Archive for March, 2004

Rhythm and Hues Bringing Narnia F/X to Life

Monday, March 29th, 2004

Rhythm & Hues has landed the role as lead special effects studio on Walt Disney Studios and Walden Media fantasy epic The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, which Disney will distribute late next year.

Variety reports that R&H is expected to create more than 700 shots for the film, which will start lensing this summer in New Zealand, with “Shrek” series director Andrew Adamson from a script by Ann Peacock.

The effects studio has built a name for itself in creating digital characters, most recently for such films as Fox’s Daredevil, Warner Bros.’ Scooby-Doo and its sequel and Universal’s Dr. Seuss’ The Cat in the Hat. Its work will next be seen in Fox’s upcoming Garfield and Universal’s The Chronicles of Riddick.

For “The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe,” R&H will create matte paintings, as well as bring to life a cast of creatures from the C.S. Lewis children’s classic as photo-realistic computer-generated characters, including Aslan, a talking lion.

Has Peter been Cast?

Tuesday, March 23rd, 2004

DarkHorizons is reporting today that unknown actor Christopher Anderson-Peters (’The Captives’) is rumoured to play the oldest of the four kids in “The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe (that’d be Peter). IMDb.com doesn’t seem to have a listing for the actor or the film, so anyone who has some info on this fellow; we’d love to hear it!

LWW’s Shooting Title has changed!

Tuesday, March 16th, 2004

The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe’s shooting title appears to have changed from “The Hundred Year Winter.”

The title that will appear on crew gear and all over the set is now Paravel.

Paravel is taken from the name of the castle in Narnia, Cair Paravel, and is fitting for the shooting title for this film.

LWW Wallpapers!

Saturday, March 13th, 2004


We’ve just created some great new wallpapers based on the Newspaper ad for The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. These are courtesy of Buena Vista Pictures, who sent us the Advertisement.

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Nicole Kidman NOT White Witch

Thursday, March 11th, 2004

Walden Media issued a statement denying rumours that Kidman was involved.

“It’s a project that we’re all very excited about, but unfortunately this is just not true. Hopefully we’ll have some exciting news soon,” company spokeswoman Alison Lehrer said.

At 178cm tall, some pundits believe the pale, imposing Kidman, 36, would be perfect for the role of the White Witch, who in the book puts a spell on Narnia so that it is always winter and never Christmas.

Lehrer said filming of the multimillion dollar movie would begin this year in New Zealand and the Czech Republic.

Kidman to Play White Witch: Official?

Monday, March 8th, 2004

LOTR and fantasy fans everywhere who eagerly await the movie version of CS Lewis’ classic The Lion The Witch And The Wardrobe have one more reason to cheer. Not only is the project in pre-production with shooting scheduled to begin this July, but studio bosses at Disney have also signed Nicole Kidman to play the white witch.

IMDB.com reports that Kidman’s children Isabella and Connor, convinced Mom to sign the deal, stating “Nicole’s kids don’t pay great attention to her career – she’s just mom to them. But when she mentioned she had been asked to star in the movie they went wild. They even asked for jobs as extras.”

The site also reports that Kidman made a secret trip to New Zealand last week to check out locations and meet the crew. Expect the Narnia craze to get wilder in coming weeks as more details are released.

City that inspired Narnia fantasy

Friday, March 5th, 2004

With work under way on a film of CS Lewis’ The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe, BBC News Online’s Greg McKevitt investigates the roots of its Belfast-born author and the Northern Ireland settings that fired his boyhood imagination.

C.S. Lewis StatueA statue was unveiled in Belfast in 1998, the centenary of Lewis’ birth.

Ever since the Lord of the Rings trilogy came to the cinemas, New Zealand’s spectacular scenery has been associated with the Oscar-winning recreation of Middle Earth imagined by the books’ author JRR Tolkien.

Hoping to repeat this success, the Disney company has announced it is backing a movie of CS Lewis’ most famous tale.

The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe describes a war in a frozen fantasy land between the forces of darkness, led by the White Witch, and the forces of good, led by the lion Aslan.

With its fantasy setting and cross-generational appeal, Walt Disney executive Dick Cook obviously had the Tolkien adaptations in mind when he said it had “the potential to be just the start of an extraordinary series”.

Although it will be filmed in New Zealand, many believe the imaginary world of Narnia was inspired by Lewis’ childhood in east Belfast.

The author left for boarding school in England in his early teens after his mother died, and spent much of his adult life as an academic in Oxford, depicted by Sir Anthony Hopkins in the 1993 biopic Shadowlands.

However, Northern Ireland always remained in his heart, and he would return for annual holidays.

In his autobiography, Surprised by Joy, Lewis wrote: “Heaven is Oxford lifted and placed in the middle of the County Down.”

When he was seven-years-old, his family moved to Little Lea, a detached Edwardian home which still stands on Circular Road in east Belfast, privately-owned and marked only by a commemorative blue plaque.

CS Lewis’ boyhood home, Little Lea, which sparked his imagination.

Tony Wilson, Chairman of the CS Lewis Association of Ireland, said this was the home of the wardrobe where the author would hide and dream up his make-believe worlds.

“I’m sure this set off the idea in the book of opening the wardrobe and the young boy getting inside,” he said.

“Once you shut yourself inside a wardrobe, you can imagine anything.”

Lewis wrote in his autobiography that he lived “entirely in (his) imagination” during his time there.
“I am a product of long corridors, empty sunlit rooms, upstair indoor silences, attics explored in solitude, distant noises of gurgling cisterns and pipes and the noise of wind under the tiles. Also of endless books.”

Mr Wilson said some believed that Lewis got the inspiration for Narnia’s topography from the view near Stormont of the distant Mourne mountains and Strangford Lough in County Down.
But what about the lion?

The author’s grandfather was a minister about a mile down the road at St Mark’s Church in the city.

At the old rectory, an ornate handle in the shape of a lion’s head can be found on the door, at about head-height for a child aged five or six.

The door knocker which some say inspired the character Aslan.

It’s not clear whether this was the direct inspiration, as the character of Aslan the lion was intended as a metaphor for the crucifixion and resurrection of Christ.

Tolkien even had an indirect influence on Lewis’ Christianity.

The two men were both lecturers at Oxford and they were close friends who shared an interest in medieval history and mythology, according to Mr Wilson.

“While Tolkien was writing the Lord of the Rings, he would meet Lewis and a number of other lecturers at a private room in an Oxford pub,” he said.

As a devout Catholic, Tolkien had an indirect effect on Lewis’ eventual conversion from atheism to Christianity, as the pair would have long conversations about religion and theology.

David Bleakley, author of the book CS Lewis: At Home in Ireland, said the two men were also fascinated by children’s imaginations.

“Lewis had great faith in the common sense and innate decency of children,” he said.

Mr Bleakley said the reason for the Chronicles of Narnia’s enduring success was its broad appeal.
“The thing about Lewis which is different to most writers is that he’s international and inter-generational,” he said.

“I think 30m copies of his books were sold in the US last year.”

In 1998, a statue was erected at Holywood Arches library in east Belfast to mark the centenary of Lewis’ birth.

The life-size bronze depicts Digory Kirke, the writer’s fictional alter ego, entering Narnia through the magic wardrobe.

Although filmmakers may look to New Zealand in conjuring up Narnia, what fired Lewis’ imagination can be found a lot closer to home.

Kidman flies into Narnia

Friday, March 5th, 2004

Oscar-winning actress Nicole Kidman flew into Christchurch this week on a top secret visit to tour locations for New Zealand’s latest fantasy epic The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe.

The glamorous star of recent films, The Hours and Cold Mountain, arrived early on Thursday morning and took part in a whirlwind tour of Canterbury’s high country in a helicopter.

One of the locations paid particular attention was Flock Hill station near Arthurs Pass where there were several sightings of the actress and accompanying crew.

The visit has firmed up rumours Kidman has signed for a major role in the film which is being brought to the big screen by Kiwi producer-director Andrew Adamson, who also produced the Oscar-winning animated film Shrek.

Adamson’s latest epic, based on the C S Lewis classic, will be filmed mainly in Auckland but some scenes will be shot in the South Island.

At 178cm tall, the pale, imposing Kidman, 36, is thought to be perfect for the role of the White Witch, who in the book puts a spell on Narnia so that it is always winter and never Christmas.

Kidman has often been connected with the film and is known to have taken her children, Isabella, 10, and Connor, eight, to a stage play of the famous book.

Australian-raised Kidman, who maintains an exhausting regime of shooting movies, travelling to promote her movies and attending award ceremonies like this week’s Academy Awards, made a powerful impression during her Canterbury visit, sources told The Press.

The casually dressed star looked tired and in a no-nonsense mood but was “very nice” to everyone, they said.

The former wife of actor Tom Cruise, who has recently formed a strong bond with one-time rock wild man Lenny Kravitz, was accompanied by eight people thought to include security men and representatives of Los Angeles-based film company Walden Media, the company producing the film.

They flew to Flock Hill in two helicopters operated by Christchurch Helicopters. The company would not comment yesterday.

Other film industry sources, including Film South in Christchurch and Film Auckland, could shed no light on the visit. Walden Media’s Auckland office refused to comment.

Kidman left Christchurch early yesterday.

She won an Oscar for her role as the emotionally fragile Virginia Woolf in the film The Hours.

The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe has won backing from industry heavyweight Walt Disney Studies, which has entered an agreement with Walden Media to co-finance and distribute the $170 million film.

It will be first in what could be a series of films based on the seven Chronicles of Narnia books by C S Lewis. The books have sold 85 million copies worldwide.

By JUSTINE TURNER

First LWW Movie Ad Runs

Thursday, March 4th, 2004

Is this a first look at the logo of the film? We can only hope. It’s a very cool image that features what could be the complete title of the LWW film: The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe

This ad was run in the March 2nd USA Today on page 6D-7D in the Life Section.
It also ran in the March 2nd NY Times on pages B6-B7
It also ran in the March 2nd Wall Street Journal on pages B4-B5

Disney is Officially Distributing LWW

Monday, March 1st, 2004

The Walt Disney Studios has entered into an agreement with Walden Media to co-finance and distribute the long-awaited motion picture “The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe,” the first book published in C.S. Lewis’ famed series, it was announced today (3/1) by Dick Cook, chairman of The Walt Disney Studios, and Cary Granat, chief executive officer of Walden Media. The live-action film will be directed by Andrew Adamson (”Shrek,” “Shrek 2″) and is scheduled to be released Christmas, 2005, by Walt Disney Pictures. The agreement allows for the continuation of the partnership for future films in the series.

“The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, The Witch, and the Wardrobe,” the first in an exciting series of films in the making and based on the phenomenal bestselling novels, concerns a war between good and evil, pitting the magnificent lion Aslan against the forces of darkness in the magical world of Narnia. A White Witch has used her dark powers to keep Narnia in winter for 100 years, but it is foretold that four humans will be able to help Aslan break the spell. When the Pevensie siblings — Lucy, Susan, Edmund, and Peter — discover the magic of Narnia by entering the enchanted world through a wardrobe, the stage is set for a classic battle of epic proportions.

Commenting on the announcement, Cook said, “With an exciting and meaningful plot and well-drawn, emotional characters, ‘The Lion, The Witch, and The Wardrobe’ has the potential to be just the start of an extraordinary series of films; the exceptional imagination present in the novels follows in the best Disney tradition. We’re pleased to be partnered once again with Walden Media — I think this is just the kind of movie audiences are looking for, and we’re thrilled to be able to bring it to the screen.”

Cary Granat and Micheal Flaherty, co-founders of Walden Media, added, “Disney has been a great friend and partner, with our company, on ‘Holes,’ ‘Ghosts of the Abyss,’ and this summer’s ‘Around the World in 80 Days.’ The combination of C.S. Lewis’ visionary ‘Chronicles of Narnia’ with the incredible strength and uniqueness of the Walt Disney brand and organization makes this a true dream project for us. This is one of the most imaginative novels ever written, and to bring it to the screen requires a director of equal inventiveness, ingenuity, and spirit. Andrew Adamson is just the guy — he knows better than anyone how to create magic on-screen and tell a story that touches the audience’s hearts. His expertise in visual effects, animation, and live-action will be critical to a fantasy work of this magnitude.”

Adamson added, “‘The Chronicles of Narnia’ were an important part of my childhood just as they are to millions of fans around the world. I hope to bring to the screen a movie that is as real to the audience as Narnia was to me as a child. ‘The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe’ tells an epic story of great heart, of a family torn apart by a war in our world, who are united in their struggle to save the magical land of Narnia. It’s been a long time dream of mine to bring these classic stories to a new generation of moviegoers and readers.”

Douglas Gresham, stepson of C.S. Lewis, said, “Fans of the series have been waiting for generations for a film that faithfully adapts the Narnia books for the screen. Disney and Walden are a perfect match for the magical world that C.S. Lewis created, and we’re as excited to see the movie as everyone else is.”

A classic series of seven novels that have sold over 85 million copies worldwide, C.S. Lewis’ “The Chronicles of Narnia” began with the publication of “The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe” in 1950. Six more novels (including the prequel, “The Magician’s Nephew,” and the sequels, “The Horse and His Boy,” “Prince Caspian,” “The Voyage of the Dawn Treader,” “The Silver Chair” and “The Last Battle”) would follow in the next six years. The final title in the series, “The Last Battle,” was awarded the highest mark of excellence in children’s literature, the prestigious Carnegie Award.

About Walden Media

Founded by Cary Granat, former president of Miramax Films’ Dimension label, and educator Micheal Flaherty, Walden Media creates films, television shows, books and interactive media that inspire, engage, enlighten and entertain. Walden believes that quality entertainment is inherently educational and can capture the audience’s imagination, rekindle curiosity and demonstrate the rewards of learning.

Walden Media is a subsidiary of The Anschutz Company. The Anschutz Company is a privately owned investment and holding company with investments primarily in the areas of entertainment, media, telecommunications, natural resources, transportation, and real estate.

For further information, please contact Dennis Rice, Senior Vice President, Publicity of The Walt Disney Studios, +1-818-560-5610; or Alison Lehrer, Vice President, Public Relations of Walden Media, +1-310-887-1052.