New Interview Online with Trio, David Yates fom MSN UK

Jun 07, 2009
Actor Interviews
There is a new interview online from MSN UK in correlation with the Harry Potter Tour (see below) with Harry Potter actors Dan Radcliffe (Harry), Rupert Grint (Ron), and Emma Watson (Hermione), as well as Half-Blood Prince director David Yates. This Q&A interview features a number of questions on a variety of subjects posed to the Trio and Mr. Yates.
In the Q&A with actor Dan Radcliffe, the young discusses his desires to work on projects outside Harry Potter, the feelings upon filming the final films (“[Harry Potter] does act as a safety net, in a way, when you’re going off to make something else. Knowing that you don’t have that will be sad. I’ll be sad to leave the character behind and not see the friends I’ve made on a daily basis”), his love for indie rock, and his thoughts on the different sides of Harry the sixth film with show. To this, he relates:
DAN RADCLIFFE: There’s friction in this film it’s much more to do with Ron and Hermione than it is to do with Harry. Harry is unhappy for a lot of this film, mainly because people keep trying to kill him. And his love life is awful, too. That’s what Jo [JK Rowling] does so well: combining everyday, mundane problems with this incredible other world.
Miss Watson relates similar feelings in her interview, speaking of her experiences filming the Harry Potter series, the budding romance between characters Hermione and Ron, her win at the ITV Movie Awards, and the diary she keeps of “funny little things I said or thought.” She goes on to say of this:
EMMA WATSON: …I also have memory boxes filled with things from the early films, including bits of the chess set. I have funny bits and pieces that they let us keep.
QUESTION: Might all of that be helpful for an autobiography one day?
EMMA WATSON: No, I couldn’t see myself doing that. It’s too strange and weird looking back on that little girl. I’m very self-critical so I find it hard to watch the early films again. Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix was a film I was proud of, but I had to watch it three or four times before I could calm myself down and stay focused on my performance.
Next, Rupert Grint talks of his nostalgia watching the early Potter films, the ending of Deathly Hallows (“I was quite happy with the ending”), and the new Quidditch scenes his character is featured in during the film. Quoteage:
RUPERT GRINT: Yeah, I’ve never done Quidditch in the films before so this is my first Quidditch experience. Dan says it’s really painful and I know where he’s coming from because it’s quite uncomfortable, with the harness and stuff, and you’re getting slung about. There are two stages. One is the try-outs where Ron is not very good and keeps getting hit in the face. Another stage is where Ron takes the potion and thinks he is really, really good. It’s quite tricky but I’ve really enjoyed it. I’m always on a wire because the broom is quite high up, about 18 feet.
Finally, director David Yates sits down to answer questions about his returning as director for the final films, the performances from the actors in the film, his decision to return for Deathly Hallows, and a ‘through-line,’ which Yates says “…goes right the way through to the end… We’re just putting in all sorts of little details between the characters, which hopefully will resonate through the films.” Mr. Yates also goes on to describe the Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince film as:
It’s love, potions and rock ˜n’ roll. There are all these wonderful things in our story. There’s a potion that gives you perfect luck. You take it and everything goes right for you. But it does heighten your senses somewhat and you get quite breezy with it. Then there’s a love potion that makes you very tactile with everybody. Rupert gets overly tactile with Jim Broadbent at one point. So, it’s got all those metaphorical values. There are some really lovely comic beats here, which we didn’t really get a chance to do last time. It was just a very different beast.
Thanks to Order Partners RupertGrint.net and DanRadcliffe.com.