….
As day one of [Harry Potter] went successfully, and by the end of their fifth day, Regal and team now fell into a loop of filming.
The days blurred, not from monotony, but from how full each hour became.
Scenes rolled one after one - sets were being touched up overnight, props swapped in and out, actors shuffled from rehearsals to blocking ready to shoot for the next day, and the next day.
There hadn't been much sleep, only the rolling of camera dollies, fogged breath on early morning glass, and scripts marked in red ink and highlighter.
Regal was keeping pace, sharper than ever.
And the shoot… it was crawling forward - but in the best way.
They had filmed two major hut scenes.
The Dursley living room blowout had been wrapped just the day before - as Dan nailed a reaction shot on seventh take.
Robin had one of his lighter days today, no beard, or layers - just a scheduled ADR pickup later in the week.
Now, they were prepping one of the most iconic visual moments from the story. Scene 54D.
The arrival of the Acceptance Letters.
Not just one letter… Hundreds, thousands are supposed to be coming in waves - through cracks, crevices, the chimney, the letterbox, under floorboards, even dropping from the ceiling rafters and finally swirling around young Harry while Vernon desperately tries to keep control.
It is one of the earliest moments in the film where the magic world forcefully intersects the Muggle one.
Everything was prepared….
The set was built as a near-perfect replica of the Dursley living room, constructed inside a full-scale warehouse soundstage.
The chimney had been hollowed and rigged with compressed air bursts. Dozens of false floorboards, fishing lines, hidden nozzles, every direction had a letter waiting to launch.
The props were intricate, deceptively simple to look at. Light, a shade creamier than real paper, and printed in curling black ink that mimicked a fountain pen.
But for the close-ups, the real artistry came in.
Thirty letters, handwritten by the art department.
Hours went into each.
Textured just right so the camera would love them. But more importantly - they needed to float.
And the owls?
Trained for six months.
Not just to carry - but to deliver.
Not just to fly - but to trust.
A process that didn't come cheap, or easy.
They had their own trailer, their own handler, and their own egos.
….
The set was humming as the crew moved briskly but quietly, hair tied back, walkies down to whispers.
The light was lit perfectly by the camera team, while on the sidelines - the big air bursts were timed, the dolly tracks were greased.
Everything seemed to be in place. And yet - there was one snag.
Down at the far end, near the chimney base, an owl - grey speckled feathers, tiny dark eyes - was hopping awkwardly toward a letter that had fallen just shy of its mark.
Regal was crouched.
He had watched the owl try and fail.
Once. Twice. Three times.
The handlers stood behind the lighting board with bait in hand, watching anxiously.
Every failed grab made the air feel thinner.
But Regal didn't raise his voice.
He just stepped forward, quiet as a breeze, and knelt by the owl.
A few crew members flinched, bracing for a snapped command, a sharp remark. But it never came.
The owl didn't back away. It didn't fly.
Regal's hand extended slowly.
Palm up.
It was as if the bird had known him.
Like his posture said it all: safe.
He brushed a finger under its wing, gently shifted it aside, then reached into his coat pocket and pulled out a small sachet of seeds.
"Here. You are working hard." He murmured.
The owl began pecking without hesitation, devouring the treat.
He stroked its back once, then looked toward the handlers. "He is good. Just tired."
With that, he handed the owl off. The bird gave a little squawk, almost reluctant, as if it knew its feeding time had been cut short.
Then, Regal crouched again, picking up the letter it had been trying to retrieve.
His fingers turned it over carefully as he pressed the edge between thumb and index finger.
He let it bounce ever so slightly with a flick, testing weight.
Texture.
Drag.
He didn't sigh.
Didn't scowl.
Just stared.
Then he stood and muttered softly, without raising his voice.
"…Make them again."
The air snapped colder.
Every member of the props team - who had labored through the night in silence, had dodged sleep and skipped dinner, froze.
The words weren't angry.
They weren't even disappointed in them. But they carried the weight of someone mourning the idea of the shot he couldn't capture - not the people who failed him.
He turned, and just walked off.
….
Behind a tangle of unused light stands, tucked near the coiled extension cables, three kids crouched like spies at a campfire.
Rupert's cheeks were flushed. He leaned back against a prop crate, swallowing hard.
"…Okay, yeah, I had it easy." Lily muttered first.
Lily continued her eyes were still wide. "He looked like he was petting the owl two seconds ago. Then boom. Cold as stone."
Rupert let out a sharp breath and wiped his palm on his trousers. "I am sweating just watching those guys get chewed alive - without even being yelled at."
Daniel, the only one in costume, smirked slightly. "That's because you don't know him. Especially you, Lily. Regal's not always sunshine and owls."
He was half-joking. Half not.
"He gets like that sometimes. It's not scary exactly... but it's like, everything around him stops moving, and he just sees things."
Lily tilted her head. "Like what?"
"Like the shot he wanted. And how we didn't get it."
Rupert muttered under his breath. "Still rather have my tooth pulled again than deal with that."
Behind them, Rock stood still and silent. Towering. Arms crossed.
Lily, without turning around, asked curiously. "Ohh, Actor - Rock. What do you think Regal is like?"
The man's voice came low. Unflinching.
"He is weak and fragile."
The three of them blinked, confused.
Daniel furrowed his brow. "Physically, right?"
"I mean... maybe?" Rupert said slowly.
Lily, leaning against a rolled-up green screen tube, didn't laugh this time.
"Could be." She said, softer than usual.
But Rock had already gone back to his silent watching, staring past them toward the part of the warehouse where Regal had disappeared. His face gave nothing away.
….
Elsewhere, in that same space - Regal was gone.
But his presence hadn't left.
Kneeling by one of the scattered Hogwarts letters was Cameron Green, head of the art department.
The thick, glossy paper bent stiffly between his fingers.
And it had failed the test - well more like failed Regal's test.
Around him, the scattered tools of effort: crumpled mock-ups, rejected envelope prototypes, fabric samples for owl straps, trial runs of seal stamps - hours of labor turned into set dressing for a moment of failure.
One of the assistants, a wiry, wide-eyed kid in his twenties, tiptoed closer, clutching a clipboard like it might shield him from bad news.
"S-sir?"
Cameron didn't look up. His eyes were still on the envelope.
The kid swallowed, trying again. "The director just said to reprint… everything?"
Cameron rose to a full stand. "No can do that? We are to do…" He replied flatly. "As instructed."
"But... for real?" - the assistant asked, unable to hide the desperation in his voice. "All of them again?"
"I said we will redo them." Cameron repeated, voice steady, eyes sharp now. "Was that not clear the first time?"
Silence. Not even a nod.
It wasn't anger that followed - Cameron didn't raise his voice. But something shifted in the air around him.
The sharpness in his expression, the way his jaw tensed… it made the others step back instinctively.
He exhaled slowly and turned to face the rest of the department, who had gathered in a loose half-circle behind the light rigs and foam mats, their expressions ranging from guilt to dread.
For a second, something like weariness passed over Cameron's face. He glanced at the place Regal had stood just a few minutes earlier.
In that stillness, he remembered the first week Regal arrived.
This young director with soft features and a tired smile who spoke in specifics and watched everything.
Cameron had worked with a hundred directors. Regal didn't command respect with volume. He didn't chase perfection through fear.
But what made him difficult wasn't cruelty - it was how much he cared. And how much that demanded of everyone else.
There was no yelling when things fell apart. There is only the disappointment of someone who could see what a scene could be, and mourned it when it fell short.
Cameron's voice cut through the silence. "Alright. Weren't we supposed to test the flight weight of the letters before the final print?"
There was a pause.
A brave, or perhaps suicidal, assistant replied. "We did, sir."
"With what?" Cameron asked, turning his full weight of attention toward the kid. "Carrier pigeons?"
No answer.
He sighed, already walking across the soundstage toward a far folding table littered with samples, the same clipboard-bearing assistant trailing behind like a guilty puppy.
He opened the oversized design binder with one hand, flipping through the pages until he found the paper stock sheet.
The moment he ran a finger over the last approved sample, his expression changed.
He didn't even speak to the assistant now. Just pulled out his phone, opened his photo archive, and swiped through dozens of images, vintage stationery, Harry Potter book covers, antique ink samples, seal impressions.
His finger stopped on a close-up of a 1930s wax-sealed letter.
He turned slightly, raised his voice.
"Switch to 90gsm cream vellum. With no gloss or matte finish. Make sure they use cold ink - hot ink is curling the paper edges."
The assistant was already scribbling.
"And for the close-ups?" He asked.
Cameron hesitated for just a beat. "Handwrite them."
"All?" the assistant stammered.
"Not all." Cameron clarified. "We only need twenty or thirty for the inserts. Assign it to the interns with decent handwriting. Use fountain pen, dark ink and ask for legibility over style. That's it. Now MOVE!"
"Got it!"
The moment the words left his mouth, the assistant bolted.
Behind him, the rest of the team moved like a swarm, scattering to grab materials, update specs, reset type trays. The space bloomed with energy - half panic, half adrenaline.
Somewhere deeper in the soundstage, Regal's voice floated back across the room, calm but focused, already deep in discussion with the props master over owl leg harnesses and leather strap adjustments.
Cameron didn't smile. But inside, he was fired up.
But something in his chest clicked back into place.
He ran a hand over his grey-flecked beard and muttered. "Alright then, kid. We will do as you say… just make sure the end product is something… as perfect as possible."
The director demanded excellence. So that's what he would get.
….
Two Days Later.
Owl Rehearsal Field, Outskirts of London.
The production team had rented a training ground outside the city. It is a chilly wind cutting through the open space, where five handlers were lined in formation, each holding a leather-gloved arm aloft.
The most important detail is - on each glove sat a slightly agitated owl.
Regal stood off to the side with line producers Simon and Andrew, watching the handlers prepare the birds for their next run.
"These are the lighter envelopes." Beside them, Cameron said, holding one up. "We followed the same design, but only retained half the paperweight."
"Good." Regal said. "And we are keeping their flight paths shallow. I don't want them climbing too high and then diving like seagulls."
"Right…." the lead handler said, overhearing.
As the owls launched, Regal squinted toward the far post, where an actress stood in Aunt Petunia's costume, pretending to open the door.
However, just in time the camera began rolling for three seconds - three owls flapped her way, one veered off, and only one delivered the letter smoothly.
The last landed, blinked - and stared straight into the camera.
Of course, it wouldn't be real filming if everything just worked the way it was supposed to.
"Cut!" Regal called out.
He shook his head. "What is that owl looking at?"
.
….
[To be continued…]
★─────⇌•★•⇋─────★
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