{"id":679,"date":"2009-12-01T15:43:00","date_gmt":"2009-12-01T15:43:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.icgmagazine.com\/wordpress\/?p=679"},"modified":"2014-06-05T17:53:57","modified_gmt":"2014-06-05T17:53:57","slug":"exposure-peter-jackson","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.icgmagazine.com\/web\/exposure-peter-jackson\/","title":{"rendered":"Peter Jackson \u2013 The Lovely Bones"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Between his earliest low-budget films and later studio-sponsored efforts, New Zealand-born filmmaker Peter Jackson has blended inventive visual effects (sometimes hilariously over-the-top in nature) and photographic sleight of hand to portray apparitions, both ghastly and ghostly. These treatments have varied greatly down through the years: <em>Bad Taste<\/em>, <em>Meet the Feebles<\/em> and <em>Braindead<\/em> show grotesque horrors through a darkly-comedic glass and a \u201chome movie\u201d approach to filmmaking that is utterly unique. <em>Heavenly Creatures<\/em>, by contrast, captured the fantasies of teenaged girls in a delicate, even artful approach that was both giddy and ethereal. Jackson\u2019s acclaimed <em>The Lord of the Rings<\/em> trilogy, along with <em>King Kong<\/em> (all shot by Andrew Lesnie, ACS, ASC), boldly reaffirmed his ability and inclination to depict fantastic realms within a deeply felt drama, human or otherwise. With his new adaptation of the Alice Sebold novel, <em>The Lovely Bones<\/em>, Jackson explores a much different \u201cmiddle earth\u201d than any J.R.R. Tolkien imagined; a Pennsylvania suburb in 1973, where the ghastly takes the form of a serial killer of young girls, and the ghostly the spirit of his most recent victim trapped between life and what lies beyond.<br \/>\n<!--more--><br \/>\n<strong>ICG: Originally, <em>The Lovely Bones<\/em> was scheduled for release earlier in the year, but then it was moved back to the holiday season. Did that allow you to do additional work on the film?<\/strong> Jackson: When the studio saw our first assembly late last year, they got very excited and wanted to hold back from March until December, for awards season. We agreed to that if they\u2019d let us work on it some more. That provided a luxury I\u2019ve never had previously \u2013 the movie went on the shelf for a few months. Usually during post, you\u2019re rushed and become very jaded when viewing the film, but seeing it in a cinema with fresh eyes caused all sorts of things to jump out at us, so we did some recutting, which was all time very well spent.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\nEarly glimpses of the film suggest a kind of less-is-more approach to visual effects, perhaps more akin to <em>Heavenly Creatures<\/em> than your recent films. Would this methodology have emerged as a reaction to some of the recent CG-overkill pictures?<\/strong> I don\u2019t really find there\u2019s much difference in approach to storytelling, outside of the obvious cosmetic ones. My process of shooting the film remains the same, regardless of the technology. Decisions made while shooting about what lens to use and the kinds of lighting are all about telling a story, regardless of whether it is <em>Lord of the Rings<\/em> or <em>King Kong<\/em> or <em>The Lovely Bones<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p><strong>You made a short film (<em>Crossing the Line<\/em>) using the RED camera (co-directed with Neill Blomkamp, director of <em>District 9<\/em>.) RED is also employed here, but selectively, not for the whole feature. Was this a matter of some discussion for you and cinematographer Andrew Lesnie?<\/strong> We used film for the most part, and this was because when shooting began, the RED camera was still in prototype stage. It didn\u2019t yet have slow motion, which was something needed on <em>The Lovely Bones<\/em>. By the time we\u2019d finished, these issues were mostly solved &#8211; so for me today, it would have been a different call &#8211; but during our shoot it was in flux. Andrew and I had in fact considered digital as an approach for <em>King Kong<\/em>. We\u2019d gone through comparisons and testing of the various options before settling back on film, since I just wasn\u2019t a fan of any of those digital camera systems. But I like the RED look; the aesthetic is not particularly electronic looking, instead it seems rather painterly to me. It is not quite film, but still nice.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Films such as <em>Somewhere in Time<\/em> have visually differentiated eras by going from Kodak for modern-day to Fuji stock for period scenes. Was the idea here to shoot the real world on film and the afterlife sequences digitally?<\/strong> We shot a lot of Susie\u2019s world on the RED, but there was 35 mm there as well. I find the switching-stock approach a bit gimmicky; these days, you can now create a different look in the DI. Having the control in post is definitely preferable in my eyes. We were able to extensively manipulate footage shot with a little Iconix (Studio) 2K. This is the camera you put on a pole to get a shot from inside a lion\u2019s mouth, because it is small enough that you just poke it in there, which wouldn\u2019t be possible with a 35 mm camera. I bought one early on for experimentation, expecting the imagery would look pretty horrible and that I\u2019d have to settle for 35 mm safety takes that weren\u2019t as interesting visually. Instead, after playing with the image in post, we found intercutting between 35 mm and the Iconix presented no issue, so this tiny thing with its $1,500 plastic lens is featured in 50 or 60 shots in extremely tight spaces!<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\nWere there other experimental approaches you investigated during prep?<\/strong> I did some previs myself on a Handycam. I shot script scenes on makeshift sets with New Zealand actors. Andrew shot some stuff with me, just to try out various styles. It was kind of home movie style, but cut together as HD footage.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\nHow did you go about visualizing Susie\u2019s afterlife world? Was Weta Digital involved in substantial previs?<\/strong> Weta didn\u2019t do much in the way of digital previs, but they created lots of conceptual art with an eye toward coming up with a look for that environment Susie calls \u2018the in-between.\u2019 It isn\u2019t Earth but it\u2019s not heaven either, so that left a lot of room for development. One thing I did know was that it should include some wild, zany, pop culture visions that came from the mind of a teen in 1973.<\/p>\n<p><strong>So this wasn\u2019t a matter of deriving an approach from classical paintings?<\/strong> We referenced <em>The Brady Bunch<\/em>! Really, we didn\u2019t do anything arty or terribly surreal in that <em>What Dreams May Come<\/em> fashion. We did have a lot of fun with it, though, which I thought was important, since there has to be a sense of adventure and excitement or else it could become a very grim picture.<\/p>\n<p><strong>I\u2019d think that would be nearly unavoidable, given the source novel.<\/strong> The in-between is not where she is <em>supposed<\/em> to be; Susie is supposed to move on. But her killer has control over her, even here, because he has hidden her body, so she becomes even more his victim and loses a sense of who she is. That\u2019s pretty dark material. At one point she says she was a girl with her whole life in front of her, but now she is only a victim, a statistic. During his attack, she fled from her body in terror. So now she has to find the body and steer people to its location in order to solve this mystery and resolve her situation.\u00a0 When she orients herself toward this goal, it becomes something of a thriller.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Building up that cinematic aspect, away from the novel\u2019s more internalized approach, sounds like a tough nut to crack in adaptation.<\/strong> It was a challenge, but mostly because we wanted to avoid being too heavy or weighed down with messages, it had to be fun \u2013 with a creepy edge. It was very important to me this be accessible to younger audience members, so PG-13 was what we always had in mind. We have a 12-year-old daughter and wanted to make something she\u2019d be able to see. And we hoped she could relate to the character and situation, since life after death is something we all think about. The idea was to make a movie that could accommodate everybody\u2019s spiritual beliefs, but without getting into any particular religious aspect.<\/p>\n<p><strong>With <em>District 9<\/em> and the upcoming version of <em>The Hobbit<\/em> (to be directed by Guillermo del Toro), you\u2019ve been wearing the hat of producer for other filmmakers.<\/strong> We had wanted to do <em>Halo<\/em> with Neill Blomkamp, but when that didn\u2019t happen due to studio issues, we decided to expand Neill\u2019s short <em>Alive in Joburg<\/em>, which we knew would make for an excellent film. We don\u2019t have any other projects like that in development at the moment and we\u2019re not chasing material; I don\u2019t have a quota of films to be made, as it is strictly a matter of finding worthy projects with the right people attached.<\/p>\n<p><strong>And the qualities that you find most compelling in a project are \u2026?<\/strong> Ideas are the important thing. If the idea is great, it is going to translate. But that notion seems to have escaped a lot of people in the film industry at the moment. There are fewer solid and exciting concepts being made into films these days, with more projects being sequels or derived from comic books. Hollywood seems to think it can\u2019t afford to develop anything new right now, because everyone, in trying to reduce risk, targets identifiable franchises in the hope enough people will see it based on name recognition. I keep hoping we\u2019ll get through this so original work can come back into vogue, but what I find a little bit depressing is that some of the real awful stuff makes a zillion dollars, which leads to another year or two of the same! It still just amazes me how much money those kinds of things can make after the marketing machine has set to work with $60 million to spend.<\/p>\n<p><strong>But with smaller projects, marketing could be inexpensive and focused, niche-oriented, to reach out directly for those who want to see challenging storylines. And technical limitations aren\u2019t what they once were for zero-budget shoots.<\/strong> I agree. The amateur or low-budget feature is something anybody can make with reasonably good quality due to the technology, so it doesn\u2019t matter about the camera. You don\u2019t even need to shoot on the RED &#8211; 1080p HD cameras are enough, and from there cut it on iMovie or Final Cut. I\u2019m hopeful that is where the next exciting trend is going to be. Perhaps as we are talking, the seeds of that ultra-low-budget film industry are being sown. That might bloom and blossom, and if so, $30,000 or $40,000-dollar feature films with really interesting content could be what turns things around. It <em>could<\/em> happen; I certainly hope to see it.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Between his earliest low-budget films and later studio-sponsored efforts, New Zealand-born filmmaker Peter Jackson has blended inventive visual effects (sometimes hilariously over-the-top in nature) and photographic sleight of hand to portray apparitions, both ghastly and ghostly. These treatments have varied greatly down through the years: Bad Taste, Meet the Feebles and Braindead show grotesque horrors through a darkly-comedic glass and a \u201chome movie\u201d approach to filmmaking that is utterly unique. Heavenly Creatures, by contrast, captured the fantasies of teenaged girls [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":3670,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"om_disable_all_campaigns":false,"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[6],"tags":[29,185,183,184],"class_list":["post-679","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-exposure","tag-cinematography","tag-lord-of-the-rings-director","tag-peter-jackson","tag-the-lovely-bones"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v24.4 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Peter Jackson \u2013 The Lovely Bones - ICG Magazine<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.icgmagazine.com\/web\/exposure-peter-jackson\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Peter Jackson \u2013 The Lovely Bones - ICG Magazine\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Between his earliest low-budget films and later studio-sponsored efforts, New Zealand-born filmmaker Peter Jackson has blended inventive visual effects (sometimes hilariously over-the-top in nature) and photographic sleight of hand to portray apparitions, both ghastly and ghostly. 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