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Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1 - Discuss and Grade

Grade the movie


  • Total voters
    83
They don't explain the name taboo/spell in the movie? It felt like they did cause they kept mentioning his name or not saying his name but I guess I'm just making an assumption with my book knowledge.
 
They don't explain the name taboo/spell in the movie? It felt like they did cause they kept mentioning his name or not saying his name but I guess I'm just making an assumption with my book knowledge.

Just saw the movie this afternoon. No, they didn't explain the name taboo; you know it from the book.

I graded it "above average". Very well done. I considered giving it an "excellent", but I think I would've found too many parts confusing if I'd never read the book.

Thought the score was very effective.

One of the most touching scenes was the very first, the... what do you call the little scene before the title? In this case, Hermione at her parents' house.
 
^ It's the "Obliviate" track on the OST. And I agree, it was a very effective montage of music and visuals as The Trio gets set to head out on their own for the very first time.
 
I liked it-- more than I liked the book I think. I liked how the "camping" scenes took them through all these visually interesting places... yet for some reasons all the dramatic scenes still happen in the same boring forest! Spice things up a bit!

Considering all the scenes seem to take place in the same forest, I'm surprised they didn't cross paths with SG-1 at some point!

I sometimes think it would have caused Rowling physical pain to show Harry being happy for more than two pages. She loved making him suffer. Maybe that's just a British thing.

I dunno. Joss Whedon is an American, and yet every single one of his characters suffers all sorts of unneccessary emotional torment. But then, Joss Whedon did go to school in England for a while...:shifty:

So how about the cinematography or the score? I loved the way the film looked, the framing and post-production work created visuals that effectively conveyed the bleak, oppressive narrative.

I thought it was interesting seeing some of the scenes, particularly the snake leaping right at the camera, that seem to have been designed for the 3-D conversion that they ended up not doing.

Borgified, have you read the books? Because this is really how the book is written and I agree with you completely. I said earlier in the thread that when I see a series of anything end, I like it to be a summation of the work as a whole and the books failed at that.

I haven't read the books. But I know what you mean. The finale that strangely departs from the vibe of the rest of the series is a common problem. (There was the final episode of Xena: Warrior Princess that was set in China or Japan. There was the final episode of the original The Prisoner that didn't take place in the Village but in some strange bunker underneath it; with everyone dressed in white sheets rather than the more colorful, psychadellic style of the rest of the series.)

The ministry of magic part was great. So cool, that they could just take these random people and keep the movie going. I mean, yes, it was the main three heroes there, but in a dusguise, that might confuse a bit.

Harry was the only one that didn't quite fit there for me. To some degree, I thought that the adult disguises of Ron & Hermione really looked like what they might really eventually grow up into looking like. And Ron's voice is so deep anyway that it totally fit coming out of that old guy with the mustache.

(BTW, his wife that was being interrogated by Umbridge, she was played by the actress that played a delightfully insane Lady Macbeth in a recent BBC production of Macbeth with Patrick Stewart.)
 
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Gaith said:
All Ginny really has to offer is her interest in him - which could be fun to watch, but the all-important Very Serious Tone requires that any sexual spark be downplayed.
I dunno. I kind of think that Harry was just going along with it with Ginny because he couldn't be bothered dealing with anything else.

I imagine that they didn't get together properly until their mid-20s, possibly after time apart.
One would hope so, though I rather doubt that that's what Rowling intended.
 
^ It's the "Obliviate" track on the OST. And I agree, it was a very effective montage of music and visuals as The Trio gets set to head out on their own for the very first time.

It's the only time I've actually felt bad for Mr. Dursley. We know from the book that Mrs. Dursley understands what's going on, but he clearly still doesn't, and he sounds so... forlorn. But it was Hermione who had me weeping thirty seconds into the movie.
 
My friends who have read the book were really disappointed that the movie didn't include the scene where you get a kind of reconciliation between Harry & Dudley.
 
Considering that so much of the Dursley's storyline has been passed over in the movies, I wasn't especially upset that much of it was cut in this film, too. As Tora Ziyal said, the few shots of the Durselys being forced out of their home were effective -- particularly in conveying just how desperate and dangerous the circumstances of become.

And I agree, too, about how emotional the scene with Hermione and her parents can be. Watching her images disappear from family photographs was especially moving -- though, the fact that I have a daughter of my own might have something to do with why I found the scene so moving.
 
I liked it-- more than I liked the book I think. I liked how the "camping" scenes took them through all these visually interesting places... yet for some reasons all the dramatic scenes still happen in the same boring forest! Spice things up a bit!

Considering all the scenes seem to take place in the same forest, I'm surprised they didn't cross paths with SG-1 at some point!

Yeah, that bothered me. When Hermione declared she loved the forest they were in, I was all, "Wait, this is different from the other ones?"
 
Gaith said:
All Ginny really has to offer is her interest in him - which could be fun to watch, but the all-important Very Serious Tone requires that any sexual spark be downplayed.
I dunno. I kind of think that Harry was just going along with it with Ginny because he couldn't be bothered dealing with anything else.

I imagine that they didn't get together properly until their mid-20s, possibly after time apart.
One would hope so, though I rather doubt that that's what Rowling intended.

I do recall an interview where Rowling said that she didn't want to encourage teen pregnancy and stated that Harry/Ginny and Ron/Hermione got married a few years after TDH.

LOL on the Hermione line. It didn't make a lot of sense. It was the Forest of Dean though and in the book she also noted that she camped their with her parents.

I was disappointed with the Dudley scene being cut out although I will say the opening sequences with the gang getting ready for what is to come was done very effectively.
 
I've always enjoyed Harry's interactions with the Dursleys. Too bad they didn't include the opening scene in the Goblet of Fire. It would be nice to include the scene with Dudley when they release the DVD/Blu-ray.
 
I've always enjoyed Harry's interactions with the Dursleys. Too bad they didn't include the opening scene in the Goblet of Fire. It would be nice to include the scene with Dudley when they release the DVD/Blu-ray.
Hopefully, we'll get the super-duper-avada-kedavra versions of the movies once the series is done. The Ultimate editions are far from 'Ultimate'
 
So is there any word whether Part II will be in 3D or not? I really hope not, but if it is, I hope we have a choice to see it in 3D or not, like we had with Avatar. I have never seen a movie in 3D and I hope I can continue that streak.
 
Saw it today and I thought it was very average, a clear filler for the true ending next summer. The pacing seems really off at times though it did improve in the 2nd half though part 1 did not need to be 2 n half hours long. I've not read the books and so many movies and the gap between them makes me forget parts of the stories, which leaves me confused with some plot points at times. I've enjoyed all the previous movies with 4 & 5 being my favourite but this is the weakest though I am sure the true finale will be great.

Biggest gripe was the death of Mad Eyed Moody because I don't remember seeing it on screen the start battle was hard to follow and he was a big character for the good side so it was odd how he died with little screen time for his actual death.
 
That's more or less how Mad-Eye's death happens in the book: very quickly, and with no fanfare
 
I was pissed that Moody's death wasn't shown. He's one of my favorite characters and why the hell not show it happen? The narrative is not strictly Harry's POV like in the books.
 
I wasn't so upset at the apparent lack of witness to Moody's death. One thing that did bug me was the defensive apparition that appeared in Grimmauld place took on Dumbledore's form instead of Moody's
 
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