February 2012
6 tags
Feb 27th
157 notes
1 tag
Feb 26th
33 notes
4 tags
Feb 26th
166 notes
2 tags
Feb 26th
179 notes
4 tags
Feb 26th
107 notes
1 tag
Feb 26th
61 notes
4 tags
Feb 26th
167 notes
1 tag
Feb 26th
50 notes
4 tags
Feb 25th
478 notes
1 tag
Feb 25th
29 notes
6 tags
Feb 25th
117 notes
1 tag
Feb 25th
67 notes
4 tags
Feb 25th
210 notes
6 tags
Feb 25th
150 notes
3 tags
Feb 24th
138 notes
1 tag
Feb 24th
62 notes
3 tags
Feb 24th
337 notes
5 tags
Feb 24th
89 notes
9 tags
Feb 24th
47 notes
5 tags
Feb 24th
465 notes
3 tags
Feb 24th
544 notes
7 tags
Feb 23rd
53 notes
8 tags
Feb 23rd
897 notes
7 tags
Feb 23rd
109 notes
3 tags
Feb 23rd
152 notes
5 tags
Tweaked How The Posts Appear On The Blog!
Hello Friends & Followers! I was just looking through the Blog and I realized that the Photo-Sets were not coming up as I would like them to, so I made some adjustments. I really like how all the posts look now and it results in a more sleeker, accessible Blog.  As always, your feedback, comments, submissions, fan-mail, and even criticisms are always welcomed and encouraged! Hope you...
Feb 23rd
7 notes
2 tags
Feb 23rd
99 notes
5 tags
Feb 23rd
444 notes
2 tags
Feb 23rd
151 notes
4 tags
Feb 22nd
857 notes
1 tag
Feb 22nd
1,564 notes
4 tags
Feb 22nd
420 notes
3 tags
Feb 22nd
175 notes
3 tags
Feb 22nd
770 notes
1 tag
Feb 22nd
47 notes
3 tags
Feb 22nd
311 notes
3 tags
Feb 21st
47 notes
4 tags
Feb 21st
5,184 notes
4 tags
Feb 21st
36 notes
4 tags
Feb 21st
114 notes
10 tags
The Night Lord of the Rings Swept The Board at the...
Jackson: We always knew Return Of The King was the strongest film. It has those powerful emotional scenes.
Dominic Monaghan: We were all buzzing off the fact that we were sat really close to Prince. He was in the row ahead of us. And Angelina Jolie walked past me and I said to Sean (Astin), “Oh my God, she’s beautiful...” And Sean went, “Go talk to her...” I was like, “No! What, are you, insane?”
Elijah Wood: I met Audrey Tautou that night. We carried on a conversation. She didn’t understand a word of it!
Jackson: There were moments of absolute joy when the crew were winning, it was amazing. But it’s excruciating because Best Director and Best Film are the last awards. It takes a hell of a long time to get to those.
Monaghan: People called it boring. Fuck that, we won 14 Oscars! Alright, 11. But I won a few more: Best Suit, Best Haircut, that was me. I remember being on the red carpet and some fan lady giving us a bunch of multi-coloured feather boas. And we all put them on. Someone’s in a yellow one, someone’s in a pink one…
Billy Boyd: One thing I remember, and I hope Sean doesn’t mind me saying this... It was the night we had sex... No, no. Sean has the most connection to Hollywood and he has a different take on things. And Sean’s face, when we went up on that stage was the most real... Such a mix of emotions to be on the Oscar stage. It was amazing to watch. He was so proud, yet freaked out by it.
Sean Astin: I can’t remember all the details, but ideas and emotions. It felt like immortality, like no matter what happens with the rest of my life, this moment has validated something that I’ve felt my whole life I needed to accomplish or be part of. When Spielberg came and talked to us, oh my God! He said, “You guys have done what America has wanted for years — fantasy has been recognized in this critical way.”
Andy Serkis: That was a pretty extraordinary night. I was with [my wife] Lorraine, I remember a haka being performed at the Four Seasons Hotel and it was really emotional.
Orlando Bloom: Tragically, I was not there. I was in Morocco making Kingdom Of Heaven, and I remember watching the ceremony from Ouarzazate. It was a crazy time difference. I remember staying up until the wee small hours to watch the events unfold, and there was a lot of frantic texting and messaging and rejoicing. At least I watched it live, so I was with them on some sort of spiritual level.
Bernard Hill: I thought it was ridiculous that Return Of The King won everything and the rest got nothing. It’s nonsense that it won for the whole trilogy. The first film is the first film! They hadn’t seen the other two! I wasn’t at the Oscars. Only certain people were allowed to go. Viggo went, I think. I sat at home and watched it. Or was I in LA? I was there sometime beforehand. I was there for something in a marquee. The Empire Awards were good though!
Viggo Mortensen: I watched the entire Oscar ceremony with friends and family. This was the first time I’d watched the ceremony since the early days of my career as an actor. I had long before become disenchanted with what I felt was the pointlessly competitive nature of prize awarding, the glaring omissions of creatively significant work. Although I still feel that the award ceremony is in some ways little more than a popularity contest geared to help a select group of star actors and directors — as well as television and movie executives — make a lot of money, I was quite moved to see so much praise and goodwill for The Return Of The King.
Jackson: There is a weird feeling just as they open the envelope that you hope your name isn’t going to be read out. Then when it is, it’s like one of those weird sound-effects moments when all of a sudden all of the sound seems to be a million miles away. You can’t think of anything but hoping you are not going to trip over.
Wood: It was particularly wonderful to see Peter Jackson up there for Best Director. That was the one we felt was the most profound and we wanted most to win. It’s him, it’s his vision, it took thousands of artists and passion and love to make it come together, but it was his vision we were all following.
Steven Spielberg: I knew of Peter, certainly. My earliest protégé, Robert Zemeckis, produced The Frighteners but I never had the chance to meet Peter until the Kodak Theatre where I reached out and handed him the Academy Award for Best Picture.
Mortensen: The clean sweep seemed to recognise the entirety of the journey that so many millions had shared with us. As much as I do not like other artists to lose or be made to feel that they are losers, I was glad that our team had won all of those trophies that night.
Denise Robert (on stage after receiving the Best Foreign Language Film Oscar for producing The Barbarian Invasions): We’re so thankful that The Lord Of The Rings did not qualify in this category.
Serkis: It had been such a phenomenon that it kind of felt it would be unjust if it hadn’t gone our way, because of the sheer size and beauty of the entire thing.
Richard Taylor: It was fantastic to be invited to their show. Back home, all of Weta were down at the pub going barmy. ‘Well-oiled’
Weta team member (at the Chicago Sports Café, Wellington, Oscar morning, 2004): There is justice in the world!
Billy Crystal (Oscar host, during the ceremony): It’s now official. There is no-one left to thank in New Zealand.
Jackson: I can’t believe how the night went; it was embarrassing... A clean sweep.
Feb 21st
483 notes
1 tag
Feb 21st
25 notes
3 tags
Feb 21st
141 notes
1 tag
Feb 21st
100 notes
6 tags
Feb 20th
531 notes
1 tag
Feb 20th
77 notes
3 tags
Feb 20th
113 notes
5 tags
Feb 20th
139 notes
5 tags
Anonymous asked: So I happened to stumble across this tumblr, and it really renewed my love for anything and everything Lord of the Rings! Because of you I have read all of the books again (including the Hobbit). I have now decided that when I get a horse I will name him Pippin and call him Pip. Also his show name will be Thorin of Oakenshield. Thank you for restoring my love for Lord of the Rings!
Feb 20th
8 notes
3 tags
Feb 20th
479 notes