harry potter and the deathly hallows part 2 reviews
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the deathly
hallows, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part II 2011 130 minutes
rated PG-13 Judged on its own merits, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows,
Part II is a fine Movie, full of terrific acting, solid action beats, several emotional
high points, and exceptional visuals. But as a series finale to an eight-Movie saga spanning ten years and
around 19 hours, it is just a touch underwhelming.
It's not so much that 'nothing could live up the hype' so much as David
Yates and Steve Kloves making the arbitrarily odd decision to make this Movie,
of all the Movies in the series, the one that is in fact too short. We have a Movie
series where the average entry ran 145 minutes, yet Yates and Kloves decide to
try to end the whole saga in just over two hours.
Furthermore, even with that comparably truncated length, the Movie
wastes valuable first-act
screentime with business that arguably should have been dealt with in
the last picture.
Point being, when you split up a book into two whole s, you have
absolutely no excuse
to feel rushed and somewhat incomplete.
Furthermore, I can't think of a single Harry
Potter fan who would not have relished a series finale at least as long
as the shortest
Lord of the Rings Movie. It is a
fine thing to leave fans and audiences desperately wanting
more, but it is a less fine thing when there is no 'more' to be found. A
token amount of plot: When we last left Harry Potter, Hermione Granger, and Ron
Weasley, they had just buried their slain companion Dobby the House Elf and
were continuing on their quest to find the last remaining Horcruxes (if you
don't know what a Horcrux is and why they must be destroyed, DO NOT see Harry
Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part II this weekend). One thing leads to another, and Harry Potter
and his friends find themselves back at Hogwarts, where Voldemort has given the
student body an ultimatum: deliver Harry Potter or everyone in the school
dies. Needless to say, the school does
not give in. The students and faculty
scramble to protect the school from an entire army of Death Eaters, which will
hopefully give Frodo the time he need to... err... I mean give Harry the time
he needs to destroy the last remaining Horcruxes and thus finally take out Tom
Riddle.
First of all, despite my
whining that will come in later paragraphs, the Movie is a technical marvel and
a generally exciting action-adventure.
The finale, like the series, distinguishes itself amongst a sea of
big-budget tent poles by emphasizing narrative and character over
spectacle. When we think back to the
favorite moments, it is not the action sequences but the character interaction
that come to mind. We love the time
spent with Harry, Hermione, Ron, Neville, Luna, Ginny, Draco, etc. We love the limited time we got to spend in
the company of such dynamic actors as Alan Rickman, Michael Gambon, Maggie
Smith, David Thewliss, Brendan Gleeson, Robbie Coltrane, Jason Issacs,
etc. And we get a sprinkling of such
moments in this final chapter. But those
moments are surprisingly few and far between, as the Movie so far out of its
way to focus almost exclusively on Harry Potter vs. Voldemort that the rest of
our beloved characters get the short shrift. as course,
one major supporting character gets his moment to shine (no spoilers, for the
two
of you who don't know), and
it's easily the best, most emotionally devastating scene in the
picture. If Warner is willing to spend the money, 'you
know who' (no, not THAT 'you know
who') could end up with his
first Oscar nomination. But there are
far too few such moments
for the rest of the heroes
and villains. Yes, the series has been
Harry-centric since The
Goblet of Fire, but again,
this is the bloody series finale! There are various crowd-pleasing moments in
the final battle scenes (most of which are supplied
by Neville Longbottom), and there are moments are shocking violence (children
die onscreen, sometimes
graphically). But most of the big Hogwarts battle basically takes place offscreen, as we follow
Harry, Ron, and Hermione as they look for Horcruxes inside the
castle. This may not be a fair comparison, but I was
reminded of the finale of the first
Transformers, where the
Autobots and Decepticons engaged in a battle royal in downtown LA
offscreen while the camera
was focused on Jon Voight shooting bugs with a shotgun. We want
to see more than just a few
moments out of the corner of the screen of our stalwart
Hogwarts heroes holding
down the fort (and paying the ultimate price).
The final battle
battle is cleverly fleshed
out into something more physical than merely two foes pointing
wands at each other,
although said battle is less emotionally engaging than you'd expect (I
was frankly hoping for
something resembling the weary fatalism of the Neo/Smith fight in
The Matrix
Revolutions). There is a semi-tracking
shot as our three main heroes race
through Hogwarts and we see
the great battle unfolding before our eyes that is both
wonderful and
frustrating. It's a great, epic moment
that nonetheless serves to remind us
of all the glorious such
moments that we didn't see because we were busy watching our main
heroes try to stab a
necklace. Yes, the series has always
been more about character than
action, but again, this is
the bloody series finale! When a major character cradles the dead body of
another major character, the moment is so fleeting my wife (who hasn't read the
book) couldn't tell which specific character had been killed. And when a major villain is killed onscreen
in a most surprising manner by a most surprising hero (arguably the biggest
crowd-pleasing moment in the book), it's edited so tightly that we can't tell
who said hero was defending (again, my wife, who hadn't read the book, didn't
know who was in peril). I understand the
reluctance of the Moviemakers to turn the Movie into a full-on Lord of the
Rings-style war picture. But this is the
series finale of a 19 hour saga... they've earned the right to tack another hour on
and go a little crazy, especially when the source material is right in front of
them. Considering how much
good this truncated Movie still contains, I can only imagine that the
three-hour cut would
not only be the best Movie in the series (still the seventh Movie,
natch) but one of the
better fantasy Movies of our generation, something to stand tall beside
The Empire Strikes
Back and The Lord of the Rings: Return of the King. But as it stands,
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part II is merely a very good Movie in
the franchise, and a very good fantasy Movie in its own right. What is included in the Movie, especially in
the last two acts, is certainly worth our attention and our praise. The acting is peerless throughout (Maggie
Smith has several lovely grace notes), and there are indeed scenes of genuine
power and tearjerking emotion (prepare to weep when Harry pulls out the
'ressurection stone' in a key moment).
The actual onscreen action is generally gripping and impressively staged, and their is a brutal
casualness to the violence (who lives and who dies is often random and arbitrary). The score by Alexandre
Desplat is appropriately stirring, and he knows exactly when to bring
out the John Williams
themes for maximum effect (the first use of the main theme is so perfect
I wanted to stand
up and applaud). And like the
book, the Movie concludes the saga with a narratively simple
but symbolically profound epilogue, a stirring reminder of what Harry
and his friends were
fighting for. And unlike certain
series finales (cough-Lost-cough), it does make the
viewer greater that they actually stuck it out and watched each
successive installment.
Even while I carp about certain details of this final chapter, there are
two things that
must be stated (if you have the soundtrack, start playing the 'leaving
Hogwarts' theme...
NOW). First of all, quite simply,
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, Part II is still
better than any fantasy picture released in the last ten years that
isn't a Harry Potter,
Lord of the Rings, or Star Wars Movie (I love Revenge of the Sith... sue
me). Second of
all, one cannot ignore the momentous achievement that is the Harry
Potter saga. Eight
Movies, perfectly cast right from the start by director Chris Columbus
(who really deserves
an apology from quite a few of you) and with a consistency in
construction and general
quality that was, let's be honest, as much about luck as talent. Luck that all of its
young would-be wizards stayed interested and became genuinely solid
actors (and ahem...
aged well to boot), luck that the adult cast had not a single defector
or major change save
for one untimely death (RIP Richard Harris), luck that Warner Bros had
the good sense to
rarely if ever interfere with the creative process, luck that audiences
stayed with the
series even as they got older, luck to the extent that any one good is partially
about luck, let alone eight consecutive relative triumphs. There will
probably never be an ambitious undertaking like this again, certainly not in
our 'do trilogy and reboot'era. The Harry Potter series is everything we say we
want from our big budget Moviemaking, and we write it off as 'pop-culture
junkfood' at our peril. The highest
compliment I can pay to the series is that, as a longform saga, it truly
deserves to stand alongside Star Wars and The Lord of the Rings. The highest compliment I can pay this Movie
is that it falters mainly in comparison to our expectations (and our knowledge
of the source material). It says a lot about the adventures of 'the boy who
lived' that a Movie this good could still be 'disappointing'.
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