‘Half Blood Prince’ Review Round-Up!
The reviews have started pouring out for Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, and you’ll be happy to know they’re almost all positive. As I write this, it’s sitting at a 90% on Rotten Tomatoes, with only one rotten review — and that one gave it 3 out of 5 stars, hardly a pan.
The general consensus? Not a lot of action, a lot of relationships, and great performances all around. Here are a few reviews to keep you busy:
CHUD:
A remarkable achievement, a film that is moving, that is funny, that is honest and true and sad and sweet. It’s a movie about characters who we have come to know and love, and it’s a movie that understands that it’s these characters, and not the magic they perform, that is the real hook of the series.
The BBC:
Those wanting noisy spectacle and endless action will be disappointed. This is a talky Potter.
It feels long - but not in a bad way. The main characters and the complex plot get a chance to breathe…relationships are what interests Yates.
Even when we first meet Harry in a cafe at Surbiton station, he is effortlessly catching the eye of a waitress.
But assessing the romantic entanglements is not nearly as much fun as simply beholding the big physical changes in the young actors, whose onscreen maturation will have been documented across the span of a decade when all is said and done. The biggest change since “Phoenix” two years ago has been registered by Tom Felton, who plays Malfoy; he’s now a tall stringbean in the Jimmy Stewart mold, with a face that’s come to resemble that of Jonathan Pryce, and he towers over Daniel Radcliffe’s Harry, who looks to be the shortest person in the cast (not true when Imelda Staunton was around).
Rupert Grint, as Ron, has always looked a tad older than the others and continues to while showing more character. Emma Watson, perennially appealing as Hermione, has become a very attractive young woman, and Bonnie Wright’s Ginny intrigues as the sort of initial plain Jane who keeps growing on you.
The Independent (written by a 15-year-old girl):
The acting of all three main characters has stepped up a level: still not great, but it’s passable. They are, naturally, shown up by co-stars Helena Bonham Carter, Alan Rickman, Maggie Smith and Jim Broadbent. Only one big name, Michael Gambon, disappoints; he doesn’t quite capture the pure love of Albus Dumbledore – at times coming across as too harsh.
The scriptwriters bungled several key set pieces, including the funeral scene – although they almost make up for it with a magical passage where students and teachers raise their wands in tribute. Tears poured down many faces in the cinema at that moment.
The Half-Blood Prince is frightening, funny, romantic and entertaining but as the end credits rolled, I still felt disappointed. I had waited all year to see my second-favourite Potter book brought to life. If I wasn’t a die-hard fan, I’m sure I would have loved it. My gripe is that the film was simply too different from the book.
I think that twinge of disappointment is something all die-hard Potter fans feel after seeing every single film. You’re excited, you know it was good — but there’s just that nagging subconscious telling you that it didn’t live up to the books. But how could it?
What I’m excited about is that Steve Kloves wrote the script after skipping the fifth movie. Order of the Phoenix felt rushed; I’m looking forward to enjoying the quieter moments this time around.
Tags: Bonnie Wright, Ginny, Harry, Harry Potter 6, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, Hermione, Jim Broadbent, new movie reviews, Reviews, romance, Ron, Slughorn, Tom Felton







July 26th, 2009 at 6:51 pm
I would just like to say that although i loved the movie harry potter and the half blood prince i feel it deviates too much from the book. Why do they have to change which character does what etc. The first two films were brilliant and colombus did the job to perfection however i feel the last few films have been a bit of a let down. I am an avid fan of harry potter and would not have missed any of the films as i enjoyed them all but just a little disappointed in the changes made. I too feel that michael gambon does not suit the part of dumbledore. Will look forward to the next instalments and can’t wait.
col
July 27th, 2009 at 4:18 pm
I squirmed and squirmed all the way through this abomination of a celluloid catastrophie, the acting was lack lustre from all the main characters, exept the ageing Maggie Smith.
What let the film down was after the magnificent title sequence, the plot and the movie ran out of steam, good supporting cast of British character actors, but apart from tying all the threads together for the final movie in this sequence (which I will avoid at all costs) One big yawn all the way through.