One
of the more distinctive directorial voices in the wave of New
Zealand cinema which made such an impressive splash in the 1980s
and 90s, Jackson was interested in cameras from an early age.
When he finally bought a 16mm camera, he decided to make a short
science-fiction comedy with it. Over three years later, he
completed the feature-length result, "Bad Taste"
(1988). Though many might not see past the film's lengthy
streams of vomit and blood or what they consider to be the
aptness of the film's title, Jackson's feature debut about
aliens coming to Earth to hunt for human flesh to stock an
outer-space fast food restaurant was not only garishly funny,
but also an inventive spin on popular culture and generic
conventions.
Peter
Jackson - Director King Kong premiere 2005
Jackson's
films have an unabashed penchant for the grotesque mixed with a
child-like playfulness with the possibilities of cinema. Their
tone is humorous, in a manner both campy and celebratory, as
well as being genuinely bleak. Unstable psychological states and
unhappy family situations mix with extreme yet sometimes
cartoonish violence and a satirical, densely referential glance
at society and cinema itself. His second feature, "Meet the
Feebles" (1990), was another venture into comic horror, but
this time people, appropriately for Jackson's emerging style,
were replaced with puppets, as a massacre of performers throws
suspicion onto one Hilda the Hippo. He stayed with the same
genre but once again used live actors for his international
breakthrough film, "Dead Alive" (1993, originally
titled "Braindead" in New Zealand). It proved so
hilarious that its amazing gross-out quotient went down like a
smooth custard, yet Jackson's emerging preoccupations with
repressive parent-child dynamics and parricide gave the dessert
just enough body.
Some
saw Jackson's next film, "Heavenly Creatures" (1994),
retelling the story of New Zealand's most famous murder case in
decades, as both considerably more serious and a real departure
for him. It was certainly the former but hardly the latter, as
his restless visual stylistics and surprising sympathy for those
who commit violence lent depth to a story of two teenage girls
whose intense friendship leads to matricide. He and co-scenarist
Fran Walsh received an Oscar nomination for their original
screenplay. Jackson followed up with "Jack Brown,
Genius" (1995), a comedy about a modern inventor and a
medieval monk, and "The Frighteners" (1996), a Michael
J. Fox starrer about a psychic investigator. Both films had
their moments but seemed like mere breathers coming before the
most ambitious undertaking of Jackson's career, a move for which
his intriguing combination of the whimsical and the fantastic on
the one hand and the potently grim and downbeat on the other
seemed well-suited--filming, in what was planned as three motion
pictures, J.R.R. Tolkien's landmark mythological novel "The
Lord of the Rings" (lensed 1999-2000). Once completed, the
ambitious project as scheduled to roll out in installments over
three years: "The Fellowship of the Ring" (2001),
"The Two Towers" (2002) and "The Return of the
King" (2003). The first installment, "The Lord of the
Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring", earned praise from
critics and audiences for its epic action and skillful take on
very complicated material.
The
film initial received a near-record 13 Academy Award
nominations, including Best Picture, Best Director and Best
Adapted Screenplay. The superior special effects in the film
also made a lasting impact and elevated the Jackson-backed F/X
house WETA Workshop in New Zealand into the upper eschelons of
movie magic practitioners. Jackson also re-edited the film,
inserting over 30 minutes of unreleased material, for a special
DVD version, resulting in an even more entertaining release. The
second instalment, "The Two Towers," was released in
2002 to much fanfare, with many critics and moviegoers deeming
it an even superior film to the first outing, though Jackson was
not on the Academy's nominees list for Best Director a second
time. But it was the third outing, "The Return of the
King" (2003) that proved to be the pinnacle for Jackson,
winning universal praise as an immensely satisfying wrap-up to
the epic tale and a landmark in cinematic innovation. Jackson
himself would be rewarded at last with some major directorial
plaudits, including a first Best Director Academy Award, a
Golden Globe as Best Director, Motion Picture, and a Directors
Guild Award. The third film itself garnered 11 nominations
overall, the first ever to achieve that many without any acting
nominations, and collected an Oscar for each category for which
it was nominated, tying the records held by "Ben Hur"
and "Titanic."
Peter
Jackson and Jack Black - King Kong
Anticipation
could not have been higher on Jackson's follow-up project, a
remake of the classic monster film "King Kong" (2005),
a film he had dreamed of remaking since he became obsessed with
it as a small child (he had already come close once in the late
1990s, but the plans were scuttled by Universal, the studio
which owned the property, when the script failed to gel).
Jackson recruited an enviable cast, including Adrien Brody, Jack
Black and Naomi Watts in the Faye Wray role, as well as his
"Rings" trilogy Gollum Andy Serkis in the ape suit as
Kong. Jackson and his wife Fran Walsh also signed to bring the
popular video game "Halo" to the big screen, for a
summer 2007 release.
-
Born:
on
10/31/61 in New Zealand
-
Job
Titles:
Director,
Producer, Screenwriter, Apprentice photo engraver
Family
-
Daughter:
Kate Jackson. born c. 1996; mother, Frances Walsh
-
Father:
William Jackson. appeared briefly in the park scene of
"Heavenly Creatures" (1994)
-
Mother:
Joan Jackson. appeared briefly in the park scene of
"Heavenly Creatures" (1994)
-
Son:
William Jackson. born c. 1995; mother, Frances Walsh
Significant
Others
Education
Milestones
-
Directing
the remake of the 1930's classic "King kong"
starring Naomi Watts, Jack Black and Adrien Brody (lensed
2005)
-
Will
direct Alice Sebold's recent bestseller "The Lovely
Bones" which tells the story of a murdered girl (lensed
2005)
-
1983
Bought a 16mm camera and decided to test it by making a
10-minute short science-fiction comedy film, "Roast of
the Day"; some four years later, the result was
Jackson's first feature, "Bad Taste"
-
1986
Received $5000 grant from the New Zealand Film Commission;
quit working as an apprentice photo engraver
-
1988
Release of first completed feature film, "Bad
Taste", which he also produced, starred in, wrote,
photographed, edited and did makeup and special effects
-
1990
First of three consecutive collaborations with producer Jim
Booth, "Meet the Feebles"; co-written with Fran
Walsh and Stephen Sinclair
-
1993
Formed WETA, a special effects company
-
1993
Release of international breakthrough feature, "Dead
Alive/Braindead"
-
1994
Last collaboration with producer Jim Booth, "Heavenly
Creatures"; Booth died of cancer on January 4, 1994
-
1996
Helmed "The Frighteners", a serio-comedic picture
starring Michael J Fox
-
1999
Directed the trilogy of films based on J.R.R. Tolkein's
"The Lord of the Rings"; shot back-to-back;
scheduled to be released over a three-year period, "The
Fellowship of the Ring" (2001); "The Two
Towers" (2002) and "The Return of the King"
(2003)
-
2002
"Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Rings"
received Oscar nominations for Best Picture, Best Director
and Best Screenplay; received a Golden Globe nomination for
Best Director; received a nomination by the Directors Guild
of America for Outstanding Directorial Achievement
-
2003
"Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers" received an
Oscar nomination for Best Picture; received a Golden Globe
nomination for Best Director; received a nomination by the
Directors Guild of America for Outstanding Directorial
Achievement
-
2004
"Lord of the Rings: Return of the King" took the
Oscar in each category in which it had been nominated,
eleven of them in total, thereby joining "Ben Hur"
and "Titanic" with the most Oscars in the record
books
-
Began
making a feature-length vampire film with a Super 8mm camera
when he was a teenager
-
Raised
in Pukerua Bay, just outside of Wellington, New Zealand
Peter
Jackson
Peter
Jackson - Oscar for Lord of the Rings 2004
Academy
American
Film Institute
British
Academy Awards
Broadcast
Film Critics Association
Chicago
Film Critics Association
Directors
Guild of America
Golden
Globe
L.A.
Film Critics Association
Peter
Jackson - New York 2001
National
Board of Review
National
Society of Film Critics
Producers
Guild of America
San
Francisco Film Critics Circle
Toronto
Film Critics Association
Writers
Guild of America
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