Harry Potter director wants to release his original 3-hour version of Sorcerer’s Stone

376506 01: Warner Bros. Pictures announced August 21, 2000 that the young actor Daniel Radcliffe, center, has been named as the young actor who will play Harry Potter, in the upcoming film adaptation of the popular books by J.K. Rowling. Newcomers Rupert Grint, right, and Emma Watson will be taking on the roles of Ron and Hermione, Harry's best friends at Hogwarts. (Courtesy of Warner Bros./Newsmakers)
376506 01: Warner Bros. Pictures announced August 21, 2000 that the young actor Daniel Radcliffe, center, has been named as the young actor who will play Harry Potter, in the upcoming film adaptation of the popular books by J.K. Rowling. Newcomers Rupert Grint, right, and Emma Watson will be taking on the roles of Ron and Hermione, Harry's best friends at Hogwarts. (Courtesy of Warner Bros./Newsmakers)

This year marks the 20th anniversary of the release of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone in theaters, and director Chris Columbus is sharing a lot of information about it. For instance, did you know that at one point the movie was three hours long?

At two hours and 32 minutes, the theatrical cut of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone is hardly short, but there was around 30 minutes of extra footage, some of which contained material fans of J.K. Rowling’s books would have loved to see. “We have to put Peeves back in the movie, who was cut from the movie!” Columbus told The Wrap.

Peeves is a meddlesome poltergeist who haunts the halls of Hogwarts in the novels; he was played by actor Rik Mayall but didn’t make he final cut, nor any of the special editions released subsequently.

Will Warner Bros. #ReleaseTheColumbusCut of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone?

Back in 2001, it was very difficult to get a vastly extended cut of a movie released, but the practice has been picking up steam lately. Warner Bros. made waves when it released Zack Snyder’s Justice League, a much longer version of 2017’s Justice League, on HBO Max. Warner Bros. also made the Harry Potter films, so who’s to say we couldn’t get a mega-sized version of Sorcerer’s Stone sometime?

According to Columbus, the three-hour version was a hit when they screened it, at least with kids. “We knew that the film worked because we did a couple of previews,” the director said. “Particularly a Chicago preview where our first cut was a three-hour cut. Parents afterwards said it was too long, the kids said it was too short. I thought, well, the kids presumably have a shorter attention span so this is a good thing.”

So who here would watch a three-hour version of Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone with Peeves added back in? Call it the Peeves Cut?

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