Harry Potter and the Search for More Money
[ I'd like to preface this article by saying that all opinions, experiences and views are my own, and not that of any company or person mentioned here.. ]
I spent six years in the film and television industry, largely supporting visual effects for the Harry Potter franchise—though the most exciting and rewarding assignment was Terry Pratchett’s Hogfather, which earned us a BAFTA.
Warner Bros. were frequent clients, but—frankly—not particularly good ones. As a cinemagoer, I find their endless reboots and re-hashes exasperating; as someone helping to make their films, it could be just as painful. On Troy, for example, they granted most of the network bandwidth to the accounts department and to director Wolfgang Petersen’s office, while the VFX team received virtually nothing. I remember standing at Shepperton Studios as the VFX supervisor uncovered the problem and fought to have it fixed. There was also the occasion when a VPN endpoint used on the first Harry Potter film failed, and Warner Bros. simply could not be bothered to replace it.
During this period I followed the attempts to adapt Susanna Clarke’s Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell. New Line (a Warner Bros. subsidiary) cycled through several screenwriters, each trying to squeeze a vast novel into a feature-length script. Unsurprisingly, it never became a film. Eventually a sensible voice suggested turning it into a television series—outside New Line—and Peter Harness’s superb mini-series was born. It perfectly captured the charm of the book and is now available on Prime Video in the UK; I recommend it wholeheartedly.
Jonathan Strange was not the only ill-fated New Line adaptation. Philip Pullman’s The Golden Compass, on which pre-production operations were based at MPC's London offices, suffered the same fate. The film flopped—spectacularly—partly because too much story was crammed into a single instalment, and partly because of rushed, ill-judged visual effects. Years later, another Warner Bros. division saw sense and produced His Dark Materials as a three-series television epic. It took time, but the result was magnificent—easily on a par with Jonathan Strange for quality and attention to detail.
Yet after eight Harry Potter films (I worked on five), Warner Bros. now plans a detailed television remake of a story that already worked perfectly well on screen. Anything omitted from the films is readily available in the books and audiobooks; the films stand on their own merits. Instead, the studio is returning to its habit of regurgitating content—what I call “mamma-bird syndrome”—apparently hoping to squeeze out more profit, this time with the backing of the increasingly controversial J. K. Rowling.
It is worth noting that I spent nine years working for a transgender woman, Kate Craig-Wood—one of the finest people I have ever known. She led Memset with kindness and flair, winning significant business and numerous awards. There was no controversy, no “forced ideology”, merely a calm, efficient workplace. Her presence contradicts the fear-mongering propagated by anti-trans voices such as Rowling.
For these reasons I dislike what Rowling has become—and I question the wisdom of Warner Bros.’ new series. The vast sums earmarked for yet another adaptation could be better spent on literacy initiatives, particularly when Fantastic Beasts remains unresolved.
I was once proud of our work on Harry Potter, but what is the point if the studio simply keeps remaking the same material with minor tweaks? Yes, it maintains employment, but there are far more worthwhile projects. I wonder how many crew members—whether on production or among the VFX vendors—will return, and how they truly feel. I know I would not be enthusiastic, especially after Warner Bros.’ 2005 threat to the UK government over tax credits, an episode circulated internally as an existential danger should Gordon Brown fail to comply (spoiler alert: he didn't). Two decades on, MPC has folded after over-expansion and relentless under-bidding in a market controlled by the studios.
In the end, constant repetition stifles creativity and squanders resources. Warner Bros. could—and should—do far better.