
At the age of nine, the young New Zealander experienced a profound moment when he saw the original King Kong (1933) which “really accelerated a burgeoning interest in special effects, models, and films.” When a neighbour, who lived down the street, gave the family a Super 8 movie camera as a Christmas gift, Jackson finally had the means to bring his fantastical stories to life. “I did a WWII drama film with friends of mine in old army uniforms – kids with big helmets and uniforms that don’t fit very well – running around.” To add more authenticity to the production, the aspiring moviemaker went so far as to dig trenches in the garden of his supportive parents.
The director’s early amateur efforts did not go entirely unnoticed. Influenced by the work of visual effects wizard Ray Harryhausen (Jason and the Argonauts), Peter Jackson and his friends acted in and shot a short film called The Valley in 1976. Four prospectors travel down into a valley where they encounter a rift in the time/space continuum. Misfortune ensues as one of the group members is abducted by a harpy, and another (Jackson) tumbles off a cliff. The remaining two men fight and destroy a Cyclops; escaping on a makeshift raft, they discover that the city of Wellington has been overrun by mystical beasts in a Post-Apocalyptic world. The ambitious silent production, filmed using Jackson’s beloved Super 8 movie camera, was broadcasted on the television show Spot On.
The teenager could not wait to leave school because he wanted to earn enough money to buy an essential piece of filmmaking equipment. “I got a job at a newspaper as photolithographer, and during the seven years I was there, I basically spent two of the years saving up for a 16 m.m. camera, which cost several thousands dollars, and I was only getting paid 75 bucks a week. I lived at home with my parents all this time because I couldn’t afford not to.”
A cinematic renaissance swept Jackson’s island homeland beginning in the late 1970s. “When I was about 16 or 17 years old, Roger Donaldson [The Bounty] made a movie called Sleeping Dogs [1977], which was New Zealand’s first real feature film. Other filmmakers, Jeff Murphy, quickly followed. Goodbye, Pork Pie [1981], which was a very funny comedic film, came along, and then suddenly, with a hiss and a roar, the New Zealand film industry got underway, and the government formed the Film Commission.”

Returning home from France, the newly christened professional filmmaker decided to collaborate with two writers, Steven Sinclair and Fran Walsh. “We started to write a zombie comedy film called Braindead, but we couldn’t get the money for that. It was too expensive. So we had this other idea called Meet the Feebles, which was a cheaper idea based on puppets, like the Muppets, but puppets who do sex and drugs, and they murder each other.” Jackson still revisits the 1989 movie. “It’s very funny. It’s the one film I screened for the cast of King Kong when they came down to New Zealand.” The movie also went to the Cannes Film Festival and did well enough in the marketplace to secure the funding to make Braindead.

After three gory features in a row, Peter Jackson was ready for a creative change. “Fran said to me, ‘Why don’t we do something on the Parker-Hulme murder case?’” The infamous 1954 incident occurred in Christchurch, New Zealand when two teenage girlfriends facing a permanent separation from each other collaborated to brutally kill one of their mothers.
To play the role of Pauline Parker, Fran Walsh was able to uncover, in a New Zealand classroom, Melanie Lynskey; the search for an actress to portray Juilet Hulme (the schoolgirl whose family was returning to England) led to a discovery on the other side of the world. “John Hubbard, our London casting director, had very good instincts. I remember very clearly, he said to us, ‘Kate Winslet’s going to be a big star one day.’” Once shooting commenced on Heavenly Creatures, Jackson was very impressed by the young British performer who was making her motion picture debut. “The best actors don’t pretend,” explained the director. “They’ve gone to a dark place, whatever that is, and they are living the anguish and the pain, and they’re giving that to you to film for your movie, and that’s what Kate does.” The other star of Peter Jackson’s breakthrough 1994 production was the depiction of the adolescent fantasy world which the murderous female companions inhabit; the imaginary images were created under the supervision of Richard Taylor at Weta (a special effects company co-founded by Jackson in 1993).

The resulting script was nominated at the Academy Awards for Best Original Screenplay, thereby, cementing the writing team who had also become partners in life. “It was nice,” reflected the filmmaker. “I think Fran and I both absolutely valued the fact that we got two or three years of just getting to know each other as friends, as co-workers, co-scriptwriters before anything got serious. It’s given our relationship a really stable, solid foundation.”
Shifting to less serious subject matter in 1995, Peter Jackson co-directed with fellow New Zealander Costa Botes (Saving Grace) a mockumentary about a series of lost movies rediscovered in a shed. The originator of the recovered works is the fictitious filmmaker Colin McKenzie whom the two men present as the father of modern cinema. Jackson and Botes conduct celebrity interviews with Miramax Films cofounder Harvey Weinstein and film historian Leonard Maltin, while actor Sam Neill (Dead Calm, Jurassic Park) and movie archivist John O’Shea provide a “serious” commentary to the contrived tale. Playing the critically lauded McKenzie is theatrical performer Thomas Robins who is better known to moviegoers as the ill-fated Déagol in The Lord of the Rings: The Return of the King (2003).

Recruited to play the role of the paranormal charlatan was Michael J. Fox, a Canadian actor who became famous playing time-traveler Marty McFly in the Back to the Future trilogy. Faced with the beginnings of his fight with Parkinson disease, Fox cleverly disguised his body tremors throughout the entire picture by never standing still. A hybrid of horror and comedy, The Frighteners featured the music of Danny Elfman (Batman) and actor Jake Busey (Enemy of the State) as the spirit of a long since executed mass murderer who has continued his killing ways beyond the grave.
The film was originally conceived as a Halloween release but was bumped by a blockbuster starring actor Sylvester Stalone (Rocky). “Daylight [1996] was delayed for six months and so they [Universal Pictures] decided to bring The Frighteners up from Halloween and to plunk it into the middle of summer. So, that was, ultimately, our biggest frustration because it never was and should never have been a summer movie.” The reviews ranged from scathing, “The Frighteners is not immune to overkill, even though most of its characters are already dead,” (Janet Maslin - New York Times) to favourable. “Director Peter Jackson, at home with all kinds of excess in New Zealand, keeps everything spinning nicely, not even losing a step when the mood turns increasingly disturbing.” (Kenneth Turan - Los Angeles Times)
Next on the Jackson’s cinematic agenda was a remake of the movie which had compelled him to become a filmmaker, King Kong. With the giant gorilla picture Mighty Joe Young (1998) already in production, Universal Pictures balked at the idea. Left to find another project, Peter Jackson decided to adapt a literary classic which would propel him and his native New Zealand into the Hollywood spotlight.
Continue to part 2.
The Bastards Have Landed - The Official Peter Jackson Fan Community
Trevor Hogg is a freelance video editor and writer who currently resides in Canada.
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