The Fellowship Of The Ring's 20th Anniversary: 20 Things You Didn’t Know About the Film

If there's any movie series that has a mountain of supplemental features to peruse, it's The Lord of the Rings. The Extended Editions Blu-ray trilogy collection comes loaded with a slew of bonus features including interviews, behind-the-scenes documentaries, and explanations of how the films' intensive visual effects were pulled off.

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The early aughts LOTR trilogy was a massive cinematic undertaking, and the complexity of its production was nothing short of staggering. This means that every aspect of its assembly is rife with fun and intriguing facts. Since December 19th marks the 20th-anniversary of The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring's release, now's a good time to cover some of the many production details (from the Blu-ray boxset's special features) that casual fans still don't know.

20 A Bump On The Head

The DVD commentary for The Fellowship of the Ring was a treasure trove of facts both the interesting and charming variety. On the latter side is a funny gaffe that occurred while filming a scene inside of Bilbo's house.

McKellen's Gandalf is bent over, walking through the tiny house. As he's about to hit the foyer, his head bonks into a beam, and Gandalf winces. It plays like a scripted scene, setting up one of the best friendships in The Lord of the Rings. But it's a legitimate accident and is enough to remind the viewer of the Stormtrooper bumping his head in Star Wars Episode IV: A New Hope.

19 Billy Boyd's Real Scream

On the funny side of LOTR bonus feature revelations is actor Billy Boyd's real scream. It occurred while shooting Fellowship of the Ring's early party scene, where Merry and Pippin (Boyd) set off a massive dragon firework that ends up scaring half of the party's attendees.

Ironically, it ended up scaring Pippin himself. Boyd didn't know the firework was actually going to blow up, figuring the sound would be a post-production addition. His reaction to the jarring boom is real, and Jackson kept it in the final cut.

18 John Rhys-Davies Is The Tallest Of The Fellowship In Real Life

Acting is about becoming someone else, but John Rhys-Davies took it to a new level by portraying Gimli, son of Glóin.

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A dwarf in Tolkien's books is going to be anywhere between four and five feet. Rhys-Davies is 6 feet 1 inch. In other words, he's the tallest of the 9 actors to portray a member of the Fellowship. This actually came in handy, considering the Hobbits would also be digitally altered, and Hobbits are a bit shorter than Dwarfs.

17 Casting For Gandalf & Frodo

Elijah Wood's Frodo and Ian McKellen's Gandalf are the two characters with the most screentime in Fellowship. This makes it interesting to imagine how casting could have originally gone.

There was a time when Jake Gyllenhaal could have played the heroic Hobbit while a 007 actor, the late Sean Connery, could have played the mentoring wizard. Gyllenhaal is a terrific actor and Connery was a legend, but it's for the best that the casting department ended up where they did.

16 Buying The Horse

If recasting Lord of the Rings with all-female actors, the filmmakers would still need to find some tough-as-nails stunt doubles.

This includes riding doubles, who are particularly important in fantasy pieces like The Lord of the Rings trilogy. Unfortunately, these hard-working stuntpeople are not paid anything close to the actors they're doubling. Aragorn actor Viggo Mortensen took a stride to make up for this, as it were. Specifically, he bought Liv Tyler's riding double the horse with which she'd become acquainted.

15 The 16th Time's The Charm For 2nd Breakfast

One of the trilogy's more lighthearted scenes is also one of its most iconic. It takes place about midway through Fellowship of the Ring when Pippin begins to complain about the lack of a "second breakfast." Pippin is then tossed an apple from someone off-screen.

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Pippin actor Billy Boyd stated in one of the boxset's cast interviews that the apple was tossed by none other than Viggo Mortensen. It also took them 16 takes to get it right, with Boyd getting smacked on the head by the apple more often than not. The actor joked that Mortensen seemed to be having a fun time, which isn't difficult to imagine.

14 Boromir Doesn't Fly

Responsible for one of The Lord of the Rings movies' greatest betrayals, Boromir was a character who made a major impression with a limited appearance. He and his actor, Sean Bean, are also responsible for one of LOTR's more interesting behind-the-scenes factoids.

During one of the Extended Edition's bonus feature interviews, Bean stated that he was too scared of heights to board a helicopter easily. This includes the filming of a later scene, which took place in a remote location. Bean rejected the helicopter and instead hiked two hours to film his scenes.

13 Almost Something Far Worse Than Orcs

Just as important as anything else in a film's production is its sound design and sound mixing. The technical team behind The Lord of the Rings trilogy had many creatures to bring to life, and this includes how they sound.

To capture the sounds of screaming Orcs within the Mines of Moria, the crew sampled the hollering of nocturnal possums. This is different from the opossum, a creature far more terrifying than the Orc or Mordor's other monsters.

12 Barefoot Hazards

At the end of the movie, Samwise Gamgee runs into a river to stop Frodo from journeying to Mordor solo. It's a touching scene that was also responsible for an off-screen injury.

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Gamgee actor Sean Astin, barefoot as a Hobbit, stepped on a piece of broken glass when he entered the water. There's a soundbite on the Extended Edition's bonus features about how it was so bad Astin had to be airlifted to the closest hospital.

11 Balrog-Sized Acting Ability

One of the best things a Lord of the Rings villain did was at first devastating. The Balrog's whip flying up and wrapping itself around Gandalf's ankle immediately makes the Fellowship seem like it's at serious risk.

Making the significant impact of the scene even more impressive is the fact that the actor wasn't looking at anything outside of a little ball in front of a green screen. McKellen rightfully received an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor nomination.

10 Not An Elf To Trifle With

Arwen actor Liv Tyler gives a terrific performance throughout her relatively limited time in The Lord of the Rings trilogy. This includes one of The Fellowship of the Ring's best scenes. Unfortunately, this same scene resulted in Tyler getting injured.

She accidentally pierced her right thigh with a prop blade filming the scene where Arwen yells defiantly across a river at the pursuing Nazgûl. It's a moment included on the home releases' blooper footage.

9 Christopher Lee Had Met J. R. R. Tolkien

While The Fellowship of the Ring and the rest of the trilogy showed a lot of respect to the work of author Tolkien, there was one cast member who had met the man himself.

According to US Weekly, the late and legendary Christopher Lee had even received Tolkien's blessing to play the character of Gandalf should a Lord of the Rings movie ever get made. Nearly 30 years later, it came to fruition, but only partially.

8 Legolas's Eyes

If ranking the Fellowship by usefulness, Legolas would be towards the top. His archery skills are unmatched and he's able to take out Orc after Orc with expert precision.

Impressive, considering the contact lenses worn by actor Orlando Bloom were scratching his corneas. This is why his eye color changes not just in Fellowship but throughout the trilogy as a whole. He was unable to wear the irritating lenses for too long, so the color hops between Bloom's and the altered elfen coloration.

7 The Gollum Design Is Different

Gollum has what amounts to a cameo in the first LOTR film. He's first seen during the narrated intro, sitting within his cave, shrouded in darkness. Then, there's his being tortured, where audiences see him writhing. Lastly, there' a closeup of his eyes and fingers.

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The reason he's only glimpsed is that WETA had yet to finish work on what would end up being Andy Serkis's character in the sequels. Fortunately, it works to just tease the appearance of the pivotal Gollum, as Fellowship already introduces the audience to a substantial cast of characters.

6 Elfen Eyes

Tolkien's Middle-Earth is so detailed that fictional races like elves and dwarfs have varying lineages from all over the globe.

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The production team for The Fellowship of the Ring made strides to show the differentiation when it came to the elves. For instance, Lothlorien elves like Cate Blanchett's Lady Galadriel have light blue eyes while Rivendell elves like Live Tyler's Arwen have dark blue eyes. It's a subtle detail that goes to show just how much effort was put into the trilogy's detail-oriented production.

5 The Runtime

Were Jackson to have released his first cut of The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Rings into theatres, the box office returns would probably have taken a ding. In fact, it would most likely only be able to have two to three showings per screen on a given day.

That's because the original runtime for the film was about four and a half hours. This is in comparison to the theatrical edition's runtime of 178 minutes. At 208 minutes, not even the extended edition comes close.

4 Aragorn's Point Break

One of the many benefits of filming in New Zealand was access to beautiful beaches and clean waters. Many cast members bought boards and went surfing when they weren't in front of the cameras or in hair and makeup.

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An example is Mortensen, who even suffered an injury while riding the waves. The makeup team was unable to cover up the resultant bruise, so the (thankfully dark) Mines of Moria scenes show the actor from only one side.

3 Viggo Mortensen Is Unstoppable

In The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers, when Aragorn kicks an Orc helmet across the battlefield, his scream is real. Even still, he pushed forward with two broken toes.

A similar incident occurred during the filming of a scene for Fellowship. Mortensen chipped his tooth while shooting Aragorn's fight with Lurtz, Saruman's big-bad Orc creation. According to one of the Extended Edition's interviews, the actor suggested just super-gluing the broken piece back onto the rest of the tooth. Thankfully, Mortensen was instead taken to a dentist.

2 Visual Trickery

The Lord of the Rings movies' major flaws are fairly limited, with the effects them even pulling off the actors' wildly adjusted height. Their method of doing this was a combination of CGI and simple visual trickery.

On the latter side was a technique to make the Hobbits look even smaller when compared to particularly tall characters. Meaning, actors like McKellen would be instructed to stand a bit closer to the camera to further intensify the illusion.

1 The Tattoo

McKellen, Elijah Wood, Mortensen, Sean Astin, Sean Bean, Billy Boyd, Dominic Monaghan, and Orlando Bloom all got the same tattoo towards the end of filming. In reference to the number of teammates; The ink read "nine" in Elvish. The only member of the Fellowship to decline the opportunity was Gimli's Rhys-Davies.

Instead, the Raiders of the Lost Ark actor sent his stunt double. These are tattoos the cast members have to this day and serve as a reminder of just how special the trilogy is to fans and the people who made it.

NEXT: The Wheel Of Time & Their Lord Of The Rings Counterparts



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