I hope J.K stops writing about the Potter world after the Fantastic Beasts. Not because I don’t love hearing more about the world, but because I’m sick of this ungrateful fandom trashing her whenever things don’t go how they headcanoned. We get more than most fandoms do, but all people do is whine and complain about being able to do it better than the author, it’s annoying.
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New Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them promo art
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He wasn’t.
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*presses play on fantastic beasts trailer*
*hears lumos maxima*
*pauses trailer and cries*
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Fantastic Beasts Trailer: Writer J.K. Rowling
Fantastic Beasts Trailer: Invites you to return
Fantastic Beasts Trailer: To the Wizarding World
me: return?
me: RETURN??
me: m8 i never left
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HOW TO GET AWAY WITH murder
full size: x
resources: x x x x x x x x
#htgawm spoilers
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everybody needs Dave Franco admiring them on their blog
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American wizards have a completely different word for “Muggle.”
Next year’s Harry Potter prequel film Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them is set in 1926 New York, where the wizarding community uses another term entirely for people without magical powers.
In shifting the franchise away from the U.K., author J.K. Rowling — who also wrote the movie’s screenplay — is poised to introduce several new words into the Potterverse lexicon, and the most significant might be what Stateside wizards say instead of Muggle: “No-Maj” (pronounced “no madge,” as in “no magic”).
The blunt-sounding, hyphenated U.S. shorthand is used frequently by American wizards in the film, where English magizoologist Newt Scamander (Eddie Redmayne) comes to New York and has all sorts of adventures.
American wizardisms. Nice. (via simplypotterheads)
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Dinos in the palm of your hand!
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“come! let us take one of those self-portraits together!”
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Mind Fuck.
I WILL KEEP DOING THIS UNTIL IT GETS MY NUMBER WRONG.
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