By / 17th August, 2011 / T-Shirts, Video Game Shirts / 4 Comments

Movie Review: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part II

Yes, I liked it.  I’ve pretty much liked the whole series.  I now realize there is no way I could have fairly reviewed it without having seen the rest of them, so I think I took the right path.  I will also say that there was a lot of stuff I didn’t understand, and some stuff that came up in this movie that I probably could have used about five movies ago, so I guess I’m now at the point where I pretty much have to buy and read the books.  Do they all have to look so goofy on the cover?  One thing the Lord of the Rings has always done right is made their covers as dignified and ominous as possible.  I think I would have bought the books years ago if they hadn’t all featured a skinny, bespectacled kid who has a goofy smile on his face.

By the way, after my rant about carrying a ton of extra wands and using a wand in both fists my best friend Dave invented the Gatling wand, so I want to give him props for that.  I think it’s brilliant.

I am going to keep my questions down to the ones I feel won’t spoil the plot at all, in case someone like me has not seen it yet or read the books.  I will also keep the story synapses to a minimum.  Basically Harry and his friends are still on the horcrux Easter Egg hunt, and it leads them to Hogwarts, where the imprison the entirety of Slytheryn (finally) and then are besieged by Death Eaters.  Cool stone statues come to life to defend.  Stuff gets blown up.  People gets killed.  Everyone seems to have forgotten where they hid their brooms again.  Voldemort rains unholy nostril-faced hell on pretty much everyone.  Two of my three predictions pretty much came true.

The stars.  Great ending to a pretty awesome story.  Two stars.  Great special effects and CGI.  One star.  I’ve gotten so used to all the characters that none of them bug me, and they have all matured nicely as pretty good actors, especially Daniel Radcliffe.  One star.  The story, in a very real way, was extremely satisfying.  One star.  They didn’t waste any time with a recap of Part I at the start of the film.  It was a huge F you to anyone who didn’t see the first one, but really who is that dumb?  Besides almost me.  One star.  Snape had a really cool, integral part that actually gave him a lot of depth.  One star.  Despite my fears, Draco Malfoy manage to not end the movie dead or in a horrible situation.  One star.  The plot was fast paced and made a lot or sense.  One star.  Ron and Hermione finally kiss.  One star.  They didn’t try to get a softer movie rating by holding off on the massive carnage.  One star.  Two more bonus stars for an all around great movie experience.  Total: thirteen stars.

Now the black holes.  I am going to give one for all the stuff that I would have known had I read the book but they couldn’t stuff into the movie for illiterate morons.  I know this would be almost impossible to pull off in a less than six hour movie, and I don’t hold it against the film, but I still see it as somewhat of a failure.  One black hole.  Voldemort seems to play pretty fast and loose with his last remaining horcrux.  One black hole.  Dumbledore resurfaces to ruin all the respect he gained from me in the last couple films in order to prove he was exactly the manipulative, heartless bastard I though he was in the first few movies.  One black hole.  A couple of the deaths of characters I liked kind of really harshed my buzz, especially Ron’s brother.  One black hole.  Total:  four black holes.

So a grand total of nine stars, an excellent score for an excellent series.  I feel pretty good about this.  However, it would not be one of my Harry Potter reviews if I did not come up with more dumb questions to ask.

Back on wands.  I now understand a bit more of wand lore, thanks to one scene where a wand loremaster kind of lays out some details, but I am still intrigued by the idea of size and shape.  Could you make your want the size and shape of a baseball bat?  Then, if you are in a duel and your opponent is kind of kicking your ass but you are up close you could give him or her a magical concussion.  What if you made your wand into a broom stick?  Then you could fly around and basically dive bomb people.  What if you made it into the shape of a boomerang?  Then, if someone disarmed you it could come back.  For that matter, could you just make a wand the size and shape of a shotgun stock?  And then just maybe mount a shotgun to it?  That way, just as you are doing one of those different colored firehose duels, with minimal effort you send a load of buckshot at him.  Sure, most if it would probably get vaporized in the conflagration, but if a couple pellets managed to hit Voldemort in the shin that would be a pretty huge distraction.   (Shotgun image courtesy of the video game t shirt category).

There is a scene in the movie where a bridge gets blown up with explosives, along with a bunch of bad guys.  That kind of implies that explosives have an effect on wizards.  Why, then, instead of stone guys armed with medieval weapons does Hogwarts not just have a couple of self propelled artillery pieces?  The part where the Death Eaters are all together on a hill shooting at Hogwarts could have gone pretty bad for them if someone had called in an airstrike.  I don’t know if magic really has to mean you can’t occasionally throw in some modern technology, especially if your life is in danger.

Is Snape not still obligated to protect Draco Malfoy due to his unbreakable oath?  He seems to take a pretty lax position with regards to that, letting Draco run around and get almost burned to death.  If I were obligated to protect some kid on pain of my own death I’d have him locked up in an oubliette with crate of canned food and a Game Boy until the fireworks were over.

Where did the giants and spiders come from?  Did they just see the action brewing and come along for the ride?  Does Voldemort have an account with Rent-a-Monster, but his credit limit isn’t enough to get dragons so he just ordered the two he could afford?  For that matter Hogwarts can afford to hire dragons, as they did for the Tri Wiz competition.  I think I’d have a few of those locked up downstairs in case a huge army of Death Eaters, spiders, and giants happened to come calling.

So every single kid at Hogwarts is some kind of super brave hero?  Sure, Slytheryn is evil and all got locked up while Gryffindor is supposed to be the brave ones, but there wasn’t a single Hufflepuff who was like “Hey, I’m just here to get an education.  I don’t want to get mixed in this dark master crap.”?  If an army of unimaginable evil had laid siege to my high school and I had access to a flying broom I would have bugged out so fast your eyes would spin, and I probably would have set up on a hill nearby with popcorn to watch the show.   (Actually, if an army of unimaginable evil had had destructive intentions towards my high school I probably would have gone out the them with a bunch of Cliff Bars, in case they were hungry.  However, we are not here to discuss my high school experience).

That’s pretty much it for now. I have to run.  Thanks for sticking with me on my Harry Potter marathon.  It has been a blast.  New movies this weekend.  Talk to you soon.

 

 

 


4 Comments

  • Minerva September 6, 2011 at 5:56 pm

    That was a very interesting read! I read through all your posts but realised I could write essays answering your questions. xD The best advice would be for you to read the books. There are plot questions you had that were answered in the movies themselves but they were too many to mention as well. xD

    However – since you continously mention Quidditch… who wins the House Cup is decided on the number of points a team makes, not which team won the most matches. So in reality you’d only attempt to catch the snitch when playing against a stronger team. Otherwise you’d hold off and try to gain as many points as possible. Gryffindor and Slytherin are the strongest house teams and that’s who are usually shown playing together in the films. Both Gryffindor and Slytherin would be going for a quick win in such a match whilst trying to gain more goal-points against the easier teams (Hufflepuff especially). Hope that makes sense now…

    As for the books – you can always buy a different edition of them. The UK Adult Editions are very popular.

    Here they are:
    http://imageshack.us/f/30/img0703l.jpg/

    🙂

  • Dave September 6, 2011 at 9:42 pm

    Wow, thanks. I did not know that. I have already committed to reading the books, and will look into the UK ones. I just haven’t had the chance to do so. I watched the movies back to back prior to the last one and was definitely pulled in, which is the sign of a good story. Thanks for reading my blog!

    Dave

  • Ginny September 21, 2011 at 11:16 pm

    I can’t tell if you’re being a smartass, or if you’re incredibly stupid.
    It’s Harry Potter and the DEATHLY HALLOWS.
    If you were being a smartass, good on ya.
    If you’re incredibly stupid, I feel very sorry for you.

  • Dave September 22, 2011 at 2:17 pm

    Can it not be that I am a little of both?

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