Tag: jk-rowling

  • 7 Reasons Why You Shouldn’t Expect ‘Fantastic Beasts’ to Be the Next Harry Potter at the Box Office

    Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them” was supposed to be one of the Fall’s biggest movies, but it suffered from some of the same problems that’s bedeviled other films this season: how to find enough of a fantastic audience.

    Predictions for the “Harry Potter” spinoff’s premiere ran anywhere from $80 to $100 million. After all, it’s been five years since the last film set in the Potter universe, and anticipation for a return trip to the wizard-ing world was high, what with a screenplay by J.K. Rowling herself, the franchise’s first ever American-set story, and the launch of a new five-installment series of movies.

    And yet, after all the weekend wand-waving was done, “Fantastic Beasts” had conjured up only an estimated $75.0 million. Though good enough for first place, that’s $10 million below the opening take of “Doctor Strange” two weeks ago, and $28 million behind the $103 million averaged by the eight “Harry Potter” movies during their opening weekends. An opening in the $90 million range would have indicated strong enthusiasm stateside to warrant the five-film franchise plan. Now, the movie will need all the help at the international box office not only to recoup its reported $180 million budget before P & A, but also to justify five future outings at almost $200 million a pop. Would you spend that much on five films when the first film opened to less than amazing results?

    Why didn’t “Fantastic Beasts” cast a similar spell over the box office? Here are seven reasons, starting with the glaringly obvious:
    1. No Harry
    Sorry, Newt Scamander, but you’re just not the Boy Who Lived. You’re the zoologist who traveled. You don’t even get your name in the title, like Harry did, eight times. The near total absence of familiar characters in this prequel, set 70 years and a continent away from the actions of “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone,” wasn’t necessarily a deal-breaker, but it doesn’t seem to have helped, either.

    2. No Real Bankable Stars
    True, the Potter movies had no stars either when “Sorcerer’s Stone” launched the franchise; rather, the franchise was big enough to make stars out of Daniel Radcliffe and his Hogwarts pals. Maybe it’ll make one out of Oscar-winning Eddie Redmayne, too. But going into the project, Redmayne was anything but a proven box office draw. Even if you loved him as Stephen Hawking in “The Theory of Everything,” that didn’t mean you were eager to see him play a 1920s wizard with a briefcase full of magical animals.

    3. No Source Material to Inspire Fandom
    This was the first “Potter” movie not based on a previous novel, just a fake textbook that popped up on Harry’s syllabus decades later. That the plot was a mystery to all Potter fans was supposed to be a selling point, but without a novel to whet fan appetites and introduce the characters and setting, “Beasts” may have proved too confusing — or just plain too “who cares?” — for even some hardcore Potterphiles.

    4. Potter Fans Are Mostly All Grown Up
    “Beasts” attracted an audience that was 55 percent above the age of 35, and just 18 percent were under the age of 18 — or less than what one would expect considering the target audience. Remember, kids who were Potter fans when the movies began 15 years ago are now mortgage-paying adults, often with kids of their own. That and the fact that “Beasts” is a period drama about adults and not a contemporary-set film about school children seems to have contributed to the adult-skewing polls. It’s good to see grown-ups finally returning to the multiplex, but something’s wrong when a J.K. Rowling fantasy movie can’t enchant a kid audience.

    5. Beastly Rivals
    Let’s start with that other current movie sorcerer. Knocked out of the top spot in its third weekend, “Doctor Strange” is still holding on well, earning an estimated $17.7 million this weekend. Yep, all the grown-ups are back, and they’re watching guys with capes perform spells. Or maybe they were seeing “Arrival,” “Almost Christmas,” or “Hacksaw Ridge,” adult comedies and dramas that are also holding up well. The kids, meanwhile, were all seeing “Trolls” for the third straight weekend; it came in third, just a hair behind “Strange.” That urgent, must-see-it-the-first-weekend feeling just wasn’t there among potential “Beasts” audiences. And that may have been due to…

    6. Low Stakes
    Harry Potter had to save the world. It’s less clear what drives Newt, but even with the Muggle-world catastrophe of World War II looming for the “Beasts” characters, we already kinda know how that one turned out.

    Plus, we got to watch Harry, Ron, and Hermione grow up on screen over the course of 10 years of movies. No such treat is in store for “Beasts” viewers. So it’s harder for even full-on Potterheads to get emotionally invested this time around.

    7. Multiplex Drain
    THE EDGE OF SEVENTEENHas the success of “Doctor Strange” ended the fall box office slump, or just provided a temporary break from it? It’s starting to look like the latter, with total receipts at the multiplex declining for the second straight weekend.

    Every new movie underperformed expectations. Teen dramedy “The Edge of Seventeen” was expected to net low-to-mid teens with its 95% “Fresh” RT score. Instead, it came in seventh place with less than $5 million. And no one wanted Miles Teller’s boxing biopic “Bleed for This,” which flopped in eighth place. Also bombing? Ang Lee‘s buzzed-about Oscar hopeful “Billy Lynn’s Long Halftime Walk,” which expanded wide in its second weekend but wound up in 14th place with just an estimated $930,000, or a measly $791 per screen

    Viewers seemed to enjoy “Beasts and “Seventeen,” giving “Beasts” an A CinemaScore and the latter an A-. But for paying customers who enjoyed those movies to recommend them to others, they first had to be enticed into the theater.

    And yet, clearly, people had better things to do this weekend and last than to go to the movies.

  • 15 Things You (Probably) Never Knew About ‘Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone’

    It’s a pretty big year for Harry Potter fans.

    Not only is “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them” set to kick off an entirely new chapter for the franchise, this year also marks the 15th anniversary of the original movie, “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone.” To celebrate both those occasions, here are 15 interesting facts you might not know about the first Potter movie.1. As the creator of Harry Potter, it would have been fitting if Rowling played his mother during the scenes where Harry sees his family in the Mirror of Erised. But while that was originally the plan, the role eventually went to actress Geraldine Somerville.

    2. Potter fans will surely know that the first book and movie are titled “Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone” in most countries. This forced director Chris Columbus to shoot two versions of scenes that involve any mention of the Sorcerer’s Stone so the dialogue could be altered.
    3. Every one knows that Steven Spielberg was considered to helm the movie, which he suggested should be animated rather than live-action. But, after he dropped out, few know who the legendary filmmaker suggested as his replacement: M. Night Shyamalan.
    4. The various child actors in the film, including stunt doubles, actually attended class during filming. Each actor was given several hours of private tuition each day.
    5. Alan Rickman was hand-picked by author J.K. Rowling to play Professor Snape. She even revealed certain details about the character’s history to him that fans wouldn’t learn until the final book was released.
    6. The iconic floating candles in Hogwarts’ Great Hall were made by suspending candle-shaped tubes on thin wires. Unfortunately, the wires had a nasty habit of breaking during filming, causing a switch to CG-animated candles for all the sequels.
    7. Warners initially balked at the idea of producing one movie for each Harry Potter book, fearing the child actors would age too quickly over the course of the series. Luckily, Rowling convinced them to take that risk.

    8. Nicholas Flamel, creator of the titular Sorcerer’s Stone, is believed to have actually existed in 14th Century France.
    9. Losing or breaking your glasses can be a pain, but count yourself lucky that you aren’t Harry Potter. Daniel Radcliffe went through no less than 160 pairs over the course of filming.

    10. The Mirror of Erised has an inscription along its edge that, when viewed backwards, reads “I show not your face, but your heart’s desire.”

    11. In the script, the flashbacks to Voldemort killing Harry’s parents were written by J.K. Rowling herself. The producers knew she was the only one who knew exactly what happened.
    12. While many of the owls at Hogwarts are digital creations, some scenes required live owls capable of carrying letters in their beaks. It took six months of training to pull that off.

    13. While the massive tomes in Dumbledore’s office look impressive, most of them were actually just phone books with fake covers.
    14. Williams actively campaigned to be cast as Hogwarts’ friendly groundskeeper, but Rowling shot down the idea because she wanted to stick to a strictly British and Irish cast.15. Though it wasn’t until the second film that fans learned the human identity of Lord Voldemort, “Sorcerer’s Stone” foreshadows the debut of Tom Riddle with a trophy bearing his name and the inscription “Service to the School.”

    Facts courtesy of IMDB.

  • David Yates Plans to Direct All Five ‘Fantastic Beasts’ Movies

    The same director plans to direct all of the “Fantastic Beasts” movies, so there shouldn’t be any striking differences — unlike going from Chris Columbus’s child-like first two “Harry Potter” movies to the dark, artsy maturity of Alfonso Cuaron’s “Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban.” Then again, if you don’t like the direction of the first “Fantastic Beasts” movie you can’t hope that someone else will hop on board with a fresh take.

    David Yates joined the Potter family as the director of the fifth film, “Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix,” and got Warner Bros.’s vote of confidence to stay on for “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince,” and both “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 1” and “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2.”

    Yates returned to direct “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them,” which is a prequel of sorts to Harry Potter, set in the same universe but decades earlier. J.K. Rowling wrote the script, and revealed that she’s planning for five movies, as opposed to the initial expectation of three. Yates told The Hollywood Reporter that he is on board for all of the “Beasts” ahead:

    “I love making films, and I’ve got a great team, all of whom are like family. I only look at it movie to movie.”

    It does sound like there’s a detailed plan for what’s ahead, and the second film won’t be a retread of the first. Yates told THR the sequel “feels so different from this. Much more haunting, like a dream.” He said Rowling is currently putting the finishing touches on that second script, and he’s working with the crew in pre-production, building sets of Paris, France and Watford, England.

    The first “Fantastic Beasts” movie opens November 18. The second film is scheduled for November 16, 2018, co-starring Johnny Depp as the dark wizard Gellert Grindelwald and a yet-to-be-revealed actor as the young Albus Dumbledore.

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  • Albus Dumbledore Will Be ‘Troubled’ in ‘Fantastic Beasts’ Sequel, Says J.K. Rowling

    Harry Potter fans know (and love) Albus Dumbledore as an elderly Hogwarts Headmaster, but we’ll see a new side of him in the “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them” series.

    Although the powerful wizard won’t appear in the first film in the five-part series, wizarding world creator J.K. Rowling has confirmed that a younger version of Dumbledore will appear in later installments, starting with the second. When the time comes, he’ll be very different from the professor and paternal figure we’re used to. At a press conference on Thursday afternoon, Rowling revealed that we’ll see him as “a younger man and quite a troubled man,” according to Variety.

    We’ll also learn more about his sexuality, a topic not addressed in the Harry Potter books and films. In fact, it wasn’t until a 2007 interview that Rowling outed him, as reported by The Leaky Cauldron.

    “I always thought of Dumbledore as gay,” she said at the time, adding that he “fell in love” with his then-friend, Gellert Grindlewald.

    It seems likely that parts of their complicated relationship will play out onscreen in future “Fantastic Beasts” films given that Johnny Depp was recently cast as the man Dumbledore loved. That should add a bit more drama to an already tumultuous period.

    “Fantastic Beast and Where to Find Them” opens on Nov. 18.

    [via: Variety]

  • Colin Creevey Actor: J.K. Rowling Was ‘Trigger-Happy’ in Final Harry Potter Book

    Every year now, on the anniversary of the Battle of Hogwarts, Harry Potter author J.K. Rowling apologizes for another character she killed off. She started with Fred Weasley and continued with Lupin. She may never get to Colin Creevey, but the actor who played him in the second film hasn’t forgotten his sacrifice.

    Hugh Mitchell, now 27, played Hogwarts photographer/Harry Potter Stage 5 Clinger Colin Creevey in “Harry Potter and Chamber of Secrets.” He joined the second podcast of EW’s Binge of Harry Potter following the second book and its film adaptation.

    Mitchell’s Colin was only in the second movie, despite the character continuing on in later books. When he initially replied to an ad for the movie (which arrived via fax to his school), Mitchell said he auditioned for Justin Finch-Fletchley. The audition process was drawn out over a few months, then he was ultimately cast as Colin. Mitchell said director Chris Columbus had him go crazier and crazier in the role.

    Mitchell told EW he wasn’t quick enough to read the final book, “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows,” so other people spoiled his own character’s death for him. EW asked if he thought Colin deserved his fate, as one of the victims/heroes of the Battle of Hogwarts:

    “There’s a sort of prevailing opinion that I think J.K. Rowling got a bit trigger-happy towards the end — she got a little bit like, ‘Oh, screw it, kill him as well.’ I think there’s a certain poignancy to Colin’s death just because he was that picture of innocence and also bravery — the whole thing of sneaking back into the castle. So yeah, a lot of people were pretty cut up actually about Colin’s death.”

    He said it all in a light-hearted way, and he knows Colin wasn’t the only one to die in the battle — and at least he died a hero, if a much too young one. Listen to his whole interview for more, including his thanks to fans for not being too annoyed by Colin.

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  • Wizards Are on ‘High Alert’ in New ‘Fantastic Beasts’ Featurette

    The wizarding world in America looks like a scary one in a new “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them” featurette.

    The three-plus-minute video shines light on life for American witches and wizards in the 1920s, and it’s clear that their struggle is real. As screenwriter and “Harry Potter” creator J.K. Rowling tell us in the featurette, “magic developed very differently” stateside. Secrecy is of the absolute utmost importance, so you can understand why it’s a problem when protagonist Newt Scamander (Eddie Redmayne) inadvertently sets magical creatures loose in New York.

    Still, rounding up wild beasts looks like the least of the magical community’s concerns. With all that the characters will have to tackle, it’s no wonder “Fantastic Beasts” is only the first in a five-film series. Rowling is going to have her work cut out for her over the next several years.

    Check out her latest exploration of the magical world in the featurette below.
    “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them” hits theaters on Nov. 18.

  • ‘Fantastic Beasts’ Will Be a Five-Movie Series

    When Warner Bros. first announced that it would turn Hogwarts textbook “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them” into a film, the initial plan for the “Harry Potter” spinoff was an ambitious three-movie series. But now, “Potter” author and “Fantastic Beasts” screenwriter J.K. Rowling has revealed that the franchise will be even bigger than initially anticipated.

    During a fan event and Q&A in London on Thursday featuring cast members from the upcoming film, Rowling made a surprise appearance and dropped some stunning news about the continuing adventures of protagonist Newt Scamander (played by Oscar winner Eddie Redmayne): There will be a total of five films in the “Fantastic Beasts” franchise, which will no longer be a trilogy as originally planned.


    “Beasts” marks Rowling’s screenwriting debut, and clearly, the prolific author got the movie bug, already completing the script for “Fantastic Beasts 2.” While that follow-up flick is due in theaters in 2018, it remains to be seen what the release schedule will be like for the other three films.

    At Thursday’s fan event, the cast and crew revealed a few clues about what audiences can expect in the sequel, with the setting shifting to a new prominent city (away from the first flick’s NYC action), and an important connection to Grindlewald, the evil wizard who Dumbledore battled in the original “Potter” series. Redmayne said during the event that he felt “enormous pressure” following the success of the first franchise; looks like that pressure will continue for the foreseeable future.

    “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them” hits theaters on November 18.

    [via: Fantastic Beasts, The Hollywood Reporter]

  • Which ‘Harry Potter’ Character Are You? [QUIZ]

    harry potter character quizAs “Harry Potter” fans, we’ve all imagined what it would be like to attend Hogwarts, battle Voldemort, or venture down Diagon Alley. But have you ever imagined yourself as one of the characters in J.K. Rowling’s beloved books? Take the quiz below to determine which witch (or wizard) you’re most like in the Harry Potter universe.

  • ‘Fantastic Beasts’ Reveals First Look at New Characters in Exclusive Comic-Con Poster

    Thanks to Comic-Con 2016, Harry Potter and J.K. Rowling fans got a shiny new poster for “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them.”

    Warner Bros. revealed the exclusive one-sheet on Twitter, ahead of their Hall H panel this weekend, and the art deco-y design gives us our first look at Samantha Morton and Ezra Miller‘s characters. In the much-anticipated prequel, set in 1920’s New York, Morton plays Mary Lou, the leader of the fanatical Second Salemers. Miller plays her adopted son, Credence.
    These two characters have yet to appear in any of the previously released trailers or stills, so not much is known about their roles in director David Yates‘ film, scripted by Rowling. But, according to Entertainment Weekly, Mary Lou “is a fanatical radicalist hellbent on exposing and destroying witches and wizards.”

    In addition to those reveals, we get another look at Eddie Redmayne‘s Newt Scamander and, at the top of the poster, a very cool look at the seal of the Magical Congress of the U.S.A. — MACUSA for short. (Think the yankee version of the Ministry of Magic.)

    “Fantastic Beasts” takes Hall H Saturday, July 3, at 11:30 PST, and the film hits theaters Nov. 18.
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  • ‘Cursed Child’: See Hogwarts Photo, Read the Early (Rave) Reviews

    The mischief is not being managed over in London, it is just getting started! “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child” opened Part One for previews Tuesday night, with Part Two on Thursday. Fans have been glowing about the play online, although most have been carefully following Queen J.K. Rowling’s request to #KeeptheSecrets and not share plot spoilers.

    Before retweeting fan reactions, the official Harry Potter Play account tweeted a photo of the stage-version of Hogwarts, with young Rose Granger-Weasley (Cherrelle Skeete) looking ready to be sorted. (You’ve seen all of the first look photos of the Potters, Weasley-Grangers, and Malfoys, right?)


    Here are just a few reactions to Part One:


    It’s so hard to be happy for these fans instead of just pouting with jealousy like Ron circa book four.

    There are spoilers out there for people who want to track them down, but it’s more magical to wait for the script book to come out, and Pottermore shared details on what fans can expect from the initial Special Rehearsal Edition script and the later Definitive Edition.

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