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Now, it’s her story: HBO's steamy 'Seduction’ reimagines ‘Dangerous Liaisons’ with a female gaze
Bollywood

Now, it’s her story: HBO’s steamy ‘Seduction’ reimagines ‘Dangerous Liaisons’ with a female gaze

by jummy84 November 13, 2025
written by jummy84

“Welcome to the delicious hell that is high society,” beckons the trailer for “The Seduction,” HBO Max’s steamy new French-language drama inspired by “Dangerous Liaisons.”

Now, it’s her story: HBO’s steamy ‘Seduction’ reimagines ‘Dangerous Liaisons’ with a female gaze

And indeed, when most of us last saw the Marquise Isabelle de Merteuil, she was in her own private hell, wiping white powder off her tear-stained face. This 18th-century Parisian socialite, memorably played by Glenn Close in the 1988 Stephen Frears movie, was ruined every which way — schemes exposed, reputation in tatters, shamed and booed at the opera.

Well, “The Seduction” has something to say about her story — or at least, her backstory. The latest adaptation of the 1782 epistolary novel by Choderlos de Laclos, somewhere between a prequel and a remake, retains much of the main story but takes a radical detour into the female gaze.

In other words, “it’s the #MeToo of the 18th century,” says director Jessica Palud, of the six-episode miniseries that launches Friday.

So how does one make a #MeToo version of a society where men had all the power — and the swords, too? Where the only weapons available to women were their feminine wiles?

The show, an origin story for Isabelle , accomplishes this partly by elevating a minor character, the elderly aunt named Rosemonde, into a powerful figure played by Diane Kruger. Kruger’s wealthy and independent Rosemonde forms a surprising alliance with young Isabelle as the two women seek to navigate a repressive Parisian society and “reverse the codes,” as Palud puts it, becoming masters of their own destiny.

Also playing major roles are Vincent Lacoste as Valmont , stepping into the devious shoes of John Malkovich from the Frears film, and Lucas Bravo as the villainous Gercourt. In interviews, the cast and director explained the new approach to a well-known — and oft-adapted — tale.

Vartolomei plays Isabelle, the future Marquise de Merteuil, as a poor convent girl when she first falls in love with Valmont, whose trickery launches her onto an entirely different path — into the lion’s den of top Parisian salons.

The actor says so admired the performance of Close in the Frears movie that she felt she had to “take some distance from it.” Wherever Isabelle may end up at the end of the series, she says, what’s new here is an understanding of from whence she came.

“She’s a victim, she’s an orphan … no money, no power, no contacts, no support,” says Vartolomei, of her character’s roots. “With the help of Rosemonde, she will slowly build her way into pleasure, into high society, and she will navigate them and find her freedom and her independence.”

“She’s a very complex character,” the actor adds. “What thrilled me is that I can dig inside of her and try to understand her.”

Kruger says she was “quite apprehensive” when she first received the script, thinking: “Do we really need another adaptation of a pretty perfect movie and pretty perfect book?”

But then she considered the possibilities of a new approach to the story. “What really struck me is that as I get older,” Kruger says, “I realize that all these classic stories are told to us from a male protagonist, a male point of view. What would those stories look like if we shift the gaze and dive into the female storylines?”

Even if the show portrays 18th-century women finding their own strength, Kruger notes that they were limited to the weapons at their disposal — basically their virtue, seductiveness and money. Rosemonde is getting older, which means she is starting to lose currency.

“It was very important who you married, what family you were born in, how youthful you were, how pretty you were,” Kruger says. “Women used different weapons This was what was available to them. But on the other hand, they also were women with feelings and emotions and rage.” Kruger relished exploring such feelings.

It’s hard to perceive of the scheming Valmont as innocent — after all, he deceives Isabelle brutally at the beginning, using his aunt as an accomplice. But Lacoste plays the viscount in a somewhat gentler way. It’s clear from early on that he truly loves Isabelle, despite his early treatment of her.

“I feel like in this version, the feelings of Valmont are clearer,” Lacoste says. “Through the whole show, he battles between being the greatest Casanova, and being in love with a woman who hates him.”

He says that approach gives the character a new look: “It was necessary to have a fresh start.”

Like Kruger, Bravo plays a character that had only a minor presence in earlier versions, but has been expanded in the new show. His Gercourt is, like rival Valmont, a libertine, or pleasure-seeker — but he’s more evil.

Told by a reporter that he seems like “a really bad guy” on the show, Bravo grins and replies: “Thank you!” He’s obviously going for the villain vibe.

“I had complete freedom to create my own character,” Bravo says. “That was fun, because it felt like having a part in rewriting a bit of something that’s been so iconic for a long time.”

The actor feels that having a female director was crucial in casting a completely fresh eye on the well-known story.

“It changes everything, to be honest,” Bravo says. “Because the way the eye lands and where it focuses is completely different than what a man is trying, the stories a man’s trying to tell. ”

True, Kruger’s Rosemonde is initially hardly a paragon of female solidarity — she helps her nephew, Valmont, deceive and humiliate Isabelle as a young woman.

But the two women, each needing something only the other can give, form a growing alliance that director Palud interprets as an 18th-century #MeToo moment.

“We have this woman who thinks in a certain way, freely … but finally who is still locked up in an extremely masculine world. And then there is this young woman who arrives, Isabelle de Merteuil, who represents a bit the #Me Too of the 18th century, who is saying, ‘With me, it won’t happen like that. I’m going to reverse the codes.’”

“And indeed, that’s what’s happening today,” Palud says. “In fact, we have young women who dare to speak more, who dare give their voice, who dare say things, with an older generation who sometimes says: ‘We can’t say that.’ That’s what the show is about.”

This article was generated from an automated news agency feed without modifications to text.

November 13, 2025 0 comments
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Watch HBO's 'Welcome To Derry' Stunning New Opening Credits
TV & Streaming

Watch HBO’s ‘Welcome To Derry’ Stunning New Opening Credits

by jummy84 October 31, 2025
written by jummy84

Is this the best new opening credits sequence of the year?

HBO‘s horror-thriller It: Welcome to Derry just revealed a stunner of a credits sequence (watch it below) that debuted on the show’s second episode, which was released on HBO Max a few days early for Halloween.

The phantasmagorical animated sequence peels apart the seemingly idyllic Maine town during the early 1960s to gradually reveal an increasingly horrifying succession of postcard-like tableaus, from Pennywise causing death and destruction to the threat of nuclear war. The sequence is set to the aggressively sunny 1956 song “A Smile and A Ribbon,” by Patience and Prudence, and extends HBO’s track record for creating groundbreaking titles for shows (with previous standouts including The Sopranos, Game of Thrones and Westworld).

The show’s executive producer and director, Andy Muschietti (who made the series along with his creative partner Barbara Muschietti) calls the concept “a descent into dread” that was inspired by the film’s postcard-tourism Welcome to Derry title.

“The name Welcome to Derry felt touristic and brings you to the world of postcards and facade, which has a lot to do with what Derry is — a place that’s seemingly wholesome, but there’s something dreadful under the surface,” says Muschietti, who heavily praised the production studio Filmograph, which created the sequence. “There was a lot of tweaking and calibration — how much is the next step? It reflects our desire to show the big catastrophic events [described in Stephen King’s book IT], all leading to the explosion at the Ironworks.”

The Ironworks factory explosion and other events shown in the credits, however, will not necessarily be depicted in the series, particularly during the first season. Another key event in the sequence is a shootout in the street with the Bradley Gang, which took place during the 1930s.

A crucial component is the song “A Smile and A Ribbon,” which was originally going to be used for a sequence where a character gets ready for school. Then they tried the song for the credits instead, and it fit perfectly. As the images get weirder and darker, the song offers up the unsettling key lyric, “The louder I say I’m happy, the more I believe it’s so.”

“The song is about faking a state of mind, faking a feeling,” Muschietti says. “The message of the song wrapped in such a beautiful tune is dreadful in itself.”

The team at Filmograph also gave some insight into the title’s creation, including one element that went too far even for Muschietti.

“Our assignment was to take the literature [from King’s novel] and take vignettes that also exist in the world of the show and find a way to stitch them together,” said Aaron Becker, a principal and director at Filmograph. “Andy [was] dead set on the idea of taking us back in time through a specific type of medium — the tourist postcards that you would find in like the gift shop in a small town, which worked perfectly for Stephen King’s lexicon and Derry in particular.”

The animation itself was done with CG, but then HBO let them take what they had created and put the final product on film, which added a bit of grainy realism to the end result. “And the nice thing is that Andy kept saying, ‘I want the dirtiest-looking version.’”

The grain also meshed well with the song, which has record scratches and pops as part of its original recording. “We got the track and we dropped it in, it almost lined up perfectly,” said Troy James Miller, Filmograph producer. “We realized this is the perfect track for this. And now it’s been in my head for the last year.”

“It just made what we did look so much better, because the song itself is so jarring,” Becker added. “It mirrors the characters’ arc as children coming of age, trying to convince themselves that their biggest fears aren’t real.”

“We imagine viewers really looking at this from an Easter egg perspective, just like the show,” noted
Seth Kleinberg, a Filmograph principal and executive producer. “There’s so much opportunity to not skip the intro and to really look at the finite details of what we’ve created, and I think that that’s really special. This is seriously one of our most favorite projects we’ve done.”

The sequence also has literal Easter eggs during its climactic postcard showing the explosion at Ironworks, which took place during an Easter egg hunt in 1908. A girl running from the flames originally was going to have eyeballs popping out, but that proved one step too far Muschietti. “That was too much and we dialed that back,” Kleinberg said.

And just because it’s pretty rare you have three experts in making opening title sequences on a Zoom call at one time, we couldn’t resist asking each of them what was their favorite all-time credits. And the trio came back with: David Fincher’s Seven, Alfred Hitchcock’s North by Northwest and David Chase’s The Sopranos.

October 31, 2025 0 comments
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'It: Welcome to Derry' Review: HBO's Warmed-Over 'It' Prequel
TV & Streaming

‘It: Welcome to Derry’ Review: HBO’s Warmed-Over ‘It’ Prequel

by jummy84 October 23, 2025
written by jummy84

If you appreciate a good understatement, Kimberly Guerrero’s Rose utters a real doozy partway through the fourth episode of HBO’s It: Welcome to Derry.

Rose, local small businesswoman and member of the Indigenous tribe protecting secrets about the titular Maine town, explains to newcomer Charlotte Hanlon (Taylour Paige), “Derry is a beautiful place, but things do happen from time to time. Never a bad idea to keep the people you love close.”

It: Welcome to Derry

The Bottom Line

Pennywise but pound foolish.

Airdate: 9 p.m. Sunday, October 26 (HBO)
Cast: Jovan Adepo, Taylour Paige, Chris Chalk, James Remar, Stephen Rider, Madeleine Stowe, Rudy Mancuso and Bill Skarsgård
Creators: Andy Muschietti, Barbara Muschietti and Jason Fuchs

That’s about as close as any Derry resident can get to saying, “Come for our open-minded New England values, stay because you were butchered by a killer clown.” Forgetting Derry’s communal traumas is as much a part of the town’s firmament as the scenic canals, the nearby Air Force base where Charlotte’s hubby Leroy (Jovan Adepo) has been newly posted, and the dilapidated house at 29 Neibolt Street. This forgetfulness, which has a supernatural origin, abets the monstrous tragedies that befall Derry every 27 years and it fuels It: Welcome to Derry, a bluntly effective frightfest that too often gets its scares through repetitiveness rather than creativity.

Developed by Andy Muschietti, Barbara Muschietti and Jason Fuchs, It: Welcome to Derry is a companion series/prequel to Muschietti’s two-part film adaptation, which translated Stephen King‘s epic novel by removing all of its structural and thematic complexity. Instead of weaving a nuanced interlocking story built on nostalgia and memory, Muschietti delivered a decent period-set childhood romp that wasn’t bad, and then an autonomous present-day sequel saddled with nearly all the book’s narrative flaws, somehow made even worse.

The book, probably still my pick as King’s scariest novel if not his best, is overpacked with additional flashbacks and interludes that could have been fodder for multiple seasons of television. What’s most peculiar about It: Welcomes to Derry, then, is that the creators have opted to basically replicate the core plot of the movie/book and fill in the gaps with what feel like third-tier King devices and clichés.

I sometimes liked It: Welcome to Derry, but mostly because it reminded me of a thing I love, not because of much that it actually does.

The body of the series begins in April of 1962, four months after one of those “things” that happen in Derry from time to time. The “thing” is shown in a deliciously gory prologue that relies heavily on the film version of The Music Man, a movie released in June 1962, one of many things about the timeline that you don’t want to think too hard about. Suffice it to say, without spoiling, that children aren’t safe in Derry.

It’s a less-than-ideal place, then, for Charlotte and Leroy, a Korean War hero (another temporal detail that doesn’t entirely work) with a unique condition, to bring their son Will (Blake Cameron James). Leroy soon meets the base’s commanding officer, General Shaw (James Remar), and fellow airman Dick Hallorann (Chris Chalk), who has his own unique condition that’s already well known to fans of The Shining. A Black family’s move into a traditionally white space made for an effective set-up in the intriguing, if slightly heavy-handed Amazon horror anthology Them, but here the racial undertones are limited to some tossed-off dialogue, playing second fiddle to what’s happening on the base and in surrounding environs.

The main story is a straight-up rehash of the Losers Club from the book, the juvenile adventures that so thoroughly inspired Stranger Things. Mike gets to Derry High School and soon meets an assortment of outcasts, including Lilly (Clara Stack), who spent time at the Juniper Hill Asylum after the untimely death of her father; Ronnie (Amanda Christine), whose father is the projectionist at the local movie theater; Lilly’s bestie Margie (Matilda Lawler), desperate to be popular and prone to saying things like “ginchy.” 

Awful things are transpiring in Derry and some of the outcasts soon begin poking around and, because kids have open imaginations, they’re relatively chill when voices start coming out of the sewers and fingers start poking up from the bathroom drains.

“It sounds impossible, but maybe it’s just improbable,” observes Teddy (Mikkal Karim Fidler), another outcast with a very familiar last name.

Get ready for ill-fated kids, eerily floating red balloons and a familiar clown named Pennywise. (Though Bill Skarsgard is prominent in the cast and even a credited executive producer, Pennywise doesn’t play a huge role in the five episodes sent to critics.)

But mostly, get ready for references and Easter eggs aplenty. It takes little Stephen King literacy to know that a character named “Hanlon” will someday be connected to Mike or to understand what it means to have Dick Hallorann as part of the story, and even less to point knowingly at a prison bus labeled “Shawshank.” If you’re the sort of Stephen King fan who sees the name “Bowers” — the local police chief — and instantly thinks “Henry” or hears a mention of Juniper Hill and is reminded of a half-dozen novels and stories, you’re on the series’ general wavelength.

(Except if you’re able to make those mid-grade Stephen King leaps, you’re probably the sort of fan who’s frustrated that the Muschietti timeline has to be treated as “definitive,” and for whom the original Losers Club storyline will always take place in 1957-58 and not 1988-1989 like in the film. That makes it even more confusing and, honestly, annoying that Welcome to Derry reboots the Losers Club story here in 1962. Will Hanlon having gone through a near-identical adventure to the one his son goes through 27 years later fits with King’s symmetry, but if you prefer the timeline from the books, the son’s adventure actually comes five years before the father’s adventure and everything becomes a mess.)

Say what you will about the payoffs delivered by Hulu’s Castle Rock — I thought both seasons set things up intriguingly, but couldn’t match their early aspirations — but that attempt to build an original series around a fictionalized Maine town honored the obsession of Stephen King fans and tried to carve new pathways through his work. I found myself frequently scratching my head about why the Welcome to Derry creators thought the only way to approach this story anew was to do the same thing over again, or to pipe in a folkloric Indigenous backdrop that deserved to be treated with far more commitment and authenticity.

The book is about primal insecurities and relatable fears, explored through the lens of classic horror tropes. The series says it’s about those things, but the lip-service references to the Civil Rights Movement and the Cold War fail to approach the depth necessary to push past frightening-in-a-somewhat-silly-way to actually terrifying.

If you can ignore the familiarity, it’s easy to enjoy the Losers Club story, which has at least been extremely well-cast. James has an earnest charm, Christine a solid fierceness and Fidler a relatable fragility. Lawler, the best known of the young actors thanks to her breakout work in Station Eleven, brings welcome awkward humor, while Stack, with the series’ most complex character, conveys an uneasy grasp on sanity that the rest of the show isn’t really prepared to deal with.

From the adult cast, only Chalk, haunted in a way that’s instantly recognizable if you know the character’s origins and destination in the King-verse, has the gravity necessary to make up for how anemic the military story is. 

I can’t quite tell you, for reasons of both uncertainty and secrecy, what Madeleine Stowe is doing here, but even in a small role it’s a pleasure to see this underutilized actress. Paige, Adepo and Remar are among the actors whom I’ve liked in other things, but are so far squandered here.

Muschietti and the series’ subsequent directors may not develop any set pieces of substantive or psychologically rich horror, but there are stretches that are gross or fun or grossly fun — including the opening scene with the Music Man backdrop, a memorably grotesque and paranoid trip to the supermarket and one sequence best avoided by anybody with a phobia related to eyes. A playfully Amblin-esque scene involving bicycles in a cemetery offers an adrenaline rush, even if the effects reminded me of the Haunted Mansion Disney theme park attraction.

It’s telling that my favorite part of It: Welcome to Derry is the opening credit sequence, set against the childishly unsettling chestnut “A Smile and a Ribbon.” A series of Rockwell-esque, deceptively chipper images of small-town perfection are interrupted by subterranean nightmares. The credit sequence points to a satirical exploration of America’s transition from the assimilationist 1950s into the tumult of the 1960s, a piece of the book that the films lost in the fumbled timelines and that the series isn’t, thus far, clever enough to handle.

The message basically seems to be “Derry is a beautiful place, but things do happen from time to time.” You’ve probably heard that wisdom before, just like you’ve seen nearly everything in It: Welcome to Derry before.

October 23, 2025 0 comments
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Dumbledore first look revealed: John Lithgow spotted at HBO's Harry Potter set. See pics
Bollywood

Dumbledore first look revealed: John Lithgow spotted at HBO’s Harry Potter set. See pics

by jummy84 October 8, 2025
written by jummy84

John Lithgow was spotted as Dumbledore at a beach in Cornwall as he shoots for HBO’s Harry Potter TV reboot, and as expected, Potterheads shared their excitement as the pictures leaked on social media. The Harry Potter TV show is expected to release in 2027, and fans earlier also got a peek of Nick Frost as Hagrid alongside Dominic McLaughlin as Harry Potter.

First look of John Lithgow as Dumbledore from HBO’s Harry Potter series out now: Check pics here(Reddit/r/pics)

John Lithgow as Dumbledore

A Redditor, with the username u/i-tiresias, shared a couple of snippets from the shoot of the Harry Potter TV show. The post was titled, “Dumbledore (John Lithgow) spotted on a beach in Cornwall, England, filming for the new Harry Potter series.

The post quickly became viral, and Potterheads started commenting their views on it. A curious Redditor said, “What scene does Dumbledore have on the beach? Only one I can think of is maybe the HBP seaside cave thing, but that’s way later in the series.”

Another user guessed, “Is this the scene where Dumbledore becomes the Bay Harbor Butcher?”

A lot of Redditors also pointed out that John looked ‘huge’. A comment read, “The 2nd picture looks like they have him on a really long leash, like they’re letting him play in the sea for a little bit as a treat lil.”

To this, a user replied, “Honestly it’s a confusing perspective too. I know he’s a bigger guy but he looks massive here lol.” Another user pointed out the same and wrote, “He looks massive in that second picture.”

As per Metro, Lithgow was not just taking a stroll in the grand costume of Dumbledore, rather was also reading lines from cue cards.

Also read: Harry Potter series production photos offer first look at the Weasleys, Platform 9¾

More about HBO’s Harry Potter series

HBO’s Harry Potter series is an adaptation of J.K. Rowling’s Wizarding World, reports Screen Rant. The series will run for seven seasons. Along with John, the series’ cast also includes Janet McTeer, Paapa Essiedu, and Nick Frost, among many others. Harry, Hermione, and Ron will be played by Dominic McLaughlin, Arabella Stanton, and Alastair Stout.

Even though JK Rowling’s transphobic comments have affected the chatter around the series, HBO and Warner Bros are still moving forward with it, reports Screen Rant. The Reddit post that shared images of John Lithgow as Dumbledore had some comments calling out the series there as well.

One comment read, “It’s a shame that my love for John Lithgow could never outweigh my loathing for JKR.” Another redditor replied to the comment, “I’m at the point with JKR that I will reconsider supporting any actors and directors who sign on to a project that will put money in her pockets.”

Also read: Emma Watson breaks silence about rift with JK Rowling: ‘The thing I’m most upset about…’

FAQs:

1. Who will portray the role of Dumbledore in the new Harry Potter series?

John Lithgow will play the role of Dumbledore in the new Harry Potter series.

2. Who will play Harry in HBO’s Harry Potter series?

Dominic McLaughlin will play Harry in HBO’s new Harry Potter series.

3. When will new Harry Potter show be released?

The series is reported to be released in 2027.

October 8, 2025 0 comments
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HBO's The Yogurt Shop Murders
TV & Streaming

Suspect Identified in HBO’s ‘The Yogurt Shop Murders’ Doc Case

by jummy84 September 28, 2025
written by jummy84

Police named a dead man Friday as a new suspect in the 1991 unsolved killings of four teenage girls at an Austin yogurt shop, saying DNA evidence led to a “significant breakthrough” in the brutal crime that has haunted Texas’ capital and stumped investigators for decades.

In a statement, Austin police said DNA tests led investigators to Robert Eugene Brashers, who died by suicide in 1999 during a standoff with law enforcement. He has since then been linked to several killings and rape in other states.

The announcement came amid renewed attention on the case with the release last month of The Yogurt Shop Murders, an HBO documentary series. Police said the case remains open and scheduled a Monday news conference to detail their findings.

The murders stunned Texas’ capital city and became known as one of the area’s most notorious crimes. Austin police investigators and prosecutors had stumbled over the case for years as they waded through thousands of leads, several false confessions and badly damaged evidence from the burned-out crime scene.

“Our team never gave up working this case,” Austin police said.

Amy Ayers, 13; Eliza Thomas, 17; and sisters Jennifer and Sarah Harbison, ages 17 and 15, were bound, gagged and shot in the head at the “I Can’t Believe It’s Yogurt” store where two of them worked. The building was then set on fire.

Investigators have said that around closing time, someone entered the store through the back door, attacked the girls and set the fire. The bodies were found when firefighters were still battling the blaze.

The autopsy report offered glimpses of the lives of teenage sisters and friends: Ayers wore small, white earrings. Sarah Harbison was wearing a gold necklace and a Mickey Mouse watch. Jennifer Harbison wore a high school ring and a Timex watch.

It also suggested the horror: their hands were tied with underwear and mouths were gagged with cloth. Ayers was shot twice.

In 1999, authorities arrested four men on murder charges. Two of them, Robert Springsteen and Michael Scott, were teenagers at the time of the murders. They initially confessed and implicated each other. But both men quickly recanted and said their statements were made under pressure by police.

Still both were tried and convicted. Initially Springsteen was sent to death row, but his sentence was then reduced to life in prison.

Their convictions were overturned and they were set for retrial a decade later.

A judge ordered both men freed in 2009 when prosecutors said new DNA tests that weren’t available in 1991 had revealed another male suspect.

In 2018, Missouri authorities said DNA evidenced linked Brashers to the strangulation of a South Carolina woman in 1990, and the shooting of a mother and daughter in Missouri in 1998. The evidence also connected him to the 1997 rape of a 14-year-old girl in Tennessee.

Brashers died in 1999 when he shot himself during an hours-long standoff with police at a motel in Kennett, Missouri.

September 28, 2025 0 comments
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Warwick Davis to Reprise Filius Flitwick in HBO's Harry Potter TV Reboot
Music

Warwick Davis to Reprise Filius Flitwick in HBO’s Harry Potter TV Reboot

by jummy84 September 2, 2025
written by jummy84

Original Harry Potter director Chris Columbus may not see the point of HBO’s upcoming reboot series, but cast member Warwick Davis appears to disagree. Davis, who portrayed Professor Filius Flitwick in all eight films, is set to reprise the role in the new TV series, which is currently in production and scheduled to debut in 2027.

Davis is the first principal member from the films confirmed to appear in HBO’s TV reboot. He joins a cast that includes Dominic McLaughlin in the titular role, Alastair Stout as Ron Weasley, Arabella Stanton as Hermione Granger,  John Lithgow as Albus Dumbledore, Janet McTeer as Minerva McGonagall, Paapa Essiedu as Severus Snape, and Nick Frost as Rubeus Hagrid.

Warwick Davis, photo by Aidan Monaghan/HBO

September 2, 2025 0 comments
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