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Peter Jackson Peter Jackson is also a brand of cigarettes owned by Imperial Tobacco and a men's clothing store that sells suits in Australia. CNZM (born October 31, 1961, Pukerua BayPeter Jackson is a New Zealand-born filmmaker best-known as the director of the epic film trilogy , which he, along with Fran Walsh and Philippa Boyens, adapted from the novel by J. R. R. Tolkien.

Jackson first gained attention with his "splatstick" horror comedies, and came to prominence with his movie , for which he shared an Academy Award nomination for Best Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen with his wife, Fran Walsh. He and Walsh have two children, Billy and Katie. His parents are Bill and Joan Jackson, both of whom were immigrants from England.

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Jackson started his career in film as a fanatical hobbyist, creating small movies with simple technical means and with the help of his friends. When one of his projects, the horror comedy , over a period of four years grew from the originally planned half-hour to a 90-minute feature film, Jackson and his crew took the end result to the Cannes Film Festival, received critical acclaim and sold the rights to twelve countries. This allowed him to start a professional career as a film director.

Unlike some other New Zealand film directors, Jackson has remained in New Zealand to make films, preferring to have Hollywood come to him to make his films. This has been the genesis of several production and support companies. Most of Jackson's assets are on the Miramar Peninsula in his home town of Wellington and much of his filming occurs in and around the city. He successfully cajoled New Line Cinema into holding the world premiere of Return of the King in the city's iconic Embassy Theatre which he has helped restore.

He was an early user of computer enhancement technology and provided digital special effects to a number of Hollywood films by use of telecommunications and satellite links to transmit raw images and the enhanced results across the Pacific Ocean.

A perfectionist with his film projects, Jackson demands numerous takes of every scene (with his "One more for luck"), pushes his special-effects crew to make their work seamless and invisible, and insists upon authenticity in miniatures even on the sides that never appear in a film. On the other hand, many of his most beautiful scenes result from purely serendipitous shots taken while flying from one location to another. Despite this perfectionism, he has a reputation for requiring a significantly smaller budget than his peers.

Universal Studios signed Peter Jackson for his first film following the Lord of the Rings trilogy, a remake of the 1933 classic . He was reportedly being paid a fee of US$20 million upfront, against a 20% take of the total box-office gross. The film was released on December 14, 2005, with a cast that includes Oscar-nominated actress Naomi Watts, Oscar-winning actor Adrien Brody, Jack Black, Colin Hanks and Andy Serkis. The production cost of exceeded $207 million USD and the final theatrical cut runs more than 3 hours; both of these figures are far greater than those of their 1933 counterpart.

His attention will now move to the film version of Alice Sebold's bestseller , which he will be writing and directing and which he has said will be a welcome relief from the larger-scale epics and bears some similarities to . His comments to date seem to indicate that he is interested, if the studios can work out the rights. Late in 2004 it appeared unlikely, as MGM (the studio which holds the rights to ) was sold to Sony in the race with Warner Bros. in December of 2004. Jackson said that production on "The Hobbit" would take at least three or four years, which would place a likely release date in 2010.

Peter Jackson is also executive producing the game-to-film adaptation of Microsoft, expected to hit theaters around mid-2007. Jackson, an avid fan of the game, has confessed to playing it regularly during breaks in filming.

Jackson won three Academy Awards for "Peter Jackson in The Fellowship of the Ring (top), The Two Towers (middle), and The Return of the King (bottom)." ). In the extended version of the Return of the King, his cameo is much longer, while in the theatrical version, he is glimpsed for only a moment. He also has a cameo in the theatrical release as a rider during the charge on the Pelennor Fields. Though not a cameo in the traditional sense, he served as a stand-in for Sean Astin in the shot where Samwise Gamgee steps into frame, challenging the monster Shelob, thereby giving him three different appearances in that film. He also appeared as a bi-plane pilot attacking King Kong, reprising the cameo which original King Kong filmmaker Merian C. Cooper made in his 1933 film. In the Frighteners, Jackson is a biker bumped into by Frank Bannister. In Heavenly Creatures, he is a bum kissed by Juliet Hulme. In Braindead, he is the mortician's assistant., the natives of Skull Island, home of film's Sumatran Rat-Monkey, were played by the rugby team of Fiji.22.5 kg) to the point of being unrecognizable to some fans. According to Britain's Daily Telegraph he attributes his weight loss, to a diet change. He said, "I just got tired of being overweight and unfit, so I changed my diet from hamburgers to yogurt and muesli and it seems to work." [2]Rumors of a feud between Jackson and George Lucas are apparently untrue. Jackson credits Lucas's Industrial Light and Magic in teaching him ways of special effects in film." written on the side is visible - an homage to Jackson's third film Braindead, in which the monkey carries the zombie virus.He was paid $20 million to direct King Kong, the highest salary ever paid to a film director in advance of production.

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