Harry Potter Revisited
I was tough on the Harry Potter movies when they first came out (not a patch on the books I said) but I notice I tend to settle down and watch them whenever they come on TV. Last night it was Order of The Phoenix. "What's this?" asked my mother. "Harry Potter." I said. "No wonder I don't understand a word of it!" she replied.
There were several attempts to replicate the success of the Potter franchise but none of them caught on. For instance I caught a few minutes of something starring Nicolas Cage the other day. Sorcerer's Apprentice it was called and it was crap. There was a kid in it who whined. Then ten years passed and he'd been transmogrified into an equally whiney adult. No, no, no, no- that's not the way to do it!
There were several attempts to replicate the success of the Potter franchise but none of them caught on. For instance I caught a few minutes of something starring Nicolas Cage the other day. Sorcerer's Apprentice it was called and it was crap. There was a kid in it who whined. Then ten years passed and he'd been transmogrified into an equally whiney adult. No, no, no, no- that's not the way to do it!
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The Potter movies are made with love and conviction. Nothing is skimped. They're never cynical.
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Personally, I think the films are at least as good as the books, and quite probably better - though of course it's difficult to compare two different mediums meaningfully.
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Order of the Phoenix is my favourite of the books. It has an almost Dickensian grungeiness- which is lost in the whizz-bangery of the movie. On the other hand the movies have their own virtues. I think the characters- as embodied by the cream of the British acting profession- are more vivid on screen.
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I enjoyed the books- but they didn't particularly draw me in. The same goes for the movies. I feel very little connection with the characters. I enjoy visiting them in their world but I don't take them home with me.
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