I’ve received a fuller statement from Peter Jackson and The Hobbit‘s production team regarding those animal cruelty allegations. This is what’s posting on Jackson’s Facebook page:
FROM PETER JACKSON & PRODUCERS OF THE HOBBIT
The Hobbit production has always instituted swift and immediateinvestigations in to any concerns of any kind over the treatment of animals under its care. A prompt and thorough investigation into the recent unsubstantiated allegations by the American organisation, PETA, in to the ‘hobbling’ of a horse during the making of The Hobbit was undertaken. No evidence of such a practice was found to have occurred at any time. Further, the production contacted the owner of the horse concerned who provided the following statement: “I am 100% happy with the return of Shanghai and his condition. In the term that he was leased he was picked up and returned to me two times. On both occasions there was not a mark on him and he was healthy and happy. He has shown no signs of ill-treatment. I would not hesitate in leasing him to the movie again.”
To date, the only horse wranglers whose treatment of animals fell below the production’s standard of care seem to be the two wranglers who have chosen to level this new accusation on the eve of the premiere of the first Hobbit film and who were dismissed by the production over a year ago. Reports of their actions are documented in several written statements dating back to October 2011.
The production regrets that PETA has chosen to make such a serious accusation, which has distressed many of the dedicated Kiwis who worked with animals on the films – including trainers, wranglers, care-givers, farm workers and animal health care professionals – without properly vetting the source from which they received this information.
The production has been inundated with calls of support as regards to this matter, including the following statements:
FROM: DR JULIA BRYCE BVSc
“From December 2010 till July 2012, this practice was the primary Veterinary care giver for the horses and livestock in the care of “Three Foot Seven”. During this period we were consulted promptly in cases of injury and illness. We were also consulted routinely about ongoing veterinary care and preventative medicine. If referral was required to a specialist clinic or Massey Equine Clinic, this occurred promptly. As occurs in normal practice there are incidences and injury which may result in an unfavourable outcome and others that recover completely; like the young goat who fractured a front leg but recovered completely after 6 weeks in a cast and hospital rest, or the rooster who spent two weeks at our clinic with a foot infection.These and other animals in the care of Three Foot Seven Limited received the best available treatment to ensure their recovery, their welfare and return to good health was paramount to those in charge. At no time were we concerned about the welfare and on-going treatment of animals under our care.”
FROM: JOY GRAY – FARMER
“I was appalled to hear of the wild claims being made in the media by PETA. I and my family own the farm which The Hobbit used to train their animals. Myself, my manager, my children and grand-children saw nothing to make us uncomfortable or give us cause for concern. We all had totally free access to all activities at all times. In fact, the animals were wonderfully looked after, being well-fed, well-housed, and well-treated. As both farmers and dedicated horse people ourselves we would have stood for nothing less. I myself ride horses, all my children rode competitively and now my grandchildren ride.I was involved in Pony Club for many years and was District Commissioner for the Wellington Pony Club. My manager was totally aware of all that was happening with the Hobbits and he is outraged at these false claims. The sixty horses, the cattle, oxen, sheep, goats, dogs, pigs, hens etc. were given professional and humane treatment.”
FROM: JED BROPHY – ACTOR (NORI)
“As an actor and animal trainer who has worked on large scale productions here in New Zealand, in particular The Lord Of The Rings Trilogy and more recently, The Hobbit, I am flabbergasted to read this morning of the accusations levelled at the production by PETA. With a production as large as The Hobbit, filmed over such an extensive period the care of the animals used in filming was exceptional. The entire time we were on set, and when we were training with the animal wranglers employed to look after and train the animals for filming, I observed no mistreatment – in fact the opposite is true.The animals were treated with the utmost care and responsibility. The farm in which they were housed had excellent facilities for the care and maintenance of the animals’ health. So much so that I moved my own horse on site so I could ride him for training exercises. At all times on set we had experienced Wranglers and Animal health Authorities on hand and Vets to monitor the welfare of the Animals working for the film. It has been my experience working for this film company that they take every conceivable precaution and employ the very best practitioners in every department and that includes the animal department.
I feel that there is a certain amount of personal vindictiveness levelled at the production from individuals with their own agenda. As is often the case in these situations, organisations will leap at the chance to gain publicity for their cause without seeking the truth. Being an experienced horseman and having worked as a wrangler and rider in the past, I would not have allowed myself to be a part of any production that knowingly employed unsafe practice in the workplace in this way. I can say with absolute certainty the production went out of their way to treat animals with the upmost respect and care.”
Editor-in-Chief Nikki Finke - tip her here.
Photos: Remembering James Gandolfini




It’s PETA. No one should take those freaks seriously.
Peter Jackson doesn’t grasp that a defense this spirited and intense will only make his accusers dig in deeper because they’ve gotten his attention. While this is probably going to wind up selling more tickets for THE HOBBIT, thanks to the sheer publicity factor, audiences should stay healthily skeptical about the filmmakers’ motives. This Hobbit film series smells from top to bottom like it was designed to do one thing: make Peter Jackson richer. If some animals get hurt along the way, why exactly should he care?
Wait, movies are made for profit? Stop the presses.
No need to stop the presses on the “rich people have no morals or scruples” part, though. Of course we all know that.
*ahem*
The sarcasm is hurting my head, so I’ll switch to a forthright plea: can we please, please stop pretending that anything–ANYTHING–to do with PETA is news?
INterested Observer: every statement you made is either ill-informed or inaccurate. The idea that this will sell more tickets for the Hobbit b/c of publicity is simply absurd. Peter Jackson’s defense emboldening PETA is just silly — NOT responding would embolden them.
Jackson is a responsible filmmaker who does care about what happens on his sets and how his crew is treated. Your comment about the series making Jackson richer is bullshit snark from someone who’s nursing some bitterness.
INterested Observer, you are an idiot. Injured animals is good press??? why should he care about animals being injured? I’m am against animal cruelty, but all for you being hobbled. stay off the internet, moron.
I love animals, but someone needs to sue PETA out of existence. Let ‘em have it, Jackson.
Okey dokey. So a VET, a FARMER and an ACTOR who were all on the studio’s pay roll have made statements vouching for the animals’ welfare. Somehow that makes Peter Jackson look even more dubious…
And the people who made the accusations were disgruntled ex-employees. So we have two self-interested parties, making that argument a draw.
Why would people who weren’t on the payroll, be involved in the movie or the care of animals? Logic is important thing to apply when you’re making an accusation.
PETA, looks like you messed with the wrong production crew…now go do something actually meaningful you entitled pricks.
Seriosly, is anyone taking PETA’s side on this? PETA is past the point of being relevant. These are the people who believe all animals should roam free because pets are “slaves”. Who cares what they think? I’m all for the welfare of animals and organizations like the ASPCA, the PETA people are idiots who level accusations for the sole purpose of trying to stay relevant.
PETA isn’t against having pets, they actually promote adopting animals. Don’t talk shit just because you don’t like them. You can think what you want but at least don’t say something you don’t know anything about.
BTW I’m not saying that PETA is telling the truth, my post is just related to what you said about pets.
Sorry, but killing 25+ animals during production doesn’t get a pass. Rip on PETA all you want, but this is awful.
except that everyone says it’s not true — except for the fired animal wranglers?
You really think you could kill 25+ animals on a movie set with a crew that big and keep it secret?
As a producer I can certainly agree that PETA are insane. Nothing like the ASPCA. And as someone with a very minor and tangential exposure to the lotr/hobbit productions I can also say that everything, and I mean everything, was absolutely first rate, including the care and handling of animals.
Uh, horses were run off cliffs? Nothing anyone can say to defend that.
If we’re being asked to defend things that never happened on the set of The Hobbit, how dare they clone Hitler? I’m so outraged! How was that allowed to (not) happen???
You really need to question what you read, dear. PETA lies on a regular basis.
Hmmmm – But yet you take the words of an organization that is hellbent against this production using any animals at all at face value? You really don’t recognize PETA’s own agenda in manufacturing anything to stick to a major movie production?
PETA current view on the ethical treatment of animals is to use CGI. I.e. the only “ethical treatment” on the Hobbit that would’ve passed their muster is “no treatment.”
For better or worse, really, they’re no longer in the same place everyone else is anymore.
It’s PETA who cares what they say.
Vets and ASPCA can make any valid concerns heard but for god sake these are unsubstantiated claims of a person who decided they wanted more money then they deserved reguardless of the health and well being of their animals.
Anyone who argues that the animals were ill treated, you need something called evidence.
People aren’t/shouldn’t just believe you because you say so and getting PETA on your side does nothing for your case. More people know PETA as nut jobs then as people who care about animals.
If you truly believe that, then you do not know Peter Jackson very well.