Harry Potter Film Wizardry: Updated edition by Brian Sibley will be released on 13th November 2018 (US, UK and NL) and will contain 172 pages. You can pre-order now.
Photo: Amazon
The first Harry Potter Page to Screen book was released back in 2011 by HarperCollins Publishers. The new upcoming revised & expanded edition features more pages devoted to the Harry Potter films.
In addition to that,
the book also explores the theme parks in Florida, California and Japan,
the sets and props in Leavesden Studios and the House of MinaLima. It also features reflections from the cast and crew on the end of the film series and much more.
Harry Potter Page to Screen: Updated edition by Bob McCabe will be released on 13th November 2018 (US, UK and NL) and will contain 540 pages. You can pre-order now.
Daniel Radcliffe and his personal narrative from set to set is used as
the life line that connects all aspects of this memoir, giving structure
to the many voices of the Harry Potter family who orate this
tale. All of the movies were filmed at the Leavesden Studio in
Hertfordshire, England and these pages describe how the Leavesden family
dealt with numerous cast, crew, and production dramas, replacements,
technical difficulties and countless narrative and visual decisions (HarperCollins).
Photo: Harper Collins
Photo: Twitter/Harry Potter FilmThe behind-the-scenes trickery of an Undetectable Extension Charm. #TBT pic.twitter.com/ByHesvCmAr
— Harry Potter Film (@HarryPotterFilm) September 27, 2018
La nouvelle série de Daniel Radcliffe "Miracle Workers" arrive en exclusivité sur @WarnerTVFR courant 2019 #larentreeTurner pic.twitter.com/tWKfO5wnyu— Julien Tan (@JeyTan) 27 september 2018
"The Harry Potter movies continue to thrill and delight audiences of all ages.You can pre-order at royalmail.com.
"The goal with our stamps is to capture the excitement of the Wizarding World and the heroism of the students of Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry.
"Letters are delivered by owls in the films, but the new stamps are available in post offices from 16th October."
Photo: Twitter/Harry Potter FilmA light moment on the dark set of 12 Grimmauld Place. #TBT pic.twitter.com/G8DumHV9eC
— Harry Potter Film (@HarryPotterFilm) September 20, 2018
“I was very excited about this play because it is about ideas and it is also very, very funny,” says Radcliffe. “The dialogue is incredibly snappy and fun, and the topic is really challenging and interesting.”In much the same way that some facts in the original piece written by D’Agata underwent transformation, the actors became aware that actual details about the writer and the fact-checker had been embellished as well.
“Some of my favorite memories of going to the theatre growing up are debating the play with my mum and dad while driving home afterward,” he recalls. “We would have a big conversation about what we saw — what it was about, who was right, and whose side we were on. This play should hopefully provoke a really healthy debate. The issue of truth versus fact is not something that comes up in people’s lives consciously every day, but, actually, once you start really examining it, you certainly see that it affects everyone,” he adds. “Everyone has a different relationship to the truth and to memory.”
“I think when they had the idea to write the book — well, for the book to be interesting — I think they invented a much more antagonistic relationship with each other than was probably true in reality,” says Radcliffe.The play, of course, ratchets this drama a up notch or two.
Cannavale concurs: “They’d be the first ones to admit that they weren’t really at each other’s throats. They both recognized that they were, in their own words, nerds, and they sort of grooved on each other. They were both good with language. What they created made for better drama.”
“It’s like Being John Malkovich or something! It is this hyperdramatized version of these two guys and the experience that they had.” Says Radcliffe, “The play uses the book’s discussion and a lot of the specific points that Jim raises in fact-checking John’s essay, and reframes them in a very fictional, probably much more dramatic, context than it was in real life.”On embracing their character
“I’ve fallen in love with my character, Jim, and his point of view,” says Radcliffe. “I do really think there is something noble and essential about fact-checking. I was surprised to learn that in recent years not every book or article is fact-checked. There is something impressive about people who are dedicated to finding a kind of neutral, unbiased, objective truth in something; it seems like an impossible job.”Referring to Jim’s copious 130 pages of fact-checking notes for a 15-page essay, he adds:
“OK, he surely didn’t need to do all this, but it makes a fine character in the play because he is completely uncompromising. I have a lot of respect for his diligence, his intelligence, and the idea that you don’t have to tell half-truths to write something beautiful, that truth is beautiful in and of itself.”
“I think at first he (Bobby as John) is just very irritated by my character,” says Radcliffe, who takes a more conceding approach toward the conflict.source: broadwaydirect.com
“Over the course of the play John probably comes to have a grudging respect for Jim’s intelligence and drive and relentlessness, but I don’t think he ever comes around to really liking him,” says the actor. “It is an adversarial relationship, but I actually think that Jim can see the side of John’s writing that is art and where art sometimes has to diverge from being completely factually accurate.”