Wednesday, October 24, 2012

All Time Favorite Day in London so far


Know Knock

Whos there? 
You know. 
You know who? 
He's dead, you can say his name now. 


Ooh Harry Potter

This might be my all time favorite entry of all time to write!!! Since getting to London this entry has been on my MUST DO list! This one is for all my fellow geeks!

Shortly before leaving to come back home for a visit I went on a walking tour of Harry Potter spots in London. The Harry Potter Series has long been my favorite, both the books and movies. I booked the tour through the same company we used for our Beatles tour (Celebrity Tours in London) and again I was not let down. Our tour guide was super informative not just about the Harry Potter spots, or Harry Potter but made sure to point out other landmarks and gave us some more London knowledge to go along with our tour. It was because of her that I found out about going into the Memorial to the Great Fire in the last entry. I had seen it and walked past it once but had no clue that you could go up inside!

I went on the tour alone since Nick has not a clue about ANYTHING Harry Potter related. I dragged him to the final movie and he was so confused!

We started in Leicester Square near the Odeon cinema where all the films had their premiere. It’s the largest single film cinema in the world. They only play one movie at a time, usually a British film. (Most British cinemas are full of American movies!)

We walked along the route of where they had the red carpet for the final premiere which went all the way to Trafalgar Square a half mile away!. This also happens to be the place where in the fourth movie, I believe, they put the shadow of the death eaters symbol over top the square.

 

Along the way to the square we went down an alley along Charring Cross Road. When interviewed J.K. Rowling has been reported to say that she was inspired for Diagon Alley by a small alley off Charring Cross Road, which has maintained the Victorian shop fronts.



It was the cutest little alley that you would have totally just walked past if you didn’t know it existed. It had loads of old bookshops selling first editions and collectable shops with model airplanes and cars. A signed copy of a first edition of Harry Potter & the Sorcerer’s Stone just sold in the shop for over £1000!!! There was one shop which is probably the shop that the bookshop was inspired by had all sorts of odd books and a psychic in the window doing Tarrot Card & Psychic readings.



In Charring Cross Square there’s a set of arches that used to be positioned at the entrance to Buckingham Palace prior to Green Park that is now for sale if anyone has an extra £50,000 and wants to buy them for me I’d not complain ;)


We went down to Parliament Square and saw the building at the Ministry of Defense they used as the “visitor’s entrance” to the Ministry of Magic when Harry went in for his court hearing in the fifth film. They did a lot of editing to some of the scenery in London to make it more mysterious looking. Here they took out the street barricades and a telephone pole. The arch you see to the left was moved over to the right of the door and went across the street rather than across the alley. In the movie scene the red telephone box is positioned just between the window and door in the picture here.



We hopped on a ferry and went down river and got off near the Globe Theatre and headed into the Southbank side of London. Back when London was first built the City of London ended at the Thames River, so everything illegal in the city took place on the south side, like Theatre, Prostitution, Drinking and other wild activities. Because of this, the North side of the London has much wider streets as they had to make room for horse drawn carriages that the wealthy and Royalty in the city would have, and the south side has always been more brick, smaller roads with more alleys. The North side of London has that grand feel still where as the south side feels more mysterious and dark. A lot of the filming for the fourth movie on took place on the south side of London because of this.

The oldest known prison in the world is just on the Southbank near the Globe Theatre. It’s called The Clink. It was known for having the worst conditions than any other prison. They would not feed their prisoners at all. They had windows with bars, which allowed them to beg for work and for food scraps. If they were unsuccessful they starved.



When we came off the ferry we were near the “Wobbly Bridge.” This is the bridge that the Deatheaters destroyed in the last movies. The producers chose this bridge simply because it had the least amount of work to destroy it on the computer! It’s a low suspension footbridge (the only bridge without a rail line or road, simply a footbridge that crosses the Thames) that opened in the early 2000’s. The first day it opened Londoners flocked to the bridge to cross it only to discover it literally wobbled from side to side. People boycotted the bridge and it was closed and reopened two years later without the wobbles! Everyone still calls it the Wobbly Bridge though J



We went to a market just on the river to see the location of the entrance to The Leaky Cauldron from the fourth movie on.


When Warner Bros bought the movie rights to the books, J.K. Rowling was insistent that they film everything in London and keep the feel of London true. The entrance to the Leaky Cauldron sits under a rail bridge so if you listen to the scenes where Harry is staying in the room at the Leaky Cauldron you can hear the trains going by.

We crossed the London Bridge and got to see the shots of the Tower Bridge and City Hall, which are shown throughout the series and used on the movie posters, and of course anywhere you see London! We headed back to the North side of London to the Bank area to Leadenhall Market.

The market was part of London before the Great Fire and parts of the Market were destroyed with the fire, there are marks inside with dates of rebuilding to what the market is now. The market is home to the Leaky Cauldron entrance in the first Harry Potter movie.



We hopped on the Tube at the Bank station and headed to Kings Cross! Any Potter fan knows exactly what is coming next!! However you’d be surprised to know a few things! When J.K Rowling wrote the first book and of Harry’s first experience on Platform 9 ¾ she wrote of Kings Cross even though she was picturing Euston Station, which is just down the street, an older station full of brick arches. Kings Cross had a fire, which destroyed half of the station, in the 1980’s.

When the producers began to look at filming at the station they knew the modern look of Kings Cross wouldn’t do, so for external shots they used St Pancreas station right across the street.



They were able to find just a few archways inside of Kings Cross so to keep true to the books they shot the scenes near platforms 3&4/5 & 6 


Of course the absolute highlight of my tour, and quite possibly my trip to London so far was getting the photo op at “Platform 9 ¾” with the cart going into a brick wall! They were nice enough to not put it near any actual platforms so that all tourists can get the photos without having to have a train ticket.



I need to watch the movies again so I can see all of the London spots in the movie. I catch myself more and more being able to identify where in London movies or TV shows I’ve seen since getting over there are shot. 

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