Tuesday, October 13, 2009

London Day Two: Harry Potter Tour -- London


Back in London, we were in the homestretch of our tour. King's Cross rail station was the first stop.


The station has had to learn to deal with Harry Potter enthusiasts and posted this helpful sign on where to find Platform 9¾, where young witches and wizards catch the Hogwarts Express.




We didn't have a Hogwarts ticket, but we still wanted to give it a try.


Emilie making her way onto Platform 9¾. Harry Potter fans were driving the station workers crazy crashing luggage trolleys into the actual archway used in the films, so the station had this little photo op built to placate them.


Percy showing how it's done in Sorcerer's Stone


Someday, Rebecca will appreciate having this photo.


The footbridge in King's Cross where Hagrid leaves Harry in Sorcerer's Stone and also where...


...members of the Order in Order of the Phoenix escort Harry to the Hogwarts Express, was demolished as part of King's Cross renovations.


Above us you can see the little that remains of that footbridge. This is also where Harry dreams of seeing....


...He-who-must-not-be-named while on his way to Hogwarts in Order of the Phoenix.


James' trolley just disappeared when we snapped this photo. This is the actual archway used in Sorcerer's Stone and Chamber of Secrets.


Micaela refused to pose for this picture until we told her that we will never again have this opportunity.


Desperate pleas did me no good. I could not get onto Platform 9¾. It's all Dobby's fault. Next to me you can see part of an obstruction put there to keep Potterphiles from smashing luggage trolleys into the archway...


...just like the Boy-who-lived himself did in Chamber of Secrets.


Ron flies the blue Ford Anglia not by King's Cross in Chamber of Secrets,...


...rather by St. Pancras Rail Station, located right across the street.


In Sorcerer's Stone, Harry and Hagrid walk through Leadenhall Market, a covered market, on their way to the Leaky Cauldron. The market dates back to the fourteenth century and stands on what was the center of Roman London.



As Gordon led us through the market, I turned my head, squealed, and snapped this very bad photo. Gordon told me I was getting ahead of myself. Do you see anything familiar?


Leadenhall Market is located on Gracechurch Street, a street mentioned in Pride and Prejudice as the home of Lizzy and Jane's aunt and uncle. A twofer!


This dragon fixture commemorates St. George and his victory over his fire-breathing enemy. St. George is the patron saint of England, but we've seen statues of him all over Germany as well.


St. George's emblem, a red cross on a white background, is the flag of England, and part of the British flag. And it decorated a barrier in Leadenhall Market right below the dragon.



What had caught my attention earlier was the entrance to the Leaky Cauldron from Sorcerer's Stone. In the film, the woodwork around the door is black, not blue like it is today. The kids were fatigued at this point and tired of posing for pictures.


Gordon pointed out Bridget Jones' flat as we drove to the next location.


Here is the entrance to the Leaky Cauldron from Prisoner of Azkaban. The double-decker Knight Bus would not fit in Leadenhall Market, so the film makers used this nondescript spot instead.




Couldn't get anyone to pose in front of the Leaky Cauldron at this point.


We walked past the modern Globe Theatre (one of the few buildings in London allowed to have a thatched roof -- new thatched roofs were forbidden in London by the Normans in the 12th century to reduce the risk of fire.).


The London Millennium Footbridge is destroyed by Deatheaters at the beginning of Half-Blood Prince and Harry is escorted on broomstick down the Thames by members of the Order in Order of the Phoenix.

 

And that was the end of our Harry Potter tour. Believe it or not, there were many other places we could have visited -- such as the Reptile House of the London Zoo where Harry first unknowingly speaks Parseltongue; Australia House which was used as Gringott's Bank; Oxford's Bodleian Library doubled as Hogwart's library; Westminster Underground Station where Mr. Weasley does his best muggle impression; the corner that served as the entrance to the Ministry of Magic in Order of the Phoenix, though the phone booth was only put there temporarily for the movie; the list just goes on. Still, we didn't do too badly, did we?

London Day Two: Harry Potter Tour -- Oxford


We made our way back toward London with a stop at Oxford, the university town. Oxford is the oldest university in the English-speaking world, and is believed to have existed in some form in 1096 and developed rapidly from 1167, when Henry II banned English students from attending the University of Paris. Oxford University is essentially a federation: it comprises over forty self-governing colleges and halls, along with a central administration.


The next film location we visited was the 15th-century Divinity School.


Some say this room, the university's oldest teaching room, was used in four of the Harry Potter movies as the hospital wing,.....




....but I can only say for sure that it was used in the Sorcerer's Stone.


The room was also used in Goblet of Fire as the place where Professor McGonagall teaches Griffindor House how to dance in preparation for the....


....."well-mannered frivolity" of the Yule Ball.


The ceiling of the school is a masterpiece of Perpendicular Gothic architecture. It has an elaborate system of fan vaults with 455 bosses. Each boss indicates a religious symbol, or a coast of arms, or many other things. The ceiling was altered in the films to remove any religious symbolism.


We next visited the cloister of New College used in Goblet of Fire where...


...Harry sees other Hogwarts students wearing "Potter Stinks" badges.


Our guide took a series of pictures of us walking through the cloister, at angles used in the film and I thought our acting was outstanding.

 
Simply scene-stealing




Harry crosses the quad to make his way to talk to...


Hufflepuff House's pride and joy, Cedric Diggory. After warning Cedric about the first task, Harry then...


....has a heated exchange with a jealous Ron Weasley at this archway.




At that point, Draco Malfoy jumps out of this tree to confront Harry and without warning is...


....transformed into a ferret by Mad-Eye Moody.


Sneak preview of a Harry Potter sequel, Harry Potter and the Tour of Wonders.


One last look at the cloister


Our last stop at Oxford was the college of Christ Church. The college is the setting for parts of Brideshead Revisited, as well as Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and was used in the filming of the controversial children's movie The Golden Compass.


Entering Christ Church College


This beautiful staircase was used in Sorcercer's Stone when...


...Professor McGonagall greets the new first years to Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry.


A precocious first-year with her escort


The striking ceiling above the professor




Laying down the rules to the new pupils


The staircase is seen in Chamber of Secrets when...


....Harry and Ron try to sneak into Hogwarts after having flown the blue Ford Anglia to Hogwarts and also when....


....Harry enters Tom Riddles diary and sees the body of a student being taken away.


Dumbledore is then seen at the top of the staircase asking, "Is there something you wish to tell me, Tom?"

The door at the top of the staircase leads into....


...the Great Hall. The Hall was all sent for dinner, as it does serve as a dining hall.


As far as we could tell, no portraits were moving.


The head table




The room was full of tourists taking photos


Producers of the first Harry Potter film wanted to use this exact room as the Great Hall, but quickly came to the realization that four rows of tables would not fit. They ended up re-creating the room in their studios. Our guide swore, however, that you do see this exact room for just a few seconds as the first years file in to be sorted into their houses.


Sun dial on the side of Christ Church


Leaving Christ Church


Our guide pointed out this McDonald's as we left Oxford. It had to be built in Tudor style to comply with architectural codes.

London Day Two: Harry Potter Tour -- Lacock Pt. 3


Making our way to a local pub for lunch, we passed by the Red Lion again and the hideous blue cherry picker was moved back just enough for me to snap this picture. I was no longer quite so vexed.


A lovely house located at the end of the street, complete with a horse at the left


Professor McGonagall was keeping close tabs on us.


We had a tasty lunch at The George Inn, established in 1361. Yes, you read that properly. 1361.


One of the pub's claims to fame is the fireplace and dog wheel. The fireplace houses a rotating roasting spit which was once powered by a specially-trained dog known as a 'Turnspit' who continuously ran inside the wooden wheel. This particular wheel is the last in England still in its original position.


Many collages of movies filmed here were on display, including one of The Half-Blood Prince.


The last stop in Lacock was Professor Slughorn's house, featured in the beginning of The Half Blood Prince.