Wednesday November 14, 2012
The one research study to rule them all
Just a stone’s throw from Hobbiton, a group of researchers are embarking on their own quest – to look at international
perceptions of, and hopes and expectations for, the Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey.
Lead researcher Dr Carolyn Michelle of the Audience Research Unit at the University of Waikato in Hamilton, a short
drive from Hobbiton, says she’s hoping for an international response to the survey, which is similar to one done for the
James Cameron movie Avatar in 2009.
“Whether or not you’re a serious Tolkien fan, and even if you’re a Hobbit hater, we want to know what you are thinking
and feeling about The Hobbit prior to its release,” she says. “You can participate in the one research study to rule
them all at http://goo.gl/4vsvf.”
The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey, directed by Peter Jackson, was filmed in New Zealand and is due to be released on
December 12.
Dr Michelle and colleagues from the University of Waikato’s Screen and Media Department, working with collaborators in
Canada and Denmark, are hoping global interest in The Hobbit will help generate more than 1,000 responses to their
survey from around the world.
“We want to see how prefigurative discussion, debate, marketing and promotion of a film
shape subsequent responses to it,” says Dr Michelle.
“We’re also interested in looking for response patterns linked to identity and location so the wider the reach of the
survey, the better the data. Here in New Zealand the making of the Hobbit has already fuelled discussion on a range of
issues; elsewhere in the world the response may be quite different.”
Locally, The Hobbit has generated debate about the power of Hollywood to dictate terms and conditions in the local film
industry – and wider.
An industrial dispute during filming nearly derailed the project until the New Zealand government agreed to introduce
new employment legislation, a controversial decision which drew widespread criticism.
Tourism New Zealand has launched a multi-million dollar campaign based on the movie to attract more international
tourists to the country.
The campaign includes footage of the original Hobbiton set in Matamata, in the central North Island, yet individual
tourism operators in areas where The Hobbit was filmed are being told they can’t reference the movie in any advertising
because of copyright issues.
The researchers say the study is set to be the first large-scale international sentiment survey using Q methodology. Q
methodology takes a quantitative and qualitative approach to create a conceptual map of people’s subjective responses.
Survey participants are asked to rank a set of statements, rather than simply agree or disagree.
The survey is the first part of a three phase project. “Next we’ll be looking at people’s responses to the film once
it’s released, and also undertaking a multi-lingual cross-cultural study analysing the differences in the responses
based on socioeconomic variables, values and beliefs,” says Dr Michelle.
ends