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Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince Leaked Script

   Filed under Harry Potter
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A member over at EWF has found another leaked piece of the Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince
Script and you can read it below.

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Image Proof:

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageWire.ca

53 - INT. THREE BROOMSTICKS - LATER - DAY

As the trio enter, Harry glances round, locates Slughorn at the bar, planted plumply on a stool.

HARRY
No. Over here.

Hermione and Ron, in the midst of seating themselves at a perfectly acceptable—and clean—table, see Harry seat himself at one strewn with detritus of a previous customer–but which puts him in direct view of Slughorn. They exchange a glance, shrug, join Harry. Ron starts to take the chair directly opposite Harry–blocking his view.

Read the remaining script

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Miley! Abigail! Zac! Top Teens Take The Bank In Hollywood

Nicole

z

They haven’t even graduated from high school yet, but already a ton of teens are making big bucks in Hollywood. Miley Cyrus is one of the top earning stars still in school. According to People, at just 15, she’s earned $17.5 million from her tour alone. And with her big screen release, “Hannah Montana / Miley Cyrus: Best Of Both Worlds Concert Movie,” netting around $65 million, Miley will surely be able to afford plenty of her shopping weakness - Electra bikes, People reports.

At just 14, Angus T. Jones is already a TV veteran, having spent almost half a dozen years on “Two and a Half Men.” As a result, he reportedly takes home a hefty paycheck - $1.2 million a year, People claims.

And he’s not the only one bringing in the big bucks. Tyler James Williams, 15, from “Everybody Hates Chris,” reportedly also makes the same amount.

In the movie world, Abigail Breslin, 12, and Dakota Fanning, 14, earn salaries in the millions for each film they appear in.

Breslin reportedly cashes checks for $2 million a picture, while Dakota can take up to $4 million a project. But, People reports that neither girl has lavish spending practices. Abigail earns just $11 in allowance each week, while Dakota gets no allowance at all.

As for the older stars - as in just old enough to have graduated high school - Daniel Radcliffe, 18, is a top earner.

People reports that he’s expected to earn $50 million for the final “Harry Potter” films. His co-stars, Emma Watson, 18, will bank $4 million per film, the same figure 19-year-old Rupert Grint is expected to fetch.

R&B star Chris Brown, 18, dances away with about $18.2 million a year.

Over in TV land, Hayden Panettiere, also 18, nets around $30,000 per episode of “Heroes,” but her product endorsements kick her end of year total up to around $5 million.

And Zac Efron, at just 19, will reportedly take in $3 million for “High School Musical 3.”

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Judge Tells J.K. Rowling: Harry Potter Is Hard To Follow

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One fan J.K. Rowling can’t count on: Manhattan Judge Robert Patterson Jr., who will spend the next several weeks deciding her federal copyright infringement case over an unauthorized Harry Potter lexicon.

During Thursday’s final day of testimony, the jurist, admitting he read the half of the first book, Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone, to his grandchildren, said he found Rowling’s work difficult to follow, filled with strange names and, well, such “gibberish” that it possibly required a guidebook.

“I found it extremely complex,” he told the courtroom, reports London’s The Times. “The difficulty I have here is this magical world. I couldn’t remember the characters and lots of the terms.”

Rowling, 42, is seeking to stop publication of a $24.95 encyclopedia by school librarian Steven Vander Ark about the boy wizard she created. Claiming he copied her plots, characters and spells – thereby infringing her copyright – Rowling advised Vander Ark to rethink his book – without using her words.

Small Peace Offering
As the final rebuttal witness to take the stand, Rowling said, according to The New York Times, “I never ever once wanted to stop Mr. Vander Ark from doing his own guide – never ever. Do your book, but please, change it so it does not take as much of my work.”

The judge, meanwhile, has advised Rowling, Vander Ark and the prospective book’s publisher to resolve their problems on their own, rather than drag them through the legal system and face several years’ worth of possible appeals.

“This case is in a murky state of the law,” said Patterson. “I think this case, with imagination, could settle.”

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