Earlier today after the release of the official trailer of the movie, the Beauty and the Beast cast and director were live on facebook to answer some of the fans questions. You can watch it bellow!
Hello Emma fans! Today was a very special day and why’s that? The official trailer of Beauty and the Beast has been released! We get to see Belle interact with The Beast (also known as Kyle Kingson) and much more. Watch it bellow! The movie is set to hit theatres on March 17, 2017!
Entertainment Weekly has revealed the cover of their new issue– set to hit stands this Friday, November 4, and it features none other than Beauty and The Beast! A exclusive look at the movie and the magazine’s content video has been published by the magazine, which you may watch bellow.
Film Productions > Beauty and the Beast (2017) > Behind The Scenes
Film Productions > Beauty and the Beast (2017) > Promotional Photoshoot
Film Productions > Beauty and the Beast (2017) > Production Stills
Once upon a time, there was a little girl named Emma Watson who really, really, really loved Disney’s 1991 animated classic, Beauty and the Beast. “I can’t even think how many times I watched it as a child,” says the former Harry Potter star. “I knew all the words by heart. I knew all the songs by heart.”
Watson was hardly the only person to become obsessed with this songs-filled tale of a self-possessed young woman named Belle and a prince-turned-beast who must find his true love before the final petal falls from an enchanted rose. Beauty and the Beast was the third-highest-grossing film of 1991 and the first animated feature ever nominated for a best picture Oscar. While the film lost out in that category to the slightly less romantic Silence of the Lambs, it did win Academy Awards for best score and best song. Beauty and the Beastalso inspired a stage musical, which ran on Broadway for 13 years.
Now, Watson has put her love for — and knowledge of — the film to uniquely productive use. She is playing Belle in a new live-action remake of Beauty and Beast, which will be released March 17 and costars Dan Stevens (Downton Abbey) as the Beast, Luke Evans (The Hobbit) as Belle’s egomaniacal suitor Gaston, and Josh Gad (Frozen) as Gaston’s sidekick, Le Fou. For this week’s cover story, EW visited the film’s U.K. set and spoke with all of the above, as well as director Bill Condon and costume designer Jacqueline Durran, who talked about creating the new version of the iconic yellow dress Belle wears in the original film’s ballroom scene. In addition, we chatted with Ewan McGregor, who voices the enchanted, “Be Our Guest”-performing candelabra Lumière, and Sir Ian McKellen, who plays the clock Cogsworth and was apparently desperate to get his own big production number. “I kept singing what I thought would be a rather good addition to the score,” says the X-Men franchise star. “‘My name is Cogsworth!/ And I’m a clock!/Ticktock!’ But I didn’t get my own song.”
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Source | Before she transformed into a golden-gowned princess, Belle was a French villager in a blue apron and peasant blouse. The look, though perhaps not quite as iconic as that yellow ball gown, is nonetheless memorable. When Emma Watson brings the bookworm heroine to life in the live-action remake, she’ll revamp Belle’s dresses too.
Disney recently shared another look of the new Beauty and the Best with sketches of the set and costumes, including Belle’s blue-and-white apron outfit. The drawings for Watson’s dress turns out to be a little grungier than the original, paired with boots and even a few dish towels strung at the belt instead of Belle’s dainty basket. Her perfectly bowed updo is also transformed into a loose pony, making her look even more realistic.
For more sketches, take a look at HelloGiggles.com. You can also find a sneak peek if you download the original animated Beauty and the Beast (which is 25 years old this year) oniTunes, but a few previews on the film, which is set to release in 2017, are out already.
Last week, Disney released a first look of Watson and her co-star Dan Stevens reading their lines together as Belle and the Beast:




