Tom Felton’s movie “From the Rough” At A Theater Near You – Theatrical On Demand

Now you have the chance to see From the Rough at a theater near you !

From the Rough on GATHR

From the Rough posted on their Facebook page :

We are pleased to inform all of you that have asked about the opportunity to see From the Rough in a theater that we have entered into a distribution agreement with Gathr.us, to enable that to happen.

You can organize a screening in your community, or, if someone else has done so, you can sign up to attend that screening. If enough individuals sign up, the Gathr representatives will find a suitable theater and enable you to purchase a ticket.

Your credit card will not be charged unless a screening is officially scheduled. Please take advantage of this opportunity, and let us know how it has worked.

http://gathr.us/films/from-the-rough

e44a842562ef9ca57c10dc6681235d89cbfe724b_642x900For information about Gathr® – please click h e r e –> What is Gathr®?

easyontheeyeThe DVD of From the Roughwill be released in the U.S. on September 2, 2014 ! (we reported here)

 

 

Tom Felton by Ramona Rosales for Bust Magazine + Interview

Tom is in the latest issue of the BUST Magazine.
Ramona Rosales uploaded two photos of him from his photoshoot for the magazine.

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We also have the interview with him.
The beginning of the interview is a bit sad. 🙁 You will understand when you read the interview:

Tom Felton has just gotten back to Los Angeles from a shoot in San Francisco, so when he calls me, he’s doing what everyone does as soon as they get home: walking his dog. “She’s a Chesapeake Bay Retriever,” the 26-year-old actor says proudly after I’m done squee-ing over the mental image of the former Draco Malfoy of Harry Potter fame strolling with a pooch. “We had to get a special passport for her and everything,” Felton says of the lengths he went to with his long-time girlfriend, actress Jade Olivia, to travel with their pet from the U.K. “But obviously, we had to bring the whole family.” They’re loving the West Coast: the weather, the outdoorsy hiking, the fruit trees. “Our neighbor has a plum tree,” he marvels. “And it turns out we have a fig tree! I don’t think I ever even knew what a fig looked like before this.”

The Londoner has a much more compelling reason to find himself Stateside than the abundance of fresh fruit, though. This summer, he’ll be stealing scenes—and displaying an American accent of Hugh Laurie-esque perfection—in Murder in the First, Steven Bochco’s new detective drama on TNT, which follows a single case, investigated by a pair of cops played by Taye Diggs and Kathleen Robertson, over an entire season. Felton plays Erich Blunt, a Silicon Valley techie who is drawn into the investigation when people connected to him keep turning up murdered. “He’s the world’s youngest billionaire,” Felton says, “a young tech guru who’s something of a rock star in his world.” He’s also given to fits of entitled anger—in the pilot episode, Erich fires the stewardess on his private jet when she spills a drink, even though he’s sleeping with her—that would make any Slytherin proud. So does Felton feel especially drawn to characters with a spoiled dark side? He laughs. “Oddly enough, on the show, we’re shooting everything script by script, so we have no idea how it’s going to end up. I’m still not sure if I’m a bad guy or not. But I’m already as in love with Erich as I was with Draco.” He admits the characters share a certain lordly arrogance, “but it comes from a different place,” he says. “Draco is very much a product of his parents and isn’t a very strong-willed wizard, where as this guy, Erich, is completely self-made. Draco’s rationale for his arrogance is basically one of fear. I mean, it’s the oldest racism in the book, to be terrified of anything that’s different from you. Whereas Erich’s arrogance comes from being a creative genius. He’s operating on a different plane than everyone else.”

Now that we’ve fully given ourselves over to the psychoanalysis of Draco Malfoy ( jubilation!) I ask him why he thinks the Harry Potter cast seems to have fared so much better in the mental health department than our homegrown child stars here in the U.S. His answer is pure class. “I really can’t speak to that,” he says diplomatically. “I can say that every time we would come to the States for a premiere, we were all surprised at how big and overwhelming it all was, compared to the U.K. I don’t know what it would be like, having to deal with that all the time. But I will say, just for myself, that back in London, my family kept things down-to-earth. I mean, I grew up with three brothers, and it didn’t matter to them if I was in Harry Potter. Nobody put me on any kind of a pedestal.” With Murder in the First, that may be all about to change. But I’m pretty sure a wizard of Tom Felton’s caliber can handle it.

by Rachel Shukert

You can buy the print issue here and the digital issue here.

‘From the Rough’ with Tom Felton FINALLY on DVD + Reminder of other DVD release dates

The DVD of Tom’s film From the Roughwill be released in the U.S. on September 2, 2014 !

You can pre-order the DVD here on amazon – current prize $12.74 (List Price $14.99) with pre-order Price Guarantee.

51gme07BNjLIf you missed the release dates of Tom’s other films – here are the dates for ‘Labyrinth’, ‘Belle’ and ‘In Secret’ :

U.S. :

LabyrinthDVD – Release Date : 15th July 2014
pre order h e r e !

BelleBlu-ray – Release Date : 26th August 2014
pre order h e r e !

UK :

BelleBlu-ray – Release Date : 20th October
pre order h e r e !

BelleDVD – Release Date : 20th October
pre order h e r e !

In SecretDVD – Release Date : 22nd September 2014 (Tom’s birthday 😉 )
pre order h e r e !

Germany :

In SecretDVD – Release Date : 4th December 2014
pre order h e r e

 

‘Murder in the First’ with Tom Felton – New Interview & Clip + Screenshots from Episode 2

Paste Magazine has published a new interview with Tom on their site:

Draco Malfoy is all grown up.

Tom Felton, who played the devious Malfoy in all eight Harry Potter films, now stars as tech genius Erich Blunt in the new TNT series Murder in the First (which airs Mondays at 10PM).

The series, from legendary executive producer Steven Bochco (NYPD Blue), will follow a homicide investigation for ten episodes. As viewers learned in last week’s premiere, Felton’s Blunt is a prime suspect in two seemingly unrelated murders.Paste caught up with Felton to talk about the new series, whether or not he thinks Blunt is guilty and when he decided to become an actor.

Paste Magazine: How did this part come about for you?
Tom Felton: I’ve been a fan of Steven Bochco’s work for a long time so when I heard he was ramping up with a new pilot that was very exciting. And then I read the character and saw what he was about. It was a world that I wasn’t particularly knowledgable about—thankfully with Steven and [executive producer and co-creator] Eric Lodal, we managed to kind of get to the root of this character. As soon as we had those discussions, it was something I was immediately passionate about. I knew that I wanted to see this character through.

Paste: The series will run for ten episodes. Did you know how it would end when you started filming?
Felton: No, that was the exciting part. I’m very used to knowing where the character ends before we start. And not only did they not tell me, they insisted on not revealing anything, and just going from script to script which was kind of scary at first, because I’ve never done that. It was a real challenge. The characters seem to change so much. Everything you think you know about one person is flipped on its head in the next episode. It was a really exciting journey to try to figure it out episode by episode.

Paste: So you never knew who had committed the murders?
Felton: The entire cast and crew, every day we had new theories and new speculations on who we thought was in the firing line, and that was up to the very last day of shooting. We always said if we’re still guessing and we’re reading the thing then God only knows how gripped audiences will be in not exactly knowing who’s guilty. I’m pleased to say that, even as the character, I didn’t know until the very last minute. They were very keen not to share the information with us and it’s definitely a hell of a roller coaster of a ride.

Paste: So, they never told you whodunit. But while I was watching the first three episodes they made available to critics, I kept going back and forth about whether Erich was guilty or not. Did that happen to you? Or did you just decide, in your own mind, on his innocence or guilt?
Felton: That’s what I thought I would do at first, but Eric and Steven were very keen to get this idea in my head that it’s actually a lot more powerful as a character to do every single scene as this real experience. You essentially never know if you’re lying or not, which was kind of confusing at first but actually was great in the end. It allowed you to sort of completely dive into the scenes. You were focusing without looking ahead and thinking, ‘Oh, wait a minute—later on he does this or he does that.’.

Paste: You mentioned the tech world was not something you knew a lot about. Did you do some research to prepare for the role?
Felton: I did lots of interviews with these young CEOs to sort of see how they interacted. But more important than that, was getting in my head that these people are today in modern day society. Twenty, thirty years ago you had the Rolling Stones. They were the rock stars of their society, and nowadays it’s really these Facebook, Instagram-using, young CEO’s. They are basically the rock stars of today. Twenty years ago if you were a computer geek it wasn’t really the coolest thing to be in the world, and now it’s completely turned on its head. Not only is Erich a free thinker, but because he’s such a tech genius it makes him one of the coolest people on the planet and one of the most powerful. It was a realization to me to see what these people are in today’s society.

Paste: How did you relate to him as you began playing him?
Felton: It’s very immersive especially with the accent change. Someone like Erich, his train of thought isn’t on the same level as the rest of us. His frustration and his anger comes purely from what I think. When you have a mind that isn’t controlled or tainted by the society around it, it makes for a very peculiar thought process. But for him it’s completely normal and completely right.

There’s something very intoxicating about playing a character who is completely sure about everything that they say and do. There is no second-guessing. After a few episode that really stuck with me. Even when he’s not speaking, he’s very aware of what’s going on.

Paste: In last week’s pilot, we learned that Erich was the son of a drug-addict pimp and a prostitute. Will we learn more about his troubled childhood as the series progresses?
Felton: He’s an example of the brightest rose growing from concrete. He had a very rough and unstable childhood, but in an odd way that leads to him being the person he is today. Without shining a light on it too much, his background definitely comes into play later on.

Paste: You’ve been acting since you were a child. When did you realize you wanted to be an actor?
Felton: I’ve always enjoyed it. I never realized it to be honest with you. I don’t think I ever stopped to realize, ‘Oh this is what I want to do.’ People who are lucky enough to do what they want to do in their life never really realize it. They just never stop doing what they love. I get a lot of children asking me for advice on the best thing to do to try to get into this business and I always say, ‘Do it because you love it.’ I was part of a drama group from around six years on. I vividly remember imitating Jim Carrey in front of the mirror for days on end. God knows why.

I think the reason that it comes really naturally to me is because I used to do it as a youngster—I used to imitate what I saw on TV. It’s always been something that I’ve enjoyed subconsciously. Now I just get to be a lucky man and do it as my job.

Paste: Did you ever think about doing anything else?
Felton: There’s lots of thing I enjoy as well—music, writing, behind the camera stuff. The whole medium of TV, film, and music sort of fascinates me. I did several other jobs in the meantime—a paper route, I worked at a fishery for two years. I’ve had other experiences in the working world but as much as I enjoyed them, I always keep coming back to acting.

Paste: Draco Malfoy is such an iconic character. Was it hard to transition to more adult roles and to get casting directors to see you as more than Draco?
Felton: Harry Potter opened as many doors as it’s closed. But, ultimately, it’s been a good thing. I’ve been extremely lucky that the people that I’ve worked with since Potter have all been very helpful, and very happy to spend some time teaching me the ways of different mediums, from low budget films, to TV, to theater. It’s been very helpful.

Paste: Anything else you can tell us about what to expect for the rest of the season of Murder in the First?
Felton: It ends with a bang. I guarantee it.

TNT has uploaded a new video of Murder in the First .

Murder in the First: Do you think Erich Blunt is sleeping with more than one of his employees? #letsgoback

BTW, we have a lot of screenshots from the second episode – thanks to Sabrina for the screenshots – more in our gallery.

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