Un-adapted Potter books? Holy shit! Grab a Macbook and meet me at Starbucks! |
Yeah, I had to look this up too. It was an in-universe textbook mentioned in the Harry Potter series which Rowling later fleshed out and published as a real book. It's very meta. And before you call her out for slapping together a cheap cash-in on her popular novel, you should probably know that she donates 80% of the book's cover price to Comic Relief, a children's charity. Bet you feel like a jerk now, don't you?
It was similar to how H. P. Lovecraft published copies of the Necronomicon, written in human blood and bound in human skin. You know, for the children. |
How do you think they came up with Star Trek Into Darkness? |
Alright, so who is this untested screenwriter into whose hands Warner Brothers has entrusted their financial future? Is it some promising film student? Or maybe some kind of script-writing savant? Perhaps they've assembled a thousand monkeys at a thousand typewriters. Nope. It's J. K. Rowling. I guess when you've written a book series that outsells the Bible and its many sequels, movie studios are willing to let you give it a whack.
The decision was somehow difficult for Rowling who told the Mirror (it's a newspaper in the U.K. She's not like talking to her own reflection or anything):
Overcome with emotion, the author wiped away a tear with the Magna Carta and then bought Romania. |
"It all started when Warner Bros. came to me with the suggestion of turning 'Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them' into a film. I thought it was a fun idea, but the idea of seeing...[the book]...realized by another writer was difficult. Having lived so long in my fictional universe, I feel very protective of it..."
-J. K. Rowling on how she grudgingly
agreed to become even richer
Perhaps my good friend The Queen can convince you... |
No. Just no. Look, we love you J. K. but that's just pushing your-wait, really? They're making that into a series? |
Casual Vacancy was fucking good, man.
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