HBO reportedly plans to readapt all the Harry Potter books

Harry Potter And the Order Of The Phoenix poster
Harry Potter And the Order Of The Phoenix poster Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images
  • Oops!
    Something went wrong.
    Please try again later.

The Wizarding World may be headed to HBO.

The network is nearing a deal to reboot Harry Potter by turning J.K. Rowling's novels into a television series, according to a bombshell report from Bloomberg. The idea would be for every season to be based on one of Rowling's seven original Potter books, allowing for more time to explore the details there wasn't room for in the eight films released from 2001 through 2011.

Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zaslav has previously expressed his desire to expand the Potter franchise, saying last year he hopes "we can do something with" Rowling. The author would be involved in this HBO series, though she wouldn't be the day-to-day showrunner, Bloomberg says. Still, Rowling's attachment could prove controversial given her years of controversial remarks about the transgender community, which led to a boycott of the Harry Potter video game Hogwarts Legacy earlier this year.

There had previously been speculation that Warner Bros. could adapt Rowling's play Harry Potter and the Cursed Child into a feature film, which would likely involve bringing back the original cast of the movies given the story takes place after the final Harry Potter book. But this HBO show would require recasting the roles and bringing in new actors to play Harry, Ron, and Hermione, an idea that has received actor Rupert Grint's approval. No deal has been officially announced; if this happens, it would be the latest expansion of an iconic property under Zaslav, after new Lord of the Rings movies were confirmed to be in development earlier this year.

The most recent live-action installments in the Wizarding World were the Fantastic Beasts prequel films, which were written by Rowling. Although the original plan was to produce five of them, the third was a box office disappointment, leaving it unclear whether the series will ever be finished.

You may also like

Scientists break record for fish filmed in deepest waters to date

Former Manhattan D.A. says federal prosecutors asked him to 'stand down' on Trump hush-money probe

5 scandalously funny cartoons about the 'David' debacle