Tag: tom-felton

  • Movie Review: ‘They Will Kill You’

    Zazie Beetz as Asia in New Line Cinema/Nocturna’s 'They Will Kill You', a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Photo by Graham Bartholomew. Copyright: © 2026 Warner Bros. Ent. All Rights Reserved.
    Zazie Beetz as Asia in New Line Cinema/Nocturna’s ‘They Will Kill You’, a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Photo by Graham Bartholomew. Copyright: © 2026 Warner Bros. Ent. All Rights Reserved.

    Opening in theaters on March 27 is ‘They Will Kill You,’ directed by Kirill Sololov from a script by Sokolov and Alex Litvak, starring Zazie Beetz, Myha’la, Paterson Joseph, Tom Felton, Heather Graham, and Patricia Arquette.

    epgwyqAtGleYCLpbCY6gW2

    Related Article: Channing Tatum, Oscar Isaac & Zazie Beetz to Lead Cast of ‘Kockroach’

    Initial Thoughts

    Zazie Beetz as Asia in New Line Cinema/Nocturna’s 'They Will Kill You', a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Photo Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2025 Warner Bros. Ent. All Rights Reserved.
    Zazie Beetz as Asia in New Line Cinema/Nocturna’s ‘They Will Kill You’, a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Photo Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2025 Warner Bros. Ent. All Rights Reserved.

    It’s certainly odd to see two horror-comedies about estranged sisters battling for their lives against a Satanic cult open within a week of each other, but Hollywood works in strange ways. Sadly, the newest one, ‘They Will Kill You,’ is less entertaining that the moderately enjoyable ‘Ready or Not 2: Here I Come,’ with ennui setting in quickly despite some hard work from star Zazie Beetz and a few impressive production values.

    But ‘They Will Kill You’ otherwise comes across as soulless and pointless, with director Kirill Sokolov giving the impression that his entire range of influences consists of some early Quentin Tarantino and a few video games. A few morbidly funny images aside (a disembodied eyeball nearly steals the show), this is a movie made only to be lapped up by a late-night Fantastic Fest crowd who won’t even remember it the next day.

    Story and Direction

    (L to R) David Viviers as Tall Steve, Tom Felton as Kevin, Patricia Arquette as Lily Woodhouse, Willie Ludik as Bob, and Gabe Gabriel as Small Steve in New Line Cinema/Nocturna’s 'They Will Kill You', a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2026 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) David Viviers as Tall Steve, Tom Felton as Kevin, Patricia Arquette as Lily Woodhouse, Willie Ludik as Bob, and Gabe Gabriel as Small Steve in New Line Cinema/Nocturna’s ‘They Will Kill You’, a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2026 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Asia Reaves (Beetz) tries to save her younger sister Maria and herself from their vicious, predatory father, but ends up landing herself behind bars while Maria remains in dad’s clutches. A decade later, Asia is released from prison and promptly heads to an old-school New York luxury hotel called the Virgil, the last place she knew her sister (Myha’la) to be working.

    Posing as a new member of the cleaning staff, Asia is barely settled into her quarters when she is attacked by the hotel’s manager, Lilith (Patricia Arquette), and a number of the guests. It seems that the Virgil is home to an ancient Satanic cult, and Asia has already been designated as their next ritual sacrifice to the Devil – a sacrifice that ensures the immortality of the Virgil’s guests even if they are hacked, decapitated, and disemboweled by Asia, who’s ready to fight back with everything she’s got.

    (L to R) Zazie Beetz as Asia and Director Kirill Sokolov in New Line Cinema/Nocturna’s 'They Will Kill You', a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Graham Bartholomew. Copyright: © 2026 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Zazie Beetz as Asia and Director Kirill Sokolov in New Line Cinema/Nocturna’s ‘They Will Kill You’, a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Graham Bartholomew. Copyright: © 2026 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Sokolov (‘Why Don’t You Just Die!’) and co-screenwriter Alex Litvak have strung together the thinnest script they could stretch to 90 minutes, just as connective tissue for a series of outlandish, cartoonish scenes of violence and gore. Blood sprays out of gaping wounds like fountains and the now-overused and irritating gimmick of ironically using pop song needle drops to score these repetitive sequences is deployed.

    ‘Ready or Not 2’ does more or less the same thing, but here the stakes are even less consequential because none of the Satanists can die; they merely come back to life even if Asia chops off their heads (as she does, frequently). Between that and the music undercutting everything, there’s no emotional engagement here at all with Asia, her quest, and her plight.

    (L to R) Director Kirill Sokolov and Patricia Arquette as Lily Woodhouse in New Line Cinema/Nocturna’s 'They Will Kill You', a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Graham Bartholomew. Copyright: © 2026 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Director Kirill Sokolov and Patricia Arquette as Lily Woodhouse in New Line Cinema/Nocturna’s ‘They Will Kill You’, a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Graham Bartholomew. Copyright: © 2026 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    The cumulative effect is indeed of watching a video game as people die and reset. As a result a sort of numbness sets in – not the best response as we see, for the second week in a row, a young woman beaten mercilessly by her enemies (and again, with little stakes, since she seems quite capable of getting up and going back at it). There’s nothing scary or particularly suspenseful here, and aside from some humorous moments – as when we follow that eyeball we mentioned earlier – the film settles into a rinse-and-repeat cycle that isn’t even enlivened by the appearance of the Devil himself as a talking pig’s head.

    The production values are handsome enough and the sound design is particularly effective (that team seems to be in on the joke, as their work often resembles that of cartoons). But Sokolov gets in his own way by drawing attention to his camera moves, his cutscene compositions, and his stylized, over-the-top gore, and the movie ends up vacuous and lacking anything resembling real human feelings or outcomes.

    Cast and Performances

    (L to R) Paterson Joseph as RAY, Tom Felton as Kevin, Myha'la as Maria, Willie Ludkin as Bob, Heather Graham as Sharon, Gabe Gabriel as Small Steve, Zazie Beetz as Asia, David Vivers as Tall Steve, and Patricia Arquette as Lily Woodhouse in New Line Cinema/Nocturna’s 'They Will Kill You', a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2026 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Paterson Joseph as RAY, Tom Felton as Kevin, Myha’la as Maria, Willie Ludkin as Bob, Heather Graham as Sharon, Gabe Gabriel as Small Steve, Zazie Beetz as Asia, David Vivers as Tall Steve, and Patricia Arquette as Lily Woodhouse in New Line Cinema/Nocturna’s ‘They Will Kill You’, a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2026 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    We’ve got to hand it to Zazie Beetz: not only does she have more screentime here than in just about anything else she’s done, but she makes the most of it despite the movie’s shortcomings. She has presence and an intense physicality, and is fully committed to the action even if it’s just more brutalization of a woman. Her dialogue is minimal, in keeping with the bare-bones script, so she works with what she can.

    Wish we could say the same about Patricia Arquette, but her odd, sort-of Irish accent keeps distracting us. The rest of the cast, even Heather Graham, doesn’t really register, because they’re mostly there as fodder for gore.

    Final Thoughts

    Zazie Beetz as Asia in New Line Cinema/Nocturna’s 'They Will Kill You', a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2026 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    Zazie Beetz as Asia in New Line Cinema/Nocturna’s ‘They Will Kill You’, a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2026 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Between this and ‘Ready or Not 2’ (which is the better film), it’s time to put a stake in the quickly ossifying horror-comedy tropes that have been rolled out in the last few years. But in addition to that, ‘They Will Kill You’ works too self-consciously hard to be something it’s not: an organic, authentic B-movie.

    A film like this, released in the ‘70s or ‘80s, wouldn’t have necessarily been considered good. But years later, the same esthetic – filtered as mentioned above through the combination of Tarantino’s oeuvre and far too much time on the Xbox – now just comes across as a copy of a copy of a copy. Even when it gets to its boss level, ‘They Will Kill You’ never comes to life.

    ‘They Will Kill You’ receives a score of 40 out of 100.

    'They Will Kill You' opens in theaters on March 27th.
    ‘They Will Kill You’ opens in theaters on March 27th.

    What is the plot of ‘They Will Kill You’?

    Searching for her sister, an ex-convict answers an ad to be a housekeeper at the Virgil, a mysterious New York City high-rise. But she is entering a death-trap that has seen a number of disappearances over the years, and discovers all too soon that she is next.

    Who is in the cast of ‘They Will Kill You’?

    • Zazie Beetz as Asia Reaves
    • Myha’la as Maria Reaves
    • Patricia Arquette as Lily Woodhouse
    • Paterson Joseph as Ray
    • Tom Felton as Kevin
    • Heather Graham as Sharon
    • Chris van Rensburg as the Manager
    • Gabe Gabriel as Short Steve
    • David Viviers as Tall Steve
    • Willie Ludkin as Bob
    • Darron Meyer as Ritchie
    • Lindzay Naidoo as the Maid
    Zazie Beetz as Asia in New Line Cinema/Nocturna’s 'They Will Kill You', a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Photo Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2025 Warner Bros. Ent. All Rights Reserved.
    Zazie Beetz as Asia in New Line Cinema/Nocturna’s ‘They Will Kill You’, a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Photo Courtesy Warner Bros. Pictures. Copyright: © 2025 Warner Bros. Ent. All Rights Reserved.

    List of Zazie Beetz Movies and TV Shows

    Buy Tickets: ‘They Will Kill You’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Zazie Beetz Movies on Amazon

    mSjSEFl4
  • Movie Review: ‘Fackham Hall’

    (L to R): Thomasin McKenzie, Katherine Waterston, Damian Lewis and Tom Felton in Bleecker Street's 'Fackham Hall.' Photo: Bleecker Street.
    (L to R): Thomasin McKenzie, Katherine Waterston, Damian Lewis and Tom Felton in Bleecker Street’s ‘Fackham Hall.’ Photo: Bleecker Street.

    In theaters on December 5 from Bleecker Street is ‘Fackham Hall,’ a new spoof in the ‘Airplane!’ style that has British period pieces such as ‘Downton Abbey’ firmly in its sights.

    pmYQgLgpPVOcQ3SmzdTCL1

    The movie stars Thomasin McKenzie (‘Last Night in Soho’), Ben Radcliffe (‘Masters of the Air’), Tom Felton (‘Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets’), Damian Lewis (‘Billions’) and Katherine Waterston (‘Inherent Vice’).

    Related Article: Damian Lewis Talks ‘The Radleys’ and Looks Back at TV Series ‘Life’

    Initial Thoughts

    Jimmy Carr in Bleecker Street's 'Fackham Hall.' Photo: Bleecker Street.
    Jimmy Carr in Bleecker Street’s ‘Fackham Hall.’ Photo: Bleecker Street.

    In a year where ‘The Naked Gun’ brought spoof movies back to relevance with a swift, funny script, you might be happy to have another in the genre arrive. Unfortunately for fans of joke-laden parodies, ‘Fackham Hall’ turns out to be a grave disappointment.

    Script and Direction

    (L to R): Damian Lewis and Nathan McMullen in Bleecker Street's 'Fackham Hall.'<br /> Photo: Bleecker Street.
    (L to R): Damian Lewis and Nathan McMullen in Bleecker Street’s ‘Fackham Hall.’
    Photo: Bleecker Street.

    Written by comedian Jimmy Carr alongside brother Patrick Carr and colleagues Andrew Dawson, Steve Dawson and Tim Inman and based on an idea by the Carr siblings, ‘Fackham Hall’s script can best be described as “hit and miss” with an emphasis on “miss.”

    True, there are one or two very funny jokes in the movie, and it generally moves along in amiable fashion, but so many other gags are either dull, trite or beaten into the ground. Or all three.

    And when you end up stealing not one joke (a vicar stumbling over his words) but two (about a wedding guest replying that they’re not the bride or groom) from 31-year-old comedy classic ‘Four Weddings and a Funeral,’ there’s cause for concern.

    Director Jim O’Hanlon, meanwhile, has worked on some great TV series, including ‘Catastrophe,’ ‘Inside No. 9’ and iconic spoof miniseries ‘A Touch of Cloth.’ But here, the script lets him down and try as he might to bring some comic momentum, the result is still only fitfully funny.

    Cast and Performances

    Ben Radcliffe in Bleecker Street's 'Fackham Hall.' Photo: Bleecker Street.
    Ben Radcliffe in Bleecker Street’s ‘Fackham Hall.’ Photo: Bleecker Street.

    McKenzie and Radcliffe make for an appealing central pair, and they and the rest of the cast do what they can with what the screenplay has to offer. Katherine Waterston spends most of the movie looking like she’d rather be anywhere else, while the Damian Lewis throws himself wholeheartedly into the role of the dim Lord Davenport.

    Final Thoughts

    (L to R): Tom Felton and Thomasin McKenzie in Bleecker Street's 'Fackham Hall.' Photo: Bleecker Street.
    (L to R): Tom Felton and Thomasin McKenzie in Bleecker Street’s ‘Fackham Hall.’ Photo: Bleecker Street.

    ‘Fackham Hall’ feels more of a piece with the lame ‘[insert-genre-here] Movie’ and other low-energy spoofs that showed up in the wake of ‘Scary Movie’s success post-‘Scream.’ There are laughs, but they’re few and far between.

    ‘Fackham Hall’ receives 60 out of 100.

    (L to R): Tom Felton, Ramon Tikaram, Thomasin McKenzie, Damian Lewis, and Nathan McMullen in Bleecker Street's 'Fackham Hall.' Photo: Bleecker Street.
    (L to R): Tom Felton, Ramon Tikaram, Thomasin McKenzie, Damian Lewis, and Nathan McMullen in Bleecker Street’s ‘Fackham Hall.’ Photo: Bleecker Street.

    What’s the story of ‘Fackham Hall’?

    New porter Eric Noone (Ben Radcliffe) forms a romantic bond with Rose (Thomasin McKenzie), youngest daughter of a well-known UK family. As the Davenport family, headed by Lord and Lady Davenport, deals with the epic disaster of the wedding of their eldest daughter to her caddish cousin, new schemes reveal themselves.

    Who is in the cast of ‘Fackham Hall’?

    • Ben Radcliffe as Eric Noone
    • Thomasin McKenzie as Rose Davenport
    • Damian Lewis as Lord Davenport
    • Katherine Waterston as Lady Davenport
    • Lizzie Hopley as Phyllis Davenport
    • Emma Laird as Poppy Davenport
    • Tom Felton as Archibald
    • Jimmy Carr as Vicar
    • Tom Goodman-Hill as Inspector Watt
    (L to R): Sue Johnston, Katherine Waterston, Tim McMullan, Thomasin McKenzie, Nathan McMullen, Ben Radcliffe, Damian Lewis, and Emma Laird in Bleecker Street's 'Fackham Hall.' Photo: Bleecker Street.
    (L to R): Sue Johnston, Katherine Waterston, Tim McMullan, Thomasin McKenzie, Nathan McMullen, Ben Radcliffe, Damian Lewis, and Emma Laird in Bleecker Street’s ‘Fackham Hall.’ Photo: Bleecker Street.

    Movies Similar to ‘Fackham Hall’:

    Buy Tickets: ‘Fackham Hall’ Movie Showtimes

    Buy Damian Lewis Movies and TV on Amazon

    yRvIf1se
  • ‘Origin’ Trailer: Tom Felton Gets Stranded in Space With a Troubled Group

    ‘Origin’ Trailer: Tom Felton Gets Stranded in Space With a Troubled Group

    Origin trailer still
    Origin/YouTube

    A scary situation goes from bad to worse in the “Origin” trailer.

    The upcoming YouTube Premium series centers on a space voyage that takes a frightening turn. A group of troubled people — including two played by Harry Potter vets Tom Felton and Natalia Tena — board a spacecraft thinking they’ll get a chance to start over fresh on a new planet; instead, they wake up stranded in space and in danger. As the trailer shows, they have to work together to survive, but that becomes harder when a terrifying threat emerges.

    Watch the trailer below.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HjRjcgByAhk

    “Origin” comes from the producers of the acclaimed series “The Crown” and “Lost,” and it also stars Sen Mitsuji, Fraser James, Nora Arnezedar, Philipp Christopher, Nina Wadia, Siobahn Cullen, Madalyn Horcher, Adelayo Adedayo, and Wil Coban. The series was created by Mika Watkins, and Paul W.S. Anderson (“Resident Evil”) directs.

    “Origin” starts streaming Nov. 14 on YouTube Premium.

    [h/t: EW]

  • Tom Felton Fails to Convert Matthew Lewis to Slytherin in ‘Harry Potter’ Reunion Photos

    Tom Felton Fails to Convert Matthew Lewis to Slytherin in ‘Harry Potter’ Reunion Photos

    Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
    Warner Bros.

    Nice try, Malfoy.

    It is truly delightful to see how close the “Harry Potter” film stars are in real life. It has been seven years since the final movie, “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2,” was released in theaters. Tom Felton‘s Slytherin Draco Malfoy bullied Matthew Lewis‘ Gryffindor Neville Longbottom throughout the eight-film series. But outside of the film set, the two actors are clearly good friends and have shared a few photos together.

    The latest photo is a story in two parts — Tom Felton’s version, trying to get Matthew Lewis to slither in to Slytherin; and Matthew Lewis’ “Planet of the Apes“-inspired clapback to shut the serpent down:

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BmpdXg2li8Q/

    https://www.instagram.com/p/Bmpq9dbAvvr/

    Yes, Neville. Not that all Slytherins are bad. We learned by the end of “Harry Potter” that it’s OK to be sorted into Slytherin house because it produced some brave and deep-down-all-right wizards like Severus Snape. The play “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child” explored that idea in more detail.

    But Neville is a Gryffindor through-and-through, so he wasn’t really the best choice to convert.

    Want more stuff like this? Like us on Facebook.

  • Tom Felton Leaving ‘The Flash’ as Series Regular (and Maybe Entirely?)

    Hope you weren’t just watching “The Flash” for Harry Potter alum Tom Felton. According to multiple reports, Felton won’t be returning as a series regular in Season 4, and he’s currently not booked to come back on a recurring or guest-role basis. That could change, but for now it sounds like he’s out.

    Felton joined “The Flash” in Season 3 as Barry Allen’s (Grant Gustin) CSI supervisor Julian Albert, and as a love interest for Caitlin Snow (Danielle Panabaker). But Season 4 is jumping ahead six months, with Barry trapped in the Speed Force, and it sounds like Julian will no longer be on the team.

    Julian was not seen in the Season 4 trailer, and Felton was not at San Diego Comic-Con. We do know he’ll be playing Daisy Ridley’s brother Laertes in the movie “Ophelia,” since he was recently in Prague shooting the movie. But in terms of “The Flash” … he could always pop up again later, there’s just no news on that front right now.

    “The Flash” did, however, announce some other casting: Neil Sandilands will play villain Clifford Devoe, a.k.a. The Thinker, and Kim Engelbrecht will play The Mechanic, with Danny Trejo cast as bounty hunter Breacher.

    “The Flash” Season 4 premieres Tuesday, October 10 at 8 p.m. on The CW.

    Want more stuff like this? Like us on Facebook.

  • How Troian Bellisario’s Eating Disorder Nightmare Fueled Thriller ‘Feed’

    The National Eating Disorder Association Hosts 15th Annual Benefit Gala, 'An Evening Unmasking Eating Disorders'“Pretty Little Liars” star Troian Bellisario has previously been as honest as she could be about one of the less pretty aspects of her own life story: her battle, and subsequent recovery, with anorexia during her teen years. And now she’s turned her very real personal life-and-death struggle into the basis for a harrowing on-screen narrative — with a PLL-esque twist.

    As the screenwriter and star of the new film “Feed,” Bellisario fused aspects of her own experiences with an eating disorder into a thriller with a psychological — and potentially supernatural — spin: privileged teenager Olivia descends into a tailspin when she survives a car crash that proves fatal for her twin brother Matthew (Tom Felton), who nevertheless remains a near-constant presence in her life — or at least her head — as a constant, nagging reminder of all her imperfections.

    It’s a new creative chapter for the actress, who’s also directed an episode of her recently concluded hit series (and a logical one: her writer/producer father Magnum, P.I.,” “NCIS”; her mother Deborah Pratt is a prolific actress, writer, and producer as well). And, as she shares with Moviefone, the journey came with as many painful moments as pleasurable ones.

    Moviefone: This is quite an accomplishment. I know this project is something that’s been buzzing at the back of your brain for a while now. Tell me what got you over the hump and got this movie made.

    Troian Bellisario: Money! No, I’m kidding. In a very real way. I wrote this film right before I got “Pretty Little Liars,” and I think the biggest, most difficult thing for me in giving this to people was that I didn’t want to approach my experience with my mental illness from sort of straight on. I didn’t want to write an autobiography. I didn’t want to just kind of show a story about somebody who’s going through this. I wanted to speak about it in a different way.

    It was difficult for people to grasp. I don’t think that there was as much of an open conversation in the media. So I don’t think a lot of people really understood it. So for a while, it was difficult. As I put the script out there, I had a lot of people who were like, “Okay, we’re going to make it, but it’s got to be a ghost story only,” or “It’s got to be horror.” Or, “If you’re going to make it, we want it to be solely an issue film, and we want it to not be about the grief and loss of losing somebody so close to you, we want it to only be an eating disorder.”

    I held fast. I was like, “I’m going to find the people who want to make this with me, who believe that it can be all of these things, because mental illness is very complicated, and multilayered, and it’s not just one thing.” So it took me eight years of talking to people, and pushing myself into rooms, and asking people to have faith in me, and finally, enough people did that we got to make it.

    Was it challenging figuring out how to marry psychological thriller elements to the real-world issue that you were tackling?

    Definitely. It also gave me room to not only speak about my experience with an eating disorder. It gave me room to speak about the loss of my first love, and it gave me room to speak about growing up — two of my best friends in the world are brother-and-sister twins. I got to talk about the jealousies and the desperation that I wanted to be in that relationship, and, as much as they loved me, I could never be in that relationship. So I watched it a lot from the outside.

    So it was creative and wonderful to get the permission to not have to speak only truthfully about it, to get to sort of work in a metaphor, or work in a slightly fragmented prism about my experience. It was really important for me, because I think, particularly as somebody who already has a career, I already have fans through my show, and they have an idea about me, and I feel that if I were to just come forward and regurgitate the facts of my life, I don’t think that’s as interesting. I think that that can also be like exploitative. It can be sensationalized.

    What I really didn’t want, and I’ve had to deal with it a lot, is I didn’t want somebody to ask me like, “So what was the lowest you got to?” I didn’t want these questions thrown in my face. I wanted it to be about something else.

    Was it a painful process to dig into all of it? You’ve certainly been very open about it publicly, but to open it up for your art — was that painful or was it healing?

    It was both. It was definitely both. One of my main intentions in writing and acting “Feed” was to try to close that chapter of my life. It was naive to think that way, because a mental illness is something that never really goes away. It’s always something that you’re struggling with. So the thought that I could write this thing and get it out of me, and then I would never have to deal with it [wasn’t realistic] — in fact, it was really more a testament to my rehabilitation and to my constant process of recovery to say, “Can I go back into this world? Can I go back into these behaviors and these compulsions? Can I also find my way back to health afterwards?”

    Because the one thing that would be tragic, for me personally, would be to get involved with this, and just welcome it all back in my life after I worked so hard, and after so many of my friends and family supported me through it. Also, I wouldn’t be a good role model to other people struggling with this to just intentionally welcome this back into my life, and then let it take control.

    So it was really difficult. We shot it, I don’t even know how long ago. I guess it would almost be like, maybe a year and a half ago — and for me, I’m still finding ways that it’s rippling through my life. I think that’s good, because I think that talking about it and being open about it and sharing my vulnerabilities is the only way that I’m also going to encourage other people to do the same.

    Were you completely surprised that twins also played into the endgame of “Pretty Little Liars”? You knew for a bit.

    [Laughs] I did know for a bit. And to me, it felt so different. In “Pretty Little Liars,” it was the classic sort of like, the trope of the evil twin — the twin who got everything, and the twin who got nothing — coming back. It was really that. With me and “Feed,” it felt like a lot more of an exploration of a sort of mirroring of your own psychosis, and using a twin in order to enact that.

    It was funny — I didn’t really put two and two together, but yeah, since then, if there’s anything that comes across my desk that like is a twin, I’m like, “Oh my God, this is too much!”

    How are things now that you’re done? You just put the show down. Are you feeling energized for the next chapter, or taking a breath?

    Yeah, I feel like I’ve been able to breathe, and I feel really grateful for that time. It’s given me time to focus on launching “Feed,” which is great, and I am excited. I’m excited for the next steps of my career.

  • Watch Tom Felton Sing on the Streets of Prague & Be Totally Ignored

    'A United Kingdom' - Opening Night Gala - 60th BFI London Film FestivalCan’t anyone spare a dime for Draco Malfoy?

    Actor Tom Felton just had to dodge dozens of tourists who wanted nothing to do with his free street performance in Old Town Prague in the Czech Republic. They probably thought he was just another chill dude playing his guitar in the square, maybe looking for some money, or perhaps preparing for an eventual reality show audition. (Isn’t that what everyone does nowadays?)

    A post shared by Tom Felton (@t22felton) on

    Keeping it real

    A post shared by Tom Felton (@t22felton) on

    Felton — still probably best known from the “Harry Potter” films, but also now from The CW’s “The Flash” — isn’t just in Prague to hang out. He plays Laertes, brother of Daisy Ridley’s title character in “Ophelia,” the reimagining of Shakespeare’s “Hamlet.” When away from set, Felton is clearly soaking up the vibes of the beautiful city.

    A post shared by Tom Felton (@t22felton) on

    Laertes

    A post shared by Tom Felton (@t22felton) on

    Check out his Instagram for more Prague photos, and more missed opportunities to at least dance to his street jams. Loosen up, tourists!

    [via: People]

    Want more stuff like this? Like us on Facebook.

  • ‘The Flash’ Season 3: Tom Felton Works His Magic in First Photos

    “The Flash” Season 3 premiere on October 4, but we’ll see him in Episode 2.

    In the meantime, Entertainment Weekly shared the first photos of Felton in character as CSI tech Julian Dorn:

    The Flash -- " Paradox" -- Image: FLA302a_0015b.jpg — Pictured (L-R): Tom Felton as Julian Albert, Jesse L. Martin as Detective Joe West and Grant Gustin as Barry Allen -- Photo: Dean Buscher/The CW -- © 2016 The CW Network, LLC. All rights reserved
    The Flash -- "Paradox" -- Image: FLA302b_0155b.jpg -- Pictured: Tom Felton as Julian Albert and Grant Gustin as Barry Allen -- Photo: Dean Buscher/The CW -- © 2016 The CW Network, LLC. All rights reserved.
    Felton told EW he hopes to make a Harry Potter joke or two during his time on the show. He knows Cisco (Carlos Valdes) is more known for the pop culture quips, but “maybe he should misquote something and I could correct him.” DO IT.

    Executive producer Todd Helbing described Felton’s Julian Dorn as a direct result of the Flashpoint alternate universe which created at the end of Season 2. “Barry’s had that lab to himself, but now he’s got to share it with this guy, who doesn’t really like him and is kind of prickly.”

    Felton will debut in Episode 2, called “Paradox,” which airs October 11. Here’s The CW’s synopsis:

    “THE AFTERMATH – Barry (Grant Gustin) realizes the effects from Flashpoint are much greater than he thought. Meanwhile, Barry meets new co-worker Julian (Tom Felton) and is surprised by Julian’s immediate disdain for Barry.”

    If you want more details on the October 4 premiere, head over here for scoop on the Caitlin surprise ahead.

    Want more stuff like this? Like us on Facebook.

  • ‘Harry Potter’ Star Tom Felton Joins ‘The Flash’ Season 3

    Giffoni Film Festival 2015 - Day 5Superhero show “The Flash” is getting a dose of magic for season three: “Harry Potter” alum Tom Felton is joining the series.

    TVLine reports that Felton will be a series regular when the show returns this fall, playing a character named Julian Dorn. The site describes Dorn as “a fellow CSI at the Central City Police Department who suspects there’s more to Barry Allen than just his good guy reputation.”

    That description certainly sounds familiar to those who already know Felton well from his “Harry Potter” days, when he played Slytherin student (and eventual Voldemort sympathizer) Draco Malfoy. At first, the thirsty-for-pureblood-pals Draco tries to befriend Harry, only to quickly sour on The Boy Who Lived, and make Harry’s life a living hell at every turn.

    The addition of Felton isn’t the only exciting thing awaiting “Flash” fans this fall: The series also plans to introduce the famous “Flashpoint” storyline from the comics (which TVLine explains here), beginning with the season premiere.

    There’s no word yet on exactly when Felton/Dorn will make his debut, or how long his arc will last, though TVLine says he’s expected to show up sometime “early during Season 3.”

    “The Flash” returns to The CW on October 4.

    [via: TVLine]

    Photo credit: Getty Images for Giffoni Film Festival

    %Slideshow-365280%

  • ‘Cursed Child’: Meet the Malfoys in Final First Look Photos

    Will young Scorpius Malfoy be a friend or foe to Albus Severus Potter and Rose Granger-Weasley in “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child”? The lucky fans who get to see the play will find out, very soon.

    Pottermore just shared the final first look photos to tease “Cursed Child,” which starts previews June 7 in London. The story picks up 19 years after the main story of “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows,” following the next generation at Hogwarts. Two days ago we got our first looks at Harry, Ginny, and their son Albus in character; yesterday, we saw the adult Ron and Hermione, with their daughter Rose. Today we have the new Draco Malfoy, played by Alex Price, with Anthony Boyle as his son, Scorpius Malfoy. (No wife/mom? What’s that story?)

    Check out these individual photos:

    Scorpius doesn’t look too mean, he may even be a nice kid, and scared of his own dad. Everyone should be scared of this Draco Malfoy — look at that wand, it’s like a prison shank! He is ready to cut you just for looking at him.

    Author J.K. Rowling is a big fan of the Malfoy casting, saying via Pottermore, “I love Draco and Scorpius – they actually look related!” However you may be familiar with her gentle exasperation with the love for film actor Tom Felton’s Draco Malfoy, since she wishes girls weren’t so drawn to “bad boy” types. She teased of the new guy, “I’ve got a feeling Scorpius is going to do nothing to turn girls off the Malfoy men.”

    Apparently Anthony Boyle is not a natural blond, so when he got his new hair, he said, “It was such a game changer. As soon as I saw it, it was like, “‘Okay, I’m playing Scorpius Malfoy – this is real now.’ That was such a big moment.”

    So many big moments are ahead for this group. The play is opening soon in London, and the rest of us can check out the script book when it’s released on Harry Potter’s and J.K. Rowling’s birthday, July 31.

    Want more stuff like this? Like us on Facebook.

    %Slideshow-322797%