Когда жизнь экзаменует, первыми сдают нервы.
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Rupert Grint Rupert Grint has managed to squeeze several movies in between filming on the Harry Potter saga, with the coming-of-age drama Cherrybomb – which sees his character having a wild weekend – only the latest. We chat to the 21 year old about teenage rebellion and what he’s looking forward to the most once Harry has wrapped…
cherrybomb 05SKY MOVIES MAGAZINE: Were you consciously trying to move away from Ron Weasley with your recent non-Harry Potter projects? You played a rebellious teen in Cherrybomb and a young hitman in Wild Target…
RUPERT GRINT: I don’t know, I don’t think about it really. At the moment I’m still doing all the Potter things, and I’m lucky to get to do other stuff in between.
SMM: Could you relate more to your Cherrybomb character, who gets up to some typical teenage behaviour?
RG: Yes. The fact that you can look back and relate it to things that you’d actually done yourself – I’m much older than my character in it, he’s 16 – really helps.
SMM: Did you miss out on that teenage phase because of Harry Potter?
RG: No, I don’t think I missed out too much. And I don’t really regret it. It’s been a really good experience making the films. I’ve had a good time.
SMM: Is it a shock going to work on a low-budget film like Cherrybomb after the pampered world of Harry Potter?
RG: Well, it was quite scary going to a different place, but the biggest difference was just the pace they worked at. It was much quicker and it was much more exciting, actually.
SMM: Do you get recognised everywhere you go now?
RG: I do get recognised quite a bit now but everyone’s really nice so it’s quite easy to deal with. But still a bit strange.
Harry-Potter-Deathly-Hallows-4SMM: What are you most looking forward to with the last two films?
RG: I really loved the book. There’s a lot of great stuff in it. Particularly in Part 2 – that’s what I’m most looking forward to because that’s where all the action is. And the “20 years after” thing – that’s going to be interesting. I’m pretty sure they’ll age us up for that. I can’t really see them doing that with CG…
SMM: So what’s next after Potter? Have you been offered roles in Hollywood?
RG: There’s been a few things about but it’s quite tight with the Harry Potter thing. Usually we only get a few months in between. Something like Cherrybomb only took four weeks to film so it was easy just to sort of slide in. We’ll see what happens when this is all done.
Words: Matt Mueller
This interview first appeared in Sky Movies Magazine Sep/Oct 2010
Emma WatsonEmma Watson’s come a long way since she first popped up on cinema screens as Harry Potter’s angelic (albeit precocious) school chum in 2001.
harry potter and the chamber of secrets 04With six record-breaking Potter films including October’s Sky Movies premiere Harry Potter And The Half-Blood Prince under her belt and the final duo, Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows: Part 1 and 2, opening in November this year and July next year respectively, the 20-year-old Watson has been ferociously productive.
You’d expect her to have time for nothing more than wand-waving. But you’d be wrong. While Hermione Granger is without a doubt the brains of the trio, she’s by no means the only one with smarts.
Hard-working Emma’s gone from Potter to A-Level success and is now studying at Brown University in the US. If that wasn’t enough, she’s become quite the fashion icon.
Gone is the gawky teen and, in her place, a sophisticated young woman rarely absent from the catwalk front rows. She’s even tried her hand at modelling, picking up a contract for fashion house Burberry.
Emma Watson, Harry Potter London Premiere, 07 July 2009.Today, Watson is back modelling the Hermione Granger: Outdoors collection. As security keeps a careful eye out for tabloid snappers, we catch up with her and the rest of the Potter cast on a freezing day of filming in Burnham Beeches.
Taking a break away from the lens and the endless carpet of fake snow for a chat and the chance to duck into the warmth, Watson is as easy to talk to as she is serious about what she does.
What’s clear is that she’s loved every minute of the journey so far but, with so many options in front of her – acting, fashion, academia – the starlet is undecided about where her future will take her…
SKY MOVIES MAGAZINE: Do you feel like you’re at the end of a journey?
EMMA WATSON: I feel really pressured, because I feel like this is my last go, my last shot. I don’t want to have any regrets. I want it to be the best performance I’ve ever given. I want to know that I’ve done the best that I can possibly do. It’s really strange.
SMM: Are you thinking about what you’re going to do after?
EW: I really think I need to recharge my batteries and go and be me for a bit.
SMM: Will you carry on acting?
EW: I really don’t know. I think I need to find some real belief in myself away from this. I know that I can play Hermione, but I don’t know… we’ll see.
harry-potter-and-the-deathly-hallows-07SMM: When did you find time to study?
EW: It’s something I really wanted for myself. If you want something enough, you make time to do it. I’d do most of my reading when I was sat in the make-up truck. I’d sit and write and I’d have my laptop on my lap and I worked weekends. It was exhausting. But it’s so worth it, I’m so proud.
SMM: What were the challenges involved in making Half-Blood Prince?
EW: There’s a lot more to do with the relationship between Hermione and Ron. Hermione got very serious in the last couple of films so it was really nice to get to do some funny bits with Rupert and he’s great at that. Hermione’s the one who does all the thinking and planning. Sometimes I look at her and think, I can’t believe she doesn’t just collapse… You must be so bored of hearing us say, “They’re getting darker,” but it is going that way!
SMM: Do you have a favourite scene?
EW: The Quidditch scene with Ron. I couldn’t believe how funny it was, hejust killed me. I couldn’t stop laughing. Having said that, it wasn’t my favourite to film – it was one of the coldest days of the year and we were out there for hours!
SMM: How do you think you’ve changed over the course of the series?
EW: I’ve changed a lot in some ways and not a lot in others. I’ve gone from the age of nine to 20, so that’s 10 years. I guess I’ve become a lot more comfortable with filmmaking. It was all so new to me but now it’s just second nature. It’s got to the point now where I am able to be much more creative with it. I know the character like the back of my hand.
Harry Potter & The Prisoner Of Azkaban (37)SMM: Do you always keep the Harry Potter books close at hand?
EW: Yeah, I love [JK Rowling’s] work. I’ve always loved the books. I’m the first person to say, “This is not as good as it’s written in the book.” I’ll be the one saying, “This line’s much better, it’s in the book!”
SMM: Do you have a favourite?
EW: I love the third one. I just remember my dad reading it to me and I loved it. It’s also my favourite film and it was a great part for Hermione. I had a part that I could really get my teeth into. I like the tomboy aspect of Hermione, that she was part of the action.
SMM: What do you like about Hermione?
EW: She’s got a heart of gold. She’s the first person to sympathise with anyone in opposition to her. She’s so determined, loyal and she’s such a strong girl… woman! She’s the ultimate girl.
SMM: How have you coped with being in the public eye?
EW: I used to live in Oxford, but now I live in London so that I can be closer to the film sets. The commute was just crazy. Since moving to London I’m starting to feel that tension when I walk out of my door. Harry Potter has such a high level of interest, anything – even if it’s nothing – is news.
SMM: Did you think it would be this big?
EW: Even if [producer] David Heyman had known, how do you explain that to a nine year old? I was so naïve. The first time someone asked me to sign a book I thought it was the weirdest thing ever.
Harry Potter & The Prisoner Of Azkaban (39)SMM: Which of the big famous actors have you bonded with most?
EW: I found that a lot of actors are involved in art – something I love and I did for A-Level. I ended up talking to Alan Rickman because he went to art school, so did Robbie Coltrane and Chris Columbus and Judi Dench. And I really got on with Emma Thompson. I also loved how she was so down to earth, so normal and so kind, and she doesn’t ignore anyone and pays attention to everyone from the sound guy to the director. I really loved her to bits. Maggie [Smith] is an absolute sweetie. She sends me chocolates and a note at Christmas.
SMM: What about JK Rowling?
EW: She has more input in the films now that she’s stopped writing the books, but she’s so busy. She’s got a family and she’s writing and everything. She’s more involved now, which is really nice and whenever I see her I get on really well with her. She’s really funny – very, very witty.
SMM: Is she much like Hermione?
EW: Definitely. You can see it. She’s so clever!
Words: Matthew Leyland
This article first appeared in Sky Movies Magazine, Sep/Oct 2010
Daniel RadcliffeHe’ll always be known as The Boy Who Lived, but there’s more to Daniel Radcliffe than Harry Potter, as he exclusively tells Sky Movies Magazine…
He may be better known for his skills on the Quidditch pitch and the lightning-shaped scar across his forehead, but 20-year-old Daniel Radcliffe’s been busy with extra-curricular activities outside of Hogwarts.
From Ricky Gervais’ hit comedy series Extras to controversial play Equus, the boy wizard’s worked his magic to ensure there’s life beyond Potter. Despite his punishing schedule, Radcliffe is buoyant and friendly – the first to say hello to you when you arrive on set and then going out of his way to bid you goodbye at the end of a long, cold day’s filming.
TG - Harry Potter & The Half Blood Prince 1SKY MOVIES MAGAZINE: What are your memories of shooting Harry Potter And The Half-Blood Prince?
DANIEL RADCLIFFE: It was good, really good. It looks beautiful. There are parts of it where it’s got a heightened, slightly more surreal look visually than the other films. I got to work a lot more closely with Michael Gambon [Dumbledore] than I have done before and he’s a laugh.
SMM: Half-Blood Prince sees more prominent British actors joining the Potter steam train. How was the great Jim Broadbent to work with?
DR: Jim is fantastic. Horace Slughorn is somebody who has lived with the burden of guilt for 40 years and so he’s always on edge and obsessed with fame and, because he was never particularly outstanding himself, he basks in the glory of his students. So it’s incredibly sad and a brilliant part and Jim plays it rather beautifully.
SMM: Is playing Harry something that comes easily to you now?
DR: It’s interesting, Half-Blood Prince was a very hard film in terms of getting into the character because of the amount of exposition and things like that, but equally, those are the challenges that as an actor you are paid to meet and hopefully I did that.
SMM: The films keep getting darker. How does Half-Blood Prince compare with the upcoming Deathly Hallows?
DR: I think the level of darkness in Half-Blood Prince was the same as Order Of The Phoenix, but the scale is bigger. Phoenix is a more intimate story about loss and sadness, whereas Half-Blood Prince is more of a thriller. It’s about putting the pieces together – and that’s what Deathly Hallows takes even further.
Harry-Potter-&-The-Half-Blood-Prince---(David-Yates)SMM: What’s it like working with Half-Blood Prince and Deathly Hallows director David Yates?
DR: I find him great as a director… He’s the most amiable man in the world. The thing I always think about David – and I mean this entirely as a compliment! – is that if you brought somebody who’d never been onto a film set before onto our set and said, “point to the director,” he would be among the last they’d point to. He’s a quiet, really, really nice guy who happens to be great at making films!
SMM: What was your favourite scene to film in Half-Blood Prince?
DR: I did like doing the fight in the bathroom with Tom Felton [Malfoy], because it was a great action scene. And all the stuff with Michael Gambon, because he’s such a laugh. He’d be sitting in position and he’d just take a bit of the set and throw it behind his back and see if he could hit me!
harry-potter-and-the-deathly-hallows-17SMM: Has doing things like the stage play Equus made you more confident?
DR: I think confidence as an actor comes and goes according to what you’re doing. If someone comes up to you and goes, “That was great, let’s move on,” I feel pretty good. Later on, we’ll do a shot in 18 takes and I’ll feel like an idiot. Doing stuff like Equus was tough and a new discipline so you come away with a new sense of confidence.
SMM: Have you got any plans now the series has finished?
DR: There are a few things that I’m keen on, but there are no dates or anything for any of them yet, so I’m not going to jinx them! Hopefully they’ll come off.
Words: Matthew Leyland
This article first appeared in Sky Movies Magazine, Sep/Oct 2010.
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