Forget wand fights and CGI fireworks. One of the most human “Harry Potter” stories is about… a pair of fake teeth.
Matthew Lewis—the guy who played Neville Longbottom—says those chompers they slapped in his mouth to “Neville-ify” him didn’t feel like movie magic when he was a teenager. They felt like a spotlight. The bad kind.
Neville’s look wasn’t an accident—props did the heavy lifting
Big franchises don’t leave faces to chance. Hair, wardrobe, makeup, the whole machine is built to make a character readable in half a second, even in a crowded scene.
According to the article’s RSS summary, Lewis’s Neville was tweaked in certain films with props—specifically fake teeth. And yeah, that’s “just” an accessory, like a tie or a cloak. Except it sits right on your smile, which is basically your identity. You can hide a bad sweater. You can’t hide your mouth.
Narratively, it makes sense: early-movie Neville is supposed to look awkward, unsure, a little out of step with the cooler kids. The teeth help sell that instantly. But for the actor wearing them—especially a teen—there’s a thin line between “playing a character” and “being branded.”
Teenage Matthew Lewis: “This is lame,” and yeah, he felt embarrassed
Lewis admits he was ashamed of the fake teeth at the time. That’s not some shocking confession; it’s painfully normal.
On a set, everything is collaborative and approved by adults with clipboards. In a teenager’s head, everything is personal. What the crew sees as a harmless prop can feel like a label you’re stuck with—especially when you’re being photographed, recognized, and frozen in pop culture as “that kid with the teeth.”
There’s also the weird paradox: the teeth are supposed to help you become Neville, but they also constantly remind you you’re being altered. Lewis’s discomfort doesn’t sound like a shot at the makeup team or the character. It sounds like the specific misery of being a self-conscious teen whose face is being turned into a punchline—whether anyone intends it that way or not.
Now he says he’d love it—because adulthood changes the math
Here’s the turn: Lewis says that today, he’d love to do that kind of transformation.
That’s the difference between being 15 and being grown. When you’re a teen, you’re trying to control the parts of you that people notice. When you’re older—especially as an actor—you start treating transformation like a tool, even a perk. The prop stops feeling like a judgment and starts feeling like a craft choice.
Same object, same sensation, same mirror. Different brain behind the eyes.
He kept the fake teeth—because the meaning flipped
The most cinematic detail is the last one: Lewis kept the fake teeth as a souvenir.
Think about that. You don’t take home the thing that embarrassed you for years unless it’s stopped being a wound. Keeping them turns the teeth into a personal artifact—proof of a time when he was growing up in public, stuck inside a character design he didn’t choose.
In most productions, props get boxed up, cataloged, reused, or tossed into some warehouse purgatory. These teeth moved into a different category: private memory. A tiny, plastic reminder of the gap between the age when you suffer your image and the age when you can finally laugh at it—maybe even feel a little fondness.




