be a lot of new bits of Rivendale that we haven't seen before - some really cool bits

  • of Rivendale, actually, that we'll keep as a little surprise for the time being. Now

  • there's an old friend upstairs. Let's just have a quick look. Here we are. I'm sure you'll

  • recognize the statue where the broken sword sits. And, of course, in the time of "The

  • Hobbit," the sword is going to be here. It is strange walking around here because you

  • know it was up about ten or eleven years ago, and I'm used to looking at a set like this

  • on film, you know, and now we're walking back into it again. It's almost like you've stepped

  • inside a movie. It's a very weird experience. This is where we're going to be shooting.

  • It's the very beginning of our shoot. It's the goblin tunnels below the Misty Mountains.

  • It's a very iconic scene in "The Hobbit," where Bilbo has an encounter with, well, you

  • know who it's with, don't you? If you've read "The Hobbit." No need to spoil it for anyone

  • who hasn't. But this is a little network of caves. Look, there's a whole little set of

  • passageways down here. It's very claustrophobic. One of the things we've done to be able to

  • shoot the shots is make sure that all the different walls of the cave can be removed

  • so that our big, bulky cameras can actually shoot the angles that we need. Oh my God,

  • look at this thing here. That looks like a foot, or an arm. Oh, I don't know. That looks

  • rather creepy, doesn't it? Whew. Okay. So how many chairs do we need? For instance,

  • I reckon Bomber sits at the end. And then there's a slight grapple, and when you hop

  • down, it's like ahhhh. And then it's like... yeah. Now, I know it's sort of safe. This

  • is blocking. This is not really rehearsing, but we're kind of giving the actors a walking

  • through and we talk to them about what to do with the scene. And it's actually fun because

  • it means when we come to this, we've got a plan. It'd be good if you come forward, and

  • then you realize that there's something on your foot. And perhaps, you try to get ride

  • of it first, and then you... This'll be fun. This'll be more fun when everyone's in makeup

  • and costumes and dying of the heat. Set up on the corner of the table, we've got Killy.

  • Next to Killy, Filly. And then Dorry... Dorry, and then Nory... Oh my God. Orry, Dorry, Norry,

  • Biffer, Bomber... (mumbling) This is a nightmare. We'll have Gandalf here, and Thorin, too.

  • I thought it would be good to give you this whole doorway to play in kind of. The fire

  • will be blazing as well... Now my prediction is that it's all going to go incredibly well

  • on the day, don't you agree? Um... The tricky thing is that there are 13 dwarves on this

  • set. The good thing is you're not in a fat suit. I am in a nose and false eyebrows, a

  • wig, a mustache, a beard, but you're right, no fat suit. Yeah, you're a winner. You're

  • a winner every step of the way. And we can stick a fan up your robe just to give you

  • a bit of air conditioning. Promises, promises. Well that's going to work with a little bit

  • of finishing. That's going to work. Good morning. Morning. Mornin'. Good morning. So I'm officially

  • the first person in the makeup chair on "The Hobbit?" Officially. That's amazing. Chanting...

  • More chanting... My name's Richard, I'm from London, England. I would like to give thanks

  • on behalf of everyone here, and visitors for this ceremony, for this celebration, for the

  • blessing of the soundstage, and for the welcome that you offer to us. We are all deeply honored

  • to be here. And to everyone who has waited so long for this day, to begin this extraordinary

  • journey filming "The Hobbit." I'd like to wish them good luck, good health, and good

  • harmony. Thank you. My name's Martin Freeman. I'm in the cast as well. He stole everything

  • I've got to say. So it's been a long time coming today, an even longer time than we

  • thought it'd be. So I hope at the end of this journey we are all as close with each other

  • as we have the potential to be. So, thank you very much. Hello everyone, I'm Andy Serkis.

  • I am standing up just to say on behalf of the returning crew and past who have come

  • gathered here to go on the journey. We are just very, very grateful to your incredibly

  • hospitality. And to have the opportunity to share the passion to tell such an amazing,

  • amazing story in such an amazing country with such beautiful people. You know, for a long

  • time I thought that going back to the amazing experience of "Lord of the Rings" wouldn't

  • be a good idea. But really, you know, now I've come completely around because films

  • are stressful and they're hard to make, but ultimately what makes them fun is the people

  • that you work with. And the fact that we're going to be working with a lot of the old

  • gang, with a lot of friends, and obviously making some new friends is really the point

  • of being here. So I'm extremely thrilled. If somebody came up to me today and said that

  • we could carry on pre-preproduction for another six weeks, I'd say no way. Hell no. Let's

  • just start shooting. And roll sound. Rolling. And action. In a hole in the ground, there

  • lived a hobbit. Sky darkens. And flames. And cut. That's great. That'll do. Thank you very

  • much. Yay! That's the one. Thank you very much everybody for a great first block, and

  • have a great break. Everyone's having a break, and we'll see you back here soon enough. Ladies

  • and gentlemen of the second unit, that is a wrap on block 1! So we're just going to

  • get one more pickup in Bag End. Hello. Come in. Hey Andy. We were going to do one more

  • pickup in here if that's alright. This is the video blog pickup. That's right, there

  • you go the end of block one. Anyway, so we just wanted to say hi to everyone since we

  • haven't done one of these video blocks since the beginning of the shoot. God, it feels

  • like a lifetime. Because you, the first week of shooting we did with Andy is gone. If he

  • loses precious then we eats it. You weren't a second unit director in those days. You

  • were an actor. You were an old-fashioned thespian. Now I've crossed though to the dark side.

  • You've now gone to the dark side. I'm wiped. I'm completely wiped. It's all yours. Is it?

  • Just give us a good battle. Yeah, okay, okay. I don't know how you do it. You get tired.

  • I always just tell people I get exhausted at the end of the first couple days and stay

  • exhausted until it finishes. We have 250 days of shooting on these two Hobbit movies, and

  • I think it's a much better way to divide it up into three blocks, and then have some time

  • to look at what you've done, look at it, hand visual effects shots over to the CGI guys.

  • You can completely focus on the script revisions. It's just a much smarter way to shoot these

  • big films. Yeah, on something of this scale, too. I mean, when we were given our T-shirts

  • that said 54 days down, 200 to go, I have to admit I don't know how great it was to

  • say "wear these on set." It wasn't a particularly moral-boosting moment, was it? Everywhere

  • you turn, on people's backs was "200 days to go," and it was like, "oh God," I felt

  • tired before lunch, you know? The good news is that it's over. The first day back is Monday,

  • the 5th of September. So thank you guys. What are you guys off to during the break? My lovely

  • wife and I, my wife Haley, and I, we've got a holiday in the south island of New Zealand

  • planned. And my lovely, gorgeous wife Nicole, and I are just going to work on the house.

  • I'm leaving, shortly after talking to you for London, which is a long journey. By plane,

  • and once there I immediately go into production of a play I'm going to do. I'm going to America,

  • to pebble beach, in a week to play some golf. I'll work on my tan so I that I can really

  • freakin make a pic when I come back. I'm having a break. I'm having 4 weeks off. I'm just

  • sleeping in, my favorite hobby. First, we're going to Australia to see our oldest daughter.

  • I'm going to run a marathon. I'm going to attempt to sort of write and record a bit

  • of a psychedelic sludge of rock album. Hitting the fabric shops in central London. I go home

  • to Thailand tomorrow. To Barcelona to meet tattoo fans from Spain. Bali for 11 days.

  • London and Paris to see friends. Manhattan Beach because it's the closest beach to the

  • airport. I haven't been home for the last three years, back in Belgium so my mom is

  • cracking the whip. And then I'm going to Vegas and spend all my hard earned cash. Do some

  • more swimming and lots of golf. Probably getting a little bit drunk, a little bit on a holiday.

  • I'm looking forward to getting back with my mates and getting on the drink, where I won't

  • get a bad reputation because they already know what I'm like. And then I'm going back

  • to Ireland to see my family and to see some of my mates in Belfast for a quiet little

  • weekend. I hope nobody phone's me for about three weeks, at least. Hopefully come back

  • totally refreshed and ready to rock on the next lot. What are you doing on break Andy?

  • Well I'm going back home to maybe have a little time off to go on and live with the family.

  • And then really, before you know it, I'll be back. It's weird because you get to this

  • point when you're at the end of a block of shooting, and it sort of almost feels like

  • you're going on vacation, but it's not because on Monday morning I'm in the cutting room.

  • And then I've got to have meetings with Alan and John and Dan about designing stuff for

  • the second block and then with Richard Taylor about all the things he has to build. So in

  • some respects I'm back into preproduction again. But also, I'm in post production because

  • I'm editing. Plus we're in production because we're shooting these movies. So it's like

  • being in pre-production, production, and post-production all at the same time. It kind of gets a bit

  • screwy. But before I get to do any of that I've got to jump on a plane tomorrow morning

  • and go location scouting down the south island. So we'll take some good pictures. Since we're

  • going to be doing location shooting during our next block of shooting, it's really time

  • to have to nail everything down. Along the routine, there'll be about 17 of us that go.

  • We get around in 5 helicopters usually, and it's quite a spectacle that we turn up. Peter

  • Carrow, Zane, Brigette, Andrew, Dan Hennah, Simon Bright the art director, Steve Ingram,

  • John Howe, Ellen Lee, Eric Sanden, Tony Keddy the grip, Rich Gasow the gaffer, myself, location

  • scout Dave Cummer joins us, and Pete's assistants, Sebastian, the faithful Sebastian's there.

  • Here on the mountains, I put my hand out and a cup of tea slides into it. That's what we

  • like. There's even a Starbucks up here in the southern Alps. It's pretty hard to walk

  • and juggle a cup of tea at the same time on this sort of ground. I never quite prepare

  • for some of these things. I always somehow imagine it's going to be dry and warm and

  • nice. At least it's not raining. We'll be not just scouting, which is essentially searching

  • for locations, we're now returning to the locations we liked and we're going to start

  • to talk about the logistics. By the time you've helicoptered everyone in and then you've got

  • to helicopter them out before nightfall. You're not actually here early morning or late afternoon.

  • You're right, it's all broad daytime. On set, we're allowing approximately half a rugby

  • field for the essential equipment trucks. And then our marquee's crew parking and also

  • unit based parking, which is where all our makeup and costume facilities are. In essence,

  • we need to create space for two rugby fields of equipment. It's weird on locations because

  • you're standing in the middle of a mountain or a valley or some beautiful place, and you're

  • having to figure out, "Where are we going to put the crew tents, where are people going

  • to get changed, where are the Port-a-Lou's going to go?" Because all that stuff has to

  • be where you're not going to want to point the camera. You can have Gandalf and all the

  • dwarves running up over this brow here and scurry hiding there behind these rocks, and

  • just as they get there, you crane up... The last thing you want to find out in 6 months

  • time as you're standing on this beautiful mountain and saying, "wow, this is exactly

  • the shot I want to do" and you find that you've got 20 Port-a-Lou's right in front of the

  • camera. That's not what you want to do. So you've got to figure all that stuff out. We'll

  • be flying over, I don't know, maybe 30 locations? We're shooting locations around the McKenzie

  • country around wild landscapes below Mount Cook. And we will also be shooting around

  • Denidum Way. More beautiful stone, rock walled country and that's quite exciting because

  • it's an area of Middle Earth we haven't visited before. Where we're scouting presently for

  • the Ancient Murkwood and the Anduin Grasslands is south of Queenstown. We're still searching

  • and trying to work out how we're going to shoot Lonely Mountain, Misty Mountain paths.

  • You can look over in that direction there. There are still a few rivers that we're scouting

  • for. You know, I think we're getting pretty close to photographing every decent river

  • in New Zealand now. It would be quite funny to have 13 barrels all in the middle of this

  • thing, with the guy shouting, "come on, get on with it! Come on, move it here. Get on.

  • Go faster!" This is a floater. It's quite heavy. We're going to go into some reasonably

  • remote places - sometimes places that very very few people have seen. There's plenty

  • of New Zealand that we haven't seen yet. I think people think it's such a small country,

  • and "Lord of the Rings" saw so much of it that we must have seen everything, but believe

  • me we haven't. There's a huge amount of wonderful locations still to come. That's great. It's

  • a great spot. Well, we'll say goodbye for now, and hopefully you've enjoyed this update,

  • and there well may be another one coming during the break sometime, so keep your eye out for

  • that. Hello and welcome to our next video blog. I thought it would be good to carry

  • on talking to Andy Serkis about some of the fun and games we had during our first block

  • of shooting. Andy - ... Andy? Where is he? Andy! What is this place? This isn't Wellington.

  • Where am I? Isn't this where James Bond crashed his Aston Martin in 1964? And isn't this where

  • Red Grant trained to be an assassin at the beginning of "For Russia, With Love?" You

  • know what? I think we should just run the blog anyway. So what we did is we asked cast

  • and crew to tell us a few of their favorite memories from the first three or four months

  • of shooting. So please enjoy that, and I'll go figure out where I am. What are the things

  • that stand out for you the most from the first block? For me I think my favorite stuff we've

  • done so far has been Gollum's cave. The way that Pete did that scene felt like I was watching

  • a play. It was sort of like you could sit back and watch these amazing guys do their

  • thing. Him and Martin together was fantastic. It was really cool. Trying to get back into

  • the head of Gollum, I never told this, but it felt like kind of doing an impersonation

  • of a character that I played a long time ago. You know it was weird because it was like

  • having to renown it again. It was pretty cool. It was a nice way of starting. I felt sorry

  • for Martin because he was suddenly thrust into having to find the character of Bilbo

  • and have to deal with you for a whole week, going head on the whole time. It must have

  • been a bit intimidating. With a mouth full of gollum, gollum. It's going to be a good

  • movie. Check it out. After two years of "Oh my God, when are we ever going to shoot this

  • film? We had 13 dwarves and a hobbit, we might have had a wizard as well, and suddenly it's

  • real. Seeing the sets were, like, amazing. That's true. I mean, coming to Bag End for

  • the first time and walking through. It was the first day wasn't it, on the job? That

  • was amazing. Can you name them? Name the dwarves? Ori, Dori, Nori, Biffur, Boma-, Biffa, Biffer,

  • Bombur, Ori, Nori, Dori... I can never remember, see that's the problem, you can't even remember

  • who they are! You have Fili and Kili. There's Thorin and Snorin, and Dorin, and Dwalin and

  • Balin, and Biffur, Bofer, and Bomber, and then there are the 3 Dori, Nori, and Ori - and

  • I think that's it isn't it? I think so. 13 dwarves is one of the reasons I dreaded "The

  • Hobbit," and why I really didn't think I was going to make it for such a long time. But

  • the irony is that it has turned out to be one of the joys of the film. Oh my God. What

  • a challenge. I mean 13 heroes - 14 with Bilbo. They will have to be differentiated in a way

  • that isn't necessary in the book, but if you keep seeing them you want to know who they

  • are, specifically, and what they're attitude is, and why they're on this journey. We need

  • to move now! Come on! Some of the best memories were getting the dwarves ready. Everybody

  • has kind of helped these actors find their way through lots of rubber and lots of hair.

  • Walking through a waiting room and getting to see our designs and going, "actually, I

  • look amazing. I look the most amazing of anyone." That was probably the best day, wasn't it?

  • When you all said, "Gee. Gene's amazing." We did, yeah. Some of them of them actually

  • look pretty vile before they get into the prosthetics. For some of them, the prosthetic

  • is making them look better, to tell you the truth which says something. Mark Hadlow, for

  • example, comes to mind. I have this lovely bit down here and then this mustache that

  • comes up here - I look stunning. Actually, I should be in centerfold. One of the things

  • quite early on that we discovered was that Mark Hadlow likes to dress up in costumes,

  • mainly military type things. And the really weird thing about his sailor outfit is that,

  • below the waist, nothing. But again, though. He's a nice bloke, though. One of them doesn't

  • have to wear a beard. Yes we are all very jealous of that. He's the sexy dwarf. I don't

  • even think he's got a beard, actually, mainly because he's not old enough to grow one. He's

  • the hot one I suppose, if you like that kind of thing. But if you like Easter cardigans

  • and knitted mittens, then I'm your fellow. If there was a boy band in middle earth he'd

  • be the leader, the Robbie Williams, of the dwarf world, whereas you would be the roadie.

  • I think Bombur, the roadie. I think when people see the beards, they're going to come back

  • in big time, huge. Give us a kiss, mwuh. (Dwarf language). We've all learned a bit of the

  • dwarf language. So we all have sort of a selection of words to fall back on - curses and battle

  • cries. I mean, we speak dwarfish to each other most of the time. All the time. Okay, here

  • it goes, and Peter can guess what it is, and then I'll tell people. (Dwarf language). Peter?

  • It means mighty dwarf. Well you got to do all the fun stuff in Trollshaw. Yeah we did.

  • I had to shoot dialogue and things, and he got to do all the fighting troll stuff. Here's

  • the great thing about the dwarves is that even thought there's this comic element to

  • some of the characters, not all of them, but some of them, when they fight they really

  • fight. We started with three months of intense training. We did stunt fighting, we did horse

  • riding. We did the gym four times a week, we did dwarf movement, intensely. They were

  • trying to get us to a point where they could actually kill us, and bring us back from the

  • dead, kill us, bring us back from the dead - all with CPR and stuff like that - because

  • that's what it'll be like on set. They did it by breaking us down. They did it by essentially

  • reducing us to the absolute amoeba stage, and then building us up again as dwarves.

  • We've come through it as better dwarves, I feel. I do, too. I mean, I know that William

  • has discovered his inner dwarf. I have, but we all have actually. It's a frightening thing,

  • but that's the job that had to be done. If I could say key moments, and block one, arriving

  • in Rivendell and meeting Elrond and dining at his table, it really feels like you're

  • stepping into Middle Earth. There are some who would not deem it wise. What do you mean?

  • You're not the only guardian to stand watch over Middle Earth. I remember it now, but

  • later on... whooo! I love working with Hugo and Cate back in Rivendell, that was great.

  • I still can't get over being on set with Ian as Gandalf and then Cate with Galadriel and

  • Hugo with Elrond and feel like you've stepped back into a movie again, you know? Kind of

  • weird. Is this the new one? This is different. High points really I think was getting Cate

  • Blanchett with a long train. Oh, Cate, that's beautiful. They're all going to want one.

  • Don't ask me to walk in it. One of the things that I like is that we're getting a bit of

  • the music into the movie as well, the songs. Tolkein wrote quite a few songs for "The Hobbit."

  • I got to sing a song. You want to hum a few bars for us now? Oh it's a classic song. It's

  • after Cole Porter, Gershwin, that type of thing. There's an inn, there's an inn, there's

  • a merry old inn, beneath an old gray hill. It's after three he said. I think it'd be

  • great if Dwalin just yelled the whole thing. Who is this? That's the Metallica version.

  • Whether or not I'll be singing at the Oscars is a different matter, but hopefully some

  • people will sing it in the shower. I think this is a Peter Jackson question - which dwarf

  • would you like to invite to dinner? Well, you know, I wouldn't invite any of them except

  • myself. I'm afraid their table manners aren't the best. You get your fist, and you do that!

  • I would not want Bifur over for dinner. He would be the bottom of the line. Ori because

  • he'd be very polite. Excuse me. Well it'd be me, obviously, because I cook. Steven Hunter

  • does pretty well with the bad table manners because he just eats so much. Have you seen

  • the size of him? I mean, good Lord, he's enormous. I've tried to talk to him about cutting down

  • his cholesterol and his butter intake. I don't think you'd invite Nori because he'd steal

  • all the silverware. You'd never invite Graham McTavish because he would sit there and glare

  • at you and show his forearms. Dwalin's a real warrior, and at parties he goes completely

  • mad, like so many Scottish people. There you go! Well the words, "kettle, black, calling,

  • pot" come to mind. I don't think you'd invite any dwarf to dinner actually. I wouldn't have

  • them all together, though, not 13 of them - maybe a couple at a time. Special person

  • to meet here, John Reese Davies. It was fun on one of the days that we were on Bag End

  • that John Reese Davies came to visit. And it was great to introduce him, not only to

  • Gloine, who is his father in the story, but also to all the other dwarves. It's just like

  • coming home to family. I predicted what John would say, and he pretty much said it word

  • for word. I could just imagine him saying, "Oh, you poor bastards." That's pretty much

  • what he went on to say. You poor buggers. When he gets you running up a hill in full

  • armor, you'll enjoy that. You are going to be spectacular, and you'll be chased by women

  • all around the world. But only if you're in costume and makeup! We've been here since

  • January 13th so what is that? 5 months? And we haven't even scratched the surface. One

  • of the biggest moments was when we all put our gear on, and we all stood together, sort

  • of looking around at each other into the character's faces. Standing in a circle and looking at

  • the guys who were going on a quest, it sent a tingle up my spine. Thank you, that's terrific

  • - I think we can check the gate on that. Thank you very much. Thanks guys. Thank you very

  • much. Bittersweet moment because it's time to leave. Hasta La Vista, then driving off.

  • I'm waiting for someone, sorry. Just go. Ah really? Yeah, just go. We've had enough go.

  • Are you wrapped? No I'm not wrapped, they're keeping the good people. Okay we'll go now.

  • It's a bittersweet moment, but it's time to leave. Hasta La Vista. Well I hope you enjoyed

  • that. I don't know if there'll be any more because I have to find New Zealand, which

  • I've lost. I think it's over here. Who is that odd little fellow? Action. Cut. Hi, welcome

  • to our new blog. This time, we thought we'd talk a little bit about 3D. Get a good look

  • at your opening shot. Let's get this arm in a little closer. Watch your back. Hi, I'm

  • Angus. Welcome to the world of 3D. Shooting "The Hobbit" in 3D is a dream come true. I

  • mean if I had the ability to shoot "Lord of the Rings" in 3D I certainly would have done

  • it. What I actually did on the "Lord of the Rings" is I had a 3D camera taking 3D photographs.

  • Hopefully, one day maybe even on 3D Blue. We might be able to show you some of the 3D

  • photos from 10 or 12 years ago. I've got 3D and I've got reading glasses, we're all good.

  • But now, the reality is that it's not that difficult to shoot in 3D. I love it when a

  • film draws you in and you become part of the experience, and 3D helps immerse you in the

  • film. The essence of our camera system is the Red Epic. Really it's this thing that

  • enables us to shoot 3D on "The Hobbit." But, of course, to shoot 3D you actually need two

  • cameras. The problem that we have in the cinema world is that the lenses we use are so large

  • that we cannot get an interocculous similar to humans, which is the separation between

  • your eyes. For us to get the two cameras as close together as possible, they have to shoot

  • into a mirror. We have to use a mirror system, which is rig that is designed by a company

  • called 3ALITY. One's the left eye, one's the right eye. One shoots through a mirror. The

  • other one bounces off the mirror, and so the two images are perfectly overlaid. With using

  • two eyes, we can move the cameras apart, and also more importantly is find a convergence

  • point. For example, see around someone's face just like you're looking at a friend. The

  • convergence point is the screen plane itself. 3D forms two places: positive space, which

  • is inside the box what you see behind the person who is standing on the screen - and

  • negative space, which is what you feel comes out into the audience, an arm, a bullet, whatever

  • you want. And the whole idea with these rigs is that you can change the interoccular and

  • the convergence as we're shooting. We can see that separation on a 2D screen with a

  • left and a right eye overlay. So we can do this live, throughout a shot, changing our

  • 3D effect the whole way through. Roll sound. Rolling. We're watching the 3D movie as we

  • make it. It looks so good. You almost feel like you're in it. Action! A lot of people

  • have an image of 3D being big and cumbersome, and that's true, but we've got a lot of different

  • rigs that we've built for a lot of different purposes. It's actually easier in this weird,

  • 3D world to have different camera systems for different uses. So this is a camera we

  • built to go on a crane that can move around, and it never comes off the crane. This is

  • the TS5 in a handheld mode. It's our main workhouse camera. It's light, it's small,

  • so it allows Peter to get into very tight, narrow corridors and caves as if he would

  • with a 2D camera. Mobile camera work has always been very important for the films that I've

  • made, and the last thing that I wanted to do when we went into 3D was to restrict or

  • change the shooting style. So with the camera doing this as well, you don't need me to do

  • much. It was very important for "The Hobbit" that we feel like the same filmmakers who

  • have gone back into Middle Earth to tell a story. We're shooting at the same speed as

  • you would shoot in 2D. The dollies, cranes, steadicam, we put it on the shoulder, and

  • we shoot handheld the same as we would always shoot a movie. Of course once you've got 3

  • or 4 cameras for main unit, you need 3 or 4 cameras for second unit, which is 8 cameras,

  • which is really 16 cameras. This is the world of the camera department. We have 48 Red Epic

  • cameras, and they're on 17 3D rigs. This one's called Walter, which was my grandfather. This

  • one is Ronald, my uncle, Emily was Fran's grandmother. Perkins was actually Fran's dog.

  • Whitchipoo, Frank, Bill is my dad. Fergus is the name of one of our Pugs. Tricky Woo,

  • that's the name of our Peckinese. Stan is another one of our Pugs. This camera's called

  • John and Paul, George and Ringo, who were not relations of mine. Are we having fun?

  • Yayy! We're not shooting film. We're shooting digitally. We shoot onto these cards, which

  • slide in the side of the camera, and each one of these is 128GB. On top of that, you're

  • shooting at 5K resolution. A very sharp, clear image. You need like a chart, but 5K is there,

  • 4K is about there, and then you're 1080 home TV is down there, so that gives you an idea

  • of the amount of information we're capturing on these. Let's do another one of those. We're

  • shooting "The Hobbit" at a higher framerate, at 48 frames/second, which is twice the normal

  • 24 frames. The human eye sees 60 frames/second. So 48 frames is more of a natural progression

  • toward giving the viewer what they'd actually see in the real world. The people who have

  • seen scenes from "The Hobbit" at 48 fps often say it's like the back of the cinema has had

  • a hole cut out of it where the screen is, and you're actually looking into the real

  • world. Once you add stereo, and it gives you that extra ability to control depth, you can

  • devise ways in which it can become part of the story telling of a film. For instance,

  • in Murkwood, we really play on the fact that it's a forest that's kind of hallucinogenic

  • almost. It draws you in. It makes you part of it, and you may never get out. We just

  • want you to stay where you are, and then - Stay back! Stay where you are. Murkwood is a big

  • forest, and it's full of vines and sinister-looking trees I suppose you'd say. It has a lot of

  • things hanging down, things coming from all sorts of angles, and it helps us with the

  • 3D to be able to push into that, and try to get the audience to feel that they're actually

  • trying to move into the forest with the cameras, and give it that dark and look-over-your-shoulder

  • feeling. Color-wise, with the Red camera, it tends to eat camera a little, and so we

  • add more color. If you look at the ungraded footage the trees look incredibly psychedelic.

  • They look like they were painted in 1967. We wouldn't normally be quite as bold as this,

  • even in Murkwood, which is an enchanted forest, so it's like we oversaturate. In the movie,

  • they won't look anything like that. They'll be graded down and you'll just get the barest

  • hint of color in the finished film. They're coming back! 3D, 48fps is pretty unforgiving,

  • and we have to change our whole way to go about coloring these things because what we've

  • found out in early test is that if there wasn't enough red in these pieces, they would punch

  • up yellow and react differently than normal skin with blood running through it. So, here's

  • an example. This is Graham McTavish as Dwalin, and we've had to add a lot of red tones to

  • his makeup. So if you notice, if you stick your hand up next to your face, how incredibly

  • pale this man is right now. I've barely seen daylight for the last 6 months, which is why.

  • So we have to add the blood and the paste to make him look like a normal flesh tone.

  • It looks freaky now, but on film it's going to read beautifully - fingers crossed. With

  • the 3D HD stuff, it is amazing how when people's hair moves around on the wigs, it has to actually

  • be the real thing. It has to be real hair. And you find that because the number of frames/second

  • you're using and so forth, if you've got real hair moving around, it just look real. I've

  • never worked on a film that's 48 frames/second and uses the cameras that we're using. It's

  • challenging to look for fabrics that work. I know full well that a fabric we bought ages

  • ago for a dressing gown for Bilbo would probably make people feel sick if they saw it on camera.

  • It's got spots on it with a little spot inside it, and it would just be like someone throwing

  • stone at your face I think. I've avoided that fabric like the plague. It's in very poor

  • taste! Others are just a joy to behold, and the camera picks it up, and the audience can

  • see every last detail, so in that sense it's really exciting. This film is really breaking

  • new grounds in many ways as far as the technology of the filming goes. But John and I are still

  • working in our time honored methods of pencil and charcoal, composing pictures in 2D. We

  • thought we'd try to come up with some way of actually incorporating a 3D aspect into

  • the way we were producing the concept art that might communicate more clearly to Peter

  • and to the other technicians. So what we're doing is two drawings. One is in red, one

  • is in blue, and the 3D glasses have a red lens and a blue lens, one for each eye. This

  • is probably the first cinema production where the concept art has been done in 3D. Rather

  • than just sharing the same office, we're actually sharing basically the same vision. There's

  • been a bit of a tendency for me to take on the blue, and obviously sitting on the righthand

  • side of the picture it's easier to actually get your head around the left side. It doesn't

  • make sense when you try to explain it like that. It's a huge help for Peter because we're

  • actually proposing the full depths. I mean, it means Peter has to wear glasses when he

  • looks at our art, but - My God, coming at ya, look at that! If you have a pair of these

  • glasses at home, you should be able to see the artwork in 3D. You look great - very 3

  • dimensional. You've definitely improved. So I hope you've found this blog interesting.

  • I know it's a bit frustrating because everything we've been talking about you can't actually

  • see at the moment. You can't see the 3D, you can't see the 48 frames, you can't see the

  • 5k, but you will. December 2012, you'll finally get a chance to see what we've been talking

  • about - anyway, I've got to get back to set. It looks like they're almost ready for me

  • down there. We're actually shooting today Pine Forest, although as you can see it's

  • not really Pine Forest. It's a polystyrene and plaster Pine Forest. Very shortly, we're

  • going to be leaving the studio and moving onto locations for a few months. So the next

  • time we see you will be from a location somewhere in New Zealand. Catch up with you soon. Dwarves

  • and boats, everybody thinks they're a sailor. Welcome to our new blog, which is about the

  • logistics of location shooting. We've been traveling pretty much the length and breadth

  • of New Zealand shooting locations for "The Hobbit." It's been great to get outside. It's

  • been great to get that texture of Middle Earth into the movie after many, many weeks of shooting

  • in the studio, we've established our characters, we've established our story, and it was finally

  • time to get on the road and establish the landscapes of Middle Earth. So they're currently

  • moving 500 of the crew to Hemington, and then about 200 2nd unit crew to various parts of

  • the country. We like to call it the biggest logistical move in cinematic history. Just

  • the size of the fleet, plus 240 vehicles - as you can see, we're moving around a huge surface.

  • I think everyone is secretly scared, but quietly excited. The main reason for going on location

  • on the project is to capture the scenic beauty of New Zealand. Peter's often said one of

  • the things that won the fans over so much in the "Lord of the Rings" series was the

  • unbelievable vistas and scenics because they were so magnificent. People are really excited

  • about getting outside and taking this on the road. These are our changes for the main unit

  • crew, so this is how big we actually are. We have probably over 500. Everybody's got

  • to be in the right vehicle at the right time, they have to travel to the right place, they

  • have to have rooms to be able to sleep in. I can't begin to imagine the logistics involved

  • with shifts the crew, the cast, the equipment we have on "The Hobbit." It's pretty mind

  • blowing. You have to take everything with you to produce the films. We're having to

  • provide our own electricity, areas to cook food, areas for people to sit down and eat.

  • We've got to provide water, the bathrooms and the toilets that people need. You have

  • to have weather cover, heat when it's cold, and you've got to provide cooling when it's

  • hot. The daunting aspect of that is that it's all got to get into trucks, it's all got to

  • be on wheels, and it's all got to be ready to roll. We're about the try and cram all

  • of this, and all of that, all of this, some of that, most of this, both these trucks,

  • most of these people, but not that scissor lift up there. That stays. They're going to

  • go into some of these trucks. These guys here are going to go in these trucks, too. One

  • of our biggest challenges on the production is actually shooting all the locations in

  • one hit, for both main unit and second unit. You can certainly start here. We're away for

  • about 7 1/2 weeks if the weather holds up, so we're basically praying that every spot

  • we go to in the country is sunny and beautiful. The first location is Matamata, up in old

  • Hobbittown. So we're returning back to the first sop from "Lord of the Rings," which

  • is pretty exciting. We do a fantastic job, and we're out of here at 4 o'clock in the

  • morning, and as you can see we're totally under control. Why aren't you helping? Well

  • I've got to carry this. We go to some of the remotest locations in New Zealand, and if

  • there's one things grips can't live without, it's their latte, soy. That's right. We're

  • getting ready to go away, and so far we haven't packed anything, and tomorrow's our last day.

  • The hobbits are doing a big scene against green screen on the Hobbittown. This is my

  • little hobbit and my sonny hobbit. So we need the largest team on because they're also going

  • to try to pack. And they're going to say "where did you put it because I'll need it," and

  • "where did you put that wig? Did you put it away? No we need to put it on his head now."

  • We'll be here until midnight trying to load up the boxes because they leave at 4 o'clock

  • in the morning. Be sure to pack scotch, tequila, wine and beer, a heap of plants, sixty kilos

  • of toilet paper, a few artificial trees, socks, and some jaegermeister. We've got a stock

  • truck coming in to take our 49 mixed age sheep, 15 chickens, 9 goats, 5 free road steers,

  • 4 pheasants, 2 moscove ducks. We've also got Michael Jackson, the walking chicken on the

  • lead. We're just going to take you through, get your contracts done. We've got lunch packed

  • for you to take on the road, so just follow me. The keys are in it? The keys are in it.

  • We've got ups units installed in all of the trucks, purely so we can watch what's happening

  • as they move up and down the country. If you don't arrive, we can't shoot. The last truck

  • should be out of here in half an hour, and then Hobbittown. Just remember that the reason

  • you're on this plane is because you're so valuable to the production. Our main unit

  • had over a hundred units on wheels traveling to the first location. That was quite a feat

  • in itself, having that amount of drivers on the road. Once we get in, we arrive and it's

  • about an eight hour turnaround from when the first truck turns up to when the unit base

  • is actually functional for filming. They've got to get these trucks level for working

  • in. They've got to get them all powered up, and get them all functioning so quickly: prosthetics,

  • makeup, costume, catering. It's not just a case of a small crew going into very out of

  • the way places. We're literally occupying the space of a football field - I think it's

  • actually two football fields. We've moved 7,000 cubic meters of dirt to accommodate

  • everything that goes along with making a film of this size with this many people involved.

  • It's very much a mini city. It's amazing how they went home on Friday night in Wellington,

  • turn up to work here on Monday morning, and then everything's here, packed up in order

  • and looking good and working. It's okay. Rough day at the office today mom. So after 110

  • days in the studio, we finally make it ou into the sunshine. But I'll tell you what,

  • Hobbittown is looking fantastic. The arts department and the greens department have

  • been working for nearly two years. The grasses have grown, the flowers are out, and the plastic

  • ones have even bloomed. It's weird when you come back to a place you literally thought

  • you'd never see again. This is a great spot. To be standing there with Elijah dressed up

  • as Frodo, it was the nearest thing I think I'm ever going to come to a time machine.

  • This is actually the first time I'm stepping foot down into Hobbittown. I'll never forget

  • that feeling of coming to Hobbittown for the first time, so much time spent in this universe,

  • you know with these characters and I keep referencing the fact that I turned 19 when

  • I came to Hobbittown for the first time. 11 years ago. I'm 30 now. I don't know, there's

  • so many feeling of nostalgia and history. We'd been searching pretty much the whole

  • country for this rolling, green countryside. We were up here scouting around and found

  • this place called Buckland Road, and sure enough when we flew over it we found the round

  • tree, the hill, the lake - it was all meant to be. Of course, then it was a matter of

  • talking to the owners of the land, getting their permission to shoot here and build here.

  • Well it was a Saturday afternoon during a rugby game that he came and knocked on my

  • father's door, and he said they wanted to make a movie, and my father actually said,

  • "Lord of the what?" And I kicked him under the table quietly, but that's how it all started.

  • This time around, they built it for real. So before, all of these hobbit holes were

  • built using polystyrene. When the filming was finished, they tore it all down. Even

  • though it's been available for tours and for people to look at, we didn't have any of the

  • hobbit holes. Doing "The Hobbit" now, it gave us the ability to rebuild hobbit holes out

  • of permanent materials. Materials that won't deteriorate and that we can go around showing

  • people what's involved with making a movie behind the scenes. It's all, I mean that's

  • actual rock, stone, it's pretty amazing. Hobbiton's going to stay exactly as it is today, which

  • is fantastic. There's real wood, there's real stone, real bricks, and it's hopefully going

  • to be here for decades to come. It's a great gift, and as the minister of tourism, I'm

  • right with it - so well done. It's some prime real estate - hobbits. Hello, you guys having

  • a good day? Yeah. How're those feet treating you? They're alright. Are they? When you're

  • at Hobbiton you forget that you're on a film set. Seeing it like this kind of living model

  • village is just extraordinary, and you just totally believe this place exists. And that's

  • because it does. Maybe I've smoked a little bit too much of this now. It's an authentic

  • village. It's 100% 360 degree look-wherever-you-like little hobbit village. You can imagine just

  • being a hobbit in this environment, get up and have a cup of tea on the doorstep, listen

  • to the birds and the frogs, the children running around... go to the market and buy a big bottle

  • of beer and drink it - and loving it! You're not really running a film set, you're trying

  • to put yourself in the mindset of a hobbit, and figuring out well where you'd like your

  • house to be. There are 44 personalized hobbit holes, and each hobbit hole has a different

  • little detail depending on their location. That's kind of amazing the door actually open.

  • Hello? Hello? No one's home at the moment. They must be at the market. Welcome to the

  • set of "The Hobbit." So how did you get involved in this? My four daughter auditioned, and

  • they all missed out - and I got in. So, I wasn't a popular father at that point. You

  • guys are up for stealing, aren't you? Big, bad hobbits! Check this out. Oh yeah, I like

  • to get a nice combover. Is this going to be in the movie? We can cut that, it's fantastic,

  • we've got that. So we just finished our first week on location. I just wish I could move

  • into one of these hobbit holes. I mean, this would be an absolutely ideal place to live,

  • it really would. This is the sort of place I'd very happily retire to. In fact, I might

  • think about it tonight, or the next day. Good retiring here, that'd be quite nice. The end.

  • I hope you enjoyed the first part of our location block. The second part will be ready very

  • early in the new year. And in the meantime, we've just shot the last shot of "The Hobbit"

  • in 2011. So it only remains to do one last thing, which is to wish you all a Merry Christmas!

  • Welcome to the first blog of 2012. We're shooting part 2 of "The Hobbit" today. We're here in

  • lake town, but I can't show you anything. I can't show you the amazing set that's over

  • there, and the incredibly thing that's over there because you're not allowed to see that

  • until 2013. But what we can show you are the continuation of our location adventures, so

  • if you remember from our last exciting episode we were in Hobbiton. So let's pick up from

  • where we left off and travel around the rest of New Zealand. So we just finished our first

  • week on location. So it's goodbye to Hobitton and hello to our next spot. Here is the weather

  • in Pipui today. It has, of course, been raining. Welcome to the bluffs people. We've brought

  • the weather with us, which is great. We don't have the umbrellas in the movie, by the way,

  • just in case you're wondering. No because the colors clash. What's kind of weird is

  • that you're on the sets in the studio, and they look so real that you come out on location

  • and it almost looks fake. You just think, "this can't exist," it's just weird. It's

  • a trick. It's mind games. It's a very nice environment. Some nice stuff up in there,

  • just going to be a bit lumpy getting stuff around and building stuff on rocks and bits

  • and pieces, but it'll be nice. It's a good location. I'm just worried about the dinosaurs.

  • So here we are at the Turoa Ski Field, on the flanks of Mt. Ruapehu. This is the second

  • largest national park in the world. Very ancient vegetation, magnificent colors, magnificent

  • textures, but very fragile. And hence we've gone to exceptional lengths to make sure the

  • impact on the site is minimized. So it's about scaffolding, it's about elevated boardwalks

  • to keep people off the vegetation. We built the world's largest ramp as far as I'm concerned

  • to get down to the thing. When everybody sort of walked out to the edge this morning, we

  • sort of looked at it and jaws dropped, and we were like, "Wow, okay. So that's how we

  • get onto set today." So this is my favorite location. It's beautiful - there's a mountain,

  • there's a waterfall, there's a beautiful view across the valley there. It's one of those

  • sort of archetypal New Zealand locations where you think, "God, New Zealand has such amazing

  • landscapes." It's a bit sad when the grips are going faster than I am and they're carrying

  • heavy things. Andy Serkis jumped in the icy cold stream to chase the fish as Gollum about

  • 12 years ago - just over there. So welcome to the first day on location with 2nd unit.

  • I've spent quite a lot of the past few weeks in a chopper. Because a lot of our stuff was

  • arial coverage. We'd take off and choose our line and choose the way we were going to shoot

  • it and how we were going to reveal the landscapes. So we're using the space cam on all the arial

  • stuff on the show. This particular rig is set up for 3D. There's a chopper behind me,

  • isn't there? The bonuses of being on 2nd unit is that we do a lot of locations that are

  • too tricky or time consuming for main unit to go, so a lot of our locations were helicopter

  • only access. So we got very good at loading in and out of choppers. So you've got literally

  • 2 units who are now crisscrossing the country, both the north and south islands. About half

  • way through our location shoot, 1st and 2nd units met up at what happened to be exactly

  • halfway through the entire shoot - day 127, and we commemorated that with a hoodie, a

  • halfway hoodie. It's 127 days, and it's two films. Now I've got a 133 day "Lord of the

  • Rings" jumper that was for 3 films. So 133 days for 3 films, and 127 days for 2 films.

  • Easily explained. How? Well we're all ten years older, so we're going a little slower.

  • One of the challenges was showing P.J. what we'd been up to. So every day, I would then

  • do a kind of edit of the takes that we'd done and put them together and make some selects,

  • and that would be sent off to Pete. We are a long way from most of the infrastructure

  • that we know and love, so we've had to rely on satellite technology to do all of our connectivity.

  • These are the three dishes that we're setting up today to provide internet for the crew.

  • We're providing wireless and ethernet. We've also got a separate setup that's up at the

  • director's tent that's beaming in footage from second unit that basically takes the

  • feed that's coming in from the cameras, compresses it, sends it over the internet all the way

  • through, down to Pete's tent. So far, we've probably used about 6km of cable on the job.

  • I'm not sure where it's all gone, but we keep on ordering more of it. Strath Taieri, Central

  • Otago. So this is a location where you can literally shoot 360 degrees, every direction.

  • We've had some incredibly skies, what we call close encounter of the third kind skies. Warehouse

  • skies are a little boring. Because we've shot over 3 days, we'll probably replace them with

  • these cool skies. I'd love to do that, get some real mood into it. One of the days of

  • shooting at this location was actually up on the hill there, called the rock and pillar

  • range, if you just look over there. It's pretty much that distant ridge line between those

  • two rocks. So that's the rock and pillars, where we had to have ten helicopters carrying

  • crew, cast, and equipment up the mountain. This is Adam Brown's first helicopter ride.

  • Oh my gosh. Are you so excited? I'm well excited. You should be. And action. Amazing! So we're

  • picking up at the end of our location shooting here, and going to Queenstown. Here we are

  • at beautiful Queenstown. We're just at the base outside the Earnslaw Burn, which is the

  • most spectacular shooting location I think we've been to yet. We're shortly going to

  • do a rendition of "The Hills are Alive with the Sound of Music," starting with Mark over

  • there. See, he's getting into his Maria position, there he is. It's snow! Bare feet was a bad

  • choice. Now we've been to Paradise before. That's where we shot a few scenes of "The

  • Fellowship of the Ring" mainly, back in 1999 - Lothlorien Forest. Boromir's death. The

  • great thing about this job is you see beautiful, beautiful places like this. So you don't have

  • to feel sorry for our actors' leaving home for 7 1/2 weeks. We're very well looked after.

  • The catering on this movie has been sensational. The numbers we've been doing on location were

  • between 300 and 400, and then we were doing 570 to 580 because we had quite a few extras

  • there as well. We cook 100 at least kilos of meat each day. One of the guys pointed

  • out that we'd been through a ton of oranges already. It's Formal Friday today, so we're

  • dressed in suits - one of the only ways for the crew to know what day of the week it is.

  • Every morning, we crank out about 200 or 300 coffees. We're heading off to the hills to

  • look after a crew of about 100 people who are all being choppered into the mountains.

  • It being in the mountains, there's snow around. It's cold. So sometimes in formal dress it's

  • not practical, so as you can see here, Andrew has gone from a three piece to a four piece

  • with the addition of a nice, cozy puffer jacket - because you can't always look good. Sometimes

  • you have to be sensible. Sometimes you take for granted the scenery in the country where

  • you live, so to come out on the road was really amazing. Good morning. Thank you. I can't

  • believe how nice it is. We're the luckiest high-restricted people in the whole world.

  • I think it comes into high-restricted. New Zealand, looking at its spectacular best,

  • and a lot of really happy actors cavorting around in front of it. Braemer Station was

  • pretty difficult working conditions for the cast and the crew because the grounds were

  • uneven. This is a New Zealand native thorn bush, which is everywhere you ever want to

  • walk. You can't just parade through the rocks and the pebbles without looking and suddenly

  • realize that being out of doors in Middle Earth can be a difficult business, particularly

  • when there's a pack of orcs or wogs. Dances with wogs. Heavenly wogs. The boy who cried

  • wog. Aliens vs. wogs. I was a teenage wog. Enormous amount of running. Scene 88, I think,

  • is actually going to be a third film that will be coming out between the first and the

  • second. It's actually, for the most part easier working inside a studio. But, of course, you

  • know the studio doesn't have the incredible vistas, and that's what we were there for.

  • 8 km from the mount. Unbelievable. This is a glorious bridge over the glorious river

  • where we are shooting today. I think my favorite day on set unquestionably was floating down

  • the river in barrels. We're finally going to put our dwarves in barrels. Looks like

  • fun. I could do it myself if I wasn't busy doing other things. Today we're swinging over

  • the river. We've got some dwarves coming down in barrels. Keep going everybody. That's good.

  • That was way cool. And if they ever make that a ride at any of the Warner Bros. movie worlds

  • - lifetime pass please. While we were there, our location shooting came to a pretty dramatic

  • end because the police arrived and said they were about to issue a severe weather warning.

  • Okay, we need to shoot, please, because it's raining, so we need to get going. And I've

  • never seen a crew pack up their gear so quickly. So the very next day, everywhere where we

  • were standing, everywhere our equipment was, our cameras, our actors, the director, was

  • under flood water. It was incredibly dramatic. The rise in the river level was 20 or 30 feet.

  • And that's location. So that's the end of our location shooting, and we are about to

  • go into our last 100 days, what we're calling block 3, and I look forward to talking to

  • you again very very soon.

Hello, welcome to the first of our blogs on the making of "The Hobbit." It's amazing to

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