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{{Plot notice|date=November 2010}} |
{{Plot notice|date=November 2010}} |
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The film opens with Rufus Scrimgeour, newly appointed Minister of Magic, addressing the magical world about Voldemort's return to power. The film cuts to Harry Potter watching as his uncle Vernon, cousin Dudley, and aunt Petunia Dursley pack up their car and leave him behind in their empty house. Ron Weasly is shown standing outside the Burrow, contemplating the tasks ahead. Meanwhile, Hermione Granger is going around her own house, erasing herself from all of the family portraits, as well as wiping her parents' memories of anything having to do with their daughter. |
[[The]] [[film]] [[opens]] [[with]] [[Rufus]] [[Scrimgeour]], [[newly]] [[appointed]] [[Minister]] [[of]] [[Magic]], [[addressing]] [[the]] [[magical]] [[world]] [[about]] [[Voldemort's]] [[return]] [[to]] [[power]]. The film cuts to Harry Potter watching as his uncle Vernon, cousin Dudley, and aunt Petunia Dursley pack up their car and leave him behind in their empty house. Ron Weasly is shown standing outside the Burrow, contemplating the tasks ahead. Meanwhile, Hermione Granger is going around her own house, erasing herself from all of the family portraits, as well as wiping her parents' memories of anything having to do with their daughter. |
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Severus Snape, meanwhile, arrives at Malfoy Manor, where Lord Voldemort is holding a meeting with his Death Eaters. Snape takes his place among them, and informs Voldemort when Harry Potter will be moved from Number 4 Privet Drive. He also informs the group that the Ministry has come within their control. Voldemort tells the Death Eaters that he alone must be the one to kill Harry, but he cannot do so with his wand due to the connection shared between their cores. He forces Lucius Malfoy to give him Malfoy's own wand. Voldemort then kills Charity Burbage, the Muggle Studies teacher from Hogwarts, and feeds her body to Nagini as the Death Eaters look on. I saw this at midnight. I was frustrated because we waited for ten minutes for the projector to work. |
Severus Snape, meanwhile, arrives at Malfoy Manor, where Lord Voldemort is holding a meeting with his Death Eaters. Snape takes his place among them, and informs Voldemort when Harry Potter will be moved from Number 4 Privet Drive. He also informs the group that the Ministry has come within their control. Voldemort tells the Death Eaters that he alone must be the one to kill Harry, but he cannot do so with his wand due to the connection shared between their cores. He forces Lucius Malfoy to give him Malfoy's own wand. Voldemort then kills Charity Burbage, the Muggle Studies teacher from Hogwarts, and feeds her body to Nagini as the Death Eaters look on. I saw this at midnight. I was frustrated because we waited for ten minutes for the projector to work. |
Revision as of 06:04, 21 November 2010
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows | |
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File:HP7part1poster.jpg | |
Directed by | David Yates |
Screenplay by | Steve Kloves |
Produced by | David Heyman David Barron J. K. Rowling[3] |
Starring | Daniel Radcliffe Rupert Grint Emma Watson |
Cinematography | Eduardo Serra |
Edited by | Mark Day |
Music by | Alexandre Desplat Orchestrator: Conrad Pope Themes: John Williams |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. Pictures |
Release dates | Part 1: Part 2:
|
Running time | Part 1: 146 minutes [4] |
Countries | Template:Film UK Template:Film US |
Language | English |
Box office | Part 1: $61,150,000[5] |
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows is a 2010/2011 two-part epic fantasy film directed by David Yates, written by Steve Kloves and based on the novel of the same name by J. K. Rowling. The film is produced by Rowling along with David Heyman and David Barron. The two parts form the seventh and final installment in the Harry Potter film series, with the story following Harry Potter on a quest to find and destroy Lord Voldemort's secret to immortality – the Horcruxes. The films star Daniel Radcliffe as Harry Potter, alongside Rupert Grint and Emma Watson as Harry's best friends, Ron Weasley and Hermione Granger. Principal photography for both parts was completed on 12 June 2010 .[6] Part 1 was released in 2D and IMAX formats on 19 November 2010, and Part 2 will be released in 2D, 3D, and IMAX formats on 15 July 2011 .[2][7][8][9] The film will also be released with D-BOX motion code in select cinemas.
Plot
Part 1
The film opens with Rufus Scrimgeour, newly appointed Minister of Magic, addressing the magical world about Voldemort's return to power. The film cuts to Harry Potter watching as his uncle Vernon, cousin Dudley, and aunt Petunia Dursley pack up their car and leave him behind in their empty house. Ron Weasly is shown standing outside the Burrow, contemplating the tasks ahead. Meanwhile, Hermione Granger is going around her own house, erasing herself from all of the family portraits, as well as wiping her parents' memories of anything having to do with their daughter.
Severus Snape, meanwhile, arrives at Malfoy Manor, where Lord Voldemort is holding a meeting with his Death Eaters. Snape takes his place among them, and informs Voldemort when Harry Potter will be moved from Number 4 Privet Drive. He also informs the group that the Ministry has come within their control. Voldemort tells the Death Eaters that he alone must be the one to kill Harry, but he cannot do so with his wand due to the connection shared between their cores. He forces Lucius Malfoy to give him Malfoy's own wand. Voldemort then kills Charity Burbage, the Muggle Studies teacher from Hogwarts, and feeds her body to Nagini as the Death Eaters look on. I saw this at midnight. I was frustrated because we waited for ten minutes for the projector to work.
Several members of the Order of the Phoenix arrive at Number 4, Privet Drive to move Harry to the Burrow. Alastor 'Mad-Eye' Moody informs Harry that since they can't apparate or use the Floo network without being watched by the Ministry of Magic, they will fly to the Burrow. Ron, Hermione, Fleur Delacour, Mundungus Fletcher, and Fred and George Weasley all take Polyjuice Potion to disguise themselves as Harry. The plan is that if the Death Eaters attack them while they move, then they won't know which Harry is the real one. Before taking off with Hagrid on Sirius' flying motorcycle, Harry releases Hedwig to fly and meet them at the Burrow. Everybody takes off and is almost immediately attacked by the Death Eaters. A chase ensues, during which Hedwig joins the fight and is killed. Harry is then pursued by Voldemort himself, and he and Hagrid are knocked unconscious. Harry's wand acts of its own accord and defends Harry from Voldemort's curse, destroying Lucius's wand. Harry and Hagrid then pass through the protective enchantments surrounding the Burrow and land.
The rest of the Order arrives as well, shaken because of the attack and the obvious betrayal. George and Lupin show up, with George's left ear having been cursed off. Bill Weasley arrives and sadly informs the group that Mad-Eye Moody was killed and that Fletcher had fled in fear. Afterwards, while everyone is asleep, Harry attempts to leave, feeling guilty that people have been injured and killed for him. Ron stops him and convinces him that the fight is bigger than him, and that he should stay long enough to see Bill and Fleur's wedding.
Harry dreams of Voldemort raging at an imprisoned Ollivander, the wandmaker, about Lucius's wand not working to defeat Harry. While the group is setting up the tent for the wedding, Scrimgeour arrives and meets with Harry, Ron, and Hermione. He reveals to them that Albus Dumbledore left them several possessions in his will. To Ron, he left his Deluminator, the device Dumbledore used on his arrival at Privet Drive to turn out the streetlights. To Hermione, Dumbledore left his copy of The Tales of Beedle the Bard, a series of wizarding children's stories. To Harry, he left the Golden Snitch that Harry caught in his first Quidditch match. Scrimgeour also tells Harry that Dumbledore also left him the sword of Godric Gryffindor, but since it was not Dumbledore's to give away and that the sword is currently missing, Harry does not receive it.
Bill and Fleur's wedding commences, and Harry sits and talks with Elphias Doge, an elderly wizard who knew Dumbledore and wrote his obituary in The Daily Prophet. They are joined by Ron's Auntie Muriel, who tells Harry that he barely knew Dumbledore at all, and proceeds to tell Harry snippets of Dumbledore's strange past, including information about his father killing three Muggles, his sister dying tragically and strangely, his brother being a recluse and oddball, and the Dumbledore family living in Godric's Hollow as neighbors to the Potters and Bathilda Bagshot, a world-renowned historian. The wedding is interrupted by Kingsley Shacklebolt's Patronus arriving suddenly to inform everybody that the Ministry of Magic has fallen, Scrimgeour is dead, and the Death Eaters are coming. Harry, Ron, and Hermione apparate to central London as the Death Eaters arrive.
They go to a small coffee shop to discuss their next course of action is, when they are suddenly attacked by two Death Eaters. The trio subdues them and wipes their memories, wondering how the two knew where they were. The trio decides to go to Number 12 Grimuald Place to hide. While there, they discover that R.A.B, the mysterious person who stole the real locket of Slytherin that Voldemort turned into a Horcrux, is actually Sirius's brother, Regulus Arcturus Black. Kreacher, the resident house-elf of Grimauld Place, tells the trio that the real locket was in the house, but that it was stolen by Mundungus Fletcher. Harry orders Kreacher to find Mundungus and bring him back. The film cuts to the Ministry of Magic, where Pius Thicknese, a Death Eater, has taken the position of Minister of Magic, and has decreed that all half-blood witches and wizards must be screened to see if they truly are of magical descent. Harry has a dream of Voldemort finding Gregorovich, a foriegn wandmaker. Kreacher returns to Grimuald Place with Mundungus Fletcher, as well as Dobby, a house-elf that Harry freed from the Malfoy family in his second year at Hogwarts. Mundungus tells the trio that he was forced to give the locket to a Ministry woman in order to save himself from being arrested for pawning without a license. It's revealed that the woman is Dolores Umbridge.
The trio use Polyjuice Potion to take on the appearance of three Ministry officials, and sneak into the Ministry to find Umbridge. They end up seperated; Ron having to take care of an angry Yaxley, another Death Eater, Harry to go to Umbridge's office to find the locket, and Hermione to the courtroom where Umbridge is holding trials for Muggle-borns. Harry doesn't find the locket in Umbridge's office, and he meets up with Ron again. Together, they go down to the courtroom, where a large group of Dementors are used to scare the muggle-borns on trial into submission. Umbridge is interrogating a woman who turns out to be the wife of the man that Ron has changed into. Harry, in a fit of rage at Umbridge, stuns her. He quickly retrieves the locket, and the trio and the muggle-born woman, Mary Catermole, evade the Dementors. The trio quickly escapes from the Ministry with Yaxley on their tail. Deutschland
They arrive in a forest. Ron has been splinched, injuring his arm while disapparating, and while Hermione tends to his wounds, she tells Harry that they can't go back to Grimuald Place because Yaxley (who has a ponytail) followed them, destroying its protective charms. They are now forced to wander the countryside, living in a tent. After Ron is patched up, the trio attempts a variety of spells to destroy the locket, but despite their best efforts, the locket remains unscratched. They decide that they will continue searching for more Horcruxes while taking turns wearing the locket. They realize that while wearing the locket, the wearer feels much more angry, suspicious, fearful, and overall bad-tempered than they normally do. Ron is affected most, and while wearing the locket he bitterly notices Harry and Hermione spending a lot of time together. The film cuts to Harry holding the Snitch Dumbledore left him. Hermione tells him that Snitches have flesh memories, so the Snitch can tell which person caught it in the case of a disputed call.
Hermione is struck by a revelation one night about why Dumbledore left Harry the Sword of Gryffindor. She tells him that the sword is Goblin-made, meaning it does not retain dust, dirt, or scratches, but it does imbibe any and all things that only make it stronger. Because Harry had killed a basilisk in his second year with the sword, the sword is now impregnated with basilisk venom, one of the few rare substances that can destroy a Horcrux. Ron, who is wearing the locket, overhears this conversation and finally snaps, provoking a yelling match with Harry. The fight ends with Ron leaving the two.
Harry and Hermione apparate from the campsite the next day, leaving behind any chance that Ron can find them again. Hermione is particularly saddened by Ron's departure. The next day, Harry is holding the Snitch yet again, and this time he places it to his lips. Because he originally caught the Snitch by nearly swallowing it, he gets a reaction from it. Five words appear on the Snitch's gold covering; "I open at the close."
Harry and Hermione decide to go to Godric's Hollow for two reaons. The first is that it was where Harry's parents died and he wishes to visit their grave. The second is that Bathilda Bagshot still lives there and they believe that Dumbledore could have left Gryffindor's Sword with her. They apparate to Godric's Hollow and realize that it's Christmas Eve. Harry and Hermione go to the churchyard to search for Harry's parents' grave. Hermione notices on the grave of one 'Ignotus Peverell' the symbol that was inked into her copy of The Tales of Beedle the Bard. Harry finds his parents' graves, and Hermione conjures a wreath of roses for it.
The two then notice that they are being watched by Bagshot. They follow her to her house, all the while remaining silent. Once there, Bathilda goes upstairs and Harry follows her, leaving Hermione downstairs. Hermione notices that Bathilda owns a copy of Rita Skeeter's new book The Life and Lies of Albus Dumbledore, and takes it out of curiosity. Harry notices of a picture of a young man on the way upstairs, whom he had seen in Voldemort's memories. Once upstairs, Bathilda's body falls away to reveal Nagini. Nagini attacks Harry and Hermione, hearing the noise, comes upstairs to help. Harry is bitten by the snake, but the two manage to escape.
When Harry awakes, Hermione tell him that in the commotion at Bathilda's, his wand was destroyed. She also reveals to Harry that the picture he saw of a young man is the same picture in The Life and Lies of Albus Dumbledore. The man is Gellert Grindelwald, a dark wizard from the mid-1900s and a friend of Albus Dumbledore's. That night, Harry sits outside on guard when a silver doe Patronus appears to him. He follows it to a small frozen pond. The Sword of Gryffindor is at the bottom. Harry strips down and dives in to retrieve it, but the horcrux around his neck senses the Sword and tries to strangle Harry. Ron suddenly arrives and rescues Harry, retrieving the Sword. Harry uses Parseltongue to open the locket so Ron can destroy it. The locket tries to fight back by inflaming Ron's worst fears, but Ron nevertheless destroys the Horcrux.
They return to the tent, where Hermione grows increasingly angry at Ron for having the audacity to return. Harry and Hermione wonder how Ron found them, and he tells them that the Deluminator that Dumbledore left him was what got him back. He says he heard Hermione's voice coming from it and he clicked it. A small blue light came out and went into his chest, and he apparated and arrived in time to see the silver doe.
The trio decides to visit the Lovegood house because the symbol Hermione sees in The Life and Lies of Albus Dumbledore has popped up everywhere, including around Xenophilias Lovegood's neck at Bill and Fleur's wedding. Mr. Lovegood tells them the tale of the Three Brothers and the Deathly Hallows, which are revealed to be three incredibly powerful magical items; the Elder Wand, a wand of immense power that is rumored to be unbeatable, the Resurrection Stone, a stone that can bring back the spirits of those who have died, and the Invisibility Cloak, making the wearer undectable. The legend says that the person who brings these three items together will become master of death. Xenophilias tries to turn the trio over to the Death Eaters as ransom for his daughter Luna, who they have captured. The trio escape and disapparate back to the forest, where a group of Snatchers are waiting to capture them. Hermione jinxes Harry's face so he is almost unrecognizable. They are captured and taken them to Malfoy Manor in order to collect a reward that was set for Harry.
At Malfoy Manor, Bellatrix Lestrange imprisons Harry and Ron in the cellar, where she has also imprisoned Luna Lovegood, Ollivander, and a Goblin named Griphook; meanwhile, she tortures Hermione to try to find out how they acquired the Sword of Gryffindor, which she had believed to be safe in her vault at Gringotts. Harry has another vision and sees Voldemort finding Grindelwald at the wizarding prison, Nuremgard. Grindelwald tells him that as a result of their long ago duel, Dumbledore became the master of the Elder Wand.
Harry, using a magical mirror his godfather Sirius gave him, sees another man's face staring back at him. He begs the person in the mirror for help. Dobby then appears and at Harry's request, rescues Luna and Ollivander and returns to help Harry, Ron, Hermione and Griphook. The group rescue Hermione with Dobby's help, but Bellatrix throws the dagger at them as they disapparate, killing Dobby. Harry gives Dobby a proper burial on the beach near Shell Cottage, the home of Bill and Fleur.
The films ends with Voldemort visiting Dumbledore's tomb near Hogwarts. He breaks open the coffin and steals the Elder Wand; triumphant he sends green lightning shooting into dark clouds that gather overhead.
Part 2
Part 2, scheduled for release on 15 July 2011, will pick up the story from the end of Part 1.
Cast
- Cast listing for Part 1
- Daniel Radcliffe as Harry Potter[10]
- Rupert Grint as Ron Weasley[10]
- Emma Watson as Hermione Granger[10]
- Alan Rickman as Severus Snape[11]
- Helena Bonham Carter as Bellatrix Lestrange[12]
- Jamie Campbell Bower as Gellert Grindelwald[13]
- Robbie Coltrane as Rubeus Hagrid[14]
- Warwick Davis as Griphook[15][16]
- Frances de la Tour as Olympe Maxime[17]
- Hazel Douglas as Bathilda Bagshot[18]
- Ralph Fiennes as [[Lord Voldemort][19]
- Brendan Gleeson as Mad-Eye Moody
- Jason Isaacs as Lucius Malfoy
- Tom Felton as Draco Malfoy[20]
- Michael Gambon as Albus Dumbledore[21]
- Rhys Ifans as Xenophilius Lovegood
- Evanna Lynch as Luna Lovegood[22]
- John Hurt as Ollivander[23]
- Toby Jones as the voice of Dobby[24]
- Simon McBurney as the voice of Kreacher
- Andy Linden as Mundungus Fletcher
- Timothy Spall as Wormtail
- Julie Walters as Molly Weasley
- James Phelps as Fred Weasley
- Oliver Phelps as George Weasley
- Mark Williams (actor) as Arthur Weasley
- Bonnie Wright as Ginny Weasley
- Domhnall Gleeson as Bill Weasley
- Clémence Poésy as Fleur Delacour
- Bill Nighy as Rufus Scrimgeour
- David Thewlis as Remus Lupin
- Matthew Lewis as Neville Longbottom
- Richard Griffiths as Vernon Dursley
- Fiona Shaw as Petunia Dursley
- Harry Melling as Dudley Dursley
Jason Isaacs considered not returning for Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows before the book was released, as he was worried that the senior Malfoy would have very little screen time due to the character's imprisonment in the previous story. Meeting J. K. Rowling at an awards dinner he fell to his knees and said "Get me out of prison, I beg you." Rowling reassured Isaacs by looking over her shoulder and mouthing "You're out. Chapter One." Isaacs signed onto the film immediately afterward.[25]
Joshua Herdman announced on 9 August 2009 that Jamie Waylett would not be reprising his role as Vincent Crabbe for Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. Waylett's character would instead be written out and his role in the plot taken over by Herdman's character, Gregory Goyle.[26]
Director David Yates has announced that, for the final scene in the film which is set nineteen years after the film's main story, older actors will not be cast to play the main characters. Special effects will be used to depict the cast members as adults.[27]
Production
Development
The decision to divide Rowling's final book into a two-part movie came from the original declined proposal to split Goblet of Fire in 2004. Deathly Hallows was shot back to back,[28] and treated as if it were one film.[29] The idea to split the book into a two-part movie had been around since the middle of 2007, but only came into serious consideration after producer David Heyman was able to talk to writer Steve Kloves when the 2007–2008 Writers Guild of America strike ended and Heyman had Rowling's approval.[29] Kloves started his work on the script for the second part in April 2009.[30]
According to Warner Bros. executive Alan F. Horn, it will allow "an extra hour and a half to celebrate what this franchise has been and do justice to all the words and ideas in the amazing story."[28] Heyman described the workings behind the split: "Deathly Hallows is so rich, the story so dense and there is so much that is resolved that, after discussing it with J. K. Rowling, we came to the conclusion that two parts were needed."[28] Kloves was not able to start work on the script until the WGA strike ended.[31]
Before David Yates was officially chosen to direct the film, others had expressed an interest in the job. Alfonso Cuarón, director of Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, had said that he would be tempted to return to direct.[32] Guillermo del Toro, who passed on Prisoner of Azkaban, had expressed interest in directing Deathly Hallows,[33] but an increased workload over the production of The Hobbit ruled him out of the project.[34]
Rowling was appointed producer on the two-part film, alongside David Heyman and David Barron.[3] Heyman noted that the films will be a closer recreation of the books than the previous films because of the length a two-part adaptation entails.[30] Daniel Radcliffe said: "This is a road movie, particularly in Part One of the film. People have been so used to seeing Harry Potter at Hogwarts and we're just not there for the first part of the film. That seems to have really freshened things up, and hopefully will get people seeing the films with fresh eyes again, because it's just a totally different look when you're not just sat in the same room the whole time."[30]
Yates and Heyman have noted that some of the events of the seventh book had an effect on the way the sixth film was written.[35]
Filming
Pre-production began on 26 January 2009Leavesden Studios, where the previous six installments were filmed. Pinewood Studios became the second studio location for filming the seventh movie.[36][37] Bruno Delbonnel, the Director of Photography for the sixth film, opted not to work on Deathly Hallows, as he was afraid of repeating himself.[38] Therefore Eduardo Serra was chosen to be the cinematographer for Parts 1 and 2.[39] Director David Yates said that the film will be shot with "loads of hand-held cameras." He stated, "I want to shake things up every time I go into this world. I like experimenting as we go along."[40] In October 2009, Ralph Fiennes started filming his role as Lord Voldemort. Many of the adult actors also prepared for filming during that period.[41] The crew also shot on location, with Swinley Forest and Freshwater West as two of the main outdoor filming areas, along with the village of Lavenham in Suffolk[42] and the streets of the city of London.
, while filming began on 19 February 2009 atOn 26 March 2010[43] The movie in its entirety was filmed over a one and a half year period throughout the United Kingdom and finished on 12 June 2010.[6] Even though the shooting schedule was set at 250 days, the filming took 478 days to complete. Radcliffe, Grint, and Watson all openly wept on the last day,[44] which seemed to end their eleven years of work on the films.[45] However, filming is not totally finished. Parts of the Epilogue of the 7th book are being reshot due to a rushed impression the cast and crew had. Filming on the actual King's Cross Station was harder than they had originally thought. The reshoots will take place in Leavesden Studios to give the film a proper ending.[46]
, filming finished in Pinewood Studios. However, Leavesden Studios was still occupied for further filming.During production at Leavesden, Radcliffe's stunt double David Holmes suffered a serious spinal injury during the filming of an aerial sequence, which left him paralysed. Holmes fell to the ground following an explosion which was part of the stunt.[47][48][49]
Sets
Stuart Craig, set designer for all of the previous Harry Potter films, returned for final two parts. He commented, "Inevitably, the book has to be so condensed. There's been a great deal of tolerance on the part of the public – at least I think so. I could be proved wrong, still." On the wedding tent for Bill and Fleur's wedding he said, "The wedding tent, where the reception is held, rather than make it an extension of the house, which is rather eccentric, homemade, we decided to make it rather elegant, ... , It's lined with silk and beautiful, floating candelabra. So it's a nice contrast with the house." For the Ministry of Magic set, he noted, "This is an underground world; this is a ministry, so we went to the real ministries, the muggle ministries – Whitehall, in London – and decided that our magical ministry was kind of a parallel universe to these real ministries."[50]
Soundtrack
Composer Nicholas Hooper, who scored Order of the Phoenix and Half-Blood Prince, did not return for Deathly Hallows. Instead, Alexandre Desplat was hired to compose the score for Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1. Desplat composed throughout the summer of 2010 and the recording sessions began on 14 August with the London Symphony Orchestra. The supervising orchestrator on Deathly Hallows, Conrad Pope, (also one of the orchestrators on the first three Potter films) collaborated with Desplat and commented that the music is "exciting and vigorous" and "those who love melodies, harmonies and emotions in their film scores should be pleased. Reminds one of the old days."[51] The Part 1 soundtrack was released on 16 November 2010, three days before the film's release date, while a special Collector's Edition with bonus tracks and memorabilia will be released on 21 December.
Composer of the first three films, John Williams, expressed interest in returning for Deathly Hallows if it fit his schedule. Director David Yates stated that he was eager to work with Williams on the score for Part 2, but it was not possible due to their conflicting schedules.[52] It was confirmed via the Warner Bros. website that Part 1 composer, Alexandre Desplat, was set to return for Part 2.[53][54] In an interview with Film Music Magazine, Desplat stated that scoring Part 2 is "a great challenge" and that he has "a lot of expectations to fulfill and a great deal of work" ahead of him.[55]
Not included on the soundtrack is "O Children" by Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds. Director David Yates accompanied it to a scene not included in the book, where Harry and Hermione share a dance in their tent after Ron leaves, to "capture the tension and friendship and love that they share together.” [56] He listened to "hundreds" of tracks from Music Supervisor Matt Biffa, "because I needed a piece of music that was poignant and tender but oddly uplifting. And I came across Nick's piece and I loved it immediately. It has that capacity to lift you up and break your heart at the same time."[57]
The trailer music for Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows features two tracks, both from Brand X. Track one is called "The Sorcerer's Secret" and plays on the first three teasers for the film, while the second track, also from Brand X, plays on the trailer for both parts.[58] The third trailer, which promotes only Part 1, features three new tracks: Amphibious Zoo's "Ghost of War", Position Music's "Menace", and finally from the Immediate Music company, "The End of Days".
Costumes
The costumes for the part 1 film were designed by Jany Temime, who has been the costume designer on Harry Potter productions since Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban (2004).[59] Temime has spoken about a key design: Fleur's (who is hot) wedding dress. She says she "wanted it to be a witch wedding dress but not a Halloween dress. The dress is white but it needed to have something fantastic to it. So there is the phoenix [motif], the bird, which is a symbol of love in a way because there is rebirth, love never dies, it is born again." [59]
Fashion commentators have remarked on a close similarity between Jany Temime's design for this dress and a design from Alexander McQueen's Autumn/Winter 2008 collection. The Alexander McQueen team declined to comment.[60]
Marketing
The first official picture from the first film was released on 1 December 2009[61] A clip from the film was leaked on 4 December 2009 and was officially released on 8 December 2009 with the release of Half-Blood Prince on Blu-ray and DVD.[62]
, showing Harry, Ron and Hermione in a London street.At the 2010s ShoWest convention, Alan Horn premiered unfinished footage from both Part 1 and Part 2 of the upcoming film.[63] The 2010 MTV Movie Awards premiered more footage from both parts of Deathly Hallows.[64] At the Cinema Expo event in Amsterdam on 23 June 2010, a trailer was shown along with a five minute preview of selected scenes.[65] On 28 June 2010, the first official trailer for both parts was released on the internet and also was previewed before The Twilight Saga: Eclipse when it was released on 30 June 2010.[66] During ABC Family's premiere of Huge, the 2½ minute trailer for Deathly Hallows was shown. Following the release of the official teaser poster,[67] ABC Family broadcast interviews and additional scenes from both parts during their Harry Potter weekend, which began on 8 July 2010.[68] Another trailer can be seen from Lego Harry Potter: Years 1-4.[69]
Deathly Hallows was represented at the 2010 San Diego Comic-Con International event. Several props from the film, including the Elder Wand and Slytherin's Locket, were on display.[70] Tom Felton was in attendance and introduced new clips from the film.[71] Warner Bros. International announced that a Harry Potter Movie Marathon would be held in various cities of Japan, accompanied by new exclusive Deathly Hallows footage on 11 August 2010.[72] It was later found that there was no new trailer or footage from the film at the August 11, Japanese event, but rather the featurettes which had been aired outside of Japan.[73]
During the season premiere of The Vampire Diaries on The CW, the first TV spot aired for Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1. It featured new dialogue from Voldemort, scenes of the Lovegoods' home under attack from the Death Eaters and footage of Dumbledore's ghostly apparition. Furthermore, a new trailer for solely Part 1 was approved in the UK.[74] The trailer was released on 22 September and is about 2 minutes and 25 seconds long, featuring several new scenes.[75]
On 29 September 2010, three character posters for Part 1 of Harry, Ron and Hermione were released via Yahoo! Movies.[76] The following day, a Part 1 cinema poster was released online featuring the trio on the run in a forest.[77] Various other character posters for Part 1 were released on 6 October 2010, featuring Harry, Ron, Hermione, Lord Voldemort, Bellatrix Lestrange, Severus Snape and Fenrir Greyback.[78]
On October 12, four new character posters were released, featuring, Harry, Ron, Hermione, Bellatrix, Lucius Malfoy, Fenrir Greyback and a snatcher.[79] The posters are set to the theme of "Don't Get Caught", "Trust No One", and "The Hunt Begins".
On 15 October 2010, tickets began selling on Fandango for the US release of Part 1, and on 19 October, a 50-second clip featuring never-before-seen footage was aired at the 2010 Scream Awards. On 16 October, the second TV spot was released on Cartoon Network during a premiere of Scooby-Doo! Curse of the Lake Monster.[80] On 18 October 2010, seven new TV spots were released through the Warner Bros. YouTube channel featuring new footage.[81] On 25 October 2010, Yahoo! Movies released an exclusive featurette on the film featuring new shots. The trailer for this film was released 26 October 2010 and can be viewed at the Warner Brothers website.[82] On 30 October 2010 EW released two new featurettes, titled "Horcruxes" and "The Story" respectively, featuring huge amounts of never-before-seen footage. On the same day, the Warner Bros. Harry Potter website was updated to reveal twelve miniature clips from the film.[83]
On 3 November 2010, LA Times released an extended clip of Harry leaving the Burrow to find the Horcruxes: titled "No One Else Is Going to Die For Me".[84] From 11 November to 14 November, ABC Family broadcast another "Harry Potter Weekend" with the first five Harry Potter films. Throughout the "Harry Potter Weekend", they broadcast two new scenes. On 4 November 2010, a new clip was released from the Harry Potter Facebook page: titled "The Seven Potters".[85] Two more were released for the next two days such as a scene depicting a cafe attack [86] and another taking place in Malfoy Manor.
Leaks
Just 48-hours prior to the official North American launch of Part 1, the first 36 minutes of the film was leaked on the internet.[87] Even before the leak took place, the film was already the fifth-biggest generator of advance ticket sales in history, after selling out 1,000 cinemas across the United States.[88] Despite widely circulating rumours that the leaked footage was a marketing ploy to generate hype for the movie release date, executives from film studio Warner Bros. were adamant that the leak from the DVD screener containing the first 36-minutes of the film was not staged in any way.[89]
Release
Part 1
On 26 August 2010, director David Yates, producers David Heyman and David Barron along with Warner Bros. president Alan F. Horn, attended a test screening for Part 1 of Deathly Hallows in Chicago.[90][91] The unfinished film gained rave reviews from test screeners, some of which labelled it "amazing and dark" and "the most perfect Harry Potter film". Others expressed that the film faithfully adapted the novel, which led to an inheritance of the "book's own problems".[92]
Warner Bros. Pictures was originally going to release Part 1 of Deathly Hallows in 2D and 3D formats. However on 8 October 2010, it was announced that plans for a 3D version of Part 1 had been scrapped. "Warner Bros Pictures has made the decision to release “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 1” in 2D, in both conventional and IMAX cinemas, as we will not have a completed 3D version of the film within our release date window. Despite everyone’s best efforts, we were unable to convert the film in its entirety and meet the highest standards of quality." Part 2, however, will still be released in 2D, 3D and IMAX formats.[93] It is currently unknown if Warner Bros. will re-release Part 1 in 3D.
After much speculation, Part 1 received a PG-13 rating from MPAA for "some sequences of intense action violence, frightening images and brief sensuality."[94] The film also received a 12A from the BBFC for "moderate fantasy violence and threat."[95] In Australia the film has an M Rating, for fantasy themes and violence.[96]
The world premiere for Deathly Hallows: Part 1 was held in Leicester Square in London on 11 November, with fans from across the world turning up – some of whom had camped for days in the square. This was followed by the Belgian avant-premiere on the 12th of November and the U.S. premiere in New York City on 15 November.[97]
In Australia, the film had its premiere on 13 November at Warner Bros. Movie World, located on the Gold Coast, Queensland. Three hundred people attended the viewing, which was the second official showing in the world, behind the UK premiere. The film premiered in Kuwait's release on the 16th of November. In Israel, Estonia and New Zealand, the first part of the seventh film was released on 18 November. Many New Zealand cinemas premiered the film at midnight, on the 18th.
The first part was released across countries on 17 November 2010, with other countries to follow, while the second part will be released worldwide on 15 July 2011, eight months after Part 1.
Part 1 played in 3,700 theatres at midnight. Nationwide, it was held in 4,125 theatres and 239 IMAX theatres, where it held the record for the largest release of IMAX theatres of all-time.[98]
Box Office
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1 grossed $24 million in the United States and Canada during its midnight showing, and beat the record for the highest-grossing midnight gross of the series previously held by Half Blood Prince, which made $22.2 million.[99] The film also had the third highest midnight gross of all time behind The Twilight Saga: Eclipse and The Twilight Saga: New Moon, which grossed $30 million and $26.3 million respectively.[100] However, it has the biggest gross in IMAX with $1.4 million surpassing Eclipse, which made only $1 million.[101]
The film grossed $61.2 million on its opening day in the United States, making it the fifth biggest single day gross of all-time behind The Twilight Saga: New Moon ($72.7 million), The Twilight Saga: Eclipse ($68.5 million), The Dark Knight ($67.2 million) and Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen ($62.0 million). However, it was the highest opening day for a Harry Potter film in the series, a record previously held by Half-Blood Prince with $58.2 million.[102]
Reception
Part 1
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1 has received generally positive reviews. Review aggregate Rotten Tomatoes reports that 79% of critics gave the film a positive review based on 201 reviews, with an average score of 7.2/10. The consensus is "Deathly Hallows: Part I is a beautifully filmed, emotionally satisfying penultimate installment for the Harry Potter series."[103] On Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 based on reviews from critics, the movie currently has a score of 68 (citing "generally favourable reviews") based on 40 reviews.[104]
Among other reviews, Variety gave the film a positive rating, stating, "[...] Having made it this far, the Potter faithful won't be deterred by "Part 1's" bleak, inconclusive tenor, spelling phenomenal returns and raising expectations for a truly spectacular finish."[105] The UK's Daily Telegraph also gave the film a positive review, remarking, "For the most part the action romps along, spurred by some impressive special effects," adding, "It’s just slightly disappointing that, with the momentum having been established so effectively, we now have to wait until next year to enjoy the rest of the ride."[106] Roger Ebert awarded the first part three out of four stars, praising the cast and calling it "a handsome and sometimes harrowing film... completely unintelligible for anyone coming to the series for the first time".[107] Newsweek had a negative review in its November 15 issue.[108]
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{{cite interview}}
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{{citation}}
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External links
- Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Official Website
- Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1 at IMDb
- Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1 at AllMovie
- Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1 at Rotten Tomatoes
- Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1 at Box Office Mojo