Warner Bros’ official Harry Potter Facebook has released a new video where the Harry Potter cast interview each other. We see the Phelps brothers, Tom Felton, Matthew Lewis Bonnie Wright and Evanna Lynch!
As promised here is part 2 of Magical-Menagerie’s coverage of the World Premiere of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part I in London on November 11th! Part I can be seen here. Before I post the video I would like to say thank you SO MUCH to my amazing friend Maura for stepping in to brave the press pit when I wasn’t able to get to London for the premiere. You are AMAZING and did a great job with the footage!
In case you don’t want to scroll down here’s the first video:
Movies.ie has released more new interviews with Harry Potter cast members! Yesterday they released videos with Bonnie, Evanna and Matt that can be seen here. Today we have videos with James & Oliver Phelps and Tom Felton.
Today, James and Oliver Phelps attended the Copenhagen, Denmark premiere of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. We have a couple photos from the event thanks to Lise Lyng Falkenberg and SS! (all the photos may be seen here)
Hero Complex has been updated with a new interview they had with James and Oliver Phelps. In the interview they talk about the fate of the Weasley twins, their home/normal life and much more. There are major spoilers, as with most of the stories I’ve been posting these days, so heed with caution if you haven’t read the books.
Fans may have lamented the loss of Fred Weasley’s life and George Weasley’s ear when they read “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows,” but James and Oliver Phelps, who play the mischievous Weasley twins in the “Potter” movies, were excited for the gore. “To be honest with you, I think ever since we started these movies, not specifically this character, but I’vealways wanted to die on screen,” James said. “So I guess that was something ticked off the box.”
Though he was anxious to portray the “shocking” moment as readers had imagined it, he said, dying wasn’t all that difficult. “I just had to lie there,” he said. “I guess that was quite easy.” Losing an ear also proved pain-free for Oliver. “It was amazing how comfortable it was, losing an ear,” he said. “I’ve always wanted a bit of a gory effect, really, in any of the films, so to get to do something like this was really cool.” Less exciting for Oliver was having to play the part of a brother who survives his twin.
“I had to get myself into that mindset of what it would be like and try to make it feel as real as possible,” Oliver said. “There’s a scene where he’s laid out in the Great Hall, and to look at that, that was really surreal, actually, because they pale him up and everything. For me, it was really quite an odd scene to film, especially because I was supposed to be crying my eyes out, and to do it with the whole Great Hall full of people, as well. It was a different day of filming from anything we’d done before.”