Saturday, January 29, 2011
FB: Vote for the Blu-Ray Cover of DH PArt
There's a new video on the page, actress Emma Watson (Hermione Granger) presents the two options and explains how to vote.
In order to place your vote, "Like" the official Harry Potter UK Facebook page and click on the "Blu-ray Poll" tab. Voting ends at midnight GMT on January 30th.
Tuesday, January 25, 2011
Monday, January 24, 2011
DH Part 1 DVD
The BBFC has come out with the release date of the "Deathly Hallows: Part 1" DVD, which will be April 11th, as well as the special features that will be on the DVD:
Deleted Scenes
The Burrow's Shed: Ron Discusses Radios with Mr. Weasley
The Dursley House: Harry and Aunt Petunia As They Leave House
The Dursley House: Harry and Dudley Shake Hands
The Granger House: Death Eaters Search Deserted Home
Ministry of Magic Lifts: Harry Tells Arthur He's Being Tracked
Tent: Trio Discusses Destroying The Locket
Rabbit Chase in the Forest
Montage: Ron and Hermione Skimming Stones
Featurettes
The Seven Harrys
On the Green with Rupert, Tom, Oliver, and James
Focus Point
The Last Days of Privet Drive
Hagrid's Motorbike
Magical Tents!
Death Eaters Attack Cafe
Creating Dobby and Kreacher
Godric's Hollow
The Frozen Lake
The Return of Griphook
Deleted Scenes
The Burrow's Shed: Ron Discusses Radios with Mr. Weasley
The Dursley House: Harry and Aunt Petunia As They Leave House
The Dursley House: Harry and Dudley Shake Hands
The Granger House: Death Eaters Search Deserted Home
Ministry of Magic Lifts: Harry Tells Arthur He's Being Tracked
Tent: Trio Discusses Destroying The Locket
Rabbit Chase in the Forest
Montage: Ron and Hermione Skimming Stones
Featurettes
The Seven Harrys
On the Green with Rupert, Tom, Oliver, and James
Focus Point
The Last Days of Privet Drive
Hagrid's Motorbike
Magical Tents!
Death Eaters Attack Cafe
Creating Dobby and Kreacher
Godric's Hollow
The Frozen Lake
The Return of Griphook
from TLC
DH Part 1 DVD
Sunday, January 23, 2011
YOU GOTTA CHECK THIS OUT!
Evanna Lynch has written a terrific blog post for the campaign titled "Why the Body Bind is My Nightmare", which you can find here on the HPA website.
Evanna writes:
It’s true that the mind is where all ideas are born, but the body is the tool that translates and expresses those ideas to the wider world. It is nothing but a vehicle for our greater creative purpose but if we don’t give it fuel and keep it in good working order it instead becomes another obstacle to transcend, a physical one, as well as the many million fictitious mental ones that society presents.
To anyone who has let their body cage their dream, I say to you, isn’t it true you might as well have been paralysed, hit with the curse?
YOU GOTTA CHECK THIS OUT! NO JOKE.
I was so impressed with Evanna. She has always been my favorite HP actress.
I was so impressed with Evanna. She has always been my favorite HP actress.
A truly inspiring blog post, this made me love her even more!!
YOU GOTTA CHECK THIS OUT!
Thursday, January 20, 2011
Wednesday, January 19, 2011
Art Director talks about Snape Death Scene
Art director, Andrew Ackland-Snow, has revealed a bit of curious information from the forthcoming conclusion to final part of the Harry Potter film series in an interview.
"We wanted to change a bit where Snape dies. In the book, he dies on the Shrieking Shack, and we wanted to get him out from, not a conventional interior, but from that kind of box, to do it in a more dramatic atmosphere. We asked J.K. if she agreed for that to happen in there, because we hadn't really seen it before. We made a crystal house, and you can see what happens in the boat house from there - Are you listening Harry? -, but also the school is in flames...and she loved it. Besides, it's a very romantic place to die. Snape dies in a extremely good way, I gotta say."
Art Director talks about Snape Death Scene
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Friday, January 14, 2011
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
Monday, January 10, 2011
Yates, Heyman and Tom Discuss DH Part 2
In a new article in USA Today, director David Yates and producer David Heyman talked about the general atmosphere of "Deathly Hallows: Part 2":
"The very last one's a big old epic, with lots of battles and dragons and goblins. It's going to be operatic. And then it's over," says director David Yates.
"The decision to split this into two was purely a creative one. By doing two, there's more detail and more time to engage with the characters in the way that we do," says producer David Heyman. "It allows the audience time to bring themselves to it. The audience has the time to project their own feelings and engage with the characters."
Both Yates and Heyman, as well as Tom Felton (Draco Malfoy), also discussed some of the feelings that came with ending the film series:
Asked if he's feeling nostalgic, Yates says, "I don't think we ever took it for granted. We'd sometimes joke about what we're going to do when it's all over. We'll never have this amount of resources again. We're going to have to go back into the real world, after living in this bubble."
...
"One of the greatest gifts that Jo Rowling and the whole franchise has given (the actors) is that we can really end up making a kid's night just from saying hello," Felton says. "I was 12 when we started shooting; 13 when it came out. I'm 23 now. It's been a long journey.
"You don't see people growing up, not when you're there. It's only when you look back at the films. ... Look at Daniel! He was bloody tiny. My face was like a basketball. But those angelic features seem to have left me," he jokes.
"The last film will be it. It's never going to be like this again. You never take this for granted," Heyman says. "You want to do the end justice, so there's a little bit of anxiety."
from TLC
Yates, Heyman and Tom Discuss DH Part 2
Saturday, January 8, 2011
Copyright Lawsuit Against J. K. Rowling, Bloomsbury Dismissed by Judge
A lawsuit against Harry Potter author J. K. Rowling and the book's UK publisher, Bloomsbury, by the estate of the late Adrian Jacobs has been dismissed by the judge, a statement from US Potter publisher Scholastic reveals. The statement reads:
Scholastic is extremely pleased that Judge Scheindlin decided to dismiss, at the earliest stage possible, the lawsuit brought against Scholastic by the estate of Adrian Jacobs. The Court's swift dismissal supports our position that the case was completely without merit and that comparing Willy the Wizard to the Harry Potter series was absurd. Judge Scheindlin clearly agreed, stating: “…the contrast between the total concept and feel of the works is so stark that any serious comparison of the two strains credulity.” Scholastic will continue to vigorously defend any such frivolous claims challenging the originality of Harry Potter and the brilliant imagination of its author, J.K. Rowling.
great news!!
Copyright Lawsuit Against J. K. Rowling, Bloomsbury Dismissed by Judge
Stuart Craig Nominated for Excellence in Production Design Award
"Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1" has been nominated for the Art Directors Guild's 15th Annual Excellence in Production Design Awards for 2010. DH production designer Stuart Craig was nominated alongside the production designers for "Alice in Wonderland", "Inception", "Tron: Legacy" and "The Chronicles of Narnia: The Voyage of the Dawn Treader" in the Fantasy category.
yeah!
Stuart Craig Nominated for Excellence in Production Design Award
Thursday, January 6, 2011
Jo in early interview
- "I think it's funny and... I think it's frightening. [...] Judging by letters I've received I'd say I've succeeded in that and that's all I wanted."
- "It sold very well, which wildly overshot my expectations, I have to say, because it sold about 30,000 copies in the U.K. which is phenomenal. To me it's phenomenal. To me more than anyone else, probably! It won the Smarties book prize recently which was fantastic, mainly because [...] you're shortlisted by adults, but children vote the gold, silver and bronze medals. So children have a say in that."
- "My realistic side has not allowed me to dream half of what's happened to me."
- "If it were done right, I think it could make a great film. And if it was done right, yes that would be wild, that would be wonderful to see it as a film. But I wanted to write books, do you know what I mean? So my absolute ambition was not Hollywood."
- "I'm a quarter Scottish by blood, on my mother's side. My parents met and married in Scotland and then settled in the Forest of Dean in England and for some odd reason my sister and I have both gravitated back to Scotland. I have to say too, I've always imagined... Harry starts off in London, or near London in Surrey, but he ends up in Scotland, the haunted school for wizards I always imagined to be next to a loch, this big gothic thing set in all the mountains of Scotland. That's never made clear in the books, that's just left open, but in my imagination it's in Scotland."
Jo in early interview
Tuesday, January 4, 2011
Monday, January 3, 2011
Saturday, January 1, 2011
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)