Potter finale to be 'best yet'
Relevant offers
Film
The sixth Harry Potter film opens this week and is likely to be another hit for the boy wizard series, but with filming started on the finale, British director David Yates says "you haven't seen anything yet".
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, in which romance, magic and comedy collide as teenage hormones rage at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, has received rave reviews and already sold out hundreds of theatres for its opening day.
Based on author British author JK Rowling's seven novels, which have sold more than 400 million copies, the film franchise has so far raked $4.5 billion worldwide for Warner Bros studio.
The series finale is being split into two movies for which filming began five months ago and is due to finish in about a year. Part one of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows is due out in late 2010 and part two is planned for release in 2011.
"People are being very kind about what they're seeing in Half-Blood Prince and I just think you haven't seen anything yet," Yates, who directed Harry Potter five and six and is helming the final two, said in a recent interview.
"(Part one) is like a road movie, refugees being chased by all these people who want to kill them. It's quite intense," he said. "Then the final film is like this big opera, big epic, it's got more set pieces than any of the others."
"It's fights and dragons and battles," he said. "It's a real rollercoaster, but with a really oddly uplifting end."
Website Rottentomatoes.com, which collates movies reviews, said 96 percent of critics liked Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. Variety magazine said the movie is set to become "one of the year's two or three top-earning films".
ROWLING TO 'POP IN' MORE OFTEN
The three key cast members who have played their characters throughout the series - Daniel Radcliffe (Harry Potter), Emma Watson (Hermione Granger) and Rupert Grint (Ron Weasley) - said they were excited about the final films.
"I feel like I'm on this totally different film," Watson, 19, told a news conference. "All of us are now finished with school and we're just totally focused on this finale."
Radcliffe said he didn't want to start contemplating the end of the film yet, which he likened to his "dream coming to an end," while Tom Felton, who plays Potter enemy Draco Malfoy, said he would "cry my eyes out" when it's finished.
Author Rowling has said she was devastated after finishing the final Harry Potter book, which was published in July 2007 by Scholastic Corp in the United States and Bloomsbury Publishing elsewhere in the world.
The books, which she spent 17 years working on, have made the mother-of-three one of the world's wealthiest writers.
Rowling has also remained involved throughout the making of the films, reading scripts before shooting begins and offering suggestions, Yates said.
"She's really gracious, she's not territorial," he said. "She kind of recognises the challenges of adapting (a book for a film) and she's really sympathetic to that."
"She said now that the shooting part is coming to an end she might just pop in more often, which we would love," Yates said. "She was so busy with all the other books she couldn't (visit much more than once a year)."
Chris Columbus directed the first two Harry Potter films, Alfonso Cuaron took on the third and Mike Newell directed the fourth before Yates took control of the final four movies.
"I wake up in the morning I think Potter, I got to bed I think Potter. By the time I finish I probably will have spent seven years doing Potter," Yates said.
"It's a challenge to bring this huge thing to a conclusion and I couldn't bear letting that go and seeing someone else doing it," he said.
"I couldn't let it go, it was too addictive, too compulsive, too much fun."
- Reuters
Sponsored links
Warning over Houston's funeral
Adele slams career break rumours
Star claims Home and Away racism
Shihad serve fans their Meanest
Robyn Malcolm lays it all bare
Tuning in to TV-watching pooches
Jennifer Lawrence warns of movie violence
Is Kutcher an upgrade over Sheen?
Houston's room already re-occupied
Mallard offers ticket cash back
Kiwis in cruise ship cocaine bust
Charges over Kapiti coast fatal car crash
Marryatt skips council debate to play golf
Suppression lapses for kidnap accused
Apple mobile apps stealing private data
Dragons deny wrongdoing as wee row erupts
15-minute-old newborn gets heart pacemaker
'Starved, beaten' teen weighed just 32kg
Bookies favour Crusaders to win Super Rugby
Cyclist shot, retaliates with rock
From TV to a tent: Family of eight evicted
Fallen property king arrested in Auckland raids
Star claims Home and Away racism
Mallard offers ticket cash back
'Starved, beaten' teen weighed just 32kg
Sonny Bill Williams finds rugby boring: mate
Robyn Malcolm lays it all bare
Suppression lapses for kidnap accused
Mallard offers ticket cash back
Mallard sells festival tickets online at profit
Should you take your groom's name?
Cyclist: Don't fine us, fix the road
China 'will see Crafar ruling as racist'
Reconsider Crafar farms deal, Government told