Archive for the ‘Harry Potter Books’ Category

The Hunger Games movie premiere is tonight in Los Angeles, believe it or not; Check out the live Red Carpet action on MTV, the Capitol’s main line to the heartland of Panem! Any bets that the three principal players show up dressed for a District 12 Reaping? They should, though, right?

Continuing with our ‘Hunger Games Month’ coverage of the run-up to the first movie’s general release for us out in the Districts on 23 March, below are film clips from Entertainment Tonight about the making of the film. We’ll be talking about the expanded role for Seneca Crane in the first part of the story soon; please feel free to check in with your thoughts on that subject or others in the comment space provided below! Surprise about Sutherland and Seneca after the jump …


Film Director Gary Ross Interview notes:

On Working with Suzanne Collins:

SFX: You’ve done the book-to-screen process before with Seabiscuit but how different an animal was The Hunger Games?

Gary Ross: “I have a much closer relationship with Suzanne (Collins) than I had with [Seabiscuit author] Laura Hillenbrand. In fact, Suzanne and I wrote the last pass of the screenplay together.”

Passionate fans sometimes forget that you can’t do a literal book translation for film, so did you feel the pressure of knowing your screenplay was going to disappoint some purist readers?

Gary Ross: “First of all, I’m a fan, so pleasing myself is half the battle. Obviously the fact that Suzanne loved it instilled in me that I had been properly calibrated [Did he mean collaborated? Did he mean anything?...] and my tonal sense of the material was coming through. In terms of pressure, I don’t know. I felt an excitement and opportunity to dive into something that I love. Anytime you write or direct anything you are also the audience or the reader. You want to give them the same thrill you had when you first read the book.”

The media is really pushing this as the successor to the Twilight films, which doesn’t really compute if you’ve read the books. However, did the studio want you to lean more on the Katniss/Peeta/Gale triangle more to capture that audience?

Gary Ross: “I think it’s a very accurate depiction of the book and I don’t think there’s anything that is really different from the book in that sense. Katniss has a very close relationship with Gale and she has an evolving one of trust with Peeta and that’s what we tried to do in the film as it was done in the book.”

Did Suzanne Collins have much input on the design of the film?

Gary Ross: “I talked to Suzanne all the way through the design process. I showed her designs of interiors and sets, but that was much more so in the prep because when you start shooting a lot of that stuff has been determined. I wanted her opinion because it was cool and fun to talk about.”

I’d like to hear Suzanne Collins thought of this process. It sounds like he had a “cool and fun” time but didn’t let any of her thinking get in the way of his priority: “pleasing myself.” As in being sure to include the back story as envisioned by an actor who read the book… Was he a collaborator or just calibrated to get a writing credit?

On the Insights of Donald Sutherland:

For President Snow, was Donald Sutherland always a first choice? He’s done villains so well in so many styles – what did he bring to this character?

Gary Ross: “Donald had actually read it and wrote me a letter that was so compelling saying, ‘Listen, I’ve read this series and I’m really interested. Here is who I think President Snow is…’ The minute I read the letter it was very clear that he was right. He understood what he meant in the piece. He understood where the nature of power comes from and he understood how pernicious that power was and how President Snow used that power. He gave me a glimpse into that side of the world that was more vivid than anything that I had seen. In fact Donald wrote me such a compelling backstory to his character that I ended up incorporating some of those ideas into a couple of scenes that I added for him which are still in the movie and I think are very good.”

As in a scene featuring Snow’s interaction with Seneca Crane, the Gamesmaker who is invisible in the book version of the series opening? I wonder how “cool and fun” Miss Collins thought that this atextual addition was… More on Seneca Crane’s outsized role this week!

Hogwarts Professor

Last Monday, The Oklahoman published an article on the series of three lectures I am giving this month at Full Circle Bookstore in Oklahoma City (read that story and watch the video here). The talk was a blast and I hope the Full Circle SRO audience re-appears tomorrow for my exploration of Catching Fire. Part of me has to wonder if they will, of course, because there won’t be a big push in the capitol city’s only news daily.

I was interviewed last week, however, albeit an interview that you are invited to participate in as well. A serious reader of the first rank on the Left Coast — she has organized fandom conferences for both Harry Potter and Twilight, the latter, incredibly, held at Forks High School — sent me fourteen hunger Games questions for Panem Parishioners (the true believers?) a reporter had asked her to share with those in the know. I complied (the questions and my answers are below the jump) and I pass them on to you. If you’d like the reporter to get your feedback for a Hunger Games story going out before the movie premiere, send your answers to me at john at HogwartsProfessor dot com. I’ll pass them on!

1. When and how did you become interested in “The Hunger Games” books?

Summer, 2010. Readers urged me to interpret the series in light of its alchemical symbolism, etc.

2. What do you like about the books?

The political and spiritual allegories wrapped up in a page-turning dystopian adventure…

3. Tell me about your “Hunger Games” fandom. (For instance, how many times have you read the books, did you force all your friends to read the books, do you have any merchandise or memorabilia, are you planning to join the book club at Barnes & Noble, etc.?)

I’ve written more than 50,000 words on the subject for Hunger Games fandom to enjoy at my web site, HogwartsProfessor.com.

4. Were you a fan of “Twilight” and/or “Harry Potter” before “The Hunger Games,” and did your interest in one or both of those have anything to do with your interest in “Hunger Games”?

I’ve written and edited six books on Harry Potter and one on Twilight; the reason readers asked me to comment on Hunger Games was because of this expertise.

5. “The Hunger Games” is basically a story about kids killing other kids, and it’s rather dark and violent. What do you think about that?

I think that’s spot on, as Ron Weasley might say. Dystopian fiction — think 1984, Fahrenheit 451, RollerBall — isn’t for the faint of heart.

6. Are you looking forward to the movie version of “The Hunger Games”? Do you have any special plans for seeing the film?

Yes. And No. Movies act as trailers for books that inspire them. I expect even more people to read Hunger Games after the movies come out.

7. From what you’ve seen from movie trailers, photos, etc., what are your expectations for the movie?

It will be an Irony Fest — a blockbuster action film based on a book about the barrenness of a culture that loves blockbuster action films.

8. What do you think of the casting of Jennifer Lawrence as Katniss? What about the casting of the other characters? Are there any actors you’re skeptical about?

Did you see the photo shoot of Ms. Lawrence for Glamour and GQ magazines? She has great stylists, that’s for sure. And, again, the irony of all this is almost too much to believe. [Not so hard to believe now that the Four Corner marketing plan has been revealed in The Wall Street Journal. Scroll Down home page for HogPro discussion.]

9. What do you think is most important for the makers of the film to get right? Do you have any worries or concerns about the movie?

Putting the title of these books on the marquee will fill seats and create more readers. The books fill and change hearts; the best the movie can do is get movie-goers to read the books.

10. What do you think about the movie’s PG-13 rating, despite the book’s dark and violent themes?

I don’t know anything about this.

11. Do you think the film could become as popular as the Harry Potter or Twilight movie franchises?

No, but only because there are only three books in the series versus Harry Potter’s seven and romance is a relatively small bit of The Hunger Games compared to Twilight.

12. The studio has said they may divide “The Hunger Games” series into four separate films. Do you think that’s a good idea?

It will make them more money and create more interest in the series of books, so I’m all for it. Who loses?

That said, Twilight’s finale Breaking Dawn was originally two books so making it two films was a no-brainer. Here, as with Deathly Hallows, it’s all about the money.

13. What other young adult books would you recommend to people who like “The Hunger Games” and are looking for other books to read?

Collins’ Gregor the Overlander books are wonderful fun, Eoin Colfer’s Artemis Fowl books are a delight, and, if they like dystopian gore, the Chaos Walking trilogy is a mind bender.

14. Please tell me your full name, age and the city you live in. Also, if you don’t mind, a contact phone number in case I need to clarify anything or ask further questions.

John Granger, 50, Oklahoma City, [Ten Digit Phone Number]

That’s it for the interview! You can send me your complete set of answers or just post the ones that strike your fancy (include the question number, please!) in the comment boxes below. If you’re within easy driving distance of OKC, I’ll see you tomorrow at Full Circle to discuss the artistry and meaning of Catching Fire. 12 Days to the Hunger Games movie (caution: link to Capitol countdown!) …

Hogwarts Professor

This past week, I had the opportunity to visit the abandoned Henry River Mill Community where many of the District 12 scenes were filmed for the upcoming Hunger Games film. Here are a few of the photographs we snapped. I was prepared for surly security guards, police officers, even, but it was a lovely day, and the only person we encountered was a delightful gentleman who had been wanting to photograph the site and was aware of the film only as something that blocked up traffic back in the summer. I was hoping for dandelions, but had to settle for daffodils, which, as Katniss would tell us, are completely inedible, but I like them because they linger on long after people have left a house or town site, beautiful yellow reminders of a past that is long gone.


The site is easy to reach and is about an hour from Charlotte. The Mellark Bakery (that’s new paint on the front) was once the company store. The folks in Asheville are also sensitive to how the forthcoming film will improve their fortunes. I’ve been chatting with them about their plans to bring film fans to see some of the scenery from the film. They’ve even put together a super little video that showcases some of the lovelier spots used in the film. And they have vacation packages that, to my mind, are a little reminiscient of the Capitol citizens’ penchant for visiting the old Arenas where, as is Asheville, the food is great.

Considering the positive economic impact the whole of Western NC has seen so far, though, I will try to refrain from too many smart remarks. If people want to go whitewater rafting where the actors went, great. I just hope they don’t litter. I don’t see much chance of the darker side of District 12 getting the same treatment, though there are some coal mines in Eastern KY that offer tours.

I predict I’ll be touring plenty of visiting relatives over the next few years and that, when I see the film with my students in two weeks that we’ll be yelling “Hey, I know where that is!”
Thanks to my husband, historian, author, and photographer Michael C. Hardy, for snapping these images!

Hogwarts Professor

The Lionsgate/Scholastic ‘Four Quadrants’ marketing plan for Hunger Games has been revealed in The Wall Street Journal! Watch the video and read the article.

Three quick notes before you share your comments:

(1) Why no comments about the Glamour magazine shots? Those cleavage numbers were aimed at whom? I’m guessing Glamour is a women’s magazine but those fotos probably have a lot to do with male interest in the film running as high as 48%.

(2) Not a peep here, either, about the in-your-face irony of this kind of marketing-styling of a story (product?) about the demeaning use of story by propagandists and film makers.

(3) 23.5 million copies of the novels sold and rising… The films could be a bust or just break even and they’ve already done a great service in drawing in that many readers to Suzanne Collins’ remarkable work.

Your thoughts? Sound off below! (Hat tip to Rev George)

Hogwarts Professor

Some ‘time sensitive news’ Potter Philes will be interested in:

Read the press releases beneath jump!

On Pottermore? April is the opening date — April Fool’s Day? We’ll see!

Waiting for Pottermore?

We’re pleased to announce that pottermore.com will be open to everyone in early April 2012.

We know that the extended wait for those wishing to be part of Pottermore has been frustrating, and we’d like to thank you all for your patience so far.

Many of you are interested to know why we extended the original opening date beyond October of last year.

We always knew Pottermore would be incredibly popular, which is why we made the decision to only open to one million Beta users to begin with. We wanted to make sure that we had a really good understanding of how people want to use the site and which bits we’d need to modify before giving more people access.

We gathered some incredibly useful feedback from our Beta users, and it became clear that our original platform wouldn’t be suitable when millions more users came on to the site. So we made a big decision: to move Pottermore to an entirely different platform set up. This ‘invisible’ change has involved a lot of work behind the scenes but it will enable our users to get the best from Pottermore as it grows and develops.

There have definitely been some challenges and the whole Pottermore team has been working really hard to incorporate all the Beta activity and feedback. This means that over the coming weeks and months we’ll be adding exclusive content and many more exciting features (such as sounds) to Pottermore for you to explore, share and discover.

So get ready to join the Pottermore journey – the wait is nearly over.

SXSW Interactive panel of Potter Heavyweights:

Pottermore. MuggleNet. The Leaky Cauldron. Huge conferences like Infinitus 2010 and LeakyCon 2011. What makes Potter fan communities thrive? Is the success simply due to the size of the fandom, or is there real magic happening? Melissa Anelli (LeakyCon, Leaky Cauldron, LeakyNews), Andrew Sims (Hypable, MuggleNet, Twilight Source), and Heidi Tandy (HPEF/Ascendio, FictionAlley) will share insider knowledge on creating vibrant online and “In Real Life” communities and events. Social Media Librarian Lisa Bunker (Pima County Library) will deconstruct Potterverse methodologies, with an emphasis on ways other organizations can build and Potterize their own “fanbase” to bring the magic home. With moderator Brenda Huettner (P-N Designs), they’ll discuss how to spark new fires, continually adapt to new tools and media, capture attention and encourage participation, and remain fresh in a fickle realm.

Hogwarts Professor

If you would love to expend your Harry Potter movies’ collection, here is a fantastic opportunity and it looks like the following 8-disc Blu-Ray set. Spend your money wisely and get this awesome kit!

Amazon Is Selling This 31-Disc Harry Potter DVD Box Set

Currently, Amazon is taking orders on the “Harry Potter Wizards Collection” 31-disc box set. The entire series is listed at a whopping 9.99. One tip: in case of pre order you will get a discount!

Are you into this?

ReadingHarry

Daniel Radcliffe will finally can get a very prestigious award, because this boy was nominated for a best actor gong for his role in the last installment of the hit films, Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows Part 2.

harry

ReadingHarry

Read the Story. Review the Preview. Watch the Interview. Tell Your friends. Brush up on your Hunger Games. See you tonight!

Hogwarts Professor

It’s Hunger Games Month here at HogwartsProfessor and today let’s take a trip to the Capitol to see how actress Jennifer Lawrence is being packaged as the ‘Blonde Bombshell turned Revel Vixen’ by her handlers and beauticians –

Beyond. Satire. Glamour Covers after the jump.

Is Ms. Collins laughing, crying, or what about these promotional stills of the District 12 fashion goddess after her makeover by stylists?

From the DailyGlow:

She’s starring as Katniss Everdeen in The Hunger Games and now Jennifer Lawrence has taken part in a tough new photo shoot for Glamour. The stunning actress poses holding a bow, her onscreen character’s weapon of choice, and wearing a black bodysuit complete with plunging neckline…

The 21-year-old actress looks sensational in the shots that are featured in the magazine’s March edition. The actress looks incredible in a fitted black bodysuit that showcases her curvaceous figure. Lawrence poses confidently holding the bow, with her long tousled hair falling down her back.

In another, softer shot, Lawrence looks sweeter, wearing a gold top as she kneels on the grass. The actress’s makeup looks sultry and sexy in every image. With heavy kohl and bronze shimmery eye shadow, The Hunger Games star smolders. Lawrence rocks peach-toned blush and understated lipstick to complement her radiant complexion.

You couldn’t make this stuff up — except perhaps as a parody of the Capitol gossip sheets’ commentary on Katniss’ wedding dress? Your thoughts, please! More photos and interview comments with Caesar sans Peeta:

In the weeks leading up to the release of the film, Lawrence, who laughs often and quickly—at herself as much as everything else—has intentionally been taking it easy, hanging out with her friends, surfing, going grocery shopping and mentally preparing for what’s to come. May the odds be ever in her favor.

GLAMOUR: So, are you ready?
JENNIFER LAWRENCE: I feel like I’m in the eye of the hurricane right now. I just recently started cleaning like I’m insane, and I’m starting to think it’s my anxiety over the movie. I think it’s a bit like, “I’m just cleaning the refrigerator handle. The movie’s not coming out. I’m going to clean it spotless, and then my life will not change.” It’s just scary. I feel like I got a ticket to go to another planet and I’m moving there and there’s no turning back, and I don’t know if I’m going to like that other planet or have friends there. It’s daunting.

GLAMOUR:
But you thought about all of this before you took the job, right?
JENNIFER LAWRENCE: I gave myself three days. I knew from reading the books that I loved The Hunger Games. I just didn’t know if it was worth changing my life for. I’m at a peaceful place right now. The people who used to ignore me at parties, now they’re nice to me and kissing my ass. But nobody’s staked outside of my house. I wanted to make sure that when I said yes, I wouldn’t regret it. And I don’t regret it. I would have said no because I was scared, and then I would have been that bitter actress telling my grandkids, “I’m the one that turned it down.”

GLAMOUR: Being very famous does seem crazy-making….
JENNIFER LAWRENCE: In some ways, it’s a hard life, but it’s a great professional life. I’m doing what I love, and then I get months and months of rest. I have a lot of money for a 21-year-old. I can’t stand it when actors complain.

Did I mention that Glamour voters chose Ms. Lawrence as ‘Hottest Celeb’ of 2012? The Girl’s on Fire!

Hogwarts Professor

You Know You’re Really an Adult Harry Potter Fan…

By Melanie N. Lee, February 28, 2012

Over the past 15-odd years, the Boy Wizard has collected fans of every age, class, size, and gender.  And who said that the Harry Potter stories were strictly for children?  So, in the tradition of MAD Magazine…  

You know you’re really an adult Harry Potter fan when…

…you know that Bellatrix Lestrange was born in the same year as your older sister.

…your thesis paper for your M.S. in Adolescent Education would be titled The Pedagogy of Albus Dumbledore.

…you wonder why the Slytherins don’t all come down with pneumonia and mildew living in those damp caves under the lake.  (Oh, yeah…magic.)

…you’re sitting, and an object is out of your reach.  You stretch your hand and cry “Accio!” before you finally get up and get it.  (Yes, I read this somewhere else, but I’ve done it!)

…you’re late for work.  You wish you could Apparate.

…you appreciate that J.K. Rowling prescribes chocolate as a temporary relief from depression.

…you buy the silver-white Beanie Baby Christmas reindeer called Snocap because he reminds you of Prongs.

…you can’t decide between the Muggle Quidditch Tournament in Central Park and the Hogwarts Improv Marathon in an East Village theater.

…standing on line in costume for the midnight movie opening of the latest Harry Potter flick, you know enough not to ask the Asian girl in front of you dressed in a Beauxbatons uniform if she is Cho Chang.

…you appreciate the anti-racist themes dealing with the purebloods, half-bloods, and “Mudbloods” so much that you almost don’t mind that the Harry Potter stories have only about six Black characters (one of them adult) and three Asian characters (none of them adult!).

…you find yourself drawing parallels between Harry Potter and Luke Skywalker…Harry Potter and Holden Caulfield…Harry Potter and John Lennon…

…you search the Internet to see if anyone else has thought of those same Harry Potter and (fill in the blank) parallels.  They have.

…you explain a certain Biblical story to your son Nathaniel by saying that Jacob was a Slytherin and Esau was a Gryffindor.  (Credit Elizabeth Baird Hardy for that one.)

…you smile to think that the Religious Right folks who rail against the witchcraft in Harry Potter would really get their drawers in a knot if they bothered to read the books and find out how socially liberal these stories really are.  (Of course, if you’re a radical feminist, you think the stories are socially conservative.)

…you knew the Christ-figure allegory would show up in Deathly Hallows because John Granger told you so.

…you’re disappointed when a Harry Potter symposium in Limerick, Ireland, turns down your proposed paper about the phallic and yonic symbolism in Chamber of Secrets (not that you could afford to travel to Limerick anyway).  You’re also proud that you learned what “yonic” means.

…you think Emma Watson should have been on the short list for Best Lead Actress Oscar for Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part 1.

…you want the whole Harry Potter series reshot for television in about five or ten years, one season per book—animated cartoon series?  BBC production on PBS?—so they could cover things the movies missed or glanced at, like SPEW, Percy’s defection, Molly’s boggart, the Gaunt hovel, Fleur’s stay at the Weasley house, Potterwatch Radio, and Winky.

…you’ve considered purchasing a T-shirt or button displaying Molly Weasley’s iconic statement—“NOT MY DAUGHTER, YOU *****!”—from Deathly Hallows.  You didn’t.

…Cornelius Fudge = George H.W. Bush.  Scrimgeour = Clinton.  Pius Thickness = George W. Bush.  Kingsley Shacklebolt = Obama.  Since Deathly Hallows was released in 2007 and Obama was elected in 2008, you wonder if J.K. Rowling is a prophet.

…you decided it was worth .00, including shipping and handling, to order for your niece one Chocolate Frog.  (That was before they started selling the frogs in some Rite-Aid stores.)

…blending apple juice, spices, and pumpkin puree, you’ve made pumpkin juice for your family’s Thanksgiving and Christmas gatherings.  You drank most of it.

…you won’t make homemade butterbeer because of your Type 2 diabetes.  Okay, you made it once.  Twice.

…you wish you could teach a middle-school English class for one day so that you could compare Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix with The Chocolate War.

…you hate Dolores Umbridge’s guts but you love her as a character.  You admire Bellatrix Lestrange and you wish she were fighting for the good guys.  You’ve dressed up as each of them for Halloween. [The first and last pictures are of Ms. Lee as Bellatrix and Dolores.]

Please ad your own “You Know You’re Really an Adult Harry Potter Fan when…” note in the comment boxes below!

Hogwarts Professor