Classroom lesson 路 Middle-earth馃嚦馃嚳 New Zealand

Where Middle-earth was filmed

Why the Lord of the Rings films came to New Zealand

Steep green mountains rising out of the still water of Milford Sound, New Zealand

Photo 路 Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

When the director Peter Jackson decided to make films of The Lord of the Rings books, he wanted to film them in the most beautiful, dramatic landscape he could find. He didn't have to look far. He grew up in New Zealand - and so almost the entire trilogy was filmed in his own back garden.

Tell me more

New Zealand has just about every kind of landscape squeezed into one country: snowy mountains, deep fjords, golden plains, dense forests, smoking volcanoes and long sandy beaches. That made it perfect for the imaginary world of Middle-earth, which has all of those places too.

Some bits of the films are so famous that the actual locations have become tourist spots. The pretty green hills of the Hobbits' village - the Shire - were filmed on a farm near a town called Matamata. The film crew built the round Hobbit doors and grassy roofs, and the farmer was so charmed that he kept them. You can still visit 'Hobbiton' today.

Other scenes were filmed in places that look almost too dramatic to be real. The deep fjord of Milford Sound, with its towering cliffs and waterfalls, doubled for places in Middle-earth. So did Mount Ngauruhoe, a near-perfect cone-shaped volcano that played the role of Mount Doom.

Making the films took years and thousands of people - costume makers, set builders, special-effects artists, riders, dancers, painters and more. Many of them were New Zealanders. The films were a huge moment for the country: people all around the world finally saw what New Zealand looked like, and many couldn't quite believe it was a real place.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01If you were making a film, what kind of landscape would you want to film it in - and why?
  2. 02Real places sometimes turn out to be more dramatic than imagined ones. Is there a place near where you live that looks like it could be in a story?
  3. 03Lots of people work together to make a film. How many different jobs can you list that go into making just one scene?
Try this

Classroom activity

Pick a story you all know (a fairy tale, a film, a book). As a class, design the 'set' for one scene: what landscape would it be in, what does it look like, what's the weather? Sketch your set on a sheet of A3 and label it.