The Valley (1976 film) explained

The Valley
Director:Peter Jackson
Editing:Peter Jackson
Runtime:20 minutes
Country:New Zealand
Language:English

The Valley is a 1976 stop motion live action[1] adventure/fantasy[2] post-apocalyptic short film made by a then fifteen-year-old Peter Jackson with his friends. It was strongly influenced by the films of Ray Harryhausen. It was filmed silent on a Super 8 camera and was shown on the children's television show Spot On.

Plot

Four prospectors walk into a valley and unwittingly enter a rift in the time/space continuum. As they journey down the valley, one of the prospectors (Ian Middleton) gets taken away by a harpy. Another prospector (Peter Jackson) falls off a cliff. The two remaining (Ken Hammon and Andrew Neal) have to fight and destroy a cyclops. They build a raft, float across a lake, and see a building in ruins. This ruin, unbeknownst to them, is the Beehive building of Wellington city – they have not travelled back in time but ahead into a post-apocalyptic world taken over by mythical beasts.

Cast

Reception

The short has been described as "a tribute to special effects master Ray Harryhausen".[3]

References

Bibliography

Secondary filmography

Notes and References

  1. Book: Vossen, Ursula . Von Neuseeland nach Mittelerde: die Welt des Peter Jackson . 2004 . Schüren . 978-3-89472-349-1 . de.
  2. Web site: 2016-04-12 . 10 great films by really young directors . 2024-01-25 . British Film Institute . en.
  3. Book: Woods, Paul A. . Peter Jackson: From Gore to Mordor . 2005 . Plexus . 978-0-85965-356-5 . en.