Search This Blog

Subcribe

Subscribe

Fans

Monday, March 29, 2010

A tale of food from the Harry Potter theme park

Presenting the second (of three-ish) parts of our report of Leaky's preview of the Wizarding World of Harry Potter.
By Melissa Anelli



All right. Enough about the attractions and how much it looks like Hogwarts and the sparkle of the fake snow and the crooked turrets and the bootlegged images over which we've all been drooling over like starved pomeranians.

This is about the food.

During last week's attraction preview Leaky had a sampling of nearly everything that will be offered in the Three Broomsticks restaurant/pub. (We mean it: nearly everything. We walked in like normal people and ambled out, carting our bellies in front of us in wheelbarrows and planning endless sets of crunches.)


Some quick facts:
  • The food was presented to us very excitedly by Ric Florrel, Senior VP of Food and Merch, and Stephen Jayson, the head chef.
  • It replicates food found in the books pretty faithfully (in some cases unbelievably so)
  • There are options for children (all kids' meals under 300 calories) and vegetarians (no Vegetarian Meal per se, but there's a Mac and Cheese option and a Potato Leek soup that may even be vegan friendly)
  • Butterbeer and pumpkin juice will blow your mind. The butterbeer was selected by J.K. Rowling out of a number of variations. More on that below.
  • The food features some fried and comfort food but the menu is mostly made up of things you might find on a Weasley dinner table.
  • Butterbeer is not alcoholic, but there will be a Hog's Head Ale that is exclusive to the park, and in fact exclusive to the Hog's Head Pub (more on that later in the month of April). The tap for it featured a 3-D hog snout. You can only get it there.
  • Pumpkin juice will be bottled and sold; butterbeer will not.
  • It was "really important that it was food that looked like it walked out of the Harry Potter books," said Thierry Coup (VP, Universal Creative).


And with that we bring you everything we can possibly remember:
  • Butterbeer:
  1. It's like cream soda plus shortbread cookies plus… plus something.
  2. When the (nonalcoholic) butterbeer is poured, the barkeep applies the foam separately. The foam makes frothy foam mustaches that you'll lick off your top lip like it's your job. It must have some yeast, because it kept replicating itself in the glass as the butterbeer below it diminished. It's a whole separate taste, much thicker than the butterbeer below it, and fuller in flavor, almost like a creamed gingerbread cookie. It's served in a plastic stein that you return (that says "Butterbeer" on it), but souvenir steins will be available to purchase. Butterbeer is ALSO served FROZEN, sort of like a Frappuccino.


  • Pumpkin juice:
  1. Like apple and pumpkin pie in a crisp and summery drink.
  2. Lots of hints of cinnamon and honey and autumnal spices that somehow feel like something you could easily drink in the one-billion-degree weather of Orlando in July.


  • The Great Feast.
  1. One food option is a Great Feast, which claims to serve a family of four [perfect!! ^^] but could probably stretch to five or six.
  2. A trough - I mean - platter of food, it contains several huge ears of corn, at least four large, roasted bits of chicken, four servings of ribs, seasoned and roasted vegetables, and seasoned potatoes.
  3. It was this more than anything that we could not believe was being prepared at a theme park.


  • Other options included:
  1. Shepherd's pie (comes in a little ceramic container, very tasty - the pie, that is, not the ceramic container, although certainly if seasoned- all right, that joke's gone on long enough)
  2. a chicken salad; heaps of vegetables; cornish pasties (twice the size that would be considered "bite" size, a nice small option).


  • Dessert:
  1. Seriously, folks, you might want to plan two trips on two separate days, because if you think your stomach can handle all of that food and then a dessert table that seems to have marched right out of the bakery section of Honeydukes, YOU ARE WRONG.
  2. For starters, they made Strawberry and Peanut Butter Ice Cream.
  3. Ten points if you didn't get to this sentence before remembering where that appears in the books: yep, die hards, in the second book, Harry buys this for himself and Ron and Hermione
  4. If you read it and thought, "Um, what kind of weirdo wizard thing is that?" you were not alone. And that was everyone's initial reaction - "Really? They made strawberry and peanut butter ice cream? Really? That's just silly."
  5. Silly must be the new freaking-delicious because it was the best thing on the menu and something I would spend a whole day's calories on if given the chance. I don't even like strawberry ice cream on its own. This, however, with bits of peanut butter and vanilla dancing around inside - this was great.


  • Cauldron Cakes
  1. Cauldron Cakes. Big, stand-on-their-own, chocolate spongy canisters leaking - exploding, more like - gooey chocolate fondue something-or-other that may or may not be a substance I wish covered everything. (Smart money's on "may.")
  2. The hard chocolate handle sticking out of the top and the clear sugared bubbles in the middle really made it art.



A few bites of each of those, after a few bites of each of everything else at lunch, had us all feeling pretty droopy. Somehow, somehow, through sheer persistence and moral fiber, we summoned the courage to do our sworn duty as Harry Potter webmeisters and reach for…

…the treacle tart (gummy, creamy, a cherry inside) and the apple tart (like an apple crumble), and the tiny pumpkin pies. There was more - cookies, some amazing looking thing with strawberries in a cup under several strata of chocolate - but at this point it was a safe bet that diabetic coma wasn't far off and we should try and get out of there with our pride and more or less at our current body weight.

Just think...we haven't even been to Honeydukes yet.


_____________________________________________


Aw~ all these sound so nice! I can't wait to be there!!
I would like to try the Strawberry & Peanut Ice cream, Butterbeer, Pumpkin Juice!! ^0^

Share/Bookmark

Friday, March 26, 2010

New Details Emerge for Wizarding World Attraction:

  • First-ever combination of advanced robotic ride system technology with innovative, immersive filmmaking
  • Award-winning composer John Williams oversaw the creation of the attraction's score
  • Duration of ride: The full attraction experience, including the queue, takes about an hour
  • Number of scenes in the attraction: 12
  • Characters (featuring Harry Potter film talent): Harry Potter, Ron Weasley, Hermione Granger, Albus Dumbledore, Rubeus Hagrid and Draco Malfoy You may also catch a glimpse of Fred and George Weasley, Ginny Weasley and Neville Longbottom








  • wait..... What about LUNA???
    I wish she is there.

    Share/Bookmark

    Thursday, March 25, 2010

    *Wahoo~* Preview of Wizarding World of Harry Potter fr TLC

    Today Universal Studios announced that the highly anticipated amusement park, The Wizarding World of Harry Potter, will have its grand opening on June 18th. (This is the grand opening date, not the first time it will be open to the public: those who have purchased one of the advertised packages for May 28 are still promised a "Harry Potter experience.") Leaky was at the park this week for a preview of some of the attractions - many, many details on the "Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey" below!

    -By Melissa Anelli


    This summer and after - after the June 18 opening and decades into the future - fans who visit the Wizarding World of Harry Potter will experience a series of owl-home events. During a recent preview of the Hogwarts attraction, however, it became blindingly obvious which one of these events will send them into the kind of joyful squeal that only those who have been part of a true fandom can say they ever had the pleasure of experiencing.

    (Below: the portrait gallery - click for high res - featuring Helga Hufflepuff at center and Godric Gryffindor in the large frame on the right.)




    Just in front of Hogwarts castle, at the very beginning of "Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey," the attraction that developers call a "game changing" visitor magnet, are two high columns. Atop these columns, two boars flank the entrance to the castle. Walking through them - seeing them above you as you walk by - creates the kind of transporting moment that most attendees, and all fans, have been excited about for years. Nothing has yet compared to the mouth-open wonder and nearly tangible lift of spirit that accompanies walking through those gates and toward the massive, rock-set, spired castle of our imagination. We've seen lot of things as fans and reporters on this fandom - sets, museums, exhibits. Nothing creates the feeling of Hogwarts so spectacularly as crossing that threshold.



    (Pictured below: the Room of Requirement during the "Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey" ride)


    Then there's a the castle itself in its incomprehensible mass and cool Scottish beauty. It's good that the first few feet of the interior of Hogwarts are relatively stone holding rooms, because it takes some time to absorb the fact that you're actually inside. (And it will indeed be a feat to get inside it once this park is open to the public: the line snakes through what must have been a quarter to a half a mile of scenery, snaking through the greenhouses in a maze of metal line-holders: this will be two hours of your day at Universal at the least. Probably three.) Once you are, a few things become clear:




    Firstly, J.K. Rowling's influence is all over the attraction, from the sparkling dialogue (screenwriter Steve Kloves is also apparent here) on portraits and characters, to small story touches (such as the fact that one statue is of Hogwarts' first headmaster: the founders were professors, none was ever a headmaster) that dot the attraction.

    (Pictured below: Dumbeldore's office. Click for high res.)






    Second, the effects are stunning:
    • The portraits move and talk without leaving any traces of digital imagery or technology.
    • They are not even reflective: they appear to have been coated in varnish and look as though they hopped out of your 18th century art textbook and could speak to you without any help from electronics.
    • The same is nearly true of the visual representations of Dumbledore (Michael Gambon), Harry (Daniel Radcliffe), Hermione (Emma Watson) and Ron (Rupert Grint). As of yet undescribed projection technology has resulted in videos that look like they could take form and accompany you to the Three Broomsticks (more on that next week).

    (Below: The gryffin leading up to Dumbledore's office. Click for high res.)







    -For the first time ever we will meet the four founders.
    1. Gryffindor, Slythering, Hufflepuff and Ravenclaw were cast, approved by J.K. Rowling (Vice President of Universal Creative Thierry Coup says Ms. Rowling proclaimed they were exactly as they were in her imagination), and talk to visitors about the ride's storyline.
    2. They also josh each other about quidditch rivalries;
    • Slytherin openly seethes about Harry Potter (the boy who "survived").
    • Ravenclaw is angled and dark-haired
    • Hufflepuff is soft and gracious looking.
    • Slytherin towers in his photo, all long nosed and stern.
    • Gryffindor has a beefy appearance that bears a slight resemblance to Hagrid.
    All of their accents differ, in accordance with the origins named by the Sorting Hat song of the first book.






    -The sets are fully reconstructed inside the castle; you walk through
    • Dumbledore's office,
    • the Gryffindor common room,
    • several hallways dotted with memorabilia (the Mirror of Erised, the Fat Lady's portrait, a Gryffindor pasteboard featuring a moving Daily Prophet proclaiming that Gryffindor would be defending its title that afternoon).

    (Below: Dan Radcliffe on the Quidditch pitch during the Hogwarts attraction. Click for high res.)









    -A few new characters (all approved by J.K. Rowling) appear in portraits, giving lectures and popping into one another's frames.

    -You will be able to peruse this area at your leisure even though it's technically a line: no one will rush you through to the end. The set is so detailed that that kind of browsing may be necessary.

    -The front hall also boasts statues of the One-eyed Witch and the Architect of Hogwarts


    -The story revolves around the fact that Muggles are being allowed into the castle for the first time ever.
    Dumbledore gives you a short intro and directs you to the Defense Against the Dark Arts room where Professor Binns is set to give a lecture on the history of the castle. Of course, Harry, Ron and Hermione won't let this happen. When you get to the DADA room, a door opens, and Harry, Ron and Hermione appear from under the Invisibility Cloak, Ron and Hermione bickering sharply.
    Harry informs you that instead of listening to a boring lecture (which Hermione says is actually fascinating!) they want to take you to a Quidditch game by sneaking you out of the castle.
    So, you're directed to the Room of Requirement, where the ride will begin.

    -"You won't be able to tell the difference between inside and outside" on the HPatFJ ride, says Woodbury.

    -The ride will be four people to a carriage, and carries the conceit that the carriages (really enchanted "benches") are supposed to fly.

    -A secondary storyline, that Hagrid has lost a dragon that very day, is hinted at.






    -The technology includes something that has been referred to as a 360-degree film experience. There were also several mentions of a robotic arm and the "biggest special effects we have ever put on," according to President of Universal Creative Mark Woodbury. "It's a level of execution that makes everything else pale in comparison."

    -The experience will take you through the Forbidden Forest, an encounter with the Whomping Willow, out to the Quidditch pitch, through a cold patch of Dementors, and more.

    -J.K. Rowling's approved, ultimately, everything, and her "level of involvement [created] the backbone of making it as authentic as it is," says Woodbury.

    Coup (vice president of Universal Creative) said, "We had to create a whole new level of experience," and that there has been "an attention to detail unlike anything we have ever done before. " He promises that the combination of new patented technologies and Universal's history of thrill rides will create an attraction that will make feel as though you are "riding beside" the characters from the books and films.




    Remember you can look at videos of the park in TLC's gallery here. Expect Leaky and PotterCast to have more details soon!
    (unnamed, he is also seen frequently in the films; he's the gold/bronze statue holding a model of Hogwarts in his hand).
    Share/Bookmark

    Tuesday, March 23, 2010

    Forbes: Most Bankable Teenage Actors

    TLC reports that Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson and Rupert Grint have been placed at the top of the Forbes list of "Most Bankable Teen Stars" with the Harry Potter films having earned $4.3 billion.

    16 years old Dakota Fanning follows the trio on the list with films that have netted $2 billion.

    Kristen Stewart takes the number three spot with $1.5 billion. Her "Twilight" co-star,
    Taylor Lautner
    is fourth with $900 million.



    And rounding out the top five is Abigail Breslin whose movies have pulled in $516 million.

    Share/Bookmark

    Monday, March 22, 2010

    A fire broke out on DH set

    British tabloid News of the World is reporting that a fire broke out on the "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows" film set on Friday evening.

    The newspaper cites "explosives used in action sequences" as the cause of the blaze, with firefighters from six fire engines taking 40 minutes to put the fire out. No one was injured and the explosives reportedly were being used to film the
    "scenes where Hogwarts gets blown up during the battle."

    The paper adds that Daniel Radcliffe (Harry Potter), Rupert Grint (Ron Weasley) and Emma Watson (Hermione Granger) were not on set at the time, but the special effects crew are "devastated."
    Share/Bookmark

    Friday, March 19, 2010

    QUICK POST: Opening date of Wizarding Park ^0^

    The Harry Potter theme park - Wizarding World of Harry Potter at Universal Islands of Adventure in Orlando - will reveal the date of its grand opening on March 25 at 12 pm eastern time!

    Meanwhile, watch this behind-the-scenes video featuring the cast of the films as they shot several scenes for the park's attractions.





    AWESOME!!

    Share/Bookmark

    Wednesday, March 17, 2010

    BEST photo ever




    Share/Bookmark

    Sunday, March 14, 2010

    Eclipse Sneak Peek BTS






    Exciting, hah?
    Well, I am!

    It looks like a more classic vampire+werewolf action movie. And I believe the boys would like this.



    Here's the trailer


    Share/Bookmark

    Friday, March 5, 2010

    HP makes TOP BOOK TO PASS ON

    A World Book Day survey has found that the Harry Potter series ranks as the top book readers would pass on to younger generations. The BBC reports that more than 1,000 Britons aged 16-64 were surveyed as part of this poll. The full list is as follows:

    1. The Harry Potter Series - JK Rowling
    2. The Da Vinci Code - Dan Brown
    3. Why Don't Penguins' Feet Freeze?: And 114 Other Questions - New Scientist
    4. A Short History of Nearly Everything - Bill Bryson
    5. Twilight - Stephenie Meyer
    6. The Kite Runner - Khaled Hosseini
    7. 9/11 Commission Report - National Commission on Terrorist Attacks upon the United States
    8. You Are What You Eat: The Plan That Will Change Your Life - Dr Gillian McKeith
    9. The God Delusion - Richard Dawkins
    10. Dreams From My Father - Barack Obama



    It is awesome that HP is #1 at the top of this list :)
    HP really is timeless and passing the book down through the generations will ensure that HP lives on. I’m a little surprised at some of the books in the top ten but hey what do I know … lol
    In the list of bed time books where HP was voted #19 it has been beaten by some worthy opponents I guess like Winnie The Pooh, Dr Seuss books and Hans Christian Andersen’s fairy tales. Maybe in a few years from now HP will be classed as a classic like those books, too!!

    I’m so glad to hear that teenagers, giving their choice to Harry Potter, are still capable of recognizing which the true values of life are, and are willing to pass them on to the next generation. I’m really confident in a better future, better because of us.
    ^^
    Share/Bookmark

    Thursday, March 4, 2010

    Dan: Saying Goodbye to Potter...

    A number of new articles and videos have surfaced on the MTV website in which Daniel Radcliffe (Harry Potter) has spoken briefly about "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows."




    Radcliffe comments, "[we] have done a few tests, and it does look really, really rather good."

    The Harry Potter actor also spoke about the daughter of Amanda Knight - the
    head of the makeup department - who Radcliffe hopes will portray Harry's daughter Lily Potter. "She was born a week before I got the part and is now 9," continued Radcliffe, "So it's the kind of physical embodiment of how long we've been there."



    Secondly, Daniel Radcliffe has spoken about saying goodbye to Harry Potter, "something," he concedes, "you have to accept, and it's also very exciting." The actor described seeing fellow cast members leave the set for good as, "odd" as they finish their individual stories in the film and also discussed the lasting impact of the film on the British film industry:





    I did have a moment the other day, in the makeup room that I have been in for ten years now. I did walk in and go, 'Wow, this is [hitting me]. One day — in about four or five months from now — I'm going to walk in here
    for the last time.'

    Potter has been the major film in England for the past ten years and it's [...] kept a lot of people in work, myself included, obviously.











    You can find the video accompanying this article at this link, where you can also find more video clips of MTV's interview with the actor. In these clips, Radcliffe mentions filming the resurrection stone scene in 'The Forest Again,' saying he "put a lot of pressure on [himself]" to get it right.






    I really enjoyed this interview.
    A very good interview! It’s always a pleasure to listen to Daniel! :)
    All the actors and the crew seem to be very committed to the process of making the best possible movie for all fans.
    It makes me happy that he thinks the aging tests are looking good. Too bad he stressed himself out so much for the Forrest scene. Hopefully it’s still fine and he just put too much pressure on himself.
    That little girl must be so cute! [It's Lily Luna Potter!! ^0^]

    How crazy to think she’s physical representation of the age of these movies.
    I love the idea and I think it’s really special for the crew to use her.

    How sad for Dan to being saying good-bye to everyone. Who’s left and how much more time do they still have?? This is exciting me so excited for the films.

    Share/Bookmark

    Rhys Ifans: "Real Honor" to be in DH

    MTV has released a clip from a press junket interview with actor Rhys Ifans, who is set to portray the character of Xeno Lovegood in the "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows" film, which features the actor discussing further his role in the upcoming film. Starting by relating the "great" experience he had making the film, Mr. Ifans expanded on this by saying:

    "When you're an English actor and you get the 'Harry Potter' call-- it's like
    Batman, you know? You have a phone, you have a normal phone, and then you have
    one that is made out of wood. That's the 'Potter' people. They call you up [and]
    you get your wand out, you put your cloak on and off you go. It's a real honor.
    It's like getting knighted or something."


    "You just sit with all these actors
    you've starved with in the theater... sitting there dressed as wizards [and]
    having wand-offs. So it's very pleasantly surreal."


    Share/Bookmark

    Tuesday, March 2, 2010

    A 10-year roller coaster ride

    There is a new interview with Jason Isaacs (Lucius Malfoy) with Collider.com online today. Quoteage:


    Well, it’s very sad for me. I was already nostalgic for the history of Harry
    Potter while I was still making it and I knew the end was coming. It was two
    film…they made the last book into two films and it was a fantastic experience because everybody’s back…everyone who is left alive that is…and even some of the dead people.
    There is nothing greater than sitting around on a Harry Potter set when you’re not filming and listening to the likes of Maggie Smith, Michael Gambon, Bill Nighy and Jim Broadbent tell stories. And watching everybody crew the scenery up in the few moments you get on screen - trying to out ham each other is magnificent. This big franchise goes out in an epic way. But I was always cognisant of the fact that I’d have to pack up my little furry friend of a wig and stick it in a box and say goodbye to the cane. All the joy was tinged with sadness for me.

    I think the end of the films will be a fantastically cinematic and visual feast. It will more than satisfy the readers of the books…but you won’t get is the book on screen. You’ll get something more and different. Everybody is very savvy to the notion that this is a much-loved franchise and this will be the end of an eighth film, and it needs to have weight and substance and you need to feel drained by the end of it. It’s a ten-year roller coaster ride, not a two-hour roller coaster ride, and we all know it and we all felt it, and it was in the air while we were shooting it.

    Wow, I cannot believe that after ten years, the end is so near! I remember when I first watch Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone at the cinema when I was just 7.
    10 years now... I hope it would never end.
    On one hand I am really really excited for the two part film to come out but on the other hand, just thinking that after that there will be nothing else to look forward to is just overwhelming.

    Share/Bookmark