[Nfbnet-members-list] June Movies
Steve Cook
cookcafe at sc.rr.com
Mon Jun 2 09:52:47 UTC 2025
Hi All,
Appreciate you sharing with everyone!
You are all invited to join me for our audio described movies and Name That Tune in June! If you would like to receive a weekly reminder message or have suggestions about an upcoming movie, send me a message at cookcafe at sc.rr.com
What goes great with our audio described movie night! Well of course, it is popcorn! Appreciate you supporting our below fund raiser if you are able to!
🎉 Support the Computer Science & Technology Division with Double Good Popcorn! 🍿
We're excited to announce our partnership with Double Good Popcorn for a virtual fundraiser that combines innovation with indulgence! From Sunday, June 1, 2025 starting at 12:00 Noon Eastern to Thursday, June 5, 2025 at 12:00 Noon Eastern. you can enjoy premium, small-batch popcorn while supporting our division's initiatives. With flavors like Caramel-Diem, In Queso Fire, and My Main Cheese, there's something for every palate. Plus, 50% of every purchase goes directly to our programs, helping us enhance resources, sponsor tech events, and fund student projects.
How It Works:
1. Shop Online: Visit our Pop-Up Store at https://popup.doublegood.com/s/9d0pf65u
2. Enjoy & Make an Impact: Your popcorn is shipped directly to you, and your support fuels our mission.
No door-to-door selling, no handling money—just click, share, and snack for a cause! Let's make this fundraiser a success and continue advancing technology education together. Thank you for your support!
Friday, June 6, 2025
Goldfinger starts at 8:00 PM Eastern
Friday, June 13, 2025
Blues Brothers from 1980 starts at 8:00 PM Eastern
Friday, June 20, 2025
Harry Potter And The Half-Blood Prince [US] (2009) starts at 8:00 PM Eastern
Friday, June 27, 2025
Name that Tune starts at 8:00 PM Eastern
Rules for Name That Tune
Stay muted unless your team is up.
No cheating.
Have fun!
TV Theme Song Category: 1 point.
only have to name the TV show to get 1 point.
If your team guesses wrong, another team can steal to get the point. If the team that stole does not get the correct answer, they will lose 1 point.
Decades, patriotic songs and yacht categories: 3 points
name the artist and song for 3 points. If you correctly name only the artist or song, you’ll get 1 point. another team will be able to steal to get the point(s) if they are able to get the correct answer. If the team that stole does not get the correct answer. They will lose a point(s).
Movie Theme Songs: 7 points
There are 3 parts to each tune for this category. You must name the artist, song and movie in order to receive the full 7 points. For each answer you get correct, you will receive 2 points. If you get all three, you get a bonus point, totaling 7.
SC Tech Talk
Takes place every Saturday at 3:00 PM Eastern
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Goldfinger
agent James Bond destroys a drug laboratory and electrocutes an antagonist in a bath in Latin America. Bond then heads to Miami Beach, where his superior, M, through CIA agent Felix Leiter, directs Bond to observe bullion dealer Auric Goldfinger at a hotel in Miami Beach. Bond discovers Goldfinger cheating at a high-stakes gin rummy game, aided by his employee Jill Masterson. Bond interrupts Jill and blackmails Goldfinger into losing. After an evening with Jill, Bond is knocked out by Goldfinger's Korean manservant Oddjob. Bond awakens to find Jill covered in gold paint, dead from skin suffocation.
In London, M tasks Bond with determining how Goldfinger smuggles gold internationally. Q supplies Bond with a modified Aston Martin DB5 and two tracking devices. Bond plays a round of golf with Goldfinger at his country club in Kent, using a bar of recovered Nazi gold supplied to him by the Bank of England. Goldfinger attempts to cheat, but Bond tricks him into losing the match. Goldfinger warns Bond against interfering in his affairs, and Oddjob demonstrates his formidable strength, along with a steel-brimmed hat. Bond follows Goldfinger to Switzerland and meets Jill's sister Tilly, who tries to assassinate Goldfinger but is stopped by Bond.
Bond sneaks into Goldfinger's refinery in Switzerland and overhears him telling Chinese nuclear physicist Ling that he incorporates gold into the bodywork of his Rolls-Royce Phantom III to smuggle out of England. Bond also overhears Goldfinger mention "Operation Grand Slam" and encounters Tilly, who again tries to kill Goldfinger. An alarm is tripped, and Oddjob kills Tilly with his hat. Bond is captured and strapped to a table with an overhead industrial laser, the beam advancing toward his crotch. Bond lies to Goldfinger that MI6 knows about Operation Grand Slam and Goldfinger spares his life. Pussy Galore, a pilot, flies the captive Bond to Goldfinger's stud farm near Lexington, Kentucky in a private jet.
Bond escapes his cell and witnesses Goldfinger's meeting with the American mafia, who have supplied materials needed for Operation Grand Slam. Goldfinger reveals the plan is to break into the US Bullion Depository at Fort Knox by releasing Delta-9 nerve gas into the atmosphere, which causes unconsciousness for 24 hours. Goldfinger promises to multiply the payoff if the scheme succeeds, but they ridicule his plan, particularly Mr. Solo, who demands to be paid immediately and leaves before the others are fatally gassed. Bond is captured by Pussy Galore but attempts to alert the CIA by planting his homing device in Solo's pocket as he leaves.
Solo is killed by Oddjob and his body is destroyed in a car crusher, along with the homing device. Bond confronts Goldfinger over the implausibility of moving the gold and Goldfinger agrees. Bond deduces from Ling's presence that the Chinese government provided a dirty bomb to irradiate the gold, making it worthless; Goldfinger's gold will increase in value and the Chinese will gain power from the resulting economic meltdown. Operation Grand Slam begins with Pussy Galore's Flying Circus spraying gas over Fort Knox, seemingly knocking out the military guards.
Goldfinger's private army breaks into Fort Knox and accesses the vault as Goldfinger arrives in a helicopter with the bomb. In the vault, Goldfinger's henchman Kisch handcuffs Bond to the bomb. Unknown to Goldfinger, Bond convinced Pussy to alert the authorities and replaced the gas with a harmless substance. Goldfinger locks the vault with Bond, Oddjob and Kisch inside. When the US Army attacks, Goldfinger kills Ling and escapes. Oddjob throws Kisch off a gangway after he tries to escape the vault. Bond frees himself with Kisch's key, but Oddjob batters him. Bond electrocutes Oddjob and forces the lock off the bomb but is unsure how to disarm it.
After killing Goldfinger's men, US troops open the vault, and a specialist turns off the device with "007" seconds remaining. Bond boards a jet to have lunch with the President at the White House, but Goldfinger hijacks the plane, tying up the crew in the hangar and putting Pussy in the cockpit. Bond and Goldfinger fight for Goldfinger's gun, which fires, shattering a window and creating an explosive decompression; Goldfinger is blown out of the window. Bond and Pussy parachute from the crashing plane. Leiter's search helicopter passes over the unseen pair; Pussy tries to alert them, but Bond playfully declares, "This is no time to be rescued," and draws the parachute over them.
Cast
Sean Connery as James Bond (007), an MI6 agent who is sent to investigate Auric Goldfinger. Connery reprised the role of Bond for the third time in a row. His salary rose, but a pay dispute later broke out during filming. After he suffered a back injury when filming the scene where Oddjob knocks Bond unconscious in Miami, the dispute was settled: Eon and Connery agreed to a deal where the actor would receive 5% of the gross of each Bond film he starred in.[6]
Honor Blackman as Pussy Galore, Goldfinger's personal pilot and leader of an all-female team of pilots known as Pussy Galore's Flying Circus. Blackman was selected for the role of Pussy Galore because of her role as the skilled judoka Cathy Gale in The Avengers, for which she had received martial arts training.[7] The script was rewritten to make Pussy Galore a judoka as well.[8] The character's name follows in the tradition of other Bond girls' names that are double entendres. Concerned about US censors, the producers thought about changing the character's name to "Kitty Galore",[9] but they and Hamilton decided "if you were a ten-year old boy and knew what the name meant, you weren't a ten-year old boy, you were a dirty little bitch. The American censor was concerned, but we got round that by inviting him and his wife out to dinner and [told him] we were big supporters of the Republican Party."[10] During promotion, Blackman took delight in embarrassing interviewers by repeatedly mentioning the character's name.[11] While the American censors did not interfere with the name in the film, they refused to allow the name "Pussy Galore" to appear on promotional materials and for the US market she was subsequently called "Miss Galore" or "Goldfinger's personal pilot".[12]
Gert Fröbe as Auric Goldfinger, a wealthy, psychopathic[13] man obsessed with gold. Orson Welles was considered as Goldfinger, but his financial demands were too high;[14] Theodore Bikel auditioned for the role, but failed.[15] Fröbe was cast because the producers saw his performance as a child molester in the German film Es geschah am hellichten Tag.[7] Fröbe, who spoke little English, said his lines phonetically, but was too slow. To redub him, he had to double the speed of his performance to get the right tempo.[10] The only time his real voice is heard is during his meeting with members of the Mafia at Auric Stud. Bond is hidden below the model of Fort Knox whilst Fröbe's natural voice can be heard above. However, he was redubbed for the rest of the film by TV actor Michael Collins.[7] The match is widely praised as one of the most successful dubs in cinema history.[16][17]
Shirley Eaton as Jill Masterson, a Bond girl and Goldfinger's aide-de-camp, whom Bond catches helping the villain cheat at a game of cards. Eaton was sent by her agent to meet Harry Saltzman and agreed to take the part if the nudity was done tastefully. It took an hour and a half to apply the paint to her body.[10] Although only a small part in the film, the image of her painted gold was renowned and Eaton appeared as such on the 6 November 1964 cover of Life magazine.[18]
Tania Mallet as Tilly Masterson, Jill's sister
Harold Sakata as Oddjob, Goldfinger's lethal Korean manservant. Director Guy Hamilton cast Sakata, an Olympic silver medalist weightlifter, as Oddjob after seeing him on a wrestling programme.[7] Hamilton called him an "absolutely charming man", and found that "he had a very unique way of moving, [so] in creating Oddjob I used all of Harold's own characteristics".[19] Sakata was badly burned when filming his death scene, in which Oddjob was electrocuted by Bond. He, however, kept holding onto the hat with determination, despite his pain, until the director called "Cut!".[6] Oddjob has been described as "a wordless role, but one of cinema's great villains."[20]
Bernard Lee as M, 007's boss and head of the British Secret Service.
Martin Benson as Mr. Solo, the lone gangster who refused to take part in Operation Grand Slam. The surname Solo was re-used by Ian Fleming when he was briefly involved in creating the character Napoleon Solo for the American TV series The Man from U.N.C.L.E., which led to a threatened lawsuit by Bond producers Broccoli and Saltzman, forcing Fleming to back out of the series.
Cec Linder as Felix Leiter, Bond's CIA liaison in the United States. Linder was the only actor actually on location in Miami.[21] Linder's interpretation of Leiter was that of a somewhat older man than the way the character was played by Jack Lord in Dr. No; in reality, Linder was a year younger than Lord. According to screenwriter Richard Maibaum, Lord demanded co-star billing, a bigger role and more money to reprise the role[22] in Goldfinger, which led the producers to recast the part. At the last minute, Cec Linder switched roles with Austin Willis, who played cards with Goldfinger.[23]
Austin Willis as Mr. Simmons, Goldfinger's gullible gin rummy opponent in Miami
Lois Maxwell as Miss Moneypenny
Bill Nagy as Mr Jed Midnight, the gangster whose contributions Goldfinger says helped smuggle the nerve gas across the Canadian border
Desmond Llewelyn is not credited in the opening sequence, but he plays Q, the head of Q-branch. Hamilton told him to inject humour into the character, thus beginning the friendly antagonism between Q and Bond that became a hallmark of the series.[21] He had already appeared in the previous Bond film, From Russia with Love, and, with the exception of Live and Let Die, would continue to play Q in the next 16 Bond films.
Michael Mellinger portrayed Kisch, Goldfinger's secondary and quiet henchman and loyal lieutenant who leads his boss's fake Army convoy to Fort Knox. Nadja Regin played Bonita, a dancer who sets a trap for Bond in the pre-credit sequence. Burt Kwouk portrayed Ling, the Communist Chinese nuclear fission specialist. Richard Vernon played Colonel Smithers, a Bank of England official. Margaret Nolan played Dink, Bond's masseuse from the Miami hotel sequence. (Vernon and Nolan both appeared in A Hard Day's Night that same year.) Nolan also appeared as the gold-covered body in advertisements for the film[9] and in the opening title sequence as the golden silhouette, described as "Gorgeous, iconic, seminal".[24] Gerry Duggan portrays Hawker, Bond's golf caddy.
Blues Brothers
Jake Blues, a blues vocalist and petty criminal, is paroled from prison after serving three years of a five-year sentence for armed robbery and is picked up by his brother Elwood in his Bluesmobile, a battered former police car. Elwood demonstrates its capabilities by jumping an open drawbridge. The brothers visit the Catholic orphanage where they were raised, and learn from Sister Mary Stigmata that it will be closed unless it pays $5,000 in property taxes. During a sermon by the Reverend Cleophus James at the Triple Rock Baptist Church, Jake has an epiphany: they can reform their band, the Blues Brothers, which disbanded while Jake was in prison, and raise the money to save the orphanage.
That night, state troopers attempt to arrest Elwood for driving with a suspended license due to 116 parking tickets and 56 moving violations. The brothers escape after a car chase through the Dixie Square Mall. The next morning, as the police arrive at the flophouse where Elwood lives, a mysterious woman detonates a bomb that demolishes the building, but leaves Jake and Elwood unharmed, saving them from arrest.
Jake and Elwood begin tracking down members of the band. Five of them are performing as "Murph and the Magic Tones" at a deserted Holiday Inn lounge and quickly agree to rejoin. Another turns them down as he is the maître d' at an expensive restaurant, but the brothers threaten to become regular patrons until he relents. On their way to meet the final two band members, the brothers find the road through Jackson Park blocked by an American Nazi Party demonstration on a bridge; Elwood runs them off the bridge into the East Lagoon. The leader of the Nazi Party swears revenge. The last two band members, who now run a soul food restaurant, rejoin the band against the advice of one's wife. The reunited group obtains instruments and equipment from Ray's Music Exchange in Calumet City, and Ray, "as usual", takes an IOU.
As Jake attempts to book a gig, the mystery woman blows up his phone booth; once again, he is miraculously unhurt. The band stumbles onto a gig at Bob's Country Bunker, a honky-tonk in Kokomo, Indiana. They win over the rowdy crowd, but run up a bar tab higher than their pay, and infuriate the Good Ole Boys, the country band booked for the gig.
Realizing they need a big show to raise the necessary money, the brothers persuade their old agent to book the Palace Hotel Ballroom, north of Chicago. They mount a loudspeaker atop the Bluesmobile and drive around the Chicago area promoting the concert—and alerting the police, the neo-Nazis, and the Good Ole Boys of their whereabouts. The ballroom is packed with blues fans, police officers, and the Good Ole Boys. Jake and Elwood perform two songs, then sneak offstage, as the tax deadline is rapidly approaching. A record company executive offers them a $10,000 cash advance on a recording contract—more than enough to pay off the orphanage's taxes and Ray's IOU—and then tells the brothers how to slip out of the building unnoticed. As they escape via an electrical riser and a service tunnel, they are confronted by the mystery woman: Jake's vengeful ex-fiancée. After her volley of M16 rifle bullets leaves them once again miraculously unharmed, Jake offers a series of ridiculous excuses that she rejects, but when she looks into his eyes she takes interest in him again, allowing the brothers to escape to the Bluesmobile.
Jake and Elwood race back toward Chicago, with dozens of state and local police and the Good Ole Boys in pursuit. They elude them all with a series of improbable maneuvers, including a miraculous gravity-defying escape from the neo-Nazis. At the Richard J. Daley Center, they rush inside the adjacent Chicago City Hall building, followed by hundreds of law enforcement officers, firefighters, and the National Guard. The brothers find the office of the Cook County Assessor and pay the tax bill. Just as their receipt is stamped, they are arrested by the mob of law officers. In prison, the band plays "Jailhouse Rock" for the inmates.
Cast
See also: § Cameos and minor appearances
John Belushi as "Joliet" Jake Blues, a former blues singer, paroled from prison after three years[6]
Dan Aykroyd as Elwood J. Blues, Jake's blood brother, also a former blues singer[6]
James Brown as the Reverend Cleophus James, pastor of the Triple Rock Baptist Church. His musical sermon "The Old Landmark" causes Jake to have an epiphany[6]
Cab Calloway as Curtis, an old friend/father figure of the brothers, who suggests they visit the church, and helps them advertise the show and performs "Minnie the Moocher" for the audience[6]
Ray Charles as Ray, a blind music store owner, who performs "Shake a Tail Feather" to demonstrate the effectiveness of the instruments he sells[6]
Aretha Franklin as Mrs. Murphy, Matt Murphy's wife, who owns a soul food restaurant with him. She performs "Think" to persuade him not to join the band[6]
Steve "The Colonel" Cropper – lead guitar; a member of Murph and the Magic Tones[6]
Donald "Duck" Dunn – bass guitar; a member of Murph and the Magic Tones[6]
Murphy Dunne ("Murph") – keyboards; lead singer of Murph and the Magic Tones[6]
Willie "Too Big" Hall – drums; a member of Murph and the Magic Tones[6]
Tom "Bones" Malone – trombone, saxophone; a member of Murph and the Magic Tones[6]
"Blue Lou" Marini – saxophone; the dishwasher at the soul food restaurant[6]
Matt "Guitar" Murphy – lead guitar; the cook at the soul food restaurant[6]
"Mr. Fabulous" Alan Rubin – trumpet; the maitre d' at the Chez Paul restaurant
Carrie Fisher as the Mystery Woman, Jake's former fiancée, who tries to kill him for leaving her at the altar[6]
John Candy as Burton Mercer, Jake's parole officer assisting the police in their hunt for the Blues Brothers[6]
Henry Gibson as the Head Nazi, the leader of a local American National Socialist White People's Party[6]
Twiggy as girl waiting at the gas station[6]
John Lee Hooker as Street Slim, a man singing "Boom Boom" together with a small band on Maxwell Street[citation needed]
Kathleen Freeman as Sister Mary Stigmata, AKA "The Penguin", the nun who leads the orphanage where the brothers grew up[6]
Steve Lawrence as Maury Sline, the agent who organized and booked many of the Blues Brothers' performances before Jake was sent to jail[7]
Frank Oz as the corrections officer who returns Jake's possessions to him at the beginning of the film[6]
Jeff Morris as Bob, the owner of Bob's Country Bunker[citation needed]
Charles Napier as Tucker McElroy, lead singer and Winnebago driver of the Good Ole Boys[citation needed]
Steven Williams as Trooper Mount, one of the cops who follows Jake and Elwood from the start[6]
John Landis as Trooper La Fong, a cop who chases the Bluesmobile at the mall[6]
Harry Potter And The Half-Blood Prince [US] (2009) starts at 8:00 PM Eastern
Lord Voldemort tightens his grip on the wizarding and Muggle worlds: his Death Eaters kidnap wand maker Mr Ollivander and destroy London's Millennium Bridge. With Lucius Malfoy incarcerated in Azkaban, Voldemort chooses his son, Draco Malfoy, to carry out a secret mission at Hogwarts. Draco's mother, Narcissa, and aunt Bellatrix Lestrange seek out Severus Snape, who gains their confidence by claiming he is a mole within the Order of the Phoenix. Snape makes an Unbreakable Vow with Narcissa to protect Draco and fulfil his task should he fail.
Harry Potter accompanies Albus Dumbledore to persuade former Potions professor Horace Slughorn to return to Hogwarts. Then, at the Burrow, Harry reunites with his best friends Ron and Hermione. In Diagon Alley, they see Draco and Narcissa Malfoy, and follow them into Knockturn Alley. The pair meet with Death Eaters, including the werewolf Fenrir Greyback, at Borgin & Burke's. When Harry believes Draco is now a Death Eater, Ron and Hermione are sceptical. On the Hogwarts Express, Harry sneaks into the Slytherin carriage wearing his Invisibility Cloak to spy on Malfoy. Malfoy notices and petrifies Harry, leaving him on the train. Luna Lovegood finds him and counters Draco's spell.
At Hogwarts, Harry discovers that his used Potions textbook is filled with helpful notes and spells added by the "Half-Blood Prince". Using it, Harry excels in class, impressing Slughorn, who awards him a Liquid Luck potion. Ron makes the Gryffindor Quidditch team as Keeper and begins dating Lavender Brown, upsetting Hermione, who harbours feelings for him. Harry consoles Hermione while acknowledging his own feelings for Ginny Weasley. Harry spends Christmas with the Weasleys. His suspicions about Draco are dismissed by the Order, but Arthur Weasley reveals that the Malfoys may be interested in a Vanishing Cabinet at Borgin & Burke's. Bellatrix and Greyback attack and destroy the Burrow.
At Hogwarts, Dumbledore asks Harry to retrieve Slughorn's memory of a young Voldemort. Slughorn has resisted giving an accurate memory. After Ron accidentally ingests a love potion intended for Harry, Harry takes him to Slughorn for a cure. After curing Ron, Slughorn offers both boys some mead, a gift to Dumbledore. Ron is poisoned upon sipping it, and Harry's quick thinking saves him. While recovering in the infirmary, Ron murmurs Hermione's name, causing Lavender to end their relationship. Harry confronts Draco about the poisoned mead and also a cursed necklace that nearly killed Katie Bell. A duel erupts, and Harry uses one of the Half-Blood Prince's curses that severely injures Malfoy, and he is only saved by Snape. Fearing the book contains Dark Magic, Ginny persuades Harry to hide it in the Room of Requirement, where they share their first kiss.
Harry uses his Liquid Luck potion in Hagrid's hut to convince the reluctant Slughorn to surrender the memory Dumbledore needs. Viewing it in the Pensieve, Dumbledore and Harry learn Voldemort sought information about Horcruxes, magical objects containing pieces of a wizard's soul for immortality. Dumbledore surmises Voldemort divided his soul into six Horcruxes, two of which have been destroyed: Tom Riddle's diary and Marvolo Gaunt's ring. They travel to a cave where Harry aids Dumbledore in drinking a potion that hides another Horcrux, Slytherin's locket.
A weakened Dumbledore defends them from Inferi by creating a ring of fire, and apparates them back to Hogwarts, where Bellatrix, Greyback, and other Death Eaters have entered through the Vanishing Cabinet in the Room of Requirement that Draco has secretly connected to one in Knockturn Alley. As Harry hides, Draco appears and disarms the headmaster, revealing Voldemort chose him to kill Dumbledore. Draco hesitates; Snape, however, arrives and kills Dumbledore, blasting him off the Astronomy Tower. As the Death Eaters escape, Harry attacks Snape, but fails, and he reveals to Harry that he is the Half-Blood Prince.
As Hogwarts students and staff mourn Dumbledore's death, Harry tells Ron and Hermione that the locket is fake and contains a message from "R.A.B.", who stole the real Horcrux intending to destroy it. Harry, Ron and Hermione agree to forgo their final Hogwarts year to hunt for the remaining Horcruxes.
Cast
Further information: List of Harry Potter cast members
Daniel Radcliffe as Harry Potter: A 16-year-old British wizard who now enters his sixth year at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry
Rupert Grint as Ron Weasley: One of Harry's two best friends
Emma Watson as Hermione Granger: One of Harry's two best friends
Helena Bonham Carter as Bellatrix Lestrange: One of Voldemort's principal Death Eaters and Draco Malfoy's aunt
Jim Broadbent as Horace Slughorn: The newly appointed Potions master who had held the position before Severus Snape
Robbie Coltrane as Rubeus Hagrid: The Hogwarts gamekeeper and Care of Magical Creatures teacher at Hogwarts
Warwick Davis as Filius Flitwick: The Charms master and head of Ravenclaw
Tom Felton as Draco Malfoy: Harry's rival and recipient of Voldemort's secret mission
Michael Gambon as Albus Dumbledore: The headmaster of Hogwarts
Alan Rickman as Severus Snape: The former Potions master, current Defence Against the Dark Arts teacher and head of Slytherin
Maggie Smith as Minerva McGonagall: The Hogwarts Transfiguration teacher, deputy headmistress and head of Gryffindor
Timothy Spall as Peter Pettigrew: The Death Eater who betrayed Harry's parents to Voldemort; Pettigrew has no lines in this film, but appears as a servant at Snape's house
David Thewlis as Remus Lupin: A member of the Order of the Phoenix and Harry's ex-Defence Against the Dark Arts teacher
Julie Walters as Molly Weasley: The Weasley matriarch and a mother figure to Harry
Gemma Jones returned to the cast as Hogwarts' matron, Poppy Pomfrey. Mark Williams plays Molly's husband, Arthur, who is a member of the Order of the Phoenix, while Natalia Tena plays fellow member Nymphadora Tonks. James and Oliver Phelps play Ron's siblings Fred and George and Bonnie Wright plays their sister and Harry's love interest, Ginny, while Devon Murray, Alfred Enoch and Matthew Lewis play Gryffindor students Seamus Finnigan, Dean Thomas and Neville Longbottom. Evanna Lynch plays Ravenclaw student Luna Lovegood. Jamie Waylett and Joshua Herdman play Slytherin students Vincent Crabbe and Gregory Goyle. Jessie Cave, Anna Shaffer and Freddie Stroma also play Gryffindor students Lavender Brown, Romilda Vane and Cormac McLaggen respectively, while Rob Knox plays Ravenclaw Marcus Belby. Helen McCrory plays Narcissa Malfoy, Draco's mother and Bellatrix's sister, while David Legeno plays werewolf Fenrir Greyback. Hero Fiennes Tiffin portrayed 11-year-old Tom Riddle, with Frank Dillane playing the 16-year-old version of him. David Bradley plays Hogwarts caretaker, Argus Filch. Louis Cordice plays Blaise Zabini, a Slytherin student.
Steve Cook
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