I was still referring to that map 10 years later on the eighth film. She immediately took out a pen and paper, and made the most extraordinarily complete map on a sheet of A4. SC: When I met Jo, I asked about the geography of Hogwarts. Tim Burke, visual effects supervisor HP 2-6, senior visual effects supervisor HP 7-8: It was this huge family I think there were over 700 people working at Leavesden, an industry in itself. The top floor was our art department, we had our own zoo, there was a workshop where we built the creatures, as well as seven stages with sets of Hogwarts. TS: We occupied practically the entirety of Leavesden Studios. My first reaction was fright: How the hell are we going to do this? Stuart Craig, production designer, HP 1-8: I was decorating a bedroom for my as-yet-unborn grandson when I got the call to come to Los Angeles and meet David and Chris. We had a November 2001 release date before we had a movie.ĭH: Stuart Craig was vital to the films' success, no question. TS: We had a commitment to make the first two films back to back, but it was a really tight schedule. I was standing too close to a candle and my T-shirt went up in flames. Rupert Grint, actor (Ron Weasley), HP 1-8: Dan said he could set fire to me and I wouldn't react. But he's a terrible corpser – he always gets the giggles during a take, and that sets everyone else off. He replied: "I don't know what it is in Muggle money, but I can tell you in Knuts and Galleons."ĭavid Yates, director, HP 5-8: Rupert is the coolest bloke I know. Rupert was the big surprise, because he was such a natural.ĭH: One of the reporters asked Rupert how much he was making. They'd been hidden away in a hotel the night before. I remember the first press conference when these three kids were unveiled. TS: I watched Emma Watson's screen test and wrote in my notebook: "Perfect! But she is rather beautiful." We did wonder if we should give her a more bucktoothed look, like she has in the book. We had three or four other boys in the mix, and several Rons and Hermiones. This boy was curious and enthusiastic and decent. What I didn't know was they'd already turned the request down once – Chris had seen him in the BBC's David Copperfield – but I persuaded Dan and his mother to come for a coffee. I knew his father, who was with him, so I called the next day to ask if he would bring Dan in to audition. Then David found him in the most random of places.ĭH: I went to the theatre and I noticed this boy in the audience – he had big eyes, and seemed to be an old soul in a young body. It got to the stage where we thought we were never going to find our Harry. NP: We had a director before we had a Harry Potter. But he expressed real passion, and he laid all the groundwork. TS: Chris Columbus had made the Home Alone films, so as well as having this global box office ranking as a director, he had a proven ability for working with children.ĭH: I suppose Chris Columbus was the most conservative choice from the studio's point of view. At the end of one, Spielberg showed me a picture of Haley Joel Osment and said: "You know, this is a really interesting young actor … " NP: There were lots of discussions about directors – Alan Parker, Terry Gilliam, Steven Spielberg.ĭH: When Steve delivered his script, Spielberg read it and we had two long meetings. TS: Steve Kloves wrote the screenplay, and Jo said the minute she met him she knew Harry would be in safe hands. We asked Richard Curtis to write the screenplay, and he said he would do it if Mike directed they had worked together on Four Weddings and a Funeral. NP: No one around London will admit that they read the book and passed on it, but I know through the grapevine that quite a few other big companies didn't see in the book what we saw.ĭH: One of the first people we asked to direct it was Mike Newell, who ended up doing the fourth film. I knew its appeal might reach more than just children. For me, Jo's book was an adventure, but it was also about character and emotion and the power of love. Family entertainment was not at the centre of film culture in the way it is now. TS: It was not a sure thing by any means. Warner Bros were not immediately enthusiastic. David asked what it was called and I told him: Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone.ĭH: I said: "I'm not sure about the title." But I read it and fell in love the world Jo had created was so rich. I came in raving about it on Monday morning. It was brilliant – a huge, original story which felt so visual and filmic. NP: I read the first Harry Potter at home on a Saturday morning. There was a slight gloom in the air about that.ĭH: Each Friday, we'd decide what everyone would read over the weekend. Nisha Parti, production consultant, HP1: We'd been running the company for a while and hadn't found the big thing Warner Bros was hoping for.
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