That's awesome news, but isn't Radagast's role in The Hobbit actually very small?
given that they have cast Sean Slater from EE, I think you might be rightDid they run out of actors?
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That's awesome news, but isn't Radagast's role in The Hobbit actually very small?
It would be small if the movie followed the book and was a single flick.
With 2 movies, I think they were planning to "pad it out", hopefully with some scenes of Gandalf, Radagast and the other wizards.
That's awesome news, but isn't Radagast's role in The Hobbit actually very small?
It would be small if the movie followed the book and was a single flick.
With 2 movies, I think they were planning to "pad it out", hopefully with some scenes of Gandalf, Radagast and the other wizards.
I always find that funny. Lord of the Rings chopped stuff out like Bombadil and the Scouring of the Shire, and yet here we're already padding.![]()
Den of Geek
Now, here's some fine news to start the week. Over at the Doctor Who News Page at Gallifrey Base, the fine folks there are reporting that Sylvester McCoy has been offered a role in Peter Jackson's upcoming two films of The Hobbit.
McCoy has confirmed to fans attending the Armageddon Expo, which took place in Auckland, that he had been cast as Radagast The Brown in the new films.
All kidding aside, though, as much as the director may have simply been trying to save people their own valuable time, it's hard not to side with Jackson. There are certain... er, white lies society as a whole agrees to tell, and if the casting director has to waste his/her time auditioning people who are too non-white to have any reasonable expectation of getting a part, at least she's getting paid to do so, yes?In an unforeseen hiccup to an otherwise butter-smooth production thus far, a casting director has been fired from The Hobbit after placing ads in New Zealand newspapers specifically calling for actors with “light skin tones” and dismissing another actor by telling her she was “too dark” to appear in the film. Peter Jackson’s production company released a statement clarifying that the casting director had acted totally alone, and that it had never made any explicit specifications that they should only be auditioning white people. All it ever did was make three Lord Of The Rings films without any black people.
Indeed there will be.There'll be orcs in The Hobbit, right?
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