which
is the first in history ever to be filmed at one time-to work with Peter
Jackson, there were so many elements to the entirety of it all that just
freaked me out and made me so excited. Especially now, looking back, it's
such an honour to have been a part of it and to be a part of it. I think
the movie's so wonderful. We had high expectations. It freaked me out,
overwhelmed me. I think Peter has outdone himself and it's only gonna get
better-that's the great thing.
Your commitment to this film has kept you out of all those
teenage movies, hasn't it?
That was good to escape from all that s**t. It was a
blessing. I was getting away from it - I didn't have to read scripts, I
didn't have to do anything but focus on Lord Of The Rings. I
got to escape and go away to another world and, in doing that, make
incredible movies, so it was a blessing more than anything. It wasn't
something I really considered either. It was an opportunity that really
does not come around. It was a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. There was
no way I was going to pass that up. There wasn't anything that could stop
me from doing it. I didn't really give it much thought and I didn't really
care that that was the most important thing to me, being a part of it,
y'know?
Did you concern yourself with rumours on the internet
about the film?
I did actually. It was announced on Harry Knowles' site
and I'm a regular to Ain't It Cool News anyway. I went to the site
and it says in big letters, Elijah Wood Is Cast As Frodo, First Casting
Decision! so I'm like, 'All right!', so I read the talkbacks and it
was people lambasting it. They were just like, 'Oh my God, kill me now!
This is terrible! The first casting and it's going to be ruined!', so I
was like, 'Wow, such passion! God, I didn't even realise'. So there I got
my first taste of how passionate the fans were, but people tend to be
over-critical on Harry's site anyway. It didn't really bother me; it was
kind of a mixed thing anyway. But it did add to the pressure. I think when
I went to New Zealand it became very obvious to me that I had to really
fulfill not only my own vision but other people's visions as to what Frodo
should be. That tended to drift away once we started filming because I
really felt like I'd found the character and I was comfortable playing
that character. At this point I feel like I've done it and I've done the
best job that I could possibly do and if fans love it then I've done my
job over and above.
Did you ever go into a chat room and say, `What's wrong
with Elijah Wood?'
No, no, it didn't interest me enough. I thought it was
more funny than anything. I didn't try to dispute it, I just let them do
their thing and hopefully they'd come around.
What was your relationship with the book before getting
involved with the film?
I have a terribly uninteresting story associated with the
book, to be honest. I read The Hobbit when I was young and I
owned Lord Of The Rings for years without reading them. They sat on
my shelf and I guess I attribute that to laziness. I certainly knew of the
stories and was definitely familiar with it enough that I got really
excited when I heard that they were making films. But I didn't actually
pick them up until I got to New Zealand.
What kind of resource were they?
Some actors more than others would consult the book. I never really
did consult the book. I felt, like we were constantly ... surrounded ...
by all things Tolkien and Middle Earth and Lord Of The Rings
that I never felt like I was wont for more information or for a different
sort of guidance. I felt like once we kind of found Frodo, I felt
comfortable in his shoes and sort of moved on from there. Obviously there
were particular points that are quite critical movements in Frodo's
evolution that were paid more attention to than others. In those
particular circumstances we'd have a conversation or a long sort of pow-wow
about where we were going to take Frodo at that point, Peter being
involved, obviously. But I never really used the book. A lot of them did,
but I think everyone had their own perspective and their own kind of way
of taking their character on their journey.
What was it like working in those hobbit feet?
Oh believe me I got tired of those damn things after
awhile. They're great and wonderful and really define hobbits, I think.
You put the feet on and you certainly feel like a hobbit then. It also
meant that we'd lose about an hour and a half of sleep on those days,
which felt like every day. Five o'clock in the morning you stand up for an
hour while the person applies the feet. Then they fall off during the day
and they're reapplying them later in the day. There's no freedom with the
feet and they were constantly taking a beating. So, yeah, I got tired of
the feet, but they look great. They look wicked.
Was making this film like being a kid again?
Everybody has a bit of an evolution. No, in fact I felt
like this, for me personally in terms of a life experience making the
movie, I felt like I was really growing as an individual. It was the first
time I lived on my own for that length of time. I left home and went to
New Zealand to work with people I didn't know in a country I'd never been
to. It was a pivotal time in my life so, for that, I felt like it was a
real kind of growing experience. Then, the actual experience of making the
film and the character that I had to work with, I really had to take him
to places in some ways I've never been before, so that was also a
challenge and a real growth. So I think it was actually probably more an
evolution for me personally and filmically as I move into being an adult.
Watching the final result of the film, can you sit back
and get drawn in?
Yeah, I think so. There's so much in the movie that is new
for all of us, a lot of CG that we haven't seen. Rivendell wasn't exactly
there. We had massive sets that were incredible, but then there'd be a
blue screen set up for a background that wasn't there. So, seeing the
movie, there were tons of scenes where there were these expansive
beautiful vistas that were included later. There was so much new
information that I was probably more focused on all of that and the
entirety of the story than my actual character. I think I focused on my
character more than I normally do because of the fact that people are
saying constantly to me, 'Dude, you're the ring bearer, you bear this
responsibility'. I probably watched a little bit closer than normal, more
so the film. I just think it's amazing. I think the film's beautiful.
How was making three movies at once different than making
one?
In making the three movies at once as opposed to doing it
over a longer period of time, separating them was critical only because
it's one story and it really does take place over this kind of length in
time. We actually, in some ways, were taking this journey in real time. As
confused as the schedule was and as back and forth as we were, we were
kind of acting it out in a time comparable to that of the book. And
certainly the idea of doing three movies as opposed to one, there's really
no argument there. You have to do a movie per book because there's no way
to encapsulate the entirety of the story in one film. Obviously Bakshi and
the cartoon tried to do it. They only got to Helm's Deep. You really can't
do that. I know that that was one of the problems Peter had shopping it to
various studios cos a lot of people didn't have the guts to take it on and
to make that commitment. New Line was the only company that really made
that leap. I believe it was Bob Shaye, actually, at New Line, who
suggested the three. which is something Peter and everyone involved with
the movie wanted in the first place, but they'd kind of been talked down
to only two movies. So it was music to their ears when New Line said,
'Well look, why are you gonna do two - let's do three - it's three books!'
Luckily it all worked out. It leant itself to something I think that was
probably more genuine and accurate because of the fact that we were taking
this journey ourselves, so I think a lot of the things that come through
in the film, a lot of the themes, were actually played out in real life. I
think they really infused the film and the performances as well.
Can you give us an example of that infusion?
The friendship of the fellowship. We became very, very
close working on this film and we're still very close, like brothers. So,
the friendship of the fellowship that you see in the movie was a reality
and we very much are a real fellowship. That's just one of the many
parallels.
What was the key to you in shooting three films out of
sequence but maintaining Frodo's growth from film to film?
Man, it's first defining what he is initially and defining
what he is at the end of all things and the challenge then is to find the
moments that define him in that evolution. The moments that, for the
character, start to change him and there are very specific kinds of
moments throughout the journey
taking
on that responsibility of the ring and understanding what the ring does
and its role, because the ring, in the film and in the books, is kind of a
character in itself. Once you understand its role, you can then apply that
pressure to yourself and carry that through. It's just about defining
those moments where he's stripped away, slowly but surely.
The producers say they still have CG work and tweaking
on the other two films. Does that mean you are on-call for reshoots in the
coming years?
Yeah, it's really going to be dependent on schedules and
things like that. Obviously I'm loyal and I want to be there for
everything they need me for. That is a massive priority to me, but I also
have to think about other things as well. I'm assuming that, in some way,
if I am doing something else there will be negotiations and so on and so
forth as to how I can do both. But yeah, I went back twice last year, I'll
definitely be going back this year and I look forward to it. I don't want
to let this journey go, I don't want it to end. It's been such an
important part of my life and I've made some incredible friends and these
reshoots and pickups and things are a way for us to hold on to it and
eventually we're not going to need to go back. So it's a good thing for
us, but yeah, it does pose a logistical problem in terms of doing other
films.
Is the tattoo that you each got [of the number nine in
Elvish - for the nine members of the fellowship], another way of holding
on to the experience of the film?
Yeah, well the tattoo, man, the tattoo was an idea that we
had early on. It was something that really came together during the last
couple of weeks of filming just because we knew at that point that it had
been a truly profound moment in our lives and that the fellowship was
indeed a real fellowship and we needed to mark that in some way that would
be permanent. So we all went to a tattoo parlour and got it done and damn
did it hurt! It was a thing that we agreed that we wouldn't show, although
some people have and that isn't cool.
It was such a great experience but it was a year and a
half long. There must have been your down times as well.
Believe me, I could talk for hours about how great it was,
but it was bloody difficult as well.
Is there one moment that stands out where you were like,
`What am I doing?'
I think the most difficult moment that I can think of is
where my own psyche kind of faltered right before Christmas break within
the first couple of months of filming. It was just particularly difficult
at that time. We were doing six-day weeks and I was just starting to get
burned out energy-wise and standing in front of me, beyond reach, was
home. It was really the first time I'd gone home so I was kind of focusing
on that and not work. I just wanted an escape from it all. I got home and
I experienced that and it was great to go home and it was a relief to
relax. Then I came back and I never felt that again - I never felt
homesick because I loved my life there [in Wellington]. I think something
happened in that it was an evolution for me as a person. I think I
accepted a certain amount of newfound strength, a newfound focus. I
started to lose focus, I think, towards the first break. When I came back,
I somehow didn't allow myself to feel that way again. I grooved myself
into the process and accepted that fact that in my mind it wasn't going to
end. I was going to be there forever and that was fine. I think there was
a difference of focus. It was a part of my evolution as a person.
Were you able to move freely in New Zealand?
Yeah, it was easy to move around and not be bothered. We
were welcomed into society with open arms.
How did you find driving on the opposite side of the road?
I think there was only one time when I kind of f****d up
and I drove on the left. They drive on the right-hand side, but I ended up
on the wrong side of the road, actually twice. One towards the end when we
were doing pickups. It was terrible. I turned right and I turned into
their left-hand side and a car came right for me. I literally do not know
how I avoided an accident. I think it was reflexes and the other driver
must have had good reflexes and we just narrowly missed each other. It
actually felt like the car went through us. I don't know, it was divine
intervention or something. It was scary.
What did you love about your life in New Zealand?
I loved my house, I loved my car, I loved the
Matterhorn Bar -a great local bar we went to. They make some of the best
eggs benedict by the way. I just loved everything about it. I loved
Wellington, it was home. I loved going over to Peter's house and borrowing
DVD's. There were so many things that were so normal to me that became a
part of my life living there. I loved going to Arrow Street Videos and
picking up videos. It was its own life and I loved every minute of it. It
was hard and I rarely got sleep and I was more exhausted than I've ever
been in my life when I left, but everything about it - making the movie
and my time away from it - was incredible and indescribable.
JORDAN RIEFE/PLANET SYNDICATION