Showing posts with label HP Month. Show all posts
Showing posts with label HP Month. Show all posts

Monday, 8 August 2011

IT ALL ENDS- HP MONTH

         So after dragging this out for a very long time, longer than anyone I know...I am closing shop on my HP Month. I know I didn't review the last film..but hell I haven't reviewed the others either. I don't think I have it in me...atleast for now. 
        Anyways nothing can really replace the Harry Potter films for me. However my cinematic world is not without any hope yet.


THINGS I AM LOOKING FORWARD TO POST HP







Some good 'uns there...


My HP Month Posts:


        Thank you for bearing with me. I am going to go back to the normal movie-watching world now!!
I now declare the HP Month Closed.



Sunday, 7 August 2011

"No story lives unless someone wants to listen. The stories we love most do live in us forever."

         It's been a month since that tearful premiere of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, part 2 in Trafalgar Square, London. That was the day many people said goodbye to the film series. I think it's about time I think about my adieus to them. This is my tribute to Harry and his friends, and I have decided to do it in a Dear Mr. Potter manner.
        I feel obligated to say that God, I feel scared writing this! I have built it up so much in my head that I feel it is impossible to deliver. So here goes nothing/everything...


Dear Mr. Harry Potter,

                                   This letter has  been delayed for a while now; I meant to write it sooner. I'm sure you know me...Hi! Big Fan!! This is a but tiny letter of me telling you about how you changed my life.

                                   Up until my ninth year, my entire film-world had been restricted to what my parents allowed me to see. Hollywood-wise, I only knew about a few action and comedy blockbutsters, and Titanic ofcourse. Jim Carrey, Julia Roberts and Arnold Schwarzenegger were the only "foreign movie-star" names I was familiar with, though I could have been called a walking-and- talking encyclopaedia of the 90s Bollywood scene. It was indeed a fateful day when I went to the video store and saw this VHS of quite an adorable little boy, with a huge glittering castle as his background, on its cover. This was the first time I read the words Harry Potter. I had just moved to UAE, and Pottermania had not yet hit India. Attracted by the quietly alluring cover, and thinking that it would be a fun children's film, I rented it, went home, put it in my tape-player, sat down, and watched it.

                                    I often, Mr. P., tell people that I will love Sorcerer's Stone at ninety-nine years old just how I did when I was nine. But that's not quite true. Ten years on, with much fewer grey cells, I cannot remember the exact emotions that went through me when I first viewed your first cinematic outing. I don't know how I felt watching this skinny little wonderful boy, who was bullied at home and felt so unwanted, and was then told that he was wizard and finally found a place where he belonged, and not just any place, but the most magical one he, or I, could have ever fathomed. Here he found friends, trolls, danger, Quidditch, and a home. All I remember after watching the film, your film, for the first time is falling head-over-heels in love with you, and praying every night for a very long time that I too am a witch, and Hogwarts really existed, and when I finally go there I will meet you and have the adventure of my life.

A Little Diversion: I don't know if you know this Mr. P., but I have this thing, this wish, of existing in worlds not quite my own...mostly of those in my favourite films. I have now come to the conclusion it is all because of you, and your world. Gee thanks...

                                  Back on track now. So it took me quite a while to accept that I wasn't a witch; and you, my friend, did not make it any easier. After watching the first film for like fifty times, I started reading the books from where you originally came. Needless to say, they quite blew me away too. I loved your second year at Hogwarts too. In fact I remember skipping up to my house after I had finally acquired the CD. Again your courage, and your friends- especially Ron with his funny face, made me feel very happy, and extremely wistful.

                                   Now instead of going through all of your films- each that I love for many varied reasons, I am just going to say why you matter to me so much. You matter because no other films have ever filled me with the kind of wonder and amazement like yours has. You matter because you have made me believe in the magic of this world. You matter because you have shown me that being different is never a bad thing- whether you are the Boy who Lived (under a staircase or otherwise), or a female super-nerd, or a quirky ginger boy. You matter because you and your friends were my friends too, and I felt that I could live and die for them just like they would have done for me.You matter because you taught me about life and death, good and evil, laughter and despair, power and friendship...what it is to lose someone but always keeping them with you in your heart. You matter because you taught me about love.

                                 As your creator, my queen, Ms. Rowling has said: though the books and the movies have ended, your story will live with me and all my fellow-fans forever. I have done so many things with you and your friends- read books with Hermione, cracked jokes with Ron, felt stupid with Neville, made a fool of myself with Seamus, been proudly quirky with Luna, bragged with Draco, broken the smallest of rules and felt awesome with Fred and George, and ofcourse have been there for my friends, and tried to be brave and selfless like you, Mr. P. My childhood is interwoven with yours and it is very difficult, nearly impossible for me, to look back on the last ten years of my life and not see you and your friends popping out of every corner and nook. It is beyond me, and my wildest imaginative skills, to think of my life without you ever having been a part of it. Today, the sole reason I am into films the way I am is because I saw yours first. I owe you so much!

                                    This is not goodbye, I hope you know. I will hang on to you...quote you, read you, watch you, be perpetually inspired by you, and grow old with you. I have already declared, and I am telling you this now- my future children, whether they go to school or not, will be acquainted with you. Period. Your story will enchant and enkindle them, and their children, like they have me all this while. Obviously I was a part of your generation, and they won't be able to have that, but I know that they will still love you, and revere us for being here. They will think of this as a great era, as you have made me-an eternal hater of all that is 21st century-esque, believe so and feel incredible blessed to be a part of it. I don't know if that explains how much you mean to me (probably not), but these are the only words I have. Rest are just a slightly embarrassing amount of tears spent on thinking that this wonderful era has indeed come to a close.

                                       Thank you for letting me into your wondrous world...
                                                                                                                        Yours forever faithfully,
Nikhat Zahra
(Pottermaniac since 2001)

Thursday, 4 August 2011

"This boy will be famous. There won't be a child in our world who doesn't know his name." - MY FAVOURITE HP FILMS

Harry Potter films have left behind a legacy of great fantasy stories mixed with heart and humour. With all this in mind, the following are my top 5 Harry Potter Films:


5) Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, part 2-

Yes the second viewing helped. This film stroke a great balance between the huge battle scene with the fancy effects, and the touching, tear-jerky ones. Many characters got their fare share in this film finally- I rejoiced for McGonagall's "BOOM!" and Neville's heroics, and Snape and Harry made me cry a great deal. As the last line of the book says- "All was well", this film ended the beloved film series with a well-deserved bang. There were a few blatant flaws, but over-all, one heck of a film. Also the music was fantastic...never really cared till now. As Ruth from Let's be Splendid About This commented, the film as a whole is greater than the sum of its parts, and I did end up loving it.


4) Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone-

The film that started it all- the series and my madness. Chris Columbus did a great deal, more than people give him credit for, by bringing in the principal cast together. He knew how to make children films, and made a fantastic one out of this. The world fell in love with these three adorable kids and their magical school. So they weren't the best of actors then, but they played the characters perfectly. Also the supporting cast- Richard Harris, Maggie Smith, Robbie Coltrane and obviously- Alan Rickman are wonderful. This film introduced us to the many things of this enchanted world, and filled us with amazement, and a life-long wish to be part of it all. I think it was a very well-made film...not particularly innovative or anything, but an honest and dazzling adaptation of a genius children's book.


3) Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, part 1-

I remember how utterly depressed I was reading the first half of this book. David Yates, however, made a beautiful, haunting film out of this. What we usually felt from Harry Potter films was that cozy feeling of belonging somewhere and like being with friends. This film negated all that, and left us with like a hole, but since it was such an unexpected thing to feel from an HP film, I loved it. It just showed that so much can be done with these films. This is the only film not set in Hogwarts, and Yates took total advantage of that and gave us gorgeous backdrops. Things like the noise of the Horcrux, Hermione wiping out her parents' memories, the incredulous Deathly Hallows sequence, and the amazing Dobby set it apart from all the other films. 


2) Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban-

Yaay! Now that's what I'm talking about. Warner Bros handed over the reigns of the super-kiddy series to a slightly-racy auteur, Alfonso Cuorón, and we got MAGIC! Suddenly the films became dark, and cool. This one in particular was smart and funny. The brilliant Gary Oldman, Emma Thompson, Michael Gambon and David Thewlis joined the cast. The kids finally started acting! This film didn't require much explosions or charms, but still simple things like the Dementors or the Whomping Willow did enough. I just love the look of this film in general, and the super-witty humour, and the fact that Hermione punches Malfoy in it. Plus major points to Cuarón and the film for making sense out of the super-flawed Time Turner idea, and making a great third act as a whole.



1) Harry Potter and the Order of Phoenix-

Again, I can imagine the "WHAAAT???" But seriously, I love love love this film. It's so rare that a film is better than the book. And I absolutely loathed the book, and was convinced this film will be shite. But instead, I got this great story. I love all the aspects of it- Harry with his anger and Voldie-spasms, Umbridge in all her pink Devil-ness, the formation of DA and all the secretive fighting, LUNA, Sirius and Harry, BELLATRIX, the trio discussing Harry's kiss, and obviously the end. Then end is just brilliance, better than those of all the other films combined. First there are these splendid kids fighting against Death Eaters; then the angelic Order comes and they start fighting; then Harry and Sirius fight against Malfoy together; then Sirius dies and Harry's face just there; then Dumbledore and Voldemort have that super-epic duel; finally when Voldemort possesses Harry, the way Harry fights back because of the ability to love in him. This film gives me such a kick...a great effort by Yates. It shows why I love these films so much...beneath all the glamour of charms and potions and dark arts, they are about these incredible kids with who have such heart and courage, and who give so much importance to friendship, and no amount of darkness, and despair and sorrow can ever defeat that.

Wednesday, 3 August 2011

"I can't be a wizard. I mean, I'm just Harry, just Harry." ~ Harry Potter

          Yes I am lame enough to choose the main protagonist as my favourite character in the series. What can I say? I have always loved Harry. I think he's a genuinely good guy, and even though that sometimes causes problems, he just wants to save everyone. Also, the fact that I fell in love with him when I was 9 years old, and never really got over him, might have something to do with it. This is a highly subjective list of favourite characters I am making, so such feelings do matter. Although, having had recently seen all the films, I can safely say that there is good reason for me staying true to my 9 year old self- Harry is a great person, a fierce friend, and his special brand of dry humour is kind of charming.




HP and the Sorcerer's Stone

"Excuse me sir, can you tell me where I might find Platform Nine and Three-Quarters?"

The film starts with Dumbledore putting baby Harry on the Dursley's doorstep, and saying that one day every kid in their world will know his name. The baby with a lightning scar on his forehead is shown to have grown up into a little skinny boy of nearly 11, living in the cupboard under the stairs of the Dursley house. We also see the...um, well-fed Dudley and understand how Harry must have been treated there. Our heart goes out for the little bullied boy. Obviously mystery surrounds him- what with the vanishing glass and the talking to the boa constrictor in the zoo and ALL those letters; we can feel the "magic" in the air. Then, on Harry's lonely and touching eleventh birthday, Hagrid visits and informs Harry that he is in fact a wizard. He, obviously, finds all this incredulous at first, but then is swept away in the wonder of it all, as we are too. I guess Harry in the first film is the eyes of the audience. He also sees how everyone else behaves around him- and finds out the secret behind him being the Boy who Lived and all. He is just amazed at all this first...being a very starry-eyed and together kid that he was. Then he meets Ron, and finds a person who knows all about being magical, and someone who he can, finally share his secrets and feelings and food with. Soon after, he also meets Hermione and I think he just finds her funny, and is not irritated by her like Ron. Malfoy is next..."the wrong sort",  and this shows how Harry is a good judge of character. His whole sorting, with choice and all, forms a foundation of his character...a person who was good and brave by choice, despite whatever problems he faced. There is a lovely shot of him looking out of his window with Hedwig the first night at Hogwarts, signifying that he finally feels like he belongs somewhere. Harry is made uncomfortable by Snape since the get-go, and their first Potions lesson does not lesson this feeling. While the belonging part- Harry is a natural at flying, and him getting chosen as Seeker, even as a "Frankie first year" shows that. One of the things I noticed this time round was that Harry is such a little conspiracy theorist, and most of his blown-up ideas more or less hit the spot. In this one, he starts snooping about what went missing in vault 713 in Gringotts, Snape's secret, and what was under the trapdoor that Fluffy was guarding..after the trio's run-in with the three-headed giant dog. Another thing is him trying to save or protect people- whether it's Neville and his Remembrall in Quidditch practice, or Hermione from the clutches of a huge troll. The Quidditch match is a great moment of victory for Harry, and for us who support the little boy wizard. Then it's back to snooping around with Nicholas Flamel, and Hagrid's baby Norwegian Ridgeback etc. One of the saddest and most fantastical things in this film is when Harry encounters in the Mirror of Erised. We see how much this boy has missed out in his life, and the importance for family for him. Harry and the trio get in trouble with McGonagall, and in the dangerous Forbidden Forest, Harry for the first time in all his consciousness, meets Voldemort. There he finds himself in mortal danger, but still he soon goes through the trapdoor to retrieve the Sorcerer's Stone and try and prevent Voldemort's return. Though the earlier obstacles show off Hermione and Ron's strengths more, finally, and how it is always fated to be, Harry faces Voldemort alone. Here we see his inner strength...seeing this horrific face and still fighting back, not wanting his parents back because he wouldn't give up, getting the Sorcerer's Stone because he only wanted to protect it and not use it, and finally destroying the treacherous Quirrell. Later when Dumbledore meets him, we see the beginning of a life-defining friendship and understanding between this young wizard and this old master. Dumbledore talks about the love that flows inside him because of his mother,and we get clues of what might come later. Finally, Harry, with Hermione, Ron and Neville, helps Griffindor in winning the house cup. When he leaves, he says- "I'm not going home, not really," and then waves goodbye to his wondrous new home Hogwarts...and we know that we have fallen under his spell forever.




HP and the Chamber of Secrets


"Not to be rude or anything, but this isn't a great time for me to have a house elf in my bedroom."


Harry's eyes are as iconic as he is and throughout the film series, we see a much-appreciated share of them. The beginning of this film start with them, as Harry is looking through his album and reminiscing about his magical school and incredible friends. He is hurt that they haven't written to him all summer, and the apathetic Dursleys do nothing to lessen that feeling. Immediately after he is given instructions to play invisible during Vernon's important business dinner, he meets the marvelous house-elf Dobby for the first time. Through Dobby's devotion to him and his friendship, we see what an impact he has had all over the world, and how just and kind he is. Dobby comes to tell him to not return to Hogwarts that year because it could be fatal to him, but he is adamant to do the contrary because, danger or not, it is his only home. This leads to a fallen dessert on Vernon's boss's wife, and a putting-up of bars on Harry's window. But Harry breaks free with the help of Ron, the Weasley twins and a stolen car. Harry is amazed by the very enchanted Burrow, and the lovely Weasley family. Ginny is properly introduced there, and we see her feelings for Harry immediately (gah...Ginny). In Knockturn/Diagon Alley, Harry runs into a number of people- creepy witches and wizards, Hagrid, Hermione, the amiable Malfoys, and Gilderoy Lockhart...which goes to show how Harry's fame precedes him always. After reaching Hogwarts, Harry starts hearing a voice, and discovers a petrified Mrs. Norris and bloody writings on the wall saying that the Chamber of Secrets has been opened. This is, as Hermione says, a bad thing. But Harry and his conspiracy theorist self, start believing that Malfoy is the heir of Slytherin and behind all this. The trio get to the bottom of this with the help of Polyjouice potion. It is also around this time that more muggle-borns get petrified, there is a duel between Harry and Malfoy, and it is revealed that Harry is a parselmouth and can talk to snakes. This leads to the first time in the films, when Harry is ostracised by everyone. Harry later finds a Tom Riddle's diary and a memory in this shows that it might have been Harry's good friend Hagrid who could have opened the Chamber of Secrets 50 years ago and caused the death of a girl. But following spiders, and nearly being eaten by them, Harry finds out it isn't true and is relieved that his friend is innocent. Hermione also gets petrified during this time, and this clearly upsets him, but not enough to be able to figure out the clues that she has left behind. Harry was rather smart in my opinion, and him finding out the truth behind the monster of the Chamber just shows that. Again he risks his life, this time to save Ginny, and faces Voldemort/Riddle- a memory but still fatal again. He also kills the Basilisk with the Sword of Griffindor very bravely, and destroys Tom Riddle's diary (a Horcrux). People are all about the final film when he is about to get killed, but he does that numerous times in the films. For example here, when he had been poisoned by the Basilisk, and had been accepting death until Fawkes saved him. Upon his return to Dumbledore's office Harry, the wise, tells Dumbledore that he felt that there were similarities between him and Voldemort. But Dumbledore shows him that it was true, but still he was good and courageous otherwise the Sword would not have appeared to him. Again choice is shown. Also then Lucius Malfoy comes in, all snarly, and Harry's answer to him about being always there to save the day at Hogwarts shuts everyone up (except me who screams "Fuck Yeah!" everytime he says that). He then tricks Lucius into freeing Dobby, which shows that he is kind of cheeky, but in a good way. The end, with Hermione and Hagrid back, is a great one for Harry, as he has indeed saved the day.




HP and the Prisoner of Azkaban


"Expecto Patronum!"


Harry the teenager. He's an angry young man, that one. Anyways, first he blows up his aunt, runs away from the Dursley home, not gets imprisoned and says the biggest lie of his life (Umbridge notes), "Why would I go looking for someone who wants to kill me?" I mean anyone can answer that- IT'S IN YOUR FRIGGIN' NATURE HARRY, THAT'S WHY! So Sirius Black, the murderer is out to get Harry in this one, but what really scare Harry are the creepy Dementors of Azkaban. As the tone of the story and film turns darker, so do Harry's problems. Harry is especially affected by the Dementors because of his horrific past. The first professor he ever really likes, Lupin, helps him overcome that fear with the cool-as-hell Patronus charm. Harry also becomes more adept at breaking rules with the Marauder's Map that Fred and George present him with. He goes to Hogsmeade with the help of that, and his trusted Invisibility Cloak, and gives Malfoy and his minions a taste of their own medicine. Then he overhears the truth behind his connection with Sirius- that he was his godfather, and had betrayed his parents, causing their deaths. He is super-enraged by this. The conspiracy thing is teeny in  this part- as he goes looking for the apparently dead Peter Pettigrew who had appeared on the Map. He doesn't find anything, but this gives Lupin ideas. Throughout the film, Harry is troubled by Trelawney-predicted evil omen- The Grim, but when she really frightens him is in her seer trance, telling him about the servant returning to the Dark Lord. Later when Buckbeak, the hippogrif, is about to be executed, the Grim comes. But he is infact Sirius Black in his animagus state. Harry threatens to kill him first, but when it is revealed that his parent's betrayer was actually Pettigrew, in Animagus form as Ron's rat Scabbers, he forgives him and they become great friends. Here too, Harry is just when Sirius and Lupin, who is a great friend of Sirius's and a werewolf, are going to kill Pettigrew and Harry doesn't allow it and want proper authorities to deal with him. Sometimes, very rarely, I do think Harry is too kind. Harry and Sirius start a great strong bond, one which is fueled by the relationship between Radcliffe and Gary Oldman. As Pettigrew escapes and Lupin becomes a werewolf, Harry tries to save his injured godfather from the Dementors who have come. Someone does, with a very powerful Patronus, but Harry starts believing it's his father. This again shows how much he misses his family. But then, in the going back in time with Hermione, Harry realises that it is in fact himself who performs the Patronus. Harry's is shown to be really gifted with this...I think it is because of his horrific past that he holds onto the happier thoughts better, which are essential for the Patronus to form. They save Sirius, and Sirius tells, like Lupin before, that he looks like his father James a lot, but has his mother Lily's eyes. As Sirius escapes in Buckbeak, we feel happy with Harry that he has a family finally.




HP and the Goblet of Fire


"I love magic."


Harry's connection with Voldemort's mind makes him continuously see a dream of Voldemort ordering a man to find Harry. After the Triwizard Tournament is announced at Hogwarts, we see how Harry has no interest in the "eternal glory" it promises, proving Snape's statement in the first film "Fame isn't everything". But as Fate (and a fake Moody) would have it, his name does come out of the Goblet of Fire. This causes everyone, including Ron, to really ostracise Harry this time, because now they think he's an attention-seeker and is trying to take away the spotlight from the true Hogwarts champion- Cedric Diggory. Still, his pure nerve and flying skills helps him to succeed in the first task with the Dragon, and he's in everyone's good graces again. The Yule Ball presents with itself a new problem- getting dates. Especially when Harry's first crush Cho refuses him, and Ron and Hermione choose to quarrel instead. Still the Yule Ball happens all fine and dandy, and Harry chooses to sit it out, 'cuz he's cool like that. The dream returns, along with the second task in which Harry nearly comes first with the help of Gillyweed, but because of all that "moral fiber" in him, stays to see all the people tied in the Great Lake for the champions to save are safe and he even takes Fleur's little sister along with Ron because of the hero-fiber. He also finds Barty Crouch's dead body and has his first dip in the Pensive, looking back at Dumbledore's memories of Karkaroff and Barty Crouch Jr. In the final task, Harry saves Fleur and even Krum to some extent, because he sees he's working under the Imperius curse. He even saves Cedric, though he should have just left him there, and then decides to share the Triwizard Cup with him (see- too good sometimes) and this takes them to Tom Riddle Sr.'s grave where poor Diggory is slain. And then, Voldemort returns in full nose-less glory. The first real duel happens between both of them, and Harry is brave as hell, even though he knows how powerful Voldemort is. He escapes because of Priori Incantetum, and upon returning to Hogwarts with Cedric's body, the poor boy, who must have been scared out of his mind, cries over his body. As Hermione says in the end, and Harry very bluntly agrees to- everything's about to change, especially for him.




HP and the Order of Phoenix


"LOOK AT ME!... What's happening to me?"


Angry Harry has a run-in with Dementors right at the beginning, and this causes him to get into trouble with the Ministry. He gets saved because of Dumbledore ofcourse, but due to being ignored by him, and feeling ignored by all of the world, Harry feels alone throughout the beginning. Lovely Luna makes him see the folly of his ways, and he returns to his ever-supportive best friends. Obviously Umbridge, the pink Nazi tea-cozy, comes to Hogwarts and starts making his life hell- calling him a liar and torturing him with her gory quills. The Ministry is threatened by him and Dumbledore too, and are spreading lies about them, but Harry finds comfort in the support his darling godfather Sirius gives him. Ron and Hermione make him start Dumbledore's Army to teach people the now-banned defensive spells. This also leads to Harry coming closer to Cho. Still, Harry keeps getting Voldemort's visions, and starts fearing for his goodness. Even after the big first kiss, Harry sees Nagini attack Mr. Weasley, which causes him to explode in Dumbledore's office due to all the neglect. He even tells Sirius this, but Sirius's reply is the blatant truth about Harry- "You are not a bad person. You're a very good person who bad things have happen to." Snape starts giving Harry Occlumency lessons, but Harry in his anger taps into Snape's mind and sees a memory of his father bullying Snape when they were school kids, causing Snape to call off the lessons at once. This proves fatal later when Voldemort creates a fake vision about torturing Sirius and causes Harry to come to Ministry (too good again). But fist, he has to battle Umbridge, which he does with the help of Grawp and some very hot-headed centuars, and uses the awesome line- "I must not tell lies." I have also really loved Harry's ability to say clever lines, because let's face it, what's a hero without his lines? Then with the main DA, Harry breaks into Department of Mysteries where he hears his prophecy about how he would be the one to kill Voldemort, if he doesn't kill him first, and finding about his vision being false. He fights the Death Eaters well, especially with Sirius. In this scene, there are two moments when my heart absolutely goes out for him- one when Sirius calls him James and that tiniest shot of him being overjoyed at this, and then when he realises that Sirius is dead, and the horror starts taking hold of him. The epic duel between Voldemort and Dumbledore happens after this, but they become even better for me when shots of a broken down Harry witnessing all this are shown. Finally Voldemort possesses him, and Harry is made to feel all the despair in the world, but he still fights back- telling the big bad Dark Lord that he pities him because he cannot feel the warmth of friendship and love. The images of Ron, Hermione, his parents, and Sirius going through his head, and we understand how pure and loving he is, despite everything he has suffered. Voldemort is obviously threatened by this, and he leaves Harry and Harry gets his redemption in public. At the ending, we see a newly confident Harry, who is sure that he is on the better side because unlike Voldemort, he has something worth fighting for.




HP and the Half-Blood Prince


"But I am the Chosen One."


This film starts with Harry getting a date with a pretty waitress, and I am left confused with all this Bond-esque smoothness. It all goes back to normal once Dumbledore comes and they go to recruit the rich-and-famous-collector/Potions master Horace Slughorn. And when Harry is suddenly gobsmacked in the presence of Ginny (DIE! DIE! DIE!). Harry's conspiracy theorist days return when he starts thinking that the now disgraced Malfoy has become a Death Eater and is on some kind of evil mission. This leads to him snooping around Malfoy, and then getting kicked on the face by him. Harry is much calmer in this film...what with all the romance and hormones. He gets the Half-Blood Prince's copy of the Potions text book, and suddenly finds himself at the top of the class, even beating Hermione, and as a result getting the much coveted liquid luck potion- Felix Felicis. He becomes obsessed with the book, much to the scorn of Hermione. Clever Harry tricks Ron on the day of his first Quidditch match into thinking that his drink had Felix in it, and as a result Ron kicks arse on the field. But when this leads to Lavendar kissing Ron in front of everyone, and a devastated Hermione, his loyalties are laid asunder. Also Ginny is dating Dean, so Harry is all jealous (pah!). Still he keeps getting a lot of female attention because of his "Chosen One" status. All this aside, Dumbledore starts showing him memories regarding Voldemort, in order to understand their enemy better, and the Slughorn fake memory. Harry is told by Dumbledore to get the real one, which is something that Slughorn isn't very keen on. Harry's claims about Malfoy continues, getting him into a bit of trouble with Snape and Lupin. This leads to a confrontation between him and Malfoy in a bathroom, where Harry ignorantly uses the Sectumsempra on him, causing him to bleed profusely. Shocked and horrified at this, Harry and Ginny go to dispose off the Half-Blood Prince book where he found the curse, and their kiss happens (Woo-hoo...Ginny's a buttface). Ron had also been previously poisoned, in which Harry quite adeptly saves him. He knows the feelings that Hermione and Ron have for each other, but being the independent third party, never does anything about it- slightly idiotic if you ask me. He finally uses Felix to get the real memory from Slughorn, and finallyn finds out about the Horcruxes. Dumbledore takes him to get another one he might have found, but only on the promise that he would have to listen to everything he says. He does so, very bravely- especially with the agonizing potion that Dumbledore insists on drinking to get the Horcrux. Upon returning, he is told by Dumbledore to hide under all circumstances, and as he does this, he watches in horror as Snape kills Dumbledore. I have forever had problems with this scene because it is just not in Harry's nature to just stand there and do nothing- in the books he was petrified and couldn't help it. He then follows Snape, repeatedly rebuking him, but Snape curses him and flees. Finally, upon his return, he kneels next to the fallen headmaster, and cries over his mentor's body. This film ends with Harry deciding upon going after all the Horcruxes, and Ron and Hermione saying that they will too.




HP and the Deathly Hallows, part 1


"No one else is going to die. Not for me."


The film starts with the Dursleys leaving and Harry going back to the cupboard under the stairs one last time, to revisit the innocence and simplicity of his childhood. For now Harry has definitely become a man. When all of the Order comes to transport him to the safehouse, he is very clear about his reluctance for them using the Polyjuice potion and turning into him, because as always, he can't see his friends get hurt. That doesn't happen  as immediately after their take-off, the seven Harry's and their protectors find themselves surrounded by Death Eaters, and this causes George to get injured and Moody to die. Harry hates all this, and wants to leave alone, but Ron stops him and tells him to wait a while. This doesn't last long as the Ministry falls, Harry becomes Undesirable No. 1, and the trio has to flee and start living on their own. It is now when Harry turns 17, and can duel all he wants. Dumbledore leaves Harry the first Snitch he ever caught and the Sword of Griffindor as part of his will, though the Sword is missing. In trying to retrieve the real locket Horcrux from Umbridge, Harry and the gang break into the Ministry, where Harry with all his fancy lines, hexes Umbridge and flees, but not without Ron getting splinched in the process. This leads to their life on the road, and the influence of the evil locket on them. He is lost without instructions from Dumbledore, and soon this leads to a huge fight between him and Ron where Ron leaves. Hermione, as always, stays with him albeit shattered inside, and Harry tries to make her fell better by dancing with her and stuff, but he too misses his "best friend" terribly. Finally upon returning to Godrick's Hollow and finding his parents' graves, Harry is sorrowful, but only just as then Nagini dressed as Bathilda Bagshot tries to kill him soon after. His wand breaks in all this, and we keep seeing him become more hopeless. But a doe-Patronus leads him to the Sword of Griffindor, and Ron returns to destroy the locket with it. All together now, Harry is stronger, and more confident and goes to Xenophilius Lovegood for some answers, but is soon caught by Snatchers. Hermione disfigures his face, and in the Malfoy Manor, Malfoy doesn't recognise him on purpose- showing that finally maybe there is some reconciliation between the two old school rivals. As I said before, I think it's because even Malfoy knows that Harry is right in his cause. Soon Dobby comes to rescue, and while the little wonderful elf does save the trio, Griphook, Luna and Ollivander- all prisoners of Bellatrix and other Death Eaters, he gets fatally wounded. When in the end, Dobby dies in Harry's arms, Harry is totally helpless in trying to save him. Still, Dobby dies with his name on his lips, once again showing what Harry's friendship means.




HP and the Deathly Hallows, part 2


"I suppose I'll have to kill him before he finds me."


Harry is our Hero! And this film proves that. Dobby's death proves a turning point for Harry, who knows now he absolutely do everything to destroy Horcruxes and kill Voldemort, and not let more people die for him. After getting the Hufflepuff cup Horcrux from Bellatrix's vault in Gringotts, and breaking out of the bank on a dragon, Harry starts getting more visions of Voldemort- but all broken up now. He understands that Voldemort is more dangerous now, and with knowledge about Harry's Horcrux-hunting. He decides to go to Hogwarts because planning isn't really the trio's forte, and everyone is ecstatic as Harry has truly become the leader he was always meant to become, but never aspired to be. Harry confronts Snape in front of everyone, and with a little help from Professor McBadass, causes him to flee. He then sets on finding the next Horcrux that he had a vision about, and Luna helps him in this by making him meet the ghost of Ravenclaw- the Grey lady. While Hogwarts is being attacked by Voldemort and the Death Eaters, he begs her to tell him where the diadem, i.e., the Horcrux, is. She tells him about how Tom Riddle had also asked for the same thing, but he promises to destroy it as that's what she wants. She helps him, but not without telling him that he reminds her of Riddle. When Harry finds the diadem in the Room of Requirement, Malfoy, along with Crabbe and Goyle, comes and asks for his wand back, that Harry had previously taken from him in the Malfoy Manor. Ron and Hermione come to fight with Harry then, but Goyle sets the whole place on fire...and perishes in it. The trio escape, but not without helping Malfoy and Crabbe too. It is Harry who insists on saving them, showing that he really was benevolent and never really wanted anyone to die. As they destroy the Horcrux, Harry is almost as affected by it as Voldemort. He sees that Nagini is the last Horcrux. As they go through the battlefield that Hogwarts has now become, they find that Voldemort has killed Snape. Again, Harry tries to help Snape, despite whatever he feels for the man, but Snape dies giving Harry his tears and looking into his Lily-eyes. Voldemort...using his voice powers (?) tells Harry that he has been disgraceful inn letting so many people die for him, and as Harry goes to Dumbledore's office to get the Pensieve, he sees all the dead bodies around and is aggrieved by it. After looking into Snape's memories, he gets the whole Snape-Lily story, and that he has to die to kill Voldemort as a part of Voldemort lives inside Harry. Now he understands the connection, one that he has felt for sometime now, and being the selfless person he was, goes to sacrifice himself. The snitch opens at his acceptance of the fact that he going to die, and the Resurrection Stone comes out. Using this, he calls the spirits of his parents and of Sirius and Lupin and with their company, and love, walks to his death. He doesn't die ofcourse- the Dumbledore in his head gives him the option to but he returns to save the day at Hogwarts! By doing this...using all his courage and hero-lines, Harry Potter finally destroys Lord Voldemort.




Final Thoughts- God I rambled on in this one- but it is so difficult to talk about the growth of Harry in each film, and not talk about everything that happens to him. I mean apart from a few quotes said by people here and there, to really understand him we have to see the circumstances he is put into and what he does then. Harry is an honest person, one with an affinity for trouble, but only to save others. He too is an underdog, and we love underdogs- fact of life. Also, he is modeled after war-heroes who repeatedly risk their lives to save those of others and fight against evil. Voldemort is the Hitler of the Wizarding world, and the fact that it is Harry's destiny to defeat him, inspite of all his fame and the cost at which it came, makes us root for him. Even though, as I have said repeatedly throughout this post, he is too good, he never becomes a fake figurehead. Harry is a great wizard, who understood the importance of love and friendship in his life because he was deprived of it at first- similar to Voldemort but unlike him, he never goes wrong or power-hungry.

Monday, 1 August 2011

"Me? Books and cleverness. There are more important things: friendship and bravery" ~Hermione Granger

         If one was going to ask me if I liked Ron or Hermione better in the books, I would repeatedly change my answer. Ron is the funny, sweet, supportive best friend, and Hermione is the best nerdy girl character of all time. But in the films, no doubt about it- Hermione is the queen. And this is hardly her, or Emma Watson's fault. Steve Kloves, the screenwriter has made the biggest love story of the series with Hermione and himself. I mean I thought I was delusional, but this guy...he's creepy obsessed. Still, Hermione is as lovely and strong and spunky as she can be, and she is my second most favourite character of the film series.




HP and the Sorcerer's Stone

"Now if you two don't mind, I'm going to bed before either of you come up with another clever idea to get us killed - or worse, expelled."

I liked Hermione from the start. Maybe it was because I was like her as a kid, and liked showing off my intelligence (barely do that now). Also I was a goody two-shoes, and would have probably use the quote above; or have been all dismissive of someone breaking rules going "What an idiot!"; or even, if you can believe me, said "LeviOsar, not Leviosa." And then she becomes their friend, and starts breaking rules like only the trio can. As said in the Ron article, her life-long love-bickering relationship with Ron starts now. This is the first time they fight, and he causes her to cry, and though this happens many times throughout the series, we see how affected she is by Ron from the get-go. Her promptness, her expertise, her emotions, and her look- all is characteristic of Hermione. I have always believed that without Hermione, the other two would have died in the first half-hour of the first film and Voldemort would have won! Hermione helps them in the Devil Snare obstacle, and though she tells Harry that she's only about books and cleverness, we know that she is all about friendship and bravery too. She too gets rewarded in the end, and she just looks so darling there.


HP and the Chamber of Secrets


"Fear of a name only increases fear of the thing itself."

Hermione's magical genius is even more impressive because of the fact that she is Muggle-born. But from this film onwards, it starts creating problems. The very Hitler's-perfect-German-looking Draco starts calling her mudblood. Now in general, that's where I think JK Rowling got her idea of Voldemort and Death Eaters and purebloods/halfbloods/mudbloods from. So Hermione is like the poster girl for "Mudblood and Proud" as she is clearly better than Draco in every possible way. As the Chamber of Secrets is opened, her own survival is at risk. She brews the Polyjuice potion to trick Draco into telling Harry and Ron things about the Chamber of Secrets, something noone in her year could have possible make. She obviously puts cat hair in her potion instead and gets transformed into part cat. Afterwards, in true Hermione fashion, she finds out about the monster of the Chamber of Secrets, but is soon petrified. It is using her knowledge of this monster- the Basilisk, that Harry and Ron are able to enter the Chamber and slay it and protect Ginny. The ending, when she is cured and comes running into the Great Hall, and hugs Harry...it shows the connection both of them have. Then ofcourse is the Ron almost-hug, which is very cute too.




Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban


"You! You foul, loathsome, evil little cockroach!"


I wouldn't say that this used to be THE Hermione film for me, but she was my favourite in this, and in among all the films till the seventh one. Why? Because Hermione became oh so spunky in this. Ask Draco's flattened nose. Or an insulted Trelawney. Her bickering with Ron continues, this time on account of their pets. There is also a running gag throughout the film on how she just keeps appearing out of nowhere. We find out in the end that it's because of her Time Turner, that she used to take a billion classes throughout the year. When Harry first finds out that Sirius was the apparent betrayer of his parents and that led to their deaths, it is Hermione who goes to him and comforts him. She always has a motherly side to her...an emotional one. We can see this when she starts crying at the thought of Buckbeak dying, Then she tries to come between Harry and Sirius because she thinks he'll harm Harry. And when Lupin comes, she tells him how she had figured out that he is a werewolf, leading him to call her "the cleverest witch in her year." But the moment she really kicks into action is when she goes back in time with Harry (Ron is conveniently injured) to try and save Buckbeak and Sirius. They do that, very brilliantly, and Sirius agrees with the earlier statement made by Lupin. This statement is repeated a few times in the series, and with good reason. As said earlier, without Hermione, so many lives would have been lost.




HP and the Goblet of Fire


"I'm not an owl!"


One of the things very apparent in the film-Hermione is her very strong sense of right and wrong. For example, when in this film Mad-Eye Moody shows the class Unforgivable Curses, she is clearly made uncomfortable about it. She doesn't even answer Moody's question about Avada Kedavra, despite her a-grade student status, because she thinks it will bother Harry. Later, when Harry's name comes out of the Goblet of Fire and Ron has a huge fight with Harry about it, she is the communication cord between them, though not voluntarily. Her fear for Harry's life in the first task of the Triwizard Tournament is obvious, and her reaction to Harry and Ron's weird reconciliation is hilarious- "Boys." Then ofcourse, the Yule Ball is announced. Unlike the oblivious Ron, Viktor Krum makes a move on her and asks her out. Ron ofcourse, like an idiot, asks her last which enrages her. And then at the Yule Ball, the beautiful swan moment takes place for her- Hermione looks beyond beautiful and leaves everyone, including Harry, speechless. This was also the moment I realised that the bushy Hermione of the book has been lost forever as Emma Watson is going to grow up to be more beautiful than anyone would have expected. Ron is obviously made jealous by this, but he doesn't understand his feelings, even though Hermione does. That shot of her crying on the stairs after their argument, is so sad and so endearing at the same time as we see how this girl is growing up to be a woman. After this, her role in the film reduces except that she is Krum's "stolen item" in the second task. At the end, after Voldemort's return, and the last day of school  the always wise Hermione asks- "It's all going to change now, isn't it?" to which Harry, in his characteristic dry humour way, answers "Yes."




HP and the Order of Phoenix


"Who cares? I mean, it's sort of exciting, isn't it, breaking the rules."


At the beginning of this film, we see how much it affects Hermione that Harry is shutting them out of his world, and how troubled he is. She and Ron are in a peaceful state throughout this film. When Umbridge comes, Hermione starts hating the fact that they are neither learning how to defend themselves nor pass their OWLs, which causes her to form Dumbledore's Army with Harry as their teacher. In the first meeting, her support fpr Harry is clear as day. She also notices girlier things like the feelings between Harry and Cho. Again, I must talk about the scene after Harry and Cho's kiss, when she defends Harry's kissing skills and then tells Ron that he has an emotional range of a tea spoon, and all three end up laughing about it. This shows the importance of friendship in her life. She is also a very able member of DA. When Hagrid introduces the trio to his half-brother, and giant, Grawp, it is Hermione's motherly attitude that Grawp ends up liking. Afterwards, when Fred and George are breaking out of the school and everyone is rejoicing and Harry gets a vision of Sirius being kidnapped, it is Hermione who first notices that something is wrong with him. She tries to reason with him, but as Harry is usually stubborn about this things, she agrees to go with him to help him. But Umbridge catches them and in order to save Harry from her evil clutches, she weaves a story up and takes them to the Forbiddem Forest. Over there again we see how she feels protective towards all living things as she tries to help an otherwise deadly centaur, to break free from the strangling ropes that Umbridge had cast on him. When in the Department of Mysteries, she fights well with the Death Eaters.




HP and the Half-Blood Prince


"He's been poisoned, you daft dimbo! And as a matter of fact, I've always found him interesting."


Like Dumbledore remarks later, "Oh, to be young and to feel love's keen sting." Practically this whole film is about that with Hermione. Now sixteen, her feelings for Ron are coming out in leaps and bounds. From a little spearmint toothpaste on her face, to using the Confundus Charm on Cormac during Quidditch tryouts, so that Ron gets the Keeper position in place of him; and from babbling about snogging at the most inappropriate times, to being visibly hurt at seeing Ron and Lavendar kiss in public- it's all out there. Hermione is so adorable in her lovesick state in this film. Her reactions to the tentacle-y Cormack's very explicit approaches, attacking Ron with charmed birds...it's all part of a little game called love. She tells Harry after the Won Won-Lav Lav kiss that he is her best friend, and that is what really resounds with me. She keeps trying to save him from "wrong influences" like attention-seeking Romilda Vane, and understands his feelings towards Ginny immediately (even if we don't). Later on, when Ron is recovering from being poisoned in the hospital wing, she first has a really embarrassing argument with Lavendar in front of all then professors, and her reaction to when Ron starts saying her name repeatedly is so priceless, and she looks happier than ever. Then again, stupid Ron forgets this, and her disappointed reaction is also very touching. In the end, when Harry is about to leave to look for the remaining Horcruxes, she tells him that they, and Ron ofcourse, are in this together and that he needs them, and they will all go.




HP and the Deathly Hallows, part 1


"Actually I'm highly logical which allows me to look past extraneous detail and perceive clearly that which others overlook."


This, THIS, is my Hermione film. Emma Watson, when she had been the cast, was the only one in the trio who had never acted before. So, despite Kloves's infatuation, she was a bit of the weaker link. But in this film, she stole the show. First there was the scene in which she removes the memory of her from her parents' mind (a scene that I have completely forgotten to include in my favourite heartfelt scenes). This scene shows the sacrifice that she has made for Harry's sake, and for the greater good. She, like Ron and the others, risks her life by transforming herself into Harry for transporting him. When the Ministry falls and Death Eaters take over, Hermione jumps into action. Her beaded Mary Poppins bag is only a symbol to show how much they have been preparing, As Ron rightly said, they won't last two days without her. The duel in the coffee place shows how brave and skilled she has become. When they hide out in Grimmauld Place, we see her and Ron growing closer. After they break into the Ministry and in their escape Ron gets splinched, Hermione tries to cure him. Her crying and shaking, and then immediately getting up to putting protective charms around the place, we see how strong she has become. While they are on the road, Hermione tries to keep everything together. She understands Harry better than anyone, and when he screams at her under the influence of the locket Horcrux, she knows that it's not him speaking, but the locket. When Ron goes berserk and leaves them, Hermione is crushed, but still doesn't leave Harry's side because she, like always, has complete faith in Harry. Dumbledore had left her his copy of Tales of Beedle the Bard as part of his will. In this, the highly logical Hermione finds the sign of the Deathly Hallows and she and Harry go to Godrick's Hollow to get some more clues, and maybe a Horcrux. There they find Harry's parents' graves, and like the understanding and supporting friend she always was, she creates a bouquet of flowers for them. Later, when Ron returns and destroys the locket, she is enraged to see him at first...but his explanation about the deluminator and how the ball of light with her voice went inside his chest, she is left speechless. She still appears angry- "I'm always mad at him." When they are captured by Snatchers, she is tortured by Bellatrix. They don't show her much, but her scream scares us more than anything. They escape ofcourse, with a 'Mudblood' carved into her arm. So throughout, we see a more determined, stronger and supportive Hermione, one who will be there for Harry through thick and thin, and is in love with the boy who annoys her so much: Ron.




HP and the Deathly Hallows, part 2


"I'll go with you."


Hermione in this gets our attention first not as Hermione, but rather in disguise as Bellatrix. When they break into the vault, it is Hermione's quick thinking that saves them there...especially flying out on the dragon. Then once in Hogwarts, Ron takes over unexpectedly, and finally. Every idea from him is quickly deemed as brilliant! And as said before, the kiss happens, and Ron's exertion is clearly admired by her. Her moment in this comes when Harry is about to sacrifice himself, and she just knows and tells him that she'll go with him. That one line, and we have to reevaluate the depth of what this friendship means for her. She also tries to kill Nagini, but our hero Neville takes care of that. In the end, when she stands in between the two, holding their hands, we can understand how happy she is. 




Final thoughts- Hermione in the films was practically flawless, especially towards the end. The filmmakers, now even I have started to believe, were Harry and Hermione shippers to some extent. Except I think it is only great platonic love and understanding they have for each other. Throughout the films, they have never fought and Hermione always stood for Harry, and risked everything for him and her belief in him. The chemistry between her and Ron was adorable too, ever since they were little kids. Noone would have figured that by the time she grew up, Emma Watson would become a gorgeous human being, but still, she was Hermione through and through. Friendship and bravery were as much a part of Hermione as they were of any of the heroes, and she has made a generation of clever girls proud.

"Always." ~Severus Snape

"When I’m 80 years old and sitting in my rocking chair, I’ll be reading Harry Potter. And my family will say to me, “After all this time?” And I will say, “Always."
-Alan Rickman




         I repeatedly talk about my love and devotion towards anti-heroes. I also talk about my love and devotion towards Harry Potter films. Severus Snape was the anti-hero of the Harry Potter world...so you can imagine.


         From the first film itself, I was doubtful of Snape. I don't exactly remember if I had ever seen an Alan Rickman film before Sorcerer's Stone so he did look, and sound, rather interesting. A bit scary even. I felt, quite like Harry and the gang, that he was "upto something". But then we find out that he was protecting Harry all along, and this roused my suspicion. But I quickly dispersed that thought, and Snape just proved to be a hard, punishing, mocking teacher over the next few films. Obviously watching back, one can notice all the little hints that have been left for everyone to see. One of the funniest things about Snape for me was the music that they played for him...and his drone-y voice that accompanied it so well. Snape's apparent dislike for Harry and the running gag of hitting Ron on the head was both amusing and well, hate-worthy because no one likes a teacher like that.


        Then came the fifth film and Occlumency lessons with a hot-headed Harry and a James-hating Snape. It is at this time, when Harry taps into Snape's head in a burst of anger and we see how Snape was regularly ragged by James during their school days. Harry starts to get why Snape hated his father so much, and my initial intuition that Snape is really upto something returns. Now I had read the sixth book before watching the film obviously, so I knew the entire Half-Blood Prince plot. But still, Rickman never ceased to amaze. From being condescending to Bellatrix and making the Unbreakable Vow with Narcissa, to constantly trying to help Draco in his dark endeavour, he manages to maintain the level of mystery that surrounds Snape at all times. One of the things that they chose not to focus at all in the film was that he had become the professor of Harry's favourite subject- Defence Against the Dark Arts. Still, it's the last scene that counts...when Snape kills Dumbledore, and the shot of Snape's face, all pale and dark and sorrowful still, against the similar atmospheric sky. He becomes totally elusive after that...just throwing away the Aurors from his path and leaving Hogwarts, but not without a confrontation with Harry about his apparent treachery. Then again, in true windy cinematic fashion, he reveals that he is the Half-Blood Prince, leaving everyone perplexed and angry. My original suspicion thickens.


          Finally the last two films. In the first film, he is barely there- a great flaw, but his minute scene is very cool and impactful. Voldemort is shown to have complete trust in Snape now, and Snape, more dreary-voiced than ever, reveals even more secrets about the Order's plans. It is after that, when Voldemort is about to kill Charity Burbage, and she pleads to Snape to save her, that we see a nano-second of despair in his permanently stoic face. The last film ofcourse, is a whole another story. He has small scenes, but they are just brilliant. First we see him looking on at the strict fascistic running of Hogwarts under the Death Eaters, and he is again shown in dark lighting as the cloud of mystery around him thickens. Then there is him asking all the students, in the middle of the night, about the whereabouts of Harry. God, the way Rickman can extend every syllable he speaks is amazing. Then there is the Harry confrontation and the Prof McBadass duel. For those who haven't read the book, did you not wonder how in him trying to deflect her curses, he manages to hit the Carrows and knock them out? Because I thought that was especially clever of him and the filmmaker. And then, the scene of all scenes- his memory, his back story: The Prince's Tale. This is a chapter in the book that is my most favourite of all. First there is him looking at Harry right before he dies...looking into his Lily eyes. And then the memory. Yes this was a lot to do how David Yates made it look, but the final emotions of Rickman...him crying and begging and falling down at the sight of the dead Lily, and his "Always"...beautiful.


        So my final thoughts on Snape- noone but Rickman could have played him. I love Tim Roth, but I prefer him writhing in blood or standing up a diner. Rickman's stoicism, his mocking, funny, sad, dreary voice, his final redemption, and the fact that he knew Snape all along, is what helped him make the character so damn good. He is one of the best literary characters according to me, and Rickman made him one of the best film characters, at least in the series. I love unrequited love, and Snape had the epitome of that for Lily, to the point that he devoted his entire life in trying to protect her son who looked so much like a bullying classmate of his. As I said, looking back, we understand how much Harry's looks hurt him and annoy him, but despite all that he cares for him because he knows that Harry is quite a lot like the girl he loved since he was a little boy. His anger and meanness are all part of the act...his permanent veil forever hid the best of him. He was smart and talented and a great wizard throughout. Also, as Harry tells Albus Severus in the end, he is the bravest man ever, and also the most selfless, who did more for the great cause of love than almost any other character in the series.


         In short, I will love Snape, and love the love of Snape, always.

"Maybe you don't have to do this all by yourself, mate." ~ Ron Weasley

         Isn't it sad that the only non-wisecrack thing said by Ron is my title? Ron in the films was a bit different from his counterpart in the books. He was more of the humourous sidekick rather than the best friend. If it hadn't been for Rupert Grint's brilliant comedic talent, I think he would have been even more less important in the films. However it was not always this way.






HP and the Sorcerer's Stone

"Yes, Hermione, I think this is gonna be *exactly* like wizard's chess."

Ron and Harry officially meet in the train on their way to Hogwarts for the first time. Ron instantly amuses Harry, and us, with his blunt humour. From calling Hermione mental, to unknowingly insulting Sir Nicholas by calling him Nearly Headless Nick, Ron is always funny. We are also introduced to his enormous appetite. Harry finds in Ron a person who has always lived around magic and family, unlike himself. Ron constantly supports Harry, whether against Malfoy, or in Quidditch or in trying to find out the truth behind Nicholas Flamel and the Sorcerer's Stone. We also witness the meeting of Ron and Hermione, and the friendly bickering that will last all their lives. When Ron looks in the Mirror if Erised, he sees himself, headboy, Quidditch captain, and famous- a clear heart's desire for a younger child in a huge family. At the end of the film, Ron, with his wizard's chess expertise, fights and wins against lifesized chess figures, even at the cost of sacrificing himself. His reaction to the points he gets awarded for this is honest, and adorable.




HP and the Chamber of Secrets


"Eugh... essence of Crabbe..."


For a while, this was THE Ron film for me. I mean he breaks Harry out of the Dursley house, flies his father's enchanted car to Hogwarts, is nearly flattened to death by the Whomping Willow, vomits slugs, gets the formidable Mrs. Weasley's howler, faces Moaning Myrtle, becomes Crabbe, follows spiders, goes into the Chamber of Secrets etcetera etcetera. He is so funny and scared in this...no one makes on laugh like Ron. We meet most of the Weasley family here, and understand that beneath all the teasing and mocking, they have immense love and affection for each other. That is why Ron risks his life by entering the Chamber of Secrets, the first time, to save Ginny. Hermione gets petrified this year, and this clearly bothers him, and their almost hug at when she returns gives more than enough clues for any rom-com-watching-experienced-eye like mine.




HP and the Prisoner of Azkaban


"Spiders... the spiders... they want me to tap-dance. And I don't want to tap-dance!"


Ron returns to his duties a best friend of Harry, and co-quareller with Hermione. His main issues in this film is with his rat Scabbers, who in fact is Peter Petigrew in his Animagus form, much to Ron's surprise. We also see him entering his teens, and portraying the confusion, and subtle changes it brings with it.




HP and the Goblet of Fire


"I told Hermione to tell you that Seamus told me that Parvati told Dean that Hagrid was looking for you! Seamus never actually told me anything, so it was really me all along. I thought we'd be alright, you know, after you figured that out."


It must be difficult being the sidekick of the famous Harry Potter for Ron all these years. And when better to bare it all out than those confusing, formative, teenage years? For being jealous of Harry entering into Triwizard Tournament, with all the eternal glory- quite like what he had seen himself getting in the Mirror of Erised, Ron's slightly ugly side comes out and he and Harry have a huge fight. Then after the awkward reconciliation that is oh so typical of boys (I don't get it), Ron faces his biggest challenge yet- getting a date for the Yule Ball. This is also the first time we see a hint of his feelings towards Hermione, but he himself doesn't know it yet. From hero-worshiping Viktor Krum, to making him the "enemy" when Krum takes Hermione to the Ball, Ron is all about awkward teenage moments and feelings that we can all identify with.




HP and the Order of Phoenix


"One person couldn't feel all that, they'd explode!"


This is the film where Ron is exactly how he's supposed to be, in my opinion- a real backbone for Harry. With Harry's emotions all over the place, Ron keeps control of the situation and forever stands up for Harry- amongst skeptical classmates or in the DA. The food-lover part is touched over, showing that yes Ron hasn't changed all that much. His sense of humour also remains same- for instance the scene after Harry kisses Cho, and he jokes about it. He prepares well in the DA and then joins Harry in the Department of Mysteries and fights valiantly against the Death Eaters. Rupert Grint also looked really good in this film, and is kind of silent heroic throughout- a characteristic I really love.




HP and the Half-Blood Prince


"These girls...they're going to kill me, Harry"


Oooh Ron FINALLY gets some action in this one. This film, packed with hormones and love potions, is my favourite Ron "Won Won" Weasley film. As the quote above says- this year and film for Ron was very girl-filled (remember the conversation he and Harry have about girls' skin?). Lavendar "Lav Lav" Brown is shown to be infatuated with Ron, and when he is tricked into playing brilliantly at the Quidditch match as a Keeper, she kisses him in front of everyone in the Griffindor common room, including Hermione. This leads to the second onslaught of the Ron-Hermione fights, one which lasts very long. Ron ofcourse first enjoys, and then gets irritated by the puppy love of Lav Lav. He also ends up eating a love potion-filled box of chocolates from Romilda Vane, meant for Harry, and gets poisoned by mistake from a bottle of mead that Draco had meant to be drunk by Dumbledore. It is in his recovering/inebriated state, when he says Hermione's name repeatedly, when everyone understands what the emotionally defensive (silly) boy feels for his best female friend. He ofcourse scoff off the thought of this upon (so silly!) upon returning to normalcy. Throughout the film, he, like always, informs Harry about magical things like the Unbreakable Vow, and at the end, with Hermione- it is implied that he will go with Harry to search for the remaining Horcruxes and destroy them and defeat Voldemort.




HP and the Deathly Hallows, part 1


"Don't expect me to get excited over another damn thing we need to find."


Ron, forever the well-fed and spoilt child of his big family, is left out in the big bad world, with his two friends and not many ideas of what they are supposed to do there. From the beginning of the film itself, we see a very grown-up Ron. A Ron who drinks polyjuice potion to protect the identity of his best friend, despite the danger that it brings with it. A Ron who makes Harry stay and see the reason that their fight is not just for Harry, but for the greater good of everyone. A Ron who cannot keep his eyes off Hermione. After breaking into the Ministry of Magic to retrieve the original Horcux locket from Umbridge, Ron gets splinched during Apparation, which injures him. Added to that the troubles of travelling on road, not knowing any news of his family, and a part of the diabolical soul of Voldemort hanging around your neck, filling you up with hatred and anger- he had to blow up. Especially since he started suspecting that there is a romantic relationship being formed between Harry and Hermione right in front of him. Ron gets nasty like never before- a far cry from the funny and adorable Ron of the earlier films, and leaves the two in anger. He had been given Dumbledore's Deluminator as part of the latter's will, and this helps him return to his friends. We understand how lonely, and stupid, Ron must have felt without them, especially Hermione. Ron saves Harry's life when Harry is trying to take out the Sword of Griffindor from a frozen lake, and destroys the locket with it. The locket ofcourse tortures him first by telling him that he is least loved by his mother and an image of Harry and Hermione kissing, and happy without him; but Ron is surer of himself now and destroys it. His return is funny, and also tooth-achingly sweet, when he explains, so honestly, to the enraged Hermione that it was her voice that came through the Deluminator and helped to bring him back to them. This feeling of discontent and jealousy was needed by Ron, to make him the better person and friend he always was. Then when the trio get into trouble with the Snatchers after esacping Death Eaters at Xenophilius Lovegood's house, we can feel his pain when he hears the screams of Hermione because of how Bellatrix tortures her. Ron has problems with his self-confidence and jealousy and rage in this film, but in the end, he comes out better than ever.




HP and the Deathly Hallows, part 2


"We can do this."


A perfectly wonderful character, wasted on the whims of a screenwriter in love with the other best friend. That is what this film is for Ron. His faith is obviously, more strongly on Harry than ever before. He disguises himself as a Death Eater to break into Bellatrix's vault in Gringotts to get the Hufflepuff cup, and then with the other two, escapes on a dragon. After that, when Harry sees a vision of the next Horcrux being in Hogwarts, accompanies Harry in an almost suicide mission to the school. There he, quite brilliantly as often repeated by Hermione, goes back to the Chamber of Secrets to take out a Basilisk fang to kill the Horcrux with. After this, the big kiss takes place. After that he is a devoted boyfriend to Hermione, and goes after Crabbe and Goyle for cursing at her. Then he tells Harry to tap into Voldemort's mind one last time so as to find the last Horcrux, destroy it, and end it all. Through the destructive and terrifying battle of Hogwarts, they go and find Voldemort. Upon return, we see a very sad, albeit miniscule, shot of Ron crying over the body of a loved one. After this, Ron loses practically loses all his meaning, and doesn't even hug Harry- his best friend, who is going to sacrifice himself. A flip of what he did in the first film- I don't think so. There is just one great moment for Ron after this, when he- the scaredy boy all his life, holds on to Hermione, with all the love and warmth and protection he can provide her with, when Nagini is about to strike them. That doesn't happen ofcourse, thanks to the BAMF heroic Neville. When it is all over, Ron stands with his two friends...maybe not at his rightful place, but happy and content at last.




Final Thoughts- As I said above, Ron was robbed of his true role. Ron was supposed to be the best, most important friend of Harry's, and as the film progressed, he was reduced to the funny sidekick always with a sarcastic retort or gift of physical comedy. Still, Ron was widely loved, because one always loves the funny guy. And he's a redhead, so 5000 bonus points for that. There was a total chemistry between him and practically everyone- even Lavendar. Rupert Grint can do great and hilarious facial expressions, and as JK Rowling said in an interview- it felt like he totally got Ron inside-out. Ofcourse Steve Kloves was more in love with Hermione than Ron was, and didn't give Grint a total opportunity to show off that deep understanding of his. A lesser actor would not have been able to take Ron to the popularity and love like Grint was able to. Ron is the best friend we all want, someone who is there for you- getting in trouble, saving your life, and never leaving your side for anything in the world, and very importantly- making you laugh and happy. While the book Ron was all of this, our filmy one was true and cute and loveable nonetheless.