By Jake Coyle, Film Writer
NEW YORK (AP) --The pop culture juggernaut of J.K. Rowling's Potter-mania appeared to be breathing its last gasp when the eighth film in the series, part two of "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows," made its premiere amid teeming throngs of bittersweet Potter fans in London's Leicester Square in 2011.
Wands went into their cases. Hogwarts scarves were hung up.
"When 'Potter' finished, I thought that was it," says producer David Heyman, who oversaw the movie adaptations from the start and has since produced "Gravity," ''Paddington" and other films. Director David Yates, who helmed the final four Potter movies, staggered away for a much-needed holiday.
"I wouldn't have imagined that I'd come back so quickly," says Yates. "But it was the script that pulled me back in."
The script was "Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them," and it, unlike all the Potter films, was penned by Rowling herself. Based on Rowling's 2001 book, which was framed as Harry's Hogwarts textbook, "Fantastic Beasts" is set in Rowling's familiar, magical world, but takes place 60 years earlier, in a more adult 1926 New York where wizards and Muggles (called "No-Majs," as in "no magic," in America) live in disharmony.
This fall, Rowling's $7.8 billion film franchise will roar back into life, resurrecting one of the most potent and lucrative big-screen sensations. It's a two-pronged attack. While "Fantastic Beasts" is reaching back into the past of Rowling's Potter world, the two-part West End play "Harry Potter and the Cursed Child" (only co-written by Rowling) is going into the future. It moves the tale 19 years ahead of where the books left off.
Authorship, timelines and casts may be extending in new directions, but the old obsession is still goblet-of-fire hot. The script of "Cursed Child" sold two million copies in two days.
Big expectations naturally also surround "Fantastic Beasts" (Nov. 18). For Warner Bros., which has endured sometimes rocky times in the intervening non-Potter years, it's a happy reunion. In today's constantly rebooting, ever-sequalizing Hollywood, did you really think Rowling's world was finished?
"This isn't Harry Potter. There aren't Harry Potter characters in this," says Heyman. "But there is connective tissue. To (Rowling), it's part of one big story."
That connective tissue, like a prequel, will grow more pronounced in coming "Fantastic Beasts" installments, eventually leading close to Harry, himself. A trilogy is planned, with the next chapter going into production next July. Less diehard fans should prepare for some very hardcore nerding-out by Potter fans as they trace illuminating hints in the tale's history.
Eddie Redmayne stars as the bumbling magizoologist Newt Scamander, the future author of the Hogwarts textbook. Katherine Waterston, Dan Fogler and Colin Farrell are among the many supporting roles. The story about escaped magical beasts loose in a city with anti-magic elements, the filmmakers claim, bears contemporary relevance.
"We in a time of great bigotry in America, the UK and around the world," says Heyman. "This context of the story, while not political with a capital 'P,' is relevant in this time. It's an entertainment but it's not a hollow entertainment."
Along with the new cast and the hop across the Atlantic, the biggest change is Rowling's deeper involvement as screenwriter. She's also writing the next "Fantastic Beats" film.
"There were lots of things that inevitably got left behind," says Yates of forming the 'Potter' films. "In this case, we're working directly with (Rowling) and the material is pouring out of her."
"She's a great writer and a quick study," says Heyman. "She approached it with incredible humility but at the same time with the confidence of someone with boundless imagination. She wanted to be as good as she possibly could at it."
Rowling has written four adult novels since the end of "Harry Potter," but she has fully plunged back into her most famous creation. While sometimes angering fans by the endless tweaking, she has continued to mold her wizard world (announcing that Dumbledore is gay, for example) and, on Tuesday, she'll release three short "Harry Potter" eBooks, written partly from her online community Pottermore. With a few twists, Potter-mania is again shifting into high gear.
"It's a great universe to inhabit," says Heyman. "It seems like there's an infinite amount you can do within it."
Japan’s Toho To Acquire North American Animation Distributor GKIDS
The Japanese entertainment giant Toho has reached an agreement to acquire the Oscar-winning animation outfit GKIDS, the companies said Tuesday.
The deal gives Toho an established North American distributor and sales operation in GKIDS, which has become a force in animation since its founding in 2008. As producer and distributor of artist-driven animation, GKIDS has brought acclaimed films like "Song of the Sea," "The Breadwinner" and "Wolfwalkers" to North American audiences and operated as the domestic stewards of the Studio Ghibli catalog.
After 13 best animated feature Oscar nominations, GKIDS won the award earlier this year for Hayao Miyazaki and Studio Ghibli's "The Boy and the Heron."
Toho, meanwhile, is home to internationally recognized brands, from Godzilla to popular anime franchises like "My Hero Academia" and "Jujutsu Kaisen." The company is hoping to grow and expand outside of Japan and had already worked with GKIDS for years, on releases like "Weathering With You" and "Spirited Away: Live on Stage."
Toho president and CEO Hiro Matsuoka said in a statement that GKIDS' unique position in the U.S. market, "dovetails perfectly with Toho's own strengths and strategic mission. This partnership accelerates Toho's goals to prioritize animation, develop international markets, and support IP creation, while bringing exceptional Japanese and animated content to global audiences."
GKIDS founder Eric Beckman will remain CEO, and Dave Jesteadt will stay president. Both said that the company will continue to operate as they have, "but now with the backing of a highly complementary and legendary parent company."
The financial terms were not disclosed.
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