The Harry Potter films may be filled with
all sorts of fantastic beasts and kooky characters,
but they can't hold an enchanted candle to
some of the stranger happenings that took
place behind the camera.
These are just a few of the weirdest things
that happened on the set of the Harry Potter
flicks.
In a fun scene from Chamber of Secrets, Ron
and Harry take an enchanted car to Hogwarts
because they missed the Hogwarts Express.
Upon arrival, they encounter — read: "crash
into" — the Whomping Willow, a magical tree
grown a generation before to protect the school
from a student who was also a werewolf.
The car was damaged, of course.
But it wasn't the tree's only victim — at
least, not in real life.
In reality, many, many cars were used to get
the right shots for this scene.
Sixteen to be exact.
The car model was a 1960 Ford Anglia 105E,
a car that, in its heyday, was fairly popular
in Britain — over 1.1 million were produced
between 1959 and 1968.
Rather than relying on CGI for the car-meets-tree-and-the-tree-wins
scene, the special effects team erected an
85-foot-tall physical tree for filming.
They also used 16 real cars for the scene,
each of which was specifically altered depending
on what the scene required.
Movie magic, or just a crap-ton of hard work?
You be the judge.
"Dad's gonna kill me."
The plan, at first, was to use the historic
Canterbury Cathedral to film the scenes when
Harry first enters Hogwarts in The Sorcerer's
Stone.
Despite the money Warner Bros. offered, the
Dean refused, opposing the film's "pagan images."
As a result, the project moved to Gloucester
Cathedral instead.
Surprisingly, the Dean of Gloucester said
that many people commented on the friendliness
of the cathedral, and that it would be a perfect
setting for a story about a boy making friends
at school.
Well, the Dean may have been on board, but
many local residents were, well… not.
In fact, many were downright troubled, resulting
in talk of a protest.
Many an incensed letter to the editor was
received by the Gloucester Citizen, with one
especially ticked-off fellow in particular
even protesting the sheer fact that a movie
would be filmed in the church — "pagan"
images or not!
An honorary chaplain explained to the BBC
that the large hall that would be used for
the film was also used for meetings and markets.
In other words, the rest of Britain was just
fine, and that guy was likely just a crank.
Besides, other scenes were filmed at similarly
sacred settings, like Durham Cathedral, proving
that not every Anglican had a problem with
movie crews milling about a House of God.
They probably just wanted a chance at the
craft services table.
And who wouldn't?
Can you imagine the spread?
It must've been positively bewitching!
Everyone remembers that moment in Harry Potter
and the Sorcerer's Stone when the kids walk
into the Great Hall for the first time, and
they look up and see hundreds of candles floating
over their heads.
It's our big introduction to Hogwarts, so
moviemakers were under a lot of pressure to
make the whole scene as impressive as possible.
According to The Amazing Book of Movie Trivia,
the special effects team used real candles,
which they suspended from the ceiling with
thin wire.
The plan was to remove the wire in post-production
— which, if that sounds super tedious, then,
yeah, duh-doy it was tedious.
The problem, though, was that the candles
kept burning through the wires, and then the
candles would fall onto the actors' heads.
Now that's just plain dangerous!
Producer Chris Columbus later told Entertainment
Weekly that they were able to use the first
take of the kids entering the Great Hall,
with the camera panning up toward the floating
candles.
After that shot, though, it was all over.
The special effects team decided it was too
much trouble — and probably also too dangerous,
plus the whole "tedious" thing — to use
real candles.
Subsequent takes were done with CGI.
Jason Isaacs - who played the despicable,
super-blonde, super-evil Lucius Malfoy - is
nothing like his alter-ego.
Maybe that's why he felt that he needed to
do a little method acting in order to really
get into the evil spirit.
And what do evil people do when they are trying
to get into the evil spirit?
They steal stuff, apparently.
Isaacs said in an interview with Bang Showbiz:
"I once tried to take a copy of the Daily
Prophet because there were thousands of them."
To his credit, the director, David Yates,
had given him the impression that he was actually
allowed to have the prop — but he was later
thwarted by security people who told him Yates
wanted it back.
Quote, "It was so embarrassing," Isaacs said.
In the end, he reportedly wound up empty-handed.
"My sole concern has always been and will
always be the welfare of this school and,
of course, its students."
According to CinemaBlend, though, Isaacs wasn't
the only one nicking props from the set — the
late Alan Rickman, who you'll recall played
Severus Snape, stole a buttload of gold Gringotts
on one of the first days of shooting.
That both set a precedent for evil method
acting and put security on high alert for
prop theft.
Just like every kid, actor Rupert Grint — a.k.a.
Ron Weasley — always wanted to own an ice
cream truck.
Well, maybe not every kid wants to own an
ice cream truck, but it's easy to see the
appeal of having ready access to an endless
supply of that sweet, sweet cold stuff.
Anyway, Grint evidently did not outgrow his
childhood dream of owning an ice cream truck.
So, being the responsible adult he is, he
bought one.
"Ice cream van?"
"Yep, I've had that for a while now.
It's something I've always, always wanted,
as a child.
It's kind of a dream, really."
According to Rupert Grint Press — the foremost
authority on Rupert Grint? — one of his
first purchases as an uber-loaded superstar
was a 1974 Mr. Whippy Bedford van, which he
keeps, quote, "well stocked."
Grint once boasted in an interview:
"It's got a proper machine that dispenses
Mr. Whippy ice cream and I buy my lollies
wholesale … so I never run short."
Grint doesn't sell ice cream — he's unlicensed,
you see — but he has fun passing it out
to kids in the summer.
And on the last day of shooting, he drove
the van onto the Harry Potter set, once again
bragging:
"The cast and crew were having a barbecue
and I supplied the lollies and ice creams."
Adorable.
Alan Rickman wasn't the only thespian behind
the nominally evil characters in the Harry
Potter universe who seemed suspiciously prone
to "accidentally" doing evil things on set.
We're sure it's all just a coincidence that
it's only the evil characters who steal from
the set and rupture the eardrums of other
actors, but we'll let you decide.
In her role as Bellatrix Lestrange, Helena
Bonham Carter had to do a lot of evil things,
and one of the most evil was perpetrated on
co-star Matthew Lewis' eardrum.
Carter was menacing Lewis' character Neville
Longbottom with her wand when she decided
that she needed to try on an especially sadistic
brand of menacing.
She told Entertainment Weekly:
"I thought I could brandish the wand like
a sort of Q-tip and clean out his ear.
Sort of torture it."
Turns out, Lewis moved in exactly the wrong
direction while Carter's wand was in his ear,
and she ended up perforating the young actor's
eardrum.
She later confessed, quote, "He didn't admit
to me that he actually had some internal bleeding
about three days later."
Happily, the damage wasn't permanent.
Still, Carter wasn't above admitting to Entertainment
Weekly that she may have, quote, "[taken her]
sadism a bit too literally."
Yeah — we'd have to agree with that take.
Children aren't exactly known for professional
discretion — yes, even children who play
Harry Potter characters.
If you've ever drawn a rude picture of an
authority figure when you were a kid, you'll
be able to relate to this one.
On the set of one of the early films, Rupert
Grint recalled drawing an "unpretty" picture
of Alan Rickman as Professor Snape.
According to the Independent, Alan Rickman
was standing right behind the young actor
the entire time.
"I drew this rather unpretty of Alan Rickman,
and, as I was drawing it, Alan Rickman was
standing right behind me."
"And I was so scared,"
Can you say "Avada Kedavra?"
Now, if this had been an actual scene shot
for any other movie, the authority figure
would have snatched up the picture, scowled
at it, and sentenced the offender to detention
— or, if Snape's track record is any indication,
an alarmingly over-the-top assignment.
“And on my desk by Monday morning, two rolls
of parchment on the werewolf with particular
emphasis on recognizing it."
But according to the Independent, Rickman
did the opposite — he was actually a good
sport about it.
In fact he was such a good sport that he took
it home as a keepsake.
Rickman would later recall the drawing, admitting:
"I'd made him sign it.
I have it in my possession.
And I'm very fond of it."
We're not crying!
You're crying!
So just in case you needed another reminder
that young people are not known for their
professional discretion, here's Unprofessional
Behavior Example #2, also involving Rupert
Grint, who really seemed to have a hard time
abandoning the childish antics even as he
got older.
We can sort of understand what was going through
his head in this particular incident, though,
because when you're a kid and you've grown
up on a movie set with a lot of other kids,
they become almost like your siblings.
And then one day you're all grown up and,
oh god, one of your friends has to kiss the
other one, and…
Gag!
Barf!
So yeah, that's basically how it went.
According to Digital Spy, Rupert Grint couldn't
stop himself from cracking up while filming
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part
One as co-stars Daniel Radcliffe and Emma
Watson went in for, quote, "a pretty violent
kiss."
Radcliffe later told WENN that Grint was,
quote, "laughing so much off camera he was
asked to leave the set."
Apparently, he was laughing so hard that his
eyes were watering.
Not a good look for a scene where Grint's
face is supposed to look like, well… this:
"What are you, compared to the chosen one?"
"Ron, it's lying!"
"Your mother confessed she would have preferred
me as a son."
So that's pretty juvenile, Rupert.
Why don't you go hang out quietly in your
ice cream truck for a while?
It's hard to imagine stoic Severus Snape and
always-composed Albus Dumbledore pulling pranks,
and it's even harder to imagine Severus Snape
and Albus Dumbledore pulling pranks that involve
farting — but in the world of Harry Potter,
pretty much anything is possible.
According to Cosmopolitan, Alan Rickman and
Michael Gambon decided to prank Daniel Radcliffe
while filming a scene for Harry Potter and
the Prisoner of Azkaban.
In the scene, pretty much every Hogwarts student
is asleep in a sleeping bag in the Great Hall,
and Dumbledore is waxing poetic while pressing
the remote button for a fart machine he's
put inside Daniel Radcliffe's sleeping bag.
"Y'know, it's completely our own world, and
we like to — we like to swim in the deepest
waters."
And it's the Great Hall, of course, so the
farts are bouncing off the walls and echoing
all over the room, and pretty soon everyone
is laughing, even stoic Snape and always-composed
Dumbledore.
"They had put a fart machine inside my sleeping
bag."
"This hall echoed, like — "
"And Michael Gambon had actually been pressing
it during the take, I found out."
And that, ladies and gentlemen, is the most
awesome Harry Potter scene you never saw.
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