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Well, this last week has been rather busy. I'd like to say I worked the entire time on the revisions . . . but that didn't happen. I did work on the revisions though. I got a few new scenes my editor requested knocked out and read through and fixed a few more chapters, but alot of the time was spent on other life things interrupting my revision flow. Things like dental appointments and such. You don't realize how much time they take up until they start interfering with your work. But I'm hopeful that today will be the last day of heavy distractions and the rest of July will be all about knocking the last part of the book out. I've only got about 250 pages left of Well of Sorrows to get through. And I think I've gotten most of the heavy brand new scenes written. (I may have one or two more, I'll have to check my revision notes.)
In any case, I did take some time on Sunday to go see the movie HP & and the Half-Blood Prince with Patricia Bray. And I thought it was good. It wasn't spectacular though, and I had some issues.
They spent quite a bit of time on the characters and developing them, which I think is good because not many movies do that in any real depth any more. But in this movie I actually felt like they were all friends. Hermoine and Ron were great, Harry . . . not so much. Mainly I think this is because of Daniel Radcliffe. He didn't quite pull off the emotional depth required for Harry. But the emotional content in the movie was much higher and better than in many of the previous movies. I particularly thought that the actor who played Smughorn (I think that's the character's name) was spectacular. Initially I didn't like him, but by the time we get to the scene where he reveals the memory to Harry . . . that scene was hideously good.
However, they may have gone overboard with the emotional content at the expense of the plot. Now, some of the past movies were TOO plot heavy, with no look at the character, which isn't the way to go either, but this time they may have gone too light on the plot. I know that they changed some of the plot of the book, which I don't have a problem with so much, as long as the plot makes sense. But the biggest problem I have with the plot in this movie . . . is that it makes no sense. In particular the ending. I liked the scene up to the point where the Deatheaters and Snape start "fleeing" from Hogwarts. Why the hell are they fleeing? In the book they were being chased by the Aurors and such. In the movie, they're only being followed by HP and he's not much of a threat to 6 Deatheaters (well, 4 plus Snape and Malfoy). So why the hell didn't they destroy Hogwart's on their way out? They do what, hit the dining hall and Hadrid's place? That's kind of lame. And then, when they're confronted by HP, why didn't the kidnap him and deliver him with a nice bow to Voldemort? (Courtesy of PBray) He's freaking alone and helpless, as Snape demonstrates. So the ending of the movie seriously annoyed me. And there were other parts. Like the attack on the Weasley's house. They arrive, ring it in fire, lure people out to the marsh . . . and then all they do is fire the house. What was their point in the attack anyway? What were they trying to accomplish? I never got that. They also needed to clarify what was going on with the cursed necklace. They sort of did that, but it was almost an aside. They did better with the poisoned drink, and the Vanishing Cabinet, but I thought they should have done some clarification there as well.
But the movie was still good. I liked the visual aspects of the movie. They didn't spend a ton of money, etc, on magical visual effects such as having the moving staircases and moving pictures everywhere. I felt like they really showed us Hogwart's though, and HP pointing out how beautiful it was at the end was appropriate, because they showed us the beauty throughout the movie, without distracting us with magic. I was expecting a little more in hyping up Dumbledore's death though.
So, overall a good movie. Not the best of the summer so far, and not the best of the HP movies in particular. I won't be seeing it again at the theater, but of course I'll buy it on DVD.
Now, to go read book 7 . . . for the first time. *grin*
In any case, I did take some time on Sunday to go see the movie HP & and the Half-Blood Prince with Patricia Bray. And I thought it was good. It wasn't spectacular though, and I had some issues.
They spent quite a bit of time on the characters and developing them, which I think is good because not many movies do that in any real depth any more. But in this movie I actually felt like they were all friends. Hermoine and Ron were great, Harry . . . not so much. Mainly I think this is because of Daniel Radcliffe. He didn't quite pull off the emotional depth required for Harry. But the emotional content in the movie was much higher and better than in many of the previous movies. I particularly thought that the actor who played Smughorn (I think that's the character's name) was spectacular. Initially I didn't like him, but by the time we get to the scene where he reveals the memory to Harry . . . that scene was hideously good.
However, they may have gone overboard with the emotional content at the expense of the plot. Now, some of the past movies were TOO plot heavy, with no look at the character, which isn't the way to go either, but this time they may have gone too light on the plot. I know that they changed some of the plot of the book, which I don't have a problem with so much, as long as the plot makes sense. But the biggest problem I have with the plot in this movie . . . is that it makes no sense. In particular the ending. I liked the scene up to the point where the Deatheaters and Snape start "fleeing" from Hogwarts. Why the hell are they fleeing? In the book they were being chased by the Aurors and such. In the movie, they're only being followed by HP and he's not much of a threat to 6 Deatheaters (well, 4 plus Snape and Malfoy). So why the hell didn't they destroy Hogwart's on their way out? They do what, hit the dining hall and Hadrid's place? That's kind of lame. And then, when they're confronted by HP, why didn't the kidnap him and deliver him with a nice bow to Voldemort? (Courtesy of PBray) He's freaking alone and helpless, as Snape demonstrates. So the ending of the movie seriously annoyed me. And there were other parts. Like the attack on the Weasley's house. They arrive, ring it in fire, lure people out to the marsh . . . and then all they do is fire the house. What was their point in the attack anyway? What were they trying to accomplish? I never got that. They also needed to clarify what was going on with the cursed necklace. They sort of did that, but it was almost an aside. They did better with the poisoned drink, and the Vanishing Cabinet, but I thought they should have done some clarification there as well.
But the movie was still good. I liked the visual aspects of the movie. They didn't spend a ton of money, etc, on magical visual effects such as having the moving staircases and moving pictures everywhere. I felt like they really showed us Hogwart's though, and HP pointing out how beautiful it was at the end was appropriate, because they showed us the beauty throughout the movie, without distracting us with magic. I was expecting a little more in hyping up Dumbledore's death though.
So, overall a good movie. Not the best of the summer so far, and not the best of the HP movies in particular. I won't be seeing it again at the theater, but of course I'll buy it on DVD.
Now, to go read book 7 . . . for the first time. *grin*
no subject
Date: 2009-07-22 12:28 am (UTC)But it is nice that the more unrealistic parts of the movie, such as the magic, are said so prosaically. That's what was good about this movie. They didn't make a spectacle of the magic. It was just there, used, and mundanely as possible. Which was a nice change of pace from some of the previous movies that seemed to focus on the "WOW!" factor of the magic and left the actual plot and character behind.
no subject
Date: 2009-07-22 06:59 am (UTC)