Saturday, July 16, 2011

MOVIE REVIEW: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 (2011)


Hello friends! Sorry for my prolonged absence. I intended to write this long reflection about growing up and going off to law school, but much to my dismay, life beat me to it. Nevertheless, since I'm obviously going to be posting a lot less frequently nowadays, I'll try and write a proper reflection piece to officially put my blog on hiatus. In the meantime; last night, I got to see my first theatrical film in over a month. It is with baited anticipation, I give you: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2.

Picking up off the shores where Harry, Ron, and Hermione mourn the loss of Dobby the house elf, the trio work their way back to Hogwarts in an effort to find the last of the Horcruxes; artifacts which upon destruction, weaken the power of the sinister Lord Voldemort. While reuniting with his fellow classmates; now ready for battle against the Dark Wizards, Harry discovers more insight into his own prophecy, and the ties that bind him towards it.

Part 2 is a fitting conclusion to a series that, for the better part of my adolescence, has dominated my pop culture psyche. The pace is brisk and appropriate, and the performances are adequate. It is perhaps the most action packed out of the entire series. Many viewers may get some vibes of the battle scenes from Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers, or at least I did. My biggest complement I can give to the last two films of the series is how the production team finally managed to wise up and treat the stories with the maturity and grittiness they deserve. The final confrontation between Harry and Voldemort is exceptionally well-done, you get a tangible sense of relief after the tension of the fight, knowing that justice for the wizards has finally been served.

Now, here's the tricky part. In spite of my complements of the film as a strong series-ender; as a standalone film, well, it's not anything extraordinary. Unlike Part 1, which totally took me by surprise with it's appropriately executed twists and pathos (I consider it The Empire Strikes Back of the series, not the maudlin travesty that was Half-Blood Prince). Part 2 is entirely based off of continuity and minimal exposition; with the plot simply going from Point A to Point B. And as interesting as the expositional scenes were, too frequently did they interupt the kinetic and exciting frenzy of the action. A little frustrating for me, since the book was so much more fluid and epic with it's treatment of the plot.

(SPOILER ALERT)

Lastly, Part 2 suffers from one nearly-fatal blow: The epilogue. The story advances to 19 years after the events of the main plot, as we see the pre-adolescent progeny of Harry Potter and pals board Platform 9 3/4 on their way to Hogwarts. However, the production team has made the peculiar descision to have the original actors (who are in their early 20s) portray middle-aged versions of their roles, with embarrasingly negligible make-up work that failed to give the illusion that they've matured. Sorry make-up artists, but the actors still looked 20! Pairing them up with other actors who were probably no more or less than 8 or 9 years younger than them in real life just looked awkward and unrealistic. After such excellent attention to detail in the rest of the film, how could they drop the ball on something so noticeable?

What irks me even more is the fact that the Harry Potter series is a moneymaking juggernaut. There's no excuse, especially in this economy, why the rich, fat-cat producers couldn't settle for an Academy Award-winning make-up artist, or CGI maestro. Hell, they could've even cast some age-appropriate, well-established Anglo actors like Daniel-Day Lewis (as Harry), Simon Pegg (as Ron), Nicole Kidman (as Hermione), et al. to do cameos, paid them each £600,000 and called it quits. It would've been a much more refreshing and realistic choice, but in the end, it is what it is, and unfortunately left a bad tase in my mouth.

In the end though, while an unsurprisingly flawed film adaptation. Part 2 is a solid ending to a rollercoaster-ride of a notable fantasy series.

7/10

Peace,
- Jon

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