Well, given the name of the room, I think the OotP adaptation makes way more sense.
In HPB, I just pretended they were saying Room of Acquirement...because it acquires all your unwanted crap.
The trio had the invisibility cloak at Gringotts but not (or couldn't use it?) afterwards? Its loss and role as a Hallow could have been more emphasized.
Two of the most powerful scenes in the movie was when Molly Weasley killed Bella LeStrange ("You bitch!") and when Neville slayed Nagini with Godric Gryffindor's sword. I wanted so much to applaud and exclaim "YES!" but didn't want to feel like a dumbass amongst the quiet, yet emotionally engaged audience.So I saved my applause for the ending.
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I have watched Prisoner of Azkaban probably 6 or 7 times. It's probably my second favorite of the entire series.The most obvious one in the whole series is in Prisoner of Azhkabhan, where the film does not bother explaining who the Marauders were!
You mean aside from the three or four times they flat out said it was one of the Hallows? Which they said directly. In your face. With absolutely no subterfuge or play of words whatsoever.I don't remember in the films them actually pointing out it was one of the Deathly Hallows AT ALL. In the books it is made pretty clear that Harry's cloak is probably one of the Hallows, but this does not register in the film.
The films simply do not explain some stuff, which can be a bit frustrating, but you can only put so much exposition in a film. The most obvious one in the whole series is in Prisoner of Azhkabhan, where the film does not bother explaining who the Marauders were!
They said that one of the Hallows was a cloak of invisibility. They never said it was the one that Harry had in his possession, though obviously it can be implied.You mean aside from the three or four times they flat out said it was one of the Hallows? Which they said directly. In your face. With absolutely no subterfuge or play of words whatsoever.I don't remember in the films them actually pointing out it was one of the Deathly Hallows AT ALL. In the books it is made pretty clear that Harry's cloak is probably one of the Hallows, but this does not register in the film.
Which is why you can imply that Harry's cloak is one of the Hallows. However, you said they flat out told us several times that it was, when that is simply not true.The movies never indicated that the Hallowed cloak had any special property beyond simply granting invisibility. Nor was any interest ever shown in them trying to find it or worrying about where it was (since they already had it).
Except that it tells us that there are multiple invisibility cloaks out there in the world. Not all of them can be a Hallow.Ron stating the bleeding obvious when he saw it in action doesn't factor into anything at all.
To paraphrase yourself: "You said that this tells us that multiple invisibility cloaks are out in the world, when this is simply not true."Which is why you can imply that Harry's cloak is one of the Hallows. However, you said they flat out told us several times that it was, when that is simply not true.The movies never indicated that the Hallowed cloak had any special property beyond simply granting invisibility. Nor was any interest ever shown in them trying to find it or worrying about where it was (since they already had it).
Except that it tells us that there are multiple invisibility cloaks out there in the world. Not all of them can be a Hallow.Ron stating the bleeding obvious when he saw it in action doesn't factor into anything at all.
I'm not sure you know what paraphrasing means.To paraphrase yourself: "You said that this tells us that multiple invisibility cloaks are out in the world, when this is simply not true."
Ron: "I know what that is. That's an invisibility cloak! They're really rare."All it tells us in that Ron recognized that it was a cloak that made you invisible. There's never been a single indication that another one existed in the movies. Nor was the Hallow ever given a special name, unlike say the Elder Wand or Resurrection Stone. It was simple the "Cloak of Invisibility." Which is exactly what Ron identified it as.
I'm not saying Harry's cloak isn't the one from the Deathly Hallows story. I'm simply debating what you said about them flat out telling us that Harry's cloak is the Hallowed Cloak of Invisibility. Again, you can imply it, but nobody in any of the movies ever comes right out and says it.Or to put it more directly: In the movies, there was only one Cloak of Invisibility ever shown to exist. It was called that by name, both by Ron and in the stories about the Deathly Hallows.
^Though, technically, the 3D and inflation have helped. It actually sold less tickets than The Dark Knight.
Fewer tickets. I see.
Yes, because my poor grammar was really the crux of that argument.![]()
Actually, I have a question about the Room of Requirement for those who have read the books. In "Order of the Phoenix," the Room of Requirement is a room that appears when a person is in need of it, and it changes to fit the seeker's needs. In "Half-Blood Prince" and now "Deathly Hallows," it's just a giant room full of shit that people are trying to hide. What gives?
Probably boning. How soon after their wedding was it?
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