Peter Jackson was
born as an only child in a small coast-side town in New Zealand in 1961. When a
friend of his parents bought him a
super 8mm movie camera (because
she saw how much he enjoyed taking photos), the then eight-year-old
Peter instantly grabbed the thing to start recording his own
movies, which he
made with his
friends. They were usually
short, but they already had the
spectacular trademark that would make
Jackson famous: impressive
special effects, made at a very
low cost. For example, for his film "World
War Two" which he made as a teenager, he
used to simulate a firing gun by punching little holes into the celluloid, so that, once projected, the gun gave the
impression of displaying a small
fire.
Jackson's first step towards the more serious filmmaking came with an
entry in a local
contest to stimulate amateur and children's film. For this film, he used stop-motion animation to create a
monster that ruins a city in the style of
Ray Harryhausen. Unfortunately, he didn't win. When
Jackson was 22, he embarked on an movie making-adventure that would
change his life. This film,
Bad Taste (1987), was
begun as any other
Jackson film, in an amateuristic style, at a low budget and using
friends and local
people to
star in his film. Jackson himself did nearly everything in the movie, he directed, produced, filmed and starred in it, in a number of roles, amongst them that of the
hero, "
Derek". And everything was filmed on a second-hand, $250 camera. It took Jackson and his friends
four years to complete the movie. What had started out as an joke in a group of friends, then became a cult-classic. A
friend of Jackson who was working in the movie
industry convinced him the film had
commercial prospects and arranged for it to be shown at the
Cannes film festival, where it won a lot of
acclaim, as well as a number of prizes. The movie soon became a
hit because of its
bizarre humor and overdose of special-effects, some realistic, some hilarious because of their amateuristic look. After the
success of
Bad Taste (1987),
Jackson became recognized as a director and the door to
fame and
fortune was opened. He gave up his
job at a local photographer's shop and became a well-known director of horror-
movies, after the
success of his first professionally
made movie,
Braindead (1992).