Thursday, July 31, 2008

The Extra Scene

With the teaser trailer for the upcoming Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince making its rounds on the web, many are starting to figure out what parts of the 6th book will make it into the film. What has many people buzzing, however, is a part of the film that was not in the book – it was an extra scene that was added to the film.

“What are you talking about, T.C.?”

The other day, my guy-friend asked me about a specific scene from the trailer. “You know that scene with Ginny being attacked?” he asked, “When was that in the book?”

Great question! It turns out that that particular scene was not in the book – it was added as an extra scene especially for the movie. The film’s producer, David Barron, confirmed that this extra scene will be an attack by Death Eaters on the Weasley’s burrow. In an interview with The Herald Sun this past February, Baron revealed details of the extra scene and reassured fans who were skeptical of the move that it was indeed good news.

So what was the reason for the addition? Barron says, “We don’t often have things that aren’t in the book. But this was brought in because Jo (Rowling) was able throughout the quite lengthy book to keep dropping little snippets of what was happening in the outside world - there’d be people reading newspapers and talking about how somebody’s parents had been killed or somebody had been withdrawn from school because their parents didn’t think it was safe. And we’re made aware that the Muggle world is also experiencing these disasters, but thinks they are disasters rather than the work of Voldemort. The book is peppered with those moments, but we couldn’t do that quite so easily in the film. So [the extra scene] comes in the middle of the film and it just reminds us the world is no longer a safe place. Even in what would normally be considered the safe haven of the Burrow, nobody’s safe. I think you’ll like it. It’s quite effective.”

I have mixed feelings about the situation. On one hand, I understand the concept of film adaptations and that certain aspects of this novel aren’t going to translate well into the film – that is simply the nature of any adaptation. So, as a result, things need to be added from time to time, and, truthfully, this particular quandary seems as good a candidate as any.

On the other hand, part of me is hotter than a Hungarian Horntail! Since the added scene is an attack on the Burrow by Death Eaters, it will almost certainly be a detriment to a similar scene – a much more powerful and important scene – at the beginning of Deathly Hallows, when the Burrow is actually attacked for the first time during Bill and Fleur’s wedding. That scene is crucial since the moments leading up to it provided readers with a lot of information about Dumbleldore and his past, and because it signals the Harry, Ron, and Hermoine's departure for the quest to destroy the horacruxes.

My inkling says that the wedding scene from book 7 may be cut from the final film as a result, and that is a huge disappointment. Not only was that scene filled with excitement and suspense, it is incredibly crucial to the story. Further, there has been much talk about recasting Fleur's character, yet no new actress has been brought on board. It may just be that the filmmakers have decided to cut out the character completely.

What do you think? Feel free to chime in!

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Shot-by-Shot Analysis of HBP Trailer...For Us Die Hard Fans

If you are like me, you were so wrapped up in giddy excitement over the new Half Blood Prince trailer that you didn't get a chance to notice what was shown until the fourth or fifth viewing. Well, to help you out, I have posted a handy shot-by-shot analysis that MTV put together below. Thanks to Fenrir36 for the tip!


0:07: An overhead shot of the Hogwarts Express, winding its way through the Northern English landscape. As for Harry himself, the appearance of the train signals to viewers that we're in familiar territory. Welcome back.

0:10: Snow falls over Hogwarts School for Witchcraft and Wizardry.

0:12: Minerva McGonagall leads a group of students down a corridor at Hogwarts. The temptation is to say that the scene takes place at the end of term, prior to Dumbledore's funeral, but there are too many smiling faces in the crowd. Its placement in the trailer is nonetheless a shrewd one, however — another brief glimpse at familiarity and routine, signaling to viewers that another year of school has begun for young British witches and wizards.

0:14: A cabinet containing storied memories spins as Dumbledore is heard in voice-over: "What you are looking at are memories." What I am looking at is a vial in the upper-right frame labeled differently than all the others, with a symbol rather than the name "Thomas Marvolo Riddle." The sign of the Deathly Hallows? Close, but no cigar. The simple triangle is not bisected by a line nor surrounded by a circle. Still, one wonders what it does signal.

0:18: "In this case," Dumbledore continues, as we get a close-up of actor Michael Gambon, Harry in the background, "pertaining to one individual." Voldemort, of course.

0:21: Dumbledore's hand comes into frame, holding one memory. "This is perhaps the most important memory I have collected," he says to Harry. "I'd like you to see it."

0:27: We zoom through the Warner Bros. logo.

0:33: Harry dips his head into the Pensieve, and is transported through memory to ...

0:35: "A bustling, old-fashioned London street" as it says in the book (Page 263). Under heavy rain, Dumbledore makes his way toward Wool's Orphanage to inform young Tom Riddle that he is a wizard.

0:36: A zoom in on the orphanage, a cold, industrial building guarded by high brick fences and wrought-iron gates. A foreboding place from which there is no escape.

0:40: A title card reads "To Know the Future" as Ms. Cole, the headmistress of the orphanage, is heard in voice-over. "In all the years Tom's been here, he's never once had a visitor," she says as the image onscreen shifts to Ms. Cole leading Dumbledore up a winding staircase. Notice how the frame is slightly tilted, how the composition makes the staircases resemble something out of an Escher drawing. It's an subconscious clue that things aren't as they should be here, that we will quickly leave what we might metaphorically call "solid ground." There is an evil that lurks in these halls.

0:43: Our first glimpse at young Tom Riddle, the boy wizard who would grow up to be Voldemort. Surprisingly, I'm more interested here in Dumbledore, who is costumed differently than in the novel, where he was described as wearing "flamboyantly plum velvet."

0:46: A second title card completes the earlier sentence: "Return to the Past." Riddle is heard in voice-over: "You're a doctor, aren't you?" he asks. "Who are you?" One of the best scenes in the book gets featured front and center here, as Yates follows Rowling's lead in showcasing the Dumbledore/Voldemort battle of wills. As much as "Half-Blood Prince" is the story of Harry vs. He Who Shall Not Be Named, it's equally the story of Dumbledore vs. Riddle. Even as the older, wiser wizard, Dumbledore is drawn here into defending himself by the precocious monster.

0:58: "I'm different," Dumbledore says. "Prove it," responds Riddle. Instantly, his cabinet is set aflame. In the novel, of course, we learn that he was keeping stolen objects in there, a harbinger of his need to collect trophies.

1:00: Riddle begins his full confession to Dumbledore as Harry sprints through a field, desperately trying to outrun a presumed attacker. This is almost certainly during an added scene at the Burrow, previously discussed at length in our Movies Blog.

1:02: Our first glimpse of Fenrir Greyback, the feral werewolf who needs to feed even when not fully transformed.

1:04: Ginny Weasley in the field, wearing her pajamas.

1:06: "I can make bad things happen," Riddle continues as Ron Weasley lies stiff on the floor of Professor Slughorn's office, seemingly dead. It's not Riddle, of course, who poisons Ron with tainted wine, but Draco Malfoy (which comes to the same, really). It will take Harry's quick thinking and a handy bezoar to save him.

1:07: Dumbledore puts on the Gaunt's ring, an artifact simultaneously a Horcrux and a Hallow (the symbol of the Hallows is, in fact, visible on the emerald surface of the stone). This scene is not glimpsed in the novels until "Deathly Hallows." Dumbledore quickly recoils as a flash of old Voldemort is seen.

1:08: On an island in the middle of an underground lake, Dumbledore casts a fire spell, surrounding Harry and himself in a ring of flame and driving off the Inferi (animated corpses controlled by a Dark Wizard). This is immediately after drinking from Voldemort's Horcrux potion, which has made him relive his very worst memory ever.

1:12: "I can speak to snakes too," Riddle finishes. Oddly, it is this pronouncement that seems to stop Dumbledore dead in his tracks. Parseltongue has long been associated with the dark arts, though, of course, there are those who have the power among the great and the good too. It's yet another departure from the novel.

1:18: Several more shots of Voldemort.

1:22: "Hedwig's Theme," yet another familiar cue, this time musical, closes the trailer as the title of the film comes onscreen. A final snippet of conversation between Dumbledore and Harry, taken straight from the book, is heard.

Happy Birthday Harry!


Join me in wishing Harry a very happy birthday today!

To send him a personal greeting, you can visit Scholastic's website at http://www.scholastic.com/harrypotter/activities/birthday/.

I should also note that today is J.K. Rowling's birthday, so we send her our heartfelt wishes as well.

Tuesday, July 29, 2008

It's Here! The "Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince" Movie Trailer!

Here it is friends, what we have all been waiting for...the official teaser trailer for Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince!




Initial thoughts everyone?

Did anyone else think that was a little creepy or what?! There was not a lot shown of Harry, or any of our other favorite characters - Ron or Hermoine - or even other pivotal characters from this book - Draco and Snape, for example. We did, however, get our first look at Tom Riddle as the young Voldemort, and it's clear we are heading in a very dark direction. It's a different trailer, I think, than we all expected - most notably absent was the usual montage shots with the music building in the background. (That's not to say we won't get all that in the next trailer!) I definitely love what they did here - very dark, very ominous...I love it! This shall be a "flighty temptress adventure," indeed.

The summer movie season officially belongs to The Dark Knight, but the fall movie season is still up for grabs, and, after seeing this sneak peak, I definitely believe Half-Blood Prince will reign at the top for fall box office (move over Twilight!).

More analysis to come my friends! For now, just enjoy! Feel free, however, to let me know what your thoughts are!

Not much longer now...

Friends, we are just hours away from the release of the Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince movie trailer. As a treat, USA Today provided fans with an exclusive look inside the trailer and released two new photos from the film, as seen here.

The first, and perhaps the most intriguing released photo to date, is one of young Voldemort. The Dark Lord is played by Ralph Fiennes, who appeared in Goblet of Fire and Order of the Phoenix, will not be appearing in the 6th film. His 11-year-old incarnation, on the other hand, will. He is played by 10 year-old Hero Fiennes-Tiffin, the actor’s nephew. I must say, from the picture, the young Voldemort possess the same intensity as the Dark Lord he grows up to be.

Director David Yates says that the fact Hero is related to Ralph Fiennes wasn’t the primary reason for casting him: “It was an advantage that he looked very similar to Ralph. Of course that was useful. But primarily I went for Hero because of this wonderful haunted quality that seemed to bring Tom Riddle alive on-screen for us…Even at a very young age, Tom Riddle shows tendencies toward cruelty and maliciousness. And it's a very unsettling thing to see."

The scene in this photo is quite obvious – it must be when Dumbledore arrives at the orphanage to meet Tom for the first time. As seen in the back ground, Dumbledore appears quite younger than we know him to be in Harry Potter’s time.

The second photo released provides a glimpse into the part of the film I am looking most forward to: the journey into the cave. As we all know, Dumbledore and Harry have gone into the cave in search of one of Voldemort’s Horcruxes. The cave is filled with dark magic and they are attacked by Inferi – that is when Dumbledore creates a firestorm to fend them. Of the scene, Yates says, “It's almost a biblical image. He's a bit like Charlton Heston when he parts the Red Sea.”

Indeed!

So, there was a quick fix to get you through the day...the trailer will be released tonight at 8:00pm CST. As stated by one of our other friends in the Potter fandom, "Get ready everyone. The surge of Half Blood Prince media is about to begin!"

Until then, keep twiddling those dials! Keep each other safe, keep faith…good day!

Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Wish Harry Potter a Happy Birthday!

Friends,

Scholastic’s Harry Potter website was updated today to mark the upcoming July 31st birthday of the boy who lived. This new feature allows you to write a special birthday message to Harry for all to see. Be sure to pass along your birthday greetings to our beloved friend, Harry Potter, at


http://www.scholastic.com/harrypotter/activities/birthday/

While you are on the site, you can check out all the other games, quizzes, and many more other fun activities. I have let hours go by while on this site – it’s so much fun!!

Harry Potter Stars Attend London Premiere of "The Dark Knight"

The starts were out, the crowds were insane, and…I wish I was there!

The Dark Knight held its London premiere last night. Similarly to last week's world premiere in New York, the cast members, including Christian Bale, Michael Caine, Maggie Gyllenhaal, and Aaron Eckhart, wore dark-colored outfits, tribute to the late Heath Ledger, who plays the Joker in the movie

Many of the Harry Potter stars were at the premiere. Here are photos of
Tom Felton (Draco), Evanna Lynch (Luna), Matt Lewis (Neville), and James and Oliver Phelps (Fred and George Weasley).