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Melanism
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20449 posts
Mon Jul-09-07 08:20 AM

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"The Official Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix post"


          

Two days and counting.

Unfortunately, I have to wait until Saturday to see this with friends at IMAX.

Here's the Variety review:

Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix

A Warner Bros. release of a Heyday Films production. Produced by David Heyman, David Barron. Executive producer, Lionel Wigram. Co-producer, John Trehy. Directed by David Yates. Screenplay, Michael Goldenberg, based on the novel by J.K. Rowling.

Harry Potter - Daniel Radcliffe
Ron Weasley - Rupert Grint
Hermione Granger - Emma Watson
Bellatrix Lestrange - Helena Bonham Carter
Rubeus Hagrid - Robbie Coltrane
Lord Voldemort - Ralph Fiennes
Albus Dumbledore - Michael Gambon
Alastor 'Mad-Eye' Moody - Brendan Gleeson
Vernon Dursley - Richard Griffiths
Lucius Malfoy - Jason Isaacs
Sirius Black - Gary Oldman
Severus Snape - Alan Rickman
Petunia Dursley - Fiona Shaw
Minerva McGonagall - Maggie Smith
Dolores Umbridge - Imelda Staunton
Remus Lupin - David Thewlis
Sybil Trelawney - Emma Thompson
Argus Filch - David Bradley
Filius Flitwick - Warwick Davis
Draco Malfoy - Tom Felton
Cornelius Fudge - Robert Hardy
Mrs. Weasley - Julie Walters
Arthur Weasley - Mark Williams
Cho Chang - Katie Leung
Neville Longbottom - Matthew Lewis
Luna Lovegood - Evanna Lynch
Ginny Weasley - Bonnie Wright

By TODD MCCARTHY
The students at Hogwarts leave youthful hijinks behind once and for all in "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix." Considerably grimmer and grittier than the previous pictures in the phenomenally successful series, new entry finds the young charges' head-on collision with adolescence taking a backseat to their sober confrontation with unvarnished evil. Pottermania will reach a peak in July with the nearly simultaneous release of the fifth film and the seventh and final book, and only commercial concern for Warner Bros. may be that, after the second or third week, curiosity about the concluding tome could overshadow interest in the film.

Extravagantly produced in the expected manner, pic nevertheless marks a notable departure in tone from those that preceded it. From the opening scene, portents of bad tidings ahead hang over everyone and everything connected to the wizarding world, even as the magical establishment insists there is no threat at large in the land.

Altered feel this time around stems in large measure from the new blood recruited to push the franchise into ever-darker domains. Director David Yates, heretofore known mostly for his television work (and already engaged to helm the sixth film); screenwriter Michael Goldenberg, replacing series perennial Steve Kloves; and composer Nicholas Hooper, whose vigorously dramatic music uses only a smidgen of John Williams' themes, make the most decisive difference in steering the focus away from flights of fancy and in-house intrigue in favor of elaborate and sometimes heavy-handed foreshadowing of the inevitable showdown between Harry and Lord Voldemort.

Concentrated focus results in an unsettling mood and dramatic scenes of unusual intensity. But condensing the book, which at 870 pages is the longest J.K. Rowling has written, into the shortest film in the series has come at a price. Many viewers won't at all mind that this is the first "Potter" picture without a Quidditch match, nor that house elves and cutesy ghosts are largely absent as well.

But more serious is the diminishment of the myriad intrigues among individuals and factions that comprise so much of the stories' delightfully complicated fabric. Interplay detailing the fluctuating relationships involving Harry, Hermione, Ron (particularly slighted here), Cho Chang and intriguing newcomer Luna Lovegood (Evanna Lynch) is sacrificed in favor of repeated group scenes of Harry teaching his clandestine band of teenage warriors the finer points of wand work. Classroom scenes are scanted and a sense of the school year passing is minute, giving the film a flattened-out feel compared to the wondrous eventfulness of Mike Newell's "Goblet of Fire," the last and most successful series installment.

Current yarn commences at the end of a parched English summer, when Harry (Daniel Radcliffe, back with a clean-cut look) lands in hot water with the Ministry of Magic for issuing a forbidden curse to fend off an attack by two Dementors. Harry's Inquisition-like hearing, where he narrowly escapes expulsion from Hogwarts thanks to the unexpected intervention of Dumbledore (Michael Gambon), sets out the central conflict: The Ministry refuses to accept Harry's contention that Lord Voldemort is back and, in fact, is prepared to put all its propaganda muscle into discrediting Harry and Dumbledore.

To this end, the Ministry imposes one of its own as this year's professor of the Dark Arts. Dolores Umbridge is one of Rowling's most delicious -- and resonantly named -- creations; a stout, toad-like woman reliably clad in shades of pink, Umbridge is a party functionary par excellence, a rules-and-regulations fanatic with a whim of iron who cloaks her proscriptive edicts in dulcet tones and manufactured smiles. Imelda Staunton was the perfect choice for the part and unsurprisingly emerges as one of the film's greatest pleasures.

Umbridge wastes no time clamping down on Harry, the other kids and the Hogwarts staff; assuming more power virtually by the day, she puts her most outspoken student in painful detention, prohibits the learning of practical curses, begins firing wayward teachers and ultimately confronts Dumbledore to assert complete Ministry control over the school.

In response, Harry assembles an underground rebel band known as Dumbledore's Army. The intense way these passages are staged lead one to believe they are the scenes that most engaged the interest of director Yates, who seems to relish the image of Harry and Hermione as nascent revolutionary leaders.

Similarly prominent are Harry's renewed relationship with his beloved godfather Sirius Black (Gary Oldman), hiding away in the secret family homestead in London, and his nightmarish visions of Voldemort (Ralph Fiennes), with whom he increasingly feels a disturbingly strong connection. It gets so bad that he is forced to receive private tutoring from the dreaded Professor Snape, whose distaste for the task could not be more pronounced. Until shortly before the end, Snape has very little to do, but Alan Rickman may have outdone himself; seldom has an actor done more with less than he does here.

Climactic showdown between Harry's crew and Voldemort's henchmen, led by Lucius Malfoy (Jason Isaacs), is strikingly played out in a huge Ministry storeroom filled with shelved grapefruit-sized globes containing prophecies. One such sphere concerning Harry is of vital interest to Voldemort, and performing especially well on his behalf is Sirius' malignant cousin Bellatrix Lestrange, embodied by Helena Bonham Carter with a particularly maniacal glee.

It doesn't take much of a leap to connect the ill winds afflicting Hogwarts, along with the sweaty anticipation of inevitable conflict, with the present situation in the world at large. The metaphors are all implicit and have a lot to do with just growing up and facing unpleasant realities, but they increasingly contribute to the feeling of nervousness and unease creeping into the series. It will be interesting to see if general anticipation for the two remaining films holds fast or tails off once the epic series' conclusion is revealed in the final book.

Camera (Technicolor, JDC widescreen), Slawomir Idziak; editor, Mark Day; music, Nicholas Hooper; production designer, Stuart Craig; supervising art director, Neil Lamont; senior art director, Andrew Ackland-Snow; art directors, Mark Bartholomew, Alastair Bullock, Martin Schadler, Gary Tomkins, Alex Walker; set decorator, Stephenie McMillan; costume designer, Jany Temime; sound (Dolby Digital/DTS/SDDS), Stuart Wilson; supervising sound editor, James Mather; sound designer, Andy Kennedy; co-sound designer, James Boyle; re-recording mixers, Mike Prestwood Smith, Mark Taylor, Doug Cooper; visual effects supervisor, Tim Burke; special effects supervisor, John Richardson; special visual effects and animation, Industrial Light & Magic; visual effects, the Moving Picture Co., Framestore-CFC, Rising Sun Picture, Cinesite (Europe), Baseblack, Machine Effects; creature & makeup effects designer, Nick Dudman; stunt coordinator, Greg Powell; associate producer, Tim Lewis; assistant director, Cliff Lanning; second unit director, Stephen Woolfenden; second unit camera, Mike Brewster; casting, Fiona Weir. Reviewed at Warner Bros. studios, Burbank, June 28, 2007. MPAA Rating: PG-13. Running time: 139 MIN.


Read the full article at:
http://www.variety.com/story.asp?l=story&r=VE1117934037&c=31

  

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The Official Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix post [View all] , Melanism, Mon Jul-09-07 08:20 AM
 
Subject Author Message Date ID
New writer and a new director
Jul 09th 2007
1
Wednesday IMAX check-in.
Jul 09th 2007
2
same
Jul 09th 2007
4
FUCK! All the IMAX showings except for 10 and 12 AM are SOLD OUT in NYC
Jul 10th 2007
7
did you try Garden City?
Jul 10th 2007
9
*pops collar*
Jul 11th 2007
15
does anyone else think the films really pale in comparison
Jul 09th 2007
3
Yeah, pretty much
Jul 09th 2007
5
      I agree
Jul 10th 2007
10
I have to go see it by myself...
Jul 09th 2007
6
The reviews
Jul 10th 2007
8
I'm excited about seeing this film...
Jul 10th 2007
11
I saw it monday night.
Jul 10th 2007
12
I'm pissed that I couldn't make the midnight show. :(
Jul 10th 2007
13
I just got back from a theater in Burbank
Jul 11th 2007
14
Saw it last night... (Spoiler.....kinda)
Jul 11th 2007
16
cats got problems with this
Jul 11th 2007
18
the best HP movie to date
Jul 11th 2007
17
RE: The Official Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix post
Jul 11th 2007
19
I liked the new Harold the Potna movie (n/m)
Jul 11th 2007
20
what trailer was it + 10,000 BC (that fantasy trailer) oh yeah Stardust
Jul 11th 2007
21
i liked the novel but i dunno about this movie thing
Jul 11th 2007
23
SERIOUSLY cant wait!
Jul 11th 2007
22
It was okay, but something felt off (SPOILERS)
Jul 11th 2007
24
imelda staunton was okay, imo.
Jul 11th 2007
26
RE: It was okay, but something felt off (SPOILERS)
Jul 12th 2007
30
on Draco:
Jul 12th 2007
31
      you're right
Jul 12th 2007
40
RE: It was okay, but something felt off (SPOILERS)
Jul 17th 2007
73
      Imelda Staunton played Dolores Umbridge.
Jul 17th 2007
75
           oh right right
Jul 18th 2007
81
well,
Jul 11th 2007
25
RE: well,
Jul 12th 2007
37
just got back from seeing it. best one yet, i think
Jul 11th 2007
27
RE: just got back from seeing it. best one yet, i think
Jul 12th 2007
28
      this one and Prisoner of Azkaban are my favorites
Jul 12th 2007
43
some things i noticed:
Jul 12th 2007
29
My girlfriend said the same thing about Maggie
Jul 12th 2007
38
Seamus is Scottish, not Irish.
Jul 12th 2007
45
      thanks. I always get those two mixed up
Jul 12th 2007
46
      don't worry
Jul 12th 2007
49
      no, he's Irish
Jul 17th 2007
74
i enjoyed it
Jul 12th 2007
32
I read somewhere
Jul 12th 2007
35
mixed feelings
Jul 12th 2007
33
what did you think of book 6?
Jul 12th 2007
34
      RE: what did you think of book 6?
Jul 12th 2007
52
This was my least favorite of the books, but the movie was alright
Jul 12th 2007
36
wrong reply.
Jul 12th 2007
47
Question For Those Who Saw It (spoilers I guess)
Jul 12th 2007
39
oooooh that's juicy!!! (spoilers)
Jul 12th 2007
41
Luna is probably going to be the main love interest
Jul 12th 2007
48
luna had too big of a part in the movie
Jul 12th 2007
53
Kreacher?
Jul 12th 2007
42
According to wikipedia...
Jul 12th 2007
44
it's gotta be Kreacher. I'll tell you why.
Jul 12th 2007
50
You mean the locket?
Jul 12th 2007
51
yeah, the locket that wasn't at the bottom of the bowl.
Jul 17th 2007
76
very very nice.
Jul 12th 2007
54
Could be Bellatrix (swipe)
Jul 13th 2007
56
      Bellatrix was always in the OOTP movie because....
Jul 13th 2007
57
           I forgot to give you some context regarding her above comments
Jul 13th 2007
58
                i see what you mean
Jul 13th 2007
61
RE: The Official Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix post
Jul 13th 2007
55
i don't agree
Jul 13th 2007
59
      hated gof witha passion
Jul 14th 2007
63
Good but not the best
Jul 13th 2007
60
i wasn't to thrillied about this one...
Jul 14th 2007
62
just how i felt
Jul 14th 2007
64
I liked it until the end (Spoilers)
Jul 14th 2007
65
I actually liked how they handled it (spoilers)
Jul 16th 2007
70
didn't like it.
Jul 15th 2007
66
Not a good stand-alone, but good for the series
Jul 15th 2007
67
I think this is the best movie so far. ESPECIALLY in light of the fact t...
Jul 15th 2007
68
I was dragged into seeing this
Jul 15th 2007
69
RE: I was dragged into seeing this SPOILER!!!!!!!
Jul 17th 2007
71
LOL at Serious Black!!!!!
Jul 17th 2007
72
3rd movie > 5th movie > 4th movie > 1st 2 movies
Jul 17th 2007
78
      Agree and agree
Jul 19th 2007
83
RE: The Official Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix post
Jul 17th 2007
77
did you guys notice dumbledore as the bartender???
Jul 17th 2007
79
huh? you mean at the first d.a. meeting?
Jul 18th 2007
80
whoa. i didn't notice that at all
Jul 19th 2007
82
they are listed as diff actors in the credits
Jul 20th 2007
84
      it's Dumbledore's brother, Aberforth, not Albus...
Jul 20th 2007
85
up
Jul 24th 2007
86
this is about the movie.
Jul 24th 2007
87

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