Movie boss says sorry for Potter delay
The News Review:
- Movie boss says sorry for Potter delay
- Memo to prostesting ‘Watchmen’ and ‘Harry Potter’ fans: It just …
- Wii the focus of the next Harry Potter game
- Scholastic Kicks Off Muggle Read-A-Thon
- Figure studies
- Apparatus lingo for dummies
- MIKE WENDLAND
Movie boss says sorry for Potter delay
Stuff.co.nz, New Zealand
The film was scheduled to be released in November this year, but Warner Bros rescheduled it to July 17, 2008, an eight-month delay that dismayed many Potter fans. In a statement released today, Warner Bros CEO Alan Horn apologised to fans for the decision, and said there was a silver lining. He said: "Many of you have written to me to express your disappointment in our moving Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince to Summer 2009. "Please be assured that we share your love for Harry Potter and would certainly never do anything to hurt any of the films.
Memo to prostesting ‘Watchmen’ and ‘Harry Potter’ fans: It just …
Entertainment Weekly
Fans, Hollywood welcomes your support, but it’s not worried about your wrath. Even if you get massive numbers of people to join the cause (and you won’t, because everyone wants to see Harry Potter and Watchmen and Wolverine, and most people will go on opening weekend or watch soon after when the movies are released on DVD), all you’d be doing is taking a bite out of the ever-shrinking slice of profit pie that is the domestic box office. In the case of Potter and Wolverine, you’re talking about billion-dollar franchises, with worldwide revenue streams from cinemas, TV, DVD, publishing, and merchandise, of which the next Hogwarts and X-Men movies’ domestic ticket sales are just a drop in the bucket. You’re spitting in the wind. If it’s any consolation, I believe that Fox, no matter.
Wii the focus of the next Harry Potter game
Aussie-Nintendo.com, Australia
"We made that decision from day one, Jonathan Bunney said. "We did, I think, a good job with the Wii last year, but we’re doing a great job this year.
Scholastic Kicks Off Muggle Read-A-Thon
School Library Journal
schoollibraryjournal. release of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, Scholastic, the U. publisher of the wildly popular Harry Potter series, is inviting fans of all ages to its New York City headquarters to take part in “.
Figure studies
mad.co.uk, UK
Pamela Buxton traces the importance of standard components in toy design has won many accolades but there’s one he can be. Want to read more?To access this article and the rest of the news and content on mad.
Apparatus lingo for dummies
Edmonton Sun, Canada
Fun fact: Flinging them at the judges after receiving a bad score is considered extremely poor form. fctAdTag(”bigbox”,MyGenericTagVar,1); Ribbon: A minimum of six metres long and attached to a short stick, the ribbon is twirled and tossed to create shapes and designs in the air. If Harry Potter was a rhythmic gymnast, this would be his apparatus of choice. Fun fact: Ribbon starch is not allowed. Hoop: A rigid ring (though other shapes are also used), 80 to 90 cm wide, which the gymnast tosses, spins, rolls and moves through. Some of the contortions athletes do with the hoop are mind-blowing. Fun fact: Gymnasts routinely fling the hoop into the air with their feet.
MIKE WENDLAND
Detroit Free Press, United States
The possibilities of this new animation technique are amazing. For starters, animated characters could replace TV commercial pitchpeople. They’ll do it in one take, with no lunch breaks, makeup people or makeup needs. These amped up animations will certainly be dropped more and more into video games, making them so lifelike you’ll swear you’re watching a movie instead of an animated game.