publish time

08/04/2016

author name Arab Times

publish time

08/04/2016

An exterior view of Hogwarts is seen during the ‘Wizarding World of Harry Potter Opening’ press preview at Universal Studios Hollywood in Studio City, California on April 6. An exterior view of Hogwarts is seen during the ‘Wizarding World of Harry Potter Opening’ press preview at Universal Studios Hollywood in Studio City, California on April 6.

LOS ANGELES, April 7, (Agencies): Fifteen years after Harry Potter’s first big screen adventure, Universal is enchanting a new generation of Muggles with its most spectacular conjuring trick yet — a theme park in the heart of Hollywood. The “Wizarding World of Harry Potter” follows similar money-spinning ventures in Florida and Japan, but is set to be the most technologically advanced so far, incorporating state-of-the-art 3-D effects with the traditional fun of the fair.

Opening at Universal Studios beneath the Hollywood hills on Thursday, it is the latest attraction in a burgeoning film industry sideline which has become so lucrative executives are beginning to design sets with future theme parks in mind. “When you think about the property of Harry Potter — all seven books and eight movies — there’s no better place than the filmmaking capital of the world to have this ultimate experience,” said Thierry Coup, a senior vice-president of Universal Creative, the company’s research and development division.

Appeal

The last Harry Potter film was released five years ago but the character’s appeal remains as strong as ever, with fans eagerly awaiting stage show “Harry Potter And The Cursed Child,” which opens in London this summer.

Meanwhile a spin-off movie trilogy is due to hit the big screen, starting with “Fantastic Beasts And Where To Find Them” later in the year.

Together with the recently introduced “Despicable Me Minion Mayhem,” the award-winning “The Simpsons” park area and “Transformers: The Ride-3D,” the Harry Potter attraction sees Universal partnering with Hollywood for a merchandising merry-go-round to rival Disney’s.

Next up for Universal is “The Walking Dead,” a permanent attraction harnessing the phenomenal success of the AMC zombie drama, while Disney itself has been picking up the pace since its 2014 Magic Kingdom expansion in Florida.

Before 2020, the company has plans for Avatar and Star Wars lands as well as Toy Story and Frozen expansions at its theme parks on both coasts.

Meanwhile, Motiongate Dubai, set to open in October, recently announced a starting slate of 27 attractions inspired by films from DreamWorks, Sony and Lionsgate, including “The Hunger Games”, “How To Train Your Dragon,” and “The Smurfs.”

The new Harry Potter attraction marks Universal’s fourth foray into the boy-wizard’s universe, with two Orlando launches and an opening in Osaka, Japan, seeing the company increase visitors by up to 30 percent.

“There’s a huge effort to really address every facet of the creative process,” supervising art director Alan Gilmore told AFP at a recent visit to “Wizarding World.”

“The film is only one part of that, but you want to try and create a film that can be translated into all of this.”

Harry Potter’s enduring appeal was evidenced by Universal’s announcement that Thursday’s opening had sold out days ahead, marking the first time ever that the park has had to halt online ticketing transactions.

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti said the growth of Universal Studios — three quarters of the park has been transformed over the last five years — would create new jobs, stimulate hospitality revenues and strengthen the economy.

“In Los Angeles, tourism is surging. We’ve set records each of the last five years and we’re just getting started,” he added.

Visual

The attraction, which boasts the forbidding Hogwarts castle as its iconic focal point, transports visitors into the visual landscape of J.K. Rowling’s books and the Warner Bros films that followed.

The attention to detail is impressive, from the fading patinas on the slate-gray stone blocks that make up the aged rustic Hog’s Head tavern to the painstakingly worn edges of the stained furniture and the grimy floors.

The quaint fictional village of Hogsmeade bustles with the chatter of merchants on the cobblestone streets and a pub packed with thirsty patrons under a snow-capped roof.

If all that sounds like the run-of-the-mill theme park, the signature “Harry Potter and the Forbidden Journey” ride combining state of the art 360-degree 3-D special effects, live-action thrills and groundbreaking robotics, is anything but.

Gilmore, an architect by trade, says “Wizarding World” boasts many original props from the films, including the luggage racks from the Hogwarts Express train, Hagrid’s motorbike and a costume from the Yule ball.

“Here, we don’t have actors, we have real people. So it was very important that we at least realized the set design perfectly so that when you step into this world you feel you’re in the film,” he told AFP.

Among a international pack of reporters and photographers seeking their inner wizard at a preview on Wednesday were a number of stars from the films, including Tom Felton, who played Draco Malfoy, and Warwick Davis (Professor Flitwick).

“Even though I’ve experienced much like this, having worked on the films, for me coming to ‘Wizarding World’ is a more magical experience,” said Davis, whose filmography includes several “Star Wars” episodes, “Labyrinth” and “Willow.”

Also:

NEW YORK: The humble chair J.K. Rowling sat on while writing the first two books of the Harry Potter series was auctioned in New York City on Wednesday for $394,000.

An anonymous private collector made the winning bid, Heritage Auctions said.

The chair is one of four mismatched chairs given to the then little-known writer for her flat in Edinburgh, Scotland, and which she used while writing “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone” and “Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets.”

The seller, Gerald Gray, of Worsley, England, said the winning bid far exceeded his expectations.

The unassuming 1930s-era oak chair with a replacement burlap seat decorated with a red thistle sat in front of Rowling’s typewriter when she was “writing two of the most important books of the modern era,” said James Gannon, director of rare books at Heritage Auctions.

The chair was auctioned before — once by Rowling herself to benefit a charity in 2002 where it fetched $21,000, and on eBay in 2009 where it brought $29,000.

“I plan to donate 10 percent to J.K. Rowling’s charity, Lumos, because that’s what she did in the first place,” said Gray, a businessman who runs an automobile speed control equipment company in Manchester, England, and in Sarasota, Florida, called AutoKontrol.

He said he would like to see the new buyer display it somewhere where children could see it, perhaps in a museum or theme park.

He bought the chair in 2009 after his daughter, a Harry Potter fan, saw it on eBay.

Before Rowling donated the chair to the “Chair-rish a Child” auction in support of the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children in 2002, she painted the words “You may not/find me pretty/but don’t judge/on what you see” on the stiles and splats. She also signed the backrest in gold and rose colors and wrote “I wrote/Harry Potter/while sitting/on this chair” on the seat.

The word “Gryffindor,” the Hogwarts house of Harry, Hermione Granger and Ron Weasley, is spelled out on a cross stretcher.

The chair is accompanied by an original typed and signed letter Rowling wrote prior to the first auction.