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We Were All on an Epic Journey’
FROM:Newsweek Magazine Dec 2001
A young Australian actor was initially
cast in the key role of Aragorn—the mysterious
stranger who joins the fellowship, protects Frodo
(Elijah Wood) from a thousand dangers and
ultimately plays a key role in the fate of Middle
Earth. But just as the production got started,
director Peter Jackson had to fire the actor,
either because he was simply too young for the
role or he wasn’t willing to really throw himself
into the part, or both. (The director says the
former; other sources say the latter.) Jackson
quickly turned to Viggo Mortensen, whom he’d
never even met. As luck would have it, he was a
natural. His fortitude, his love for Tolkien, his
swordsmanship and mostly his abiding cool
knocked everyone out on the set. The
filmmakers—cast and crew alike—still talk
about him as if he’s some kind of folk hero who
arrived at the last minute to save the day.
Mortensen spoke with NEWSWEEK’s Jeff Giles
about the making of “The Lord of the Rings.”
You replaced another actor right as filming began, and
you’d never even auditioned for the role, I take it. Did
the “Lord of the Rings” folks at least give you a
couple of weeks to decide if you wanted the part?
"It was essentially, “Do you want to fly to New Zealand
tomorrow and work on a movie for a year and a half?” It
came out of the blue. "
Aragorn is such a great role. Was taking the part
an easy decision to make?
"Obviously, I knew that it was a special opportunity.
But I had not read the books. I had not met these people ...
It wasn’t that easy for me, actually. There were many
reasons, very justifiable reasons, for not doing it. Like the
time away from my family—and also knowing that this was
a big undertaking, and knowing that I would not get the time
to prepare for this role as well as I would have liked to
before being thrown in front of the camera. In the end, I had
the blessing of my son, which meant a lot to me. And I
guess my feeling was that if I didn’t do it, I would regret it
in some way. I would have felt cowardly in not taking the
challenge because it was such a unique one. "
"I know that you eventually came to really love the
book. Were you concerned that the movies wouldn’t
be able to reflect the depth of Tolkien’s vision? "
"The movie is not the book. They’re different mediums.
It’s not been possible in the movie to emphasize language
and poetry, for example, as Tolkien did. Nor do we get the
attention to detail regarding various characters’
backgrounds and interrelationships. It’s not possible unless
it’s three 12-hour movies, I suppose. And, you know, as
authors, Tolkien and Peter Jackson have different
sensibilities. While Peter obviously cares a great deal for
Tolkien’s writing—otherwise he wouldn’t have given so
much of his life to it—what seems to have drawn him most
as a filmmaker was the pure adventure aspect of the tale.
The heroic sacrifice of individuals for the common good. All
the breathtaking sequences—he really poured himself into
those. The more I explored Tolkien, the more I felt I had
two bosses: Tolkien and Peter Jackson. I tried my best to
be loyal to both of them."
Everybody says that you really threw yourself
into your role—that whenever they saw you, you were
wearing your costume.
" I didn’t really have days off as a rule and so when
people saw me, they generally they saw me as
Aragorn—that’s just on a practical note. I did also like the
character and the character’s journey. I was doing
everything I could to be faithful to what Tolkien had written
and there’s so much to explore."
You couldn’t have had no days off in a year and a
half.
"I mean, occasionally we had some days off. But
toward the end of filming, it was six days a week and rarely
less than 14 hours a day—for me, anyway. There was one
gigantic battle sequence that some of us worked on all night
every night for three months straight, which is insane. It was
dark and wet. That was a real tough one for the cast and
crew and it forged strong friendships. People made an effort
to enjoy themselves and spend time with each other
because we became part of each other’s lives one way or
another. On a shoot that long, people get together, people
come apart, marriages falter, people get ill, people get
pregnant, people get injured. It’s just like a giant traveling
circus. "
New Zealand itself must have been an inspiration.
" I was very sad to leave. In fact, I stayed on a little
while afterward. I can’t imagine that I would ever grow tired
of the place or the people. I don’t know. I can’t describe it.
And no matter where we were or how [difficult the shooting
schedule was] we had a sense that we were all on an epic
journey. That was palpable on a daily basis. You don’t get
that feeling very often on a movie set—and you certainly
don’t get it every day for a year and a half."
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