Friday,
November 2, 2001
Magic
for muggles
By
Deepti Hajela
Associated Press
Howard
Katz, a 75-year-old dentist in Manhattan, cant wait
until mid-November. Neither can 11-year-old Anna Harris in
Utah.
Years
and miles apart, they share one thing: Theyre readers
who are just wild about Harry Potter. And theyre eagerly
awaiting the movie version of the boy wizards first
adventure.
I
want to go into the theater and see what they do with it.
... I want a ride, said Katz.
Harry
Potter and the Sorcerers Stone premieres in London
on Sunday (the British title is Harry Potter and the
Philosophers Stone) and hits U.S. theaters Nov.
16.
Based
on the first of author J.K. Rowlings best-selling series,
the movie follows the adventures of Harry, an orphan boy who
is invited to become a student at the Hogwarts School of Witchcraft
and Wizardry.
The
movie directed by Chris Columbus and starring little-known
Daniel Radcliffe as Harry
faces giant expectations not only among the books
fans but at the box office.
Paul
Dergarabedian, president of the box-office tracking company
Exhibitor Relations in Los Angeles, said Sorcerers
Stone could break opening-day and opening-weekend records.
Its
just a dream come true for kids, said Dergarabedian,
who has already seen the film and liked it. It is one
of the most anticipated films ever, and I think it will live
up to that.
Since
it is the first in a potential series, its especially
important to the filmmakers that the movie do well, Dergarabedian
said. And it is expected to usher in a strong end of the year
for the industry, along with Monsters, Inc. and
Lord of the Rings.
There
was no word from Warner Bros. on how many of the nations
6,979 theaters would show Harry Potter; the record is held
by Mission: Impossible 2, which opened in May
2000 in 3,653 theaters.
In
Logan, Utah, Anna and her 8-year-old brother, Ian, thought
they had hit on the perfect way to see Sorcerers
Stone on opening day. After hearing that their uncles
cut school to see Star Wars in 1977, they suggested
to their mother that she take them out of school to see Harry.
The
matinee would be right when I have gym and lunch, Anna
said, stressing that she wouldnt be missing any academic
classes.
Mom
wasnt swayed.
Were
not going to be skipping school for a movie, said Lynette
Harris. But she admitted, We probably will have someone
in line for tickets to an evening show that day.
Lizzie
Ruiz plans to invite friends to see the movie with her on
her 10th birthday, Nov. 17, in Seguin, Texas, where she is
a member of the St. James Catholic Schools Harry Potter
book club.
Ive
been waiting for it all year, said the stringbean fourth-grader,
her wide brown eyes magnified by glasses.
Theyre
saying its going to be awesome. And my friend said its
going to be tight. Theyre starting to say that at school
now. It means awesome.
She
was looking forward to hearing the characters speak in British
accents, instead of the Texas-tinted voices shes been
hearing in her mind. And she was curious to see how the movie
creates unicorns and multicolored blood though she
doubts it could live up to her imagination.
In
the book, you can imagine things your own way and it kind
of ruins it when you see it, she said. But it
seems interesting to see how other people saw it
Max
Konetzki, a 9-year-old from Colorado Springs, Colo., said
the movie may be even better than the book because of
all the graphics and stuff.
Were
going to wait until the lines die down before seeing
it, he said.
For
7-year-old Evan Jastraub, who dressed as Harry at a Halloween
costume contest at an Indianapolis mall, the movie is just
another opportunity to see his hero.
He
really thinks that Hogwarts exists in London, said Evans
mother, Lacey Marchand. He really does think this is
real.
Not
only kids are looking forward to the movie. Jenny Burns, 25,
of McKinney, Texas, said she and her husband plan to see it
even if theyre the only adults in the theater.
I just laugh about it, seeing the kids being so excited
about it. And Im just as excited about it, she
said.
At
the Multnomah County Library in Portland, Ore., there are
five Harry Potter theme parties planned in November at branch
libraries. All 1,000 copies of Rowlings four volumes
remain checked out, with a waiting list.
Over
the last month or two, there has been more interest in Harry
Potter but it never really went away, said library
assistant Erika Bury.
Many
fans worry about whether the moviemakers will stay true to
the book.
If
they dont do it properly, they can kill it, said
Katz, the Manhattan dentist. But he said he was reassured
by knowing that Rowling was involved in the production.
It will be absolutely fabulous if they hew to the story
line of it, he said.
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