The Columbus films are rich and warm and FEEL "magical", unlike the cold, washed-out and frankly creepy feel of the latter films. Nowhere is this more apparent than in the cinematography, where the combination of lighting and filter suck all the warmth and life out of the filmed images.
Columbus apparently has no idea how to film any scene except in a mid-shot with two principles facing each other, which is about the most boring thing you can do visually. This repetitive shot construction led to the films being static. The only way they feel "magical" is by having multiple shots of Daniel Radcliffe opening his mouth and his eyes real wide and gasping - which doesn't exactly make the audience feel wonder. They lack every bit of the gently rollicking humor of Rowling's universe - and I'd like to shoot the guy for translating the "changing passages and staircases of Hogwarts" into literally swinging staircases. The whole point of having changing passages and staircases was to indicate that Hogwarts castle was magically "alive", not outfitted with mechanical stairways. He was far too literal-minded for a movie about magic.
Yes, by cutting vast amounts of character development, Cuaron made us understand Harry and Co BETTER...![]()
I'm sorry, but HP has little to no character development. The kids grow older, Ron gets a little braver and a little more comfortable in his own skin, Hermione gets a little looser - and that's about it. The only character who actually develops is Neville, and most of that is on the sidelines. Cuaron's film has style and thematic strength, and he got by far the most relaxed and naturalistic performances from the three principles.
Horsecrap. I saw the film before reading the book (I came into HP "in the middle" as it were), and almost swore of the franchise entirely because of it. GoF is a nasty, harsh film that frankly portrays many of the "adult" characters in a very frightening and unlikeable way.
A lot of adult characters in HP are very frightening and unlikeable.
Half of the point of OoTP is to set up Rowling's attempt at "redeming" Snape, yet most of that is entirely ABSENT from the film.
I honestly don't remember the point of OotP the book as it seemed to me to 900 pages of ridiculous angsty whining and stupidity on Harry's part.
I found the book atrocious and have no interest in seeing the movie because of it.
HBP is the essence of everything WRONG about Rowling's story construction. Voldemort is back and on the move. People are dying. ONLY Harry can stop it.
What does DD do?
Spend an entire frakking year playing "This is your life: Tom Riddle".
No combat training for Harry. No extra tutition in Transfiguration, Charms, or any USEFUL skill to help him face his "destiny". Just trolling through memories of Tom's life that are supposed to make us feel sorry for him somehow when it's evident that Tom was a "bad seed" from the get go.
Who gives a frak? Voldemort is evil. Now get on with helping Harry beat the snot out of the b*stard! Don't keep your "Savior" weak, ignorant and helpless...
You are asking HP to be something it is not and never was intended to be. The books followed an exact formula (even to the end which required bringing DD back from the dead so that he could have his obligatory explanatory "love is the moral of all this" scene - and begging the question of why all the students didn't just clear out every year in April, since obviously Voldemort was going to show and do something nasty) and there was never any way she was going to deviate from that. Don't get me wrong - there's plenty wrong with HP, including its formulaic nature, not to mention the various threads she seemed to set up that went nowhere. But getting pissed because she didn't turn Harry into a magic-wielding warrior is kind of ridiculous. That was never the story being told. The one semi-theme she had was about love being more powerful than violence, so to expect Harry to prevail via BadAssery is just silly.
Besides - is that honestly the only kind of hero anyone can dream up any more? Yet another generic, fisticuffs action hero? Do all stories have to be versions of superhero comics these days? I for one am way over it - and the fact that Harry is such a popular hero who does not simply rely on Might Makes Right indicates that there is plenty of other ways to tell a story about defeating evil