How to miss the blockbuster of the summer 2011? Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2 ( Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2 ) concludes the saga literature and film’s most iconic and popular of the early twenty-first century. Of course, there will always be the embittered outcasts who will be there to signify that they do not care. Only around Harry Potter in our time, it’s like not to be put on Facebook in a spirit of contradiction, it’s a shame … We can blame much to the work of JK Rowling , but certainly not for making dream of tens of millions of children, adolescents and young and old adults around the world. For that alone, I mark a time and take my hat off to the lady.
Now it’s back in the heart of the matter: that is the film adaptation of the last installment of the adventures of the most famous sorcerer in the world? With David Yates still in control, with a panel of actors ( Alan Rickman , Helena Bonham Carter , Maggie Smith , Michael Gambon , Ralph Fiennes , Robbie Coltrane , Rupert Grint , Emma Watson …) just as impressive ( Daniel Radcliffe is seriously good end and it was time!), with 3D (though again, apart from an optical illusion fun, I think it does nothing amazing and it would be good) with shortcuts always more or less wise, this second part the first widely competition, already rather successful. In fact, if Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 1 expected a chilling atmosphere and oppressive to mean the spectrum of Voldemort hanging over our three heroes Harry , Hermione and Ron , Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2 speeds up the tempo and offers a selection of action sequences rich and very impressive visually. Just like the escape of the dragon guardian of Gringotts , the bank’s Stone, or the iconic final battle that will pit Hogwarts to the terrible Death Eaters .
The intensity of the scenes that make the great revelations of the entire saga Harry Potter – and I would not go further into the meaning of these scenes for nothing “spoiler” to those who have not yet seen – is fair and well fed. I still remember the death of Dumbledore , easy and no impact in the adaptation of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince ( Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince ) of the director David Yates . The latter has found the exact dosage for the final two episodes, to make each of these striking moments, sometimes poignant, but never ridiculous or excessive.
I am only a moderate admirer of the works of JK Rowling , though I read all the books and seen all the films. I remember particularly sleepless night, around my 17 years, not being able to get rid of the third installment: Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban . One of my most intense experience of literature. But I have people around me who grew up with Harry Potter as much as people who do it are little interested. Yet at the end of the projection of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2 , when the epilogue was exasperated smile or makes the whole room, I could not help thinking that for all, each at his level, each one wanting to admit more or less, a page turned. And I do not budge.