close
Forum
-
by
Ameer
(:
Pretty self explanatory.
Especially after seeing the movie stills.
What do y'all think?
x
-
by
Stacey.
Ha ha. Here it is.
Uhm..post away! ^_^
I'll just give you little hints to talk about:
Beedle the Bard coming out this December.
Warner Bros being idiots and postponing HBP 'til next year.
Noodles. ^_^
-
by
Stacey.
Caution: this interview may contain mild adult language.
Enjoy!
“To be invisible… that would be the best…”
J. K. Rowling (Bristol, England, 1965) or “Jo” to her friends, has the same look: frightened and happy, as Harry Potter, her fictional character. She wrote the first book because she needed it, and she continued writing until the seventh which is now released (on the 21st of February in Spain; as everywhere, in Salamandra), without looking the other way, without realizing the gigantic number of, children, youths, adults, who have become addicts from this enormous book of magic and reality which is perhaps the biggest seller in history.
Harry Potter is her hero: he saved her and as a consequence has left her emotional: she has abandoned him but cannot live without him. She told us this last Tuesday morning in Edinburgh, where she has lived for years, in the only interview she has given to Spanish media.
We brought her cheese from Asturias, to remind her of her prize from the “Príncipe de Asturias de la Concordia” and greetings from the foundation that decides those awards.
Occasionally she has spoken, in her interviews, of another great solitary person like herself, of Francis Scott Fitzgerald. It stroke us as an opportunity to start to talk to her in the same vein, of solitude and death, and of melancholy, which are the themes which dominate the last part of Harry Potter, perhaps her alter ego.
Q: You usually talk of Scott Fitzgerald, a melancholy man.
A: Yes, I have spoken of him to make a distinction between a writer that due to nature and talent had the impulse to write and could not share this need to write with his social life. I mentioned him because these days with so much emphasis on the media, it seems as though there is some sort of obligation, which says that a writer must be a public person. In my case, people think that because I am a well-known author, I should be good giving interviews and appearing in photographs. People expect to see you enjoying yourself on television programmes and expect that you like to be a public person, a performer. But I’m not. I like the life of the writer. I enjoy the solitude.
Q: It’s interesting, sometimes in Harry Potter, above all the most recent installments, there has been a certain amount of sadness and solitude, which is reminiscent of Fitzgerald.
A: Undoubtedly. It’s sadness, which is born from grief. And Scott Fitzgerald had two afflictions: that of his talent and his need to create and the affliction of his private life, which was catastrophic. Those two afflictions are enough to lead anyone to alcoholism.
Q: Those afflictions can come in that time between childhood and adolescence, when the phantoms arrive and they stay with you forever.
A: Yes, I think adolescents are very aware of death. They feel as though they are so pressured that, for them, death is only a step away. They are very fragile people. In Great Britain there is a culture of fear towards teenagers, towards young people in general. And it shouldn’t be that way. We need to be protecting them instead of protecting ourselves from them.
Q: Talk a bit about death. In the sixth and seventh Harry Potter books, death appears no just as a word or thought but as a possibility, something obvious and a reality.
A: That was always the plan, that death should appear in that way. Since he was young until Chapter 34 of the seventh book, Harry is required to be a better man in that he is obligated to accept the inevitability of his own death. The plan of the books was that he should have contact with death and with the experience of death. And it was always Harry alone who had to have that experience. It all came down to conscience, because the hero had to live these things, do things, see things on his count. It’s part of that isolation and sadness that comes with being a hero.
Q: That 34th chapter [quotation – re: Harry realizing h
close
Video Box
Harry Potter And The Half Blood Prince Teaser Trailer
|  |
close
Blog
-
Chris Rankin (Percy Weasely), attended RingCon this weekend, where he spoke exclusively about his thoughts on coming back for Deathly Hallows and his character Percy Weasley's transformation in the final book:
Will you be in the seventh Harry Potter movie?
I hope so.
Did they approach you yet?
I don't know… (hesitates) That's a very complicated question to answer for a lot of different reasons. If we go by the books then there's no reason why I won't be in them. But until they print the script it could go either way. Fingers crossed!
What scene are you most looking forward to?
One of Percy's finest moments is walking back through that portrait into the Room of Requirement at the end of the seventh one when he finally comes back. I can't remember what he says, something like 'Did I miss anything?' (laughs). I just remember reading that in the book and going 'YES! Good boy!'. That would be fun. And then obviously getting to do a bit of action would be quite nice because Percy doesn't get the hardest job really. He just walks around a lot and shouts at people. They might actually give me a wand if I did the seventh film, that would be nice. I haven't had a wand yet!
Chris also goes into the depths of Percy Weasley's psyche:
Percy, although one of the most intelligent Hogwarts students, doesn't see through Lord Voldemort's propaganda. Can you identify with him at all?
I can't really identify with him apart from the fact that we're ginger and round about the same age. Although I was a prefect at school and actually I was a bit of a goodie-goodie. But I am an only child. I don't come from a long line of red-headed children (laughs). But I can understand how he got caught up in the whole ministry propaganda because he's so desperate to succeed. I suppose that comes from the poverty of the Weasley family. They're not rich, they have seven kids but no money and I guess he kind of wants to get out of that.
Do you believe Joanne K. Rowling wants to teach us some kind of lesson through Percy?
There are a lot of morals in Harry Potter and everyone realises that Percy was an idiot and even Percy knew he was an idiot so whether or not she was trying to teach us that blood is thicker than water and all that, I don't know. I guess so. He's just a good character from the point of view that he is just a [prat] really. It's nice that he has the chance to come right in the end. I don't think it's wise to try and work out what Joanne K. Rowling is thinking because you could be there a long time.
-
In a new interview segment from her chat with Melissa Anelli, author of Harry, a History (which can be pre-ordered here http:// www.amazon.com/Harry-History-Wizard-... & here http://www.amazon.co.uk/Harry-Histor... ), J.K. Rowling talks about Harry Potter's fate in Deathly Hallows.
Quote: My model with Harry really was war veterans, who have seen horrors and are asked to go home and rebuild, and go back to ordinary life and care for a family, be a father - particularly be a father - [it is] a difficult job, in troubled times. I felt it would be a betrayal of my character if I did anything other than show him doing that. And I think it's an absolutely heroic thing to do, to go home after that, not to become a mercenary, not to live forever frozen in a time of excitement and danger, but to be mentally strong enough, to an extent physically strong enough, to return from war and to raise a new generation with values that you hope will not lead to another war. That's massive.
Of course you can say, yes, to an extent, as ever in life, that's the eternal paradox. What's most worthwhile may well be seen as slightly dull, but God knows without those people who were prepared to come home and raise the family and rebuild, help rebuild... rebuilding is much more difficult than destroying.
The interview can be seen in its orignal context here http://harryahistory.com/2008/10/on-...
-
Ralph Fiennes was profiled recently on his body of film work, including playing Lord Voldemort in the Harry Potter films. Ralph talks about his initial hesitation on taking the part of the Dark Lord, as well as analysing the character from a psychological perspective:
Quote: "I hesitated for a bit before committing to the role because it sort of requires you to personify evil, and I don't know how you do that," Fiennes says. "I latched onto what was maybe crude psychology in working out Voldemort's obsession with Harry.
Harry was loved by his parents, which Voldemort can't stand. He is, of course, a rejected person. It's quite basic: the rejected child who's emotionally been denied affection turns violent. You have to suggest there's more there, a life, a spirit, a mind. It isn't just a creepy voice and makeup. I always think you can find more in something. It's good to just keep asking questions until someone says cut."
The full interview can be read here: http://www.variety.com/article/VR111...
|
totally. we have to wait until july 17th i guess.
2 weeks agoIs hp really coming out next year and not this month?
i cana wait that long!!
2 weeks agoHello everyone!
3 weeks agoJoin our Emma Watson Fan page for latest updates,news and photos on Emma Watson and related news and images. (:
we would love it if you became a member so feel free to join ♥
Thank you to the all the fans that join!
E m m a W a t s o n <>
Sophia & Soraya.
ox. ♥
(sorry for advertising ♥)
Everytime I come on here I post luv so it's no surprise I will now. =]]
3 weeks agoI'm rather annoyed about the whole "HBP moved to July thing" but now it comes out two days before my birthday. Ehich means I may be able to go see it in delux screen. =]]
But still.. I would have loved for it to come out in November. [That's This Month!]. As i'm sure you all would.
5 weeks agoLoving the skin (Y)
7 weeks agoTake some luurve! Your even better than the site called potterish... Dunno if u've heard of it or not. X
9 weeks ago via Mobileyeah you could use some more.
9 weeks agoHaven't posted Luv for AGEES.
9 weeks agoAnd you deserve some. =]]]]
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
If you have some free time, check out these Neville Longbottom Jokes. They're hysterical.
10 weeks agohttp://www.bebo.com/BlogView.jsp?Mem...
-Baii.
It makes me cry that about 200 people have seen HBP.
10 weeks ago*Dies*
Ya know the way every year there's a preview a few months previous?
Well, apparently, they scheduled it to be shown a few weeks ago. ¬¬
AND ALSO;
Who's happy that it's been almost ten years since this all started?
There's a Philosophers Stone new edition release coming out on Monday.
Happyhappyhappyhappy.
this group lacks frequent love givers.
10 weeks agoi can't stand having a number ending in 9, so here's some more
11 weeks agoThanks y'all ;D
11 weeks ago*bows*
i agree again
12 weeks agoWow, This Group ROCKS!
12 weeks agoi agreeeeeee.
12 weeks agoLove love love.
12 weeks agoLove this group.
12 weeks agoHaven't been on it in a while, but still love it. : )
Thanks muchly ;D
13 weeks ago