|
 
|
Could B.C. be the new Middle Earth for next Lord of the Rings movie?
We've got forbidding forests and majestic mountains. There are mighty rivers galore, as well as sweeping plains and quaint country villages where humble folk work the land.
We've got more bears and wolves than anywhere else in the world, plus foggy marshes, towering waterfalls and just about every other natural phenomenon with the exceptions, perhaps, of goblin-filled caves and cliff-dwelling dragons that novelist J.R.R. Tolkien or filmmaker Peter Jackson could have ever imagined.
So could British Columbia become the new Middle Earth?
Canada has been identified as one of five nations angling to become the new setting for the blockbuster Lord of the Rings film franchise.
The once-unthinkable opportunity has emerged after a bitter labour dispute flared last week between actors' unions and the producers behind a planned two-part prequel based on Tolkien's The Hobbit, leading to threats this week of shooting the films outside of New Zealand.
The LOTR series has become so crucial to New Zealand's international image, economy and tourist trade that the country's prime minister, John Key, has personally offered to mediate negotiations between union leaders and Jackson's production team.
But with the controversy still at full boil and the future of the mega-budget project in doubt in New Zealand, vulturous rivals — including Australia, Scotland, Ireland and the U.S. — have joined Canada in a feeding frenzy to host the filming of the movies, Hobbit co-writer and co-producer Philippa Boyens told New Zealand Radio on Monday.
"The dispute over job security and working conditions, in which New Zealand film workers have been backed by actors' unions in Canada, Australia and elsewhere, has thrown doubt on how stable our industry is in terms of industrial relations," Boyens said. "That is what is being put in jeopardy, not whether the production goes forward, but whether it's made here."
She also noted that the film-promotion agencies from other countries that are now contending for to be Middle Earth are dangling lucrative incentive packages in front of Hobbit filmmakers that could save them tens of millions of dollars in production costs.
"Warner Brothers' studios are running the numbers on five to six different locations," Boyens warned the unions. "That's very real and that has put at risk the livelihoods of countless thousands of New Zealand industry workers."
An official with Telefilm Canada, the federal body that promotes moviemaking in this country, told Postmedia News on Tuesday that the agency has not been in discussion with The Hobbit's filmmakers.
But she confirmed that provincial film agencies can and will directly approach foreign producers to tout the merits of moviemaking in Manitoba, for example, or here in B.C.
Telefilm itself trumpets Canada's spectacular and remarkably nuanced geography and climate in its online bid to lure out-of-country filmmakers to shoot movies here.
And provincial agencies, as well as various city and regional film-development bureaus, are similarly marketing the physical attributes of their slice of Canada's geography.
"Nova Scotia is a place where stories come to life," president Ann MacKenzie boasts in an introductory video on Film Nova Scotia's website. "Located on the east coast of Canada, our province has a diverse landscape that can fill in for anywhere or look like no place else on Earth."
She also highlights the tax breaks offered to film producers who choose Halifax over Hollywood.
A quick reading of The Hobbit does yield plenty of descriptive passages showing Tolkien's imagination fired by Canada-like landscapes. |
|