Want More Videos of Tom Felton in Greece? Coming Right Up!

Thanks, elliegeorgiou
Sometimes the Videos are sideways, just so you know.

[Close up of Tom Felton here, as she gets to the front of the line.]

Thanks, marionefelo

Thanks, PennyRef

Thanks, aaepal

Thanks, MarakiTokioHotel [The sound in this video is really good, I think.]

Obviously, since most of these are from the Q&A, you’re going to see a lot of repeats, but in different perspectives and qualities.

Thanks to all the uploaders.

And Enjoy, everyone!

New Videos & Photos of Tom Felton in Greece

Thanks to FeltonFan Dileshakespeare, we now have more video of Tom in Greece for the premiere of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. Besides the interview portion, we have the meet and greet at the beginning and the walking away at the end. A byplay or what you will. Also, via Snitchseeker we have some fan photos from the event. Enjoy!

You can see more photos from the event here in our photo galleries.

Tom Felton takes “great pleasure” in playing evil.


Digital Spy recently came out with a short interview of Tom’s where he discusses being both evil and blonde.

Harry Potter star Tom Felton has admitted that he cannot defend the behaviour of his character Draco Malfoy.

The 21-year-old actor started playing the bad boy role in 2001 and has since seen Draco transform from school bully to a member of the murderous Death Eaters in the movies.

Commenting on the part in an interview with Splash News, he remarked: “He’s such a pain in the neck and he just gets worse and worse.”

However, he then added: “As an actor, I get great pleasure playing this evil little b**tard.”

Felton also revealed that concerns over his bleached hair are the only downside to appearing in the films.

“I’ve been dyeing it to play Malfoy for about eight years now,” he explained. “People keep telling me all this peroxide is going to make my hair fall out.”

Draco Malfoy and the Character Study: FIRST Magazine, Tom Felton, and more.

Indonesia’s FIRST Magazine did a character study on our favorite Slytherin. No, not Tom, but the character he plays – one Draco Malfoy, esquire. This is from a series in the magazine Feltbeats.com previously shared with you that also included an interview with Tom, an interview with Webmistress Misha, and character studies of other Harry Potter characters from sidekicks to psychopaths.

Lord Voldemort may be Harry’s archenemy, but Harry’s true rival is this arrogant blond-haired Slytherin: Draco Malfoy.

Son of Lucius and Narcissa Malfoy and heir to the powerful Malfoy family, Draco is everything that Harry is not. He still has both of his parents living whereas Harry is an orphan; his family is wealthy in that old money kind of way whereas Harry’s relatives are vulgarly nouveau riche; he is a sneaky Slytherin whereas Harry is daring Gryffindor; he is light-haired whereas Harry is dark. In short, they have very little in common and, since the very beginning of this wondrous tale by J. K. Rowling, Draco has been as a persistent thorn on Harry’s side.

In the first year, he offered his hand for an alliance with Harry. He was, of course, rejected, thanks to his pompous attitude and his snickering comment made on Harry’s new friend, Ron. Needless to say, from that moment onward, that they were both doomed to a relationship of mutual dislike and enduring rivalry.

Draco’s ultimate goal is to undermine everything Harry has accomplished at Hogwarts. After Harry had been made Seeker in the Gryffindor Quidditch team, Draco weaseled his way in the Slytherin team in their second year, playing the same position Harry played. He attempted to get Harry’s friend Hagrid, who had been appointed as a teacher in their third year, fired and, while that didn’t work, he successfully sentenced Hagrid’s pet, a hipogriff named Buckbeak, to death. Their fourth year saw Draco betting against Harry and taking Diggory’s side in the Triwizard Tournament. And finally, in their fifth year, Draco joined Dolores Umbridge’s Inquisitor Squad and took part in unraveling Harry’s effort to teach proper Defense against the Dark Arts to his friends. There is no doubt that Draco strove to make Harry’s life one big living hell.

It’s safe to say, though, that Draco’s villainy has never truly presented any real danger for Harry so far. His nastiness, with all the pranks and the taunts, is the kind that every growing teenager have indulged in at one point in life. Come the sixth movie, however, Draco loses his status as comic relief and is now cast in a more serious light.

Draco becomes more than Harry’s schoolyard rival in Half-Blood Prince. Both older, though perhaps not wiser, both develop a new intensity in their rivalry that is previously unmatched, because the game that Draco now plays is not mere sports; he is playing a game of life and death, a game that whether directly or indirectly affects Harry’s life. He is the catalyst that sets the wheels moving, initiating the chain of events that lead to the real war between Harry and Lord Voldemort. With these changes in Draco, so does Harry change as well. Rivals they might forever be but from this point onward, their destinies are intertwined.

Feltbeats.com reported on exclusive interviews with the magazine given by Feltbeats.com’s own Misha, and Tom himself. To read those and other character studies, click on each individual link below.