Posted on 03/14/2002 5:07:26 AM PST by HairOfTheDog
Maybe you'll be one of them rangers!
It's a Wednesday, so school is in session, and the theatre will no doubt have it playing on more than one screen. If the audience is a hassle, I can ask to be switched to the other screen room.
I am pretty sure the first day will have a lot of LOTR fans in attendance, so I'm hoping they will be as eager as I am to hear the movie in peace with little talking. I do expect a bit of whispering with die hard fans, comparing movie to book, etc - but I don't mind that as long as it isn't constant or loud. I really wanted to join a line party, but thought better of it when I think logically about seating, etc.
The Paso Fino breed fanciers claim you could set your champaine glass on their butts without spilling a drop! - It is the lack of rythm that makes it smooth. At any given time, three feet are on the ground and only one is up. Unlike a trot where all four feet are off the ground, coming down two at a time with a springing motion.
It's cruel to keep any animal if you cannot care for it correctly.
Now...if I win the Lotto.....
Either would be an improvement over two computer speakers. I'm thinking about purchasing better speakers. Maybe someday I'll get something that takes advantage of the DTS track.
Oscar Hopeful Serkis 'Towers' Over CGI Brethren
http://www.reuters.com/NEW YORK (Variety) - There was never any Oscar buzz for the performances of Jar Jar Binks or Dobby, but New Line is hoping that Gollum will be up for an acting Academy Award in March.
Andy Serkis is the British actor who performs the centerpiece role of Gollum in Peter Jackson's second installment of the "The Lord of the Rings" trilogy. Only you might not realize it, because his personage has been painted out and replaced with a CGI creation. Other CGI characters were purely figments of the imagination, like Jar Jar Binks and Dobby.
The 20 minutes of "Two Towers" footage shown recently by New Line indicates a breakthrough with Gollum, who looked as real as a blue-tinted, bent and gnarled creature could look. And Jackson went back and subsequently improved the character, which the media observed.
New Line will push Serkis for a supporting actor nomination. And the actor has just signed with the Gersh Agency, hoping that his cyber-work in "Two Towers" and next year's "Return of the King" finale will propel him into regular Hollywood film work.
"This all started with an offer to do three weeks of voiceover work as Gollum," said Serkis. "I remember thinking, a voiceover? Why can't I get offered a decent acting role in a major movie? I'm known for being chameleon-like as an actor, and I've played a lot of quirky, physical roles in Mike Leigh's movies. This didn't seem that involved."
Serkis soon learned from Jackson and his screenwriting-producing partner Fran Walsh that vocal skills would be only part of the Gollum job.
"Peter had the idea to do something unprecedented," Serkis said. "Even though Gollum would be computer-generated, Peter wanted all the emotion and the physicality to come from a single performance."
Instead of three weeks, Serkis worked the better part of the last year, logging more hours than any other actor in the "Rings" ensemble.
First, Serkis acted the scenes with Frodo (Elijah Wood) and Sam (Sean Astin) as they carried the ring toward Mordor. Serkis repeated the entire performance, clad in a skintight bodysuit, wired to capture his every move and transfer it to the computer. Serkis did the role yet again, both to supply Gollum's slithery rasp of a voice, and to transfer his facial expressions to every enunciation. He spent countless more hours with the 40 animators who refined Gollum. The performance is signature Serkis -- even though the actor was erased from every scene.
"In a way it's a bummer, but I honestly feel strongly that the essence of what I've done is up there. Much the way that John Rhys-Davies hardly looks like the dwarf Gimli after being shrunk and wearing heavy prosthetic makeup, I feel like I'm wearing CG prosthetics. There is a satisfaction in playing one of the great literary character creations, being able to play Gollum without being pinned down by him for the rest of my life. Some anonymity is the actor's greatest weapon."
I prefer to re-package 'food' in ziplock baggies. They're nice and quiet in the theater and slip nicely into my purse. ;)
But paying for stable space is even more expensive than the lessons!!!
I would guess that it would have to be a newer, more modern theatre to have that sort of amenity on hand.
Of all the characters and events I am looking forward to seeing, I would have to honestly admit that it is Gollum who most intrigues me.
My daughter took our dog to the movies, in her purse. It stayed quiet the whole movie (unlike alot of the audience, I guess) and nobody hardly knew she had it.
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