You may have freed our house elf and brought doubt to our family name, but your parents still got toasted by a big green glowing flame.Alright, so it is about time I wrote my Harry Potter blog, huh? =D I've seen it twice, and have sneaky suspicion that I will see it at least once on Imax and once or twice in Spokane as well. I've heard a lot of opinions on the movie, and a lot of dissent in the ranks of the fandom. I will try to avoid dwelling on what other people think and simply explain how I felt about it.
I, of course, went to the midnight showing. I was dressed as Pansy Parkinson in a costume made almost entirely from my own closet, including my hobo pants from Audience (with Rachel as director) transformed into sparkly ripped jeans emblazoned with a Dark Mark. I was accompanied by a Luna Lovegood, complete with lion hat and radish earrings, a Lavender Brown in pink and brown and curls, a Helga Hufflepuff in a gorgeous dress, and an Ignotus Peverell, who was honestly just too lazy to actually dress up. We all had homemade wands, styled by my lovely friend Jamie (Luna in the picture). There are more pictures on Facebook.
We headed to Red Robin, where we were greeted by a very enthusiastic young man who thought it was SO COOL that we were all dressed up and wouldn't leave us alone. The rest of the restaurant eyed us. I think a few parents were scared for their children. We ran into my friends Aaron and Sasha, who were not dressed up (tsk tsk). After the meal, we swept out of the restaurant and ended up walking the mall for awhile because it was early yet.
One of the greatest things about the Harry Potter fandom is the instant camaraderie between fans, especially on nights like this one. We ran into people, some dressed up, some not, but everyone seemed to know why we were there - and those who didn't soon figured it out. We scared the little asian lady that runs Murasawki, sadly. Other fans would clap and whistle in joyous celebration, and it felt quite like the scene in the first book where the wizarding world is celebrating the downfall of Voldemort for the first time.
We walked back to the theater, deciding that it was time to be committed and join the line. We managed to be one of the last groups in the line inside. Our Luna got a lot of attention - random girls came up and asked for pictures with us! Everyone had the same excited fever, and the whole theater was bustling with energy. They let us in two hours till the movie started, and the mad rush for seats began. We came out victorious, sitting in the middle of a row that was towards the back but not too high. All through the theater, we recognized people, both by costume and because we knew them. A boy dressed as Dumbledore walked in and everyone cheered!
The energy was astounding. It's my favorite part of midnight shows. I am a very loud movie watcher. I engage myself - I yell, cry, laugh, and generally make a fool of myself at any showing, but at a midnight show it is somewhat acceptable. We are the die hard fans, after all. We screamed, cried, jumped, "awwww"d, and laughed as one. Only one person was out of sync. Me.
I am, and have almost always been, a Draco fan in a way that even other Draco fans do not quite grasp. I have two Dracos living in my head: the 'real' one, that J.K. created, and the one that I love so very much that is mostly a product of wishful thinking and too much fanfiction. The real Draco is very much an angst-ridden git, but then so is Harry. MY Draco, however, is quite a wonderful boy and if I ever find a real one like him, I think you'd all like him very much. I see the best of J.K.'s Draco - the man he might have been, had he accepted Dumbledore's help at the end of this movie. Perhaps the man he might have been had Harry accepted his friendship during first year. I'm not always entirely sure where MY Draco ends and J.K.'s begins - they are very similar, after all. Luckily, in the end, they are fictional characters.
And, here, the spoilers begin:
Personally, I LOVED the movie. I feel that Tom Felton finally got his character right, and that the Inferi scene was wonderful, if a little reminiscent of the Dead Marshes. I do wonder how Harry is going to find Ravenclaw's diadem, but the kiss was cute and I'm okay with it for now. Slughorn was an excellent addition, as was Lavender Brown. "Where's my Won-Won?!!?" has never been shouted so well before. Emma Watson's Hermione has grown up beautifully, and I don't say that just because every guy I know thinks she is gorgeous. Rupert Grint delivered a brilliant Ron, especially during the love potion scene.
And Harry. Dearest Harry. That boy that I have grown up with, both on screen and in print. I feel that I cannot ask anymore of poor Daniel Radcliffe, who will probably be typecast for the rest of his life because of this saga. However, Harry does not piss me off in the movies. Book!Harry made me yell at him for being SO stupid and stubborn and so very, very Gryffindor. Movie!Harry does not. Aside from that, I feel like he is doing well.
I do like David Yates as a director SO much more than Alfonso CuarĂ³n or Mike Newell. David's movies are not, however, quite on par with Chris Colombus. Hero Fiennes-Tiffin was an excellent young Tom Riddle, although I liked Frank Dillane a bit more. ;] Dame Maggie Smith is my hero, though. She completed filming for HBP while undergoing radio-therapy for breast cancer.
Alan Rickman was, as always, the perfect Snape. I honestly think that he is the most well-cast actor in the entire film. I can't wait to see the "After all this time?" "Always." scene in the seventh movie - well, it will probabl be the eighth movie, but hey. Michael Gambon feels like the right Dumbledore now. I remember when the switch happened, it was jarring and I was very angry. Dumbledore grew with the books, though, and Michael Gambon is the right kind of Dumbledore for the later books. I feel that the switch might have happened a movie too early, but since Richard Harris died, I can't REALLY complain about that.
My one and only big complaint is the attack on the burrow. It was completely nonsensical! It existed nowhere in the book, and it will totally ruin the REAL attack in the seventh movie. Poor Phlegm and Bill. Perhaps they are planning on cutting that anyways. Grrrr. According to IMDB, "This particular scene was not in the book, but was made just for the movie to serve as a representative of all the news reports, which are scattered around in the source novel, about various attacks by Death Eaters on the wizard community. It was considered to provide better pacing for a movie to have Harry actually experience one such attack first hand, rather than hearing/reading about those that kept happening to some other students, or their relatives." I don't care about pacing - Harry needs to care about other people!
The one other thing that made me incredibly angry is actually rather small. They changed a line of Draco's that sort of changes him, in my opinion. In the movie, he says "I have to kill you, or he'll kill me." While he does say that in the books, he also says this on page 591: "I've got to do it! He'll kill me! He'll kill me whole family!" It's about half way down the page. I think the fact that he is protecting his family as well as himself gives him some sense of humanity, yeah?
Oh, and this just in: Gellert Grindewald has apparently been cast, which means that they will NOT be cutting all of Dumbledore's past from the Deathly Hallows! YAY!
I am done ranting for now, and leave you with these many thoughts to ponder in internet-silence for awhile.