Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Women in black breaks the Record


The women in black breaks the record of most grossing horror movie of the Uk.Today BBC give the news on their blog.you can read the article below


Daniel Radcliffe's first movie since completing the Harry Potter franchise, has become the most successful British Horror film since records began 20 years ago.
Radcliffe stars as Arthur Kipps in the Woman In Black.
The horror sat at the number one spot at the UK box office for three weeks.
And grossed more than 14 and a half million pounds from 457 screens across the country.
The Hammer produced film was directed by James Watkins and adapted by Jane Goldman from the classic novel by Susan Hill
Woman in Black has also managed to make more than any other Hollywood backed horror shot in the UK, including Bram Stoker's Dracula and 28 Days Later.
Simon Oakes, President & CEO of Hammer and Vice Chairman of Exclusive Media said: "The record-breaking success of The Woman in Black is an important achievement that affirms the re-birth of Hammer.
"We are continuing to develop exciting and intelligent genre films this year such as The Quiet Ones and Gaslight, both of which will shoot in the UK."
Hammer films, based in the UK, produced a number of successful movies from its origin in 1934 until the 1980's. The production house marked a return to features in 2010.




Continue with pictures

Friday, February 24, 2012

Daniel Radcliffe bullet Magazine interview and pictures


For more than a decade, Daniel Radcliffe embodied the world’s mightiest, most magical wizard in the 'Harry Potter movies,' whose final installment last year established it as one of the highest-grossing film series of all-time. This year, the 22-year-old Brit travels back in time to Victorian-Era Britain, where he battles a malevolent ghost in 'The Woman In Black.' Herein lies the unconventional megastar channeling an altogether different spirit: the All-American heartthrob.


Thursday, February 23, 2012

Daniel Radcliffe, The Trevor Project

The Trevor Project released their second PSA, featuring Daniel Radcliffe speaking on behalf of the organisation, on Tuesday.

Visit http://www.thetrevorproject.org to learn more about The Trevor Project. If you or someone you know ever needs help, call our 24/7 Lifeline at 866.488.7386. It's toll-free and confidential.

"I'm Daniel Radcliffe and I believe that reaching out for help is the bravest thing a person can do. If you are struggling and need support, call The Trevor Lifeline at 1.866.488.7386. It's free, confidential and trained counselors are there to listen 24/7 without judgment. To learn more about The Trevor Project's lifesaving work for lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender or questioning young people, go to TheTrevorProject.org." 

Friday, February 17, 2012

Daniel Radcliffe on Graham Norton show (short clip)

BBc share small video of Daniel Radcliffe interview on Graham Norton show .will be on air tomorrow on 17 feb.you can see the clip below.



please comment,A comment is a gift to a site :)

Daniel Radcliffe share his Scary secrets

Daniel Radcliffe share his scary secret in this video.which helped him in performing in The Women in black.




Thursday, February 16, 2012

Daniel Radcliffe on Spanish tv interview El Hormiguero

Daniel Radcliffe appear a Spanish Tv programe El Hormiguero to promote The Women in black.the interview is in Spanish but at least we can see Daniel  and can say ohh he is soo cute and attractive.comon we are fans and we don't care that much if the interview was in spanish and you can hear Daniel with some distraction we also request Daniel fans.if anyone of you knew spanish and can put english subtitle in the interview.you can watch the interview below and also enjoy the 50 pictures of the interview



Sunday, February 12, 2012

Daniel Radcliffe introduce The women in black in london

Daniel Radcliffe introduce 'The Woman In Back' in London.Some great fans upload videos on youtube.We want to thanks all of them.Dan talking greet all the fans and wish that all of them would get scared.






The Woman in Black Score




















 SILVA SCREEN RECORDS PRESENTS
THE WOMAN IN BLACK
Original Soundtrack Composed by Marco Beltrami
The Woman In Black is a theatrical phenomenon that has run continuously in London’s West End for twenty-three years and has subsequently become a worldwide hit. This chilling Victorian ghost story based on the bestseller by Susan Hill has been long awaited as a cinema release and stars Daniel Radcliffe (Harry Potter) and Ciaran Hinds (Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy)
Arthur Kipps (Daniel Radcliffe), a widowed lawyer whose grief has put his career in jeopardy, is sent to a remote village to sort out the affairs of a recently deceased eccentric. But upon his arrival, it soon becomes clear that everyone in the town is keeping a deadly secret. Although the townspeople try to keep Kipps from learning their tragic history, he soon discovers that the house belonging to his client is haunted by the ghost of a woman who is determined to find someone and something she lost… and no one, not even the children, are safe from her vengeance.



Upon completing undergraduate study at Brown University, Marco Beltrami entered the Yale School of Music. His pursuit of music composition then lead him to Venice for a period of study with the Italian master, Luigi Nono and then finally to Los Angeles to undertake a fellowship with Academy Award-winning composer, Jerry Goldsmith.
Shortly after arriving in Los Angeles, Marco landed Wes Craven’s Scream embarking on what would become the widely successful terror franchise. In his approach to scoring the film, he threw away conventional horror music clichés.
After Scream, Marco went on to write his critically acclaimed score for Guillermo del Toro’s Mimic, bringing him to the attention of the entire film music industry. This was the first of several collaborations with del Toro, including Hellboy and now Don’t Be Afraid of the Dark. Marco has been nominated twice for Academy Awards for Best Score. First, for 3:10 to Yuma, his score to 2010 groundbreaking Best Picture, The Hurt Locker, which he co-composed with Buck Sanders.
Tracklisting:
1. Tea For Three Plus One
2. The Woman In Black
3. Crossing The Causeway
4. Bills Past Due
5. Voices In The Mist
6. Journey North
7. Cellar Eye
8. First Death
9. The Attic Room
10. The Door Opens
11. Fireside
12. You Could Have Saved Him
13. Crazy Writing
14. In The Graveyard
15. Elisabeth’s Vision
16. Into The Fire
17. Jennet’s Letters
18. Race To The Marsh
19. Rising From The Mud
20. Summoning The Woman In Black
21. Reunion
22. Arthur’s Theme
SILCD1378
REL. DATE: February 6 Digitally, March 2012 CD

Daniel Radcliffe on Chris Evans Breakfast show

Daniel Radcliffe goes live at BBC Radio 2 today at the Chris Evans Breakfast show
you can hear it from here

Friday, February 10, 2012

Daniel Radcliffe on bravo tv Watch what happen live












Daniel Radcliffe interview on The Talk

Daniel Radcliffe chat with fans on twitter

Daniel Radcliffe take over  Twitter account and answer some of his fans question



Q1: How did you prepare to play a lawyer & father?
I spoke to a bereavement councillor & to friends about depression.

Q2: What is the one question you get tired of people asking?
At the moment, 'did anything scary happen on set?' Answer is no. And 'do I believe in ghosts?' No.

Q3: Have you had nightmares about Woman In Black?
I was given a The Woman In Black film poster of two children with their eyes scratched out. I saw it in the middle of the night and that was scary.

Q4: Could Superman beat Harry Potter in a duel?
If Harry was able to acquire some Kryptonite, I reckon he could because he's clever.

Q5: What's the first thing you did when you heard you’d been chosen for Harry Potter?
I was in the bath when I found out. And then I was allowed to stay up an extra half hour and watch Fawlty Towers.

Q6: Would you ever consider a comedy movie?
God yes - I'm desperate to do something like that. I love Steve Carell and Will Ferrell: they're my heroes.

Q7: Have you ever considered Shakespeare? Which role?
I'd love to play Puck in A Midsummer Night's Dream.

Q8: Did you wear the same glasses through the Harry Potter series?
No, because my head got bigger.

Q9: Are you still playing guitar?
I played base for a year, but I stopped getting better at it so I decided to stop so I could see my friends.

Q10: Who’s scarier: The Woman in Black or Voldemort?
In real life Ralph Fiennes is scarier. When he's on set, everyone goes quiet.

Q11: If you could change one thing in your life what would it be?
At the moment, for people to stop taking things I've said out of context.

Q12: Is there anything you haven’t done that you wish to do?
Direct films. Indie stuff to start with. I grew up on film sets. If I die on a film set at 90 I'll be happy.

Q13: Who's your celebrity crush?
Katy Perry! She is the ideal for me. I was devastated [her & Russell] split!

Q14: Would you ever guest star on Glee?
There are enough connections between Darren Criss & I! My girlfriend loves the show though. I've seen a very episodes and there are some excellent performances.

Q15: Who is your fave singer?
The Libertines, and I met Pete Doherty. He was lovely.

Q16: Did you make any NY's resolutions?
It's been a busy five weeks - I can't remember mine!

Q17: What was your favourite scene in Harry Potter?
A moment in the 6th film where I burst out of water surrounded by fire. So cool!

Q18: Utter slob or neat freak?
Utter slob! I have made progress. I am using the floor less as a wardrobe.

Q19:Who's the actor you would like to collaborate with?
So many. I'm a huge fan of Brad Pitt. He could do have done rom-coms his entire career but he took it in a different direction.

Q20: What's your favorite book?
The Master and Margarita by Mikhail Bulgakov.


Q21: Who was the better kisser Emma, Bonnie or Katie?
Thanks for your question. To avoid any trouble, I can't answer!

Q22: What are your new projects?
I'm doing a film called Kill Your Darlings, I play a 19-year-old Allen Ginsberg.

Q23: Do you care about fashion?
I like fashion but I don't have the knowledge of the fashion world. I do have a stylist called Sam, who's great!

Q24: Would you ever consider getting a tattoo?
Most definitely! I don't know what yet. Not on my neck or face though.

Q25: What is your fave scene in The Woman In Black?
When I go back to the house for a 2nd time. It's a fantastic scene, I'm really proud of it.

Q26: Favourite film of all time?
I have three: Dr Strangelove, 12 Angry Men, A Matter Of Life & Death.

Q27: When are you gonna join Twitter?
I probably won't. I have enough trouble keeping my mouth shut as it is!

Thanks for all your questions. Woman In Black is out today. Hope you enjoy it and don't see it alone!


Daniel Radcliffe Apple Store Q&A Highlights

On why he was attracted to the script.
Radcliffe: It was a horror film with really developed characters - it didn't feel like they were there just to set up scares later on. It was so strong thematically as well, dealing with loss and grief and not being able to move on. I like anything off the beaten track. There was 15 pages of script with no dialogue - you never see that. No one's mad enough to do that. The Artist has kind of rained on our parade really - we thought our 20 minutes of silence in the movie was really impressive! We're much scarier - The Artist has no scares...



On thrashing the locals at their pub quiz.
Radcliffe: The local pub was run by a man whose surname was Potter, and he did a quiz every week which he called Potter's Pub Quiz. The day I was there at his pub quiz he was ill! We did really well. I won the lucky dip! I won a cash prize and thought I take this - I can't come into their village and leave with their money! I gave it back.

On how much fun the shoot was.
Radcliffe: When we were making this film there were a lot of major films in production, like X-Men: First Class, Captain America, War Horse, Hugo. Really long, hard shoots, and all my friends were on them, going 'this is hard'. And we were just having a really great, relaxed shoot. I was included in so much more of the process than I was with Potter, because it's such a massive machine. In this, James had me in meetings really early on with Jane to talk about the script. I learnt more about directing with James than I had in ten years. 

On the hardest scene to film.
Radcliffe: There is a scene where I'm recovering something from a marsh, for which they dug a 10' wide, 5' deep pit and covered it in kids TV show gunge, but brown. Two days in that. It's not always pretty, but that's what I'm getting paid for! You're thinking, it's going to look great in the film, and that's what keeps you warm. There was one moment where I wanted to come up looking like the scene in Apocalypse Now, and the first time I did it I looked more like Al Jolson.

On the spookiness following him home.
Radcliffe: When they were showing us the concept posters for America, a sepia photograph of two children with their eyes scratched out, saying 'what did they see?' I got up one night and someone had brought it round to my house to show me and it was just in my apartment. I jumped a mile in the air when I saw these eyeless children staring at me!

On playing a father for the first time.
Radcliffe: My real-life godson [Misha Handley] plays my son. Because people have spent the best part of ten years seeing me in a schoolboy outfit, I thought it might be a bit of a leap for people to then see me as a father. One of the things James and I talked about was that it would help if the relationship between the son and I feels real. We auditioned five or six boys, and some were older and maybe more accomplished actors, but there was no substitute for the real chemistry. It certainly helped me, and it helped him. I didn't realise at the time, but he gives a really good performance! His mum's a theatre director, so she can put him on the right path.





Daniel Radcliffe Attitude magazine shoot




Daniel Radcliffe absolute radio interview (video)



Daniel Radcliffe on football



Daniel Radcliffe on the remake of Oz



Daniel Radcliffe on  Halloween Costume

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Daniel Radcliffe cbs watch magazine interview

From cbswatchmagazine.com Daniel Radcliffe on life after Potter, why he quit drinking and how The Woman in Black might be his scariest role yet
WHEN YOU’VE ALREADY headlined a film franchise that cast a spell over Muggles worldwide, what do you do for an encore? Faced with that daunting prospect, Daniel Radcliffe, star of the beloved multibillion-dollar Harry Potterseries, is graduating from Hogwarts to a haunted house and facing off against another otherworldly foe in The Woman in Black.
“For the first time, I’m feeling nervous about a film coming out,” admits the actor of the supernatural thriller distributed by CBS Films, scheduled to open Feb. 3. “With Potter, you knew it was going to do well. There was a preexisting fan base. But with this, there’s that fear in the back of my mind that no one will really care.”
If the buzz surrounding the Gothic period drama is any indication, the actor can rest easy. Based on Susan Hill’s classic novel, The Woman in Blackfinds Radcliffe, in his first onscreen adult role, playing lawyer Arthur Kipps, a grieving widower who must leave his young son behind in London to settle the estate of a recently deceased client in a remote English village where a vengeful ghost is horrifically offing little kids. “I read the script just about two hours after we finished filming the last Potter film,” says Radcliffe, “and I thought it was the most compelling story. At the beginning of the film, [Arthur] is a deeply unhappy character in a state of emotional paralysis. But when it really gets going, he’s forced to come out of that and be an active participant in his own life.”
It also didn’t hurt that the script scared the daylights out of him. “From the first page when he’s in the house with the woman in black, I was going, ‘Get out! Run! Don’t ever go back!’ ” he says with a laugh.
To prepare for the part, Radcliffe met with a psychologist to better understand his character’s crippling grief. The 22-year-old actor dealt with the film’s other chief challenge—believably playing a father—by drawing on the natural chemistry he shares with real-life godson Misha Handley, who was cast as Arthur’s child. While valuable on camera, that led to some anxiety for Radcliffe offscreen. “We were doing night shoots a lot, and I was just so scared Misha was having a horrible time,” he says. “It gets to 10:30 and he’s starting to get tired, and no matter how much candy you offer him, or how many iPad games you promise he can play later, all he wants to do is go to bed. I was like, ‘He’s going to hate me!’ ”
That sensitivity to the feelings of his young co-star—the son of Thea Sharrock, who directed Radcliffe in Equus, the Potter star’s 2007 stage debut in which he performed in the buff every night—is understandable, given Radcliffe’s own early start in the business. The London-born actor was just 11 when he landed the star-making role of J.K. Rowling’s heroic boy wizard. He calls the Potter gig, which spanned eight films over 10 years, “the most amazing job in the world” and admits letting go hasn’t been easy. “Just the other day,” he says wistfully, “I was lying in bed before going to sleep and suddenly, I thought, ‘I miss everybody.’ ”
Still, growing up in the glare of the white-hot spotlight took its toll. In an interview with GQ last year, Radcliffe admitted to battling an alcohol problem. “There were times when things were getting a little out of control and I was starting to worry as to whether I would be able to cope in the public arena,” says Radcliffe, who stopped drinking in August 2010 after shooting wrapped on the final Potter film. “Thankfully, that blew over.
“At the end of the day, the lack of privacy is kind of the rent you pay,” he continues. “I have a lovely life and I’m in a very enviable, financially secure position. So if I have to cope with people writing crap about me in the papers, that’s OK.”
Indeed, the thoughtful and articulate actor now seems laser-focused on building a long-lasting and admirably diverse career. Having just wrapped a critically acclaimed run in Broadway’s Tony-nominated revival of the musicalHow to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying, he’s reportedly signed on to play a young Allen Ginsberg in the feature Kill Your Darlings.
“I’m very ambitious,” says Radcliffe, who harbors dreams of directing one day. “In the back of my mind, there are always voices telling me what I have to achieve. That drives me on, along with other people thinking that I won’t be able to achieve those things.” He lets loose a hearty laugh. “I find other people’s doubts incredibly motivational.”