Author J.K. Rowling said that the Potter spinoff movie
franchise "Fantastic Beasts" will consist of five films, up from
the previously announced three.
"We set a trilogy as a placeholder because we knew there would
be more than one movie, but ... we're pretty sure it's going to
be five movies," Rowling told participants in London gathered at
a fan event.
The British author of the best-selling "Harry Potter" books was
a surprise addition at a question-and-answer event with the
"Fantastic Beasts" cast in London and Los Angeles that was
broadcast across the world.
The news was welcomed by excited screams from the audience,
while the cast, including Oscar-winner Eddie Redmayne, looked
surprised as they heard it for the first time. The films will be
released by Warner Bros, a unit of Time Warner Inc.
A 4-minute "Fantastic Beasts" featurette shown at Thursday's
event finally hinted at the wider plot of the film that has so
far been under wraps.
The planned movies, designed as prequels to the Potter stories,
will trace the rise of a powerful wizard named Gellert
Grindelwald and his eventual 1945 duel with Albus Dumbledore,
the popular wizard headmaster from the Potter stories.
"We're talking about the first time a wizard rose and threatened
the world order. This was always where I was interested in
going. This is what I wanted to do," Rowling said in the
featurette.
She added in the 4-minute video that the new films will tie to
the Potter stories in "surprising" ways.
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Fans at the event were shown the first 10 minutes of "Fantastic
Beasts," which opens on Nov. 18.
The film depicts Redmayne's "magizoologist" Newt Scamander arriving
in New York City in 1926 with a case of magical creatures, amid
growing strife in the wizarding world.
When Scamander's creatures escape and wreak havoc, it poses a bigger
threat to the magical community as they may be discovered by the
nonmagical humans in the city.
"Fantastic Beasts" taps in to the eight-film Potter franchise that
officially concluded with "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows:
Part 2" in 2011. That series took in more than $7 billion at the
global box office.
Rowling's seven-book series sold more than 450 million copies
worldwide.
Earlier this year, a new sold-out London play, "Harry Potter and the
Cursed Child," cast a spell all over again, and the book version of
the script become a best-seller.
(Editing by Jill Serjeant and Matthew Lewis)
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