Steven Spielberg ‘Very Happy’ With His Decision to Turn Down ‘Harry Potter’ Movie

The ‘Indiana Jones’ filmmaker insists he harbors no regret about rejecting the first ‘Harry Potter’ film although his children thought he was ‘crazy’ for making the decision.

AceShowbizSteven Spielberg doesn’t regret turning down “Harry Potter“. The 76-year-old director was asked to direct “Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone“, the first movie in the wizardry franchise based on J.K. Rowling’s novels, but explained that he snubbed the movie as he wanted to spend time with his family rather than on a film set.

“The personal meaning about (how the conflict between) art and family will tear you in half happened to me later, after I had already established myself as a filmmaker, as a working director,” Steven – who shares seven children from his relationships with ex-wife Amy Irving and his current spouse Kate Capshaw – told fellow filmmaker S.S. Rajamouli for Reliance Entertainment.

“Kate and I started raising a family and we started having children. The choice I had to make in taking a job that would move me to another country for four of five months where I wouldn’t see my family every day.”

Spielberg explained that “Harry Potter” was just one of several projects that he turned down for family reasons. The “Indiana Jones” filmmaker said, “There were several films I chose not to make. I chose to turn down the first ‘Harry Potter’ to basically spend the next year and a half with my family, my young kids growing up. So I’d sacrificed a great franchise, which today looking back I’m very happy to have done, to be with my family.”

Spielberg previously explained that he didn’t feel ready to make an “all-kids movie” with the project, which was ultimately directed by Chris Columbus. He said in 2012, “I just felt that I wasn’t ready to make an all-kids movie, and my kids thought I was crazy. And the books were by that time popular, so when I dropped out, I knew it was going to be a phenomenon.”

You can share this post!

Source: Read Full Article