| 
				 USA Today has a new report where they interview Helena Bonham Carter and Tom Felton about their characters in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. 
In the latest installment, Lestrange fairly begs to murder Harry Potter,  lunging forward with unbridled bloodlust. “I just base her on a really,  really naughty, horrible child,” says Bonham Carter. “She’s got  arrested development. She’s totally unpredictable. You have no real idea  of how she’s going to react.” She also is “the ultimate witch,” the actress  says. “Kids are genuinely terrified by me on the street, which is quite  funny.” 
She didn’t relish the scene in which she tortures  Hermione (Emma Watson). “It was  pretty hard,” she says. “The sadistic part doesn’t come naturally to me.  The oddness definitely does, but the sadism doesn’t.” All must have been forgiven. Watson and Bonham  Carter happily socialized during filming. They discussed Hermione’s  character, since in the final film installment, out in July, Bonham  Carter impersonates Hermione. “We went to tea and had long chats,” Bonham  Carter says.  
———-  
“He’s a character who’s very defined,” Felton  says. “He was purposefully written by Jo Rowling as very one-dimensional  in the first few books, because you’re supposed to hate him. You’re supposed to build up as much dislike for  the character as you can until we get to Book 6. We hate him even more  for the first half of that book because we think he’s up to something  and we know he’s going to do some damage.  But it’s not until we actually see why he’s in  that position and see him break down on two or three occasions that we  actually start to feel a bit sorry for him. This guy’s a horrible victim  of circumstances and terrible parenting.”  
Felton says director David Yates explained  Malfoy’s position in a way that hit home. “The Muggle (non-wizard) equivalent of what Draco  was technically asked to do is like a terrorist group giving you a gun  and saying, ‘Shoot your president in the head or we’re going to shoot  you.’ God! Imagine a 16-year-old having to take that on! And that  continues in the seventh book, when we really see him struggle. He’s a boy amongst men in a world that he does  not want to be in. Every minute he stays there, he knows he’s not cut  from the same cloth as those people.”  
Filed Under: Helena Bonham Carter, Tom Felton                  |