nzherald.co.nz

Rodney Hide: Sir Peter's film means Kiwis can all think big

By Rodney Hide
5:30 AM Sunday Dec 2, 2012
Sir Peter Jackson's blockbusters are significant milestones for this country. Photo / Getty Images

Sir Peter Jackson's blockbusters are significant milestones for this country. Photo / Getty Images

Three cheers for Sir Peter Jackson. He's done it again. Another blockbuster movie. Made right here in New Zealand.

Sir Peter proves anything is possible. I would never have believed that a Kiwi down in New Zealand could make blockbuster movies. Not just blockbuster movies but movies that bust the Hollywood block.

Sir Peter's Lord of the Rings trilogy was the biggest movie project ever undertaken. The trilogy grossed $3 billion at the box office. It won 17 Academy awards. The final in the series, Return of the King, won 11 Oscars, tying it with Ben Hur and Titanic for the most Academy Awards ever.

The Hobbit is even bigger. And, again, Sir Peter has delivered.

I was lucky enough to attend the premiere of The Unexpected Journey. The crowd and the enthusiasm for the movie was incredible. It wasn't just hype. The stars were genuinely overcome by their reception. And their warmth for New Zealand, and for working with Sir Peter, was real. It was a tremendous feeling to be there.

James Cameron, director of Avatar and Titanic, attended. He said the The Hobbit sets a new movie-making standard.

He also had this to say about Sir Peter, elevating the movie industry in New Zealand to a global level: "It's really only happened a couple of times before, in Los Angeles and maybe London. It's the first time it's been done by a single film-maker."

Sir Peter's achievement and success is tremendous for the movie industry in New Zealand and for jobs and for the economy. It's a new development, too, in the very business that New Zealanders do. It's creative, artistic and entertaining.

It's a long way away from how we have always thought about our economy. It's not meat, wool and dairy built on our good soils and wonderful climate. This business comes entirely from the minds of talented men and women who don't feed and clothe their customers but entertain them.

The Hobbit provides us with a new way of thinking about what we do.

It shows we needn't be limited by physical space and the growing season. That our market is not confined by belly size and people's capacity to wear wool. There's no limit to the creative ability of the human mind. And there's no end to our appetite for entertainment and for fun. Sir Peter Jackson's movies mean more even than that.

It's easy for us to have an inferiority complex. Ours is a small country a long way from the rest of the world. We can easily believe we can't do as well as the rest of the world. The rest of the world seems richer, bigger and closer to the action.

But Sir Peter proves that wrong. He entered one of the biggest, toughest industries in the world and did it bigger and better than anyone else.

We no longer suffer the tyranny of distance. And, yes, ours is a small population, but that no longer hampers us because now the entire world is only a nanosecond away.

Indeed our smallness, and distance, can play to our advantage as the enthusiasm and support for the Hobbit movies show. Where else would an entire country get behind the stars and crew of a film?

Oh, The Hobbit has had its share of knockers - political activists, unionists, Peta, the disgruntled and the envious. Our biggest impediment may be the tall-poppy syndrome. But we shouldn't let nagging ninnies blind us to achievement and opportunity.

The Hobbit films were made here. In New Zealand. It was very much touch and go that they would be. Plans were well advanced for them to be made in Britain. Imagine how that would now feel? On the night it would be up there with losing the World Cup. For our future it would be a far greater loss than any rugby game.

So, three cheers for Sir Peter Jackson for showing us what's possible. And inspiring us to be the very best. Three cheers, too, for Prime Minister John Key. He took the political risk to make sure The Hobbit stayed in New Zealand.

We can achieve. And some of us can achieve better than the best.

By Rodney Hide

- Herald on Sunday

Ennill (Warkworth) | 11:55AM Sunday, 02 Dec 2012
Yes, Kiwis can achieve anything.

With enough money or a big enough corporate behind them, they can even buy the law of the land because John Key will take the political rick and sell us all out for a few bucks. He even wants to sell our own assets to us, even though we own them anyway.

I am sure that The Hobbit is an amazing movie, Lord of the Rings certainly was. I won't watch it though, because I have ethical standards that as a proud kiwi I will insist on maintaining, even when someone like John Key is willing to sell his own morals off.

Well done to Peter Jackson, he has achieved a lot in his chosen career from humble beginnings like Bad Taste. Shame he insisted on bringing down New Zealand to achieve what he has by blackmailing us into an unwanted law change. Still makes great movies though.
Deja (Christchurch) | 11:56AM Sunday, 02 Dec 2012
Mr Hide understands that the (paying) world has limited need for food, but has seemingly unlimited need for storytellers. And what a story he has, tales of greatness and conquest, destroying insecurities and imbibing in the elixir of material success!

But as with so many tales, there is the cautionary to the audience. In this instance Hide's tale teaches us not to confuse vanquishing insecurity with destroying humility, of not forsaking the tending our fields to put food on our tables, instead of chasing ephemeral riches of electronic dreams.

Above all, as with so many other stories, it once again points to the caution of not following a man who would make himself a king or his country a kingdom. Within the fabric of all societies there always exists at least one who weaves the tales that would bind the souls of men to teller of tales instead of to the truth. These demagogues often use intoxicating language, promising their listeners glory and riches. They have a story to tell, but the power they wield will always be determined by the audiences willingness to listen - and believe.
Gandalf (St Heliers) | 11:56AM Sunday, 02 Dec 2012
The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings are clearly good movies and show that NZ is versatile, however they were made on the basis of tax breaks and incentives, the very thing Rodney Hide and his Act Party opposes. Im not sure hes in any position to comment.
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