Images of Tom on the red carpet are now in our galleries, including screen captures! Click here to see more!


All screen caps by Feltbeats Admin Lilyginny27 and Feltbeats Reporter Estrella89san.
Images of Tom on the red carpet are now in our galleries, including screen captures! Click here to see more!
All screen caps by Feltbeats Admin Lilyginny27 and Feltbeats Reporter Estrella89san.
As expected, more photos have been released from the photo call Tom attended yesterday for the release of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince. These photos are courtesy of Accidental Sexiness.
Um, I don’t see anything accidental, did you? 😉
For more photos of the event, please check out our photo gallery.
Thanks to Feltbeats Reporter Estrella89san for the tip!
Video coverage of yesterday’s press junket for Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince have hit the airwaves, and here are a couple for you.
A very nice one from BBC Newsbeat includes Tom and Dan Radcliffe dicussing the kissing that takes place in the Half-Blood Prince. You can view the video by clicking here.
UPDATE: Here is the BBC Newsbeat video courtesy of Elbenstein. Thanks!
From Virgin Media. You can see Tom but he doesn’t speak.
Also, remember the clip we showed you yesterday from GMTV? There is a slightly longer version of Tom’s appearance on the show, and you can watch it by clicking here.
Thanks to Elbenstein for the tips!
Another glowing review of Tom in Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince has just been released. This time it’s from Motion[Captured].
According to their website:
Tom Felton’s had a tough path in the series, playing Draco Malfoy, who started as a sort of stock creep, a baby-faced Jimmy Stewart with a haughty sneer. At this point, though, Malfoy’s grown up twisted, and he embraces a terrible assignment here, convinced he’s finally found a way to prove himself to be a better magician than Harry Potter, and possibly even better than his own father. Felton reveals real layers to Malfoy’s malice, though, and he and Radcliffe share a number of scenes that illuminate how far they’ve come as performers. In a strange way, these films have become the giant blockbuster equivalent of Michael Apted’s “7 Up” series in England, a chance to watch a wide range of English schoolkids move from childhood to adulthood as we watch, checking in every so often to see how much they’ve changed as well as how much they’ve stayed the same.
Source: Motion[Captured]