A meeting with the cast of “Harry Potter” could be as mythical as the magical world of Hogwarts, according to director Chris Columbus.

Columbus, who directed the first two films in the Wizarding franchise, has expressed a great interest in directing a film adaptation of the work of the stage “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child”. But the controversy around the history of transbic comments by JK Rowling seems to have thrown a permanent hexadecimal on that dream.

“It will never happen,” Columbus told Times in an interview published on Saturday. “He has become so complicated with all political things. All in the cast have their own opinion, which is different from their opinion, which makes it impossible. ”

The Oscar -nominated filmmaker continued to reveal that he has not spoken with Rowling in “a decade more or less”, adding what he has “I have no idea what is happening with her. “

The cast of Harry Potter and the order of Phoenix, (from left to right) Rupert Grint, Emma Watson and Daniel Radcliffe, on the Thames Thames of Hall County in southern London, before the European premiere of the film next week. (Photo by Joel Ryan - images of pa/pa images through Getty Images)
The cast of Harry Potter and the order of Phoenix, (from left to right) Rupert Grint, Emma Watson and Daniel Radcliffe, on the Thames Thames of Hall County in southern London, before the European premiere of the film next week. (Photo by Joel Ryan – images of pa/pa images through Getty Images)

Joel Ryan – Pa images through Getty Images

Even so, Columbus says he maintains a “great relationship” with several members of the original cast, and even spoke with the star Daniel Radcliffe only days ago.

Several actors have publicly sentenced Rowling’s comments in recent years, and more voices continue to speak. In April, Pedro Pascal intervened after activist Tariq R’OUF published a video calling Rowling’s actions “a serious shit of Voldemort.”

In a overwhelming comment about the video, the actor wrote: “The horrible and disgusting shit is exactly correct. The losing behavior.”

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The actor “Fantastic Four” then doubled in a profile of June Vanity Fair, explaining that his position is deeply personal: his sister, Lux Pascal, is a transgender actor and activist.

“Listen, I want to protect the people I love,” said Pascal. “But goes beyond that,” he added. “The thugs make me cursed.”