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Chamber of Secrets featured in EW's fall movie preview
August 16, 2002
Entertainment Weekly's Fall Movie Preview contained a short
article on Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets:
After Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone grossed almost $1 billion worldwide -
and reeled in untold golden galleons from videos, toys, and other tie-ins - did you really
expect Warner Bros. to tinker with its magic formula? So, from the director to the
production designer, everyone is back for this adaptation of the second book in J.K.
Rowling's wildly popular series.
In Chamber of Secrets, Harry (Radcliffe), Ron (Grint), and Hermione (Watson)
return to the magical Hogwarts Academy a year older, but no less likely to run into
arch-villain Voldemort. Or get into trouble with groundskeeper Hagrid (Coltrane). Or
venture into the Forbidden Forest. Or have a ripsnorting Quidditch match against the
Slytherin team. But the Potter team has made a conscious effort to deliver a darker, more
action-heavy adventure this time around. "And the kids are much better actors,"
says Columbus. "Since these movies take as long as three normal movies, it's like
they have six movies under their belts now. We've worked on Quidditch and some of the
effects as well."
The real change will be reserved for the third installment of the series, Harry
Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, slated for release in summer 2004. After Kloves
completed his first draft of the screenplay, Columbus announced he would vacate the
director's chair in favor of a producing role - yielding to Y Tu Mama Tambien's Alfonso
Cuaron. And who did Cuaron beat out for the job? None other than Chamber of Secrets star
Kenneth Branagh. (According to producer Heyman, Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood
director Callie Khouri was also briefly considered.) "I think any director would
think twice about directing something like this. It's not going to happen and that's fine
by me," says Branagh, who plays the new Defense Against the Dark Arts teacher, the
perpetually self-impressed Gilderoy Lockhart. "But I do really like the kids. They
remain they way you would expect them to be at this age. They have not remotely grown into
monsters."
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