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Open Letter to Harry Potter & the Half-Blood Prince (the Movie)

28 August 2009 309 views 9 Comments

*No spoilers!*

harry potter poster

Dear Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince,

Hope this letter finds you well, though from the looks of the box-office sales, you seem to be doing just fine!

Now, I don’t know how you’re going to take everything I have to say, but I hope that you’ll hear me out.  After having met you on Friday, I’ve been doing some thinking about what didn’t sit well with our meeting. My biggest issue is with the way you allotted the time to certain aspects of the story.  You foregrounded the teenage romance stuff, which I understand is part of the story and is true to the development of the characters, but it’s in truth only a subplot, and a parallel plotline at best.  But the feeling I got after meeting you was that the snog-fest was the whole point! You focused on the romantic lives of the characters at the expense of developing some crucial elements that would have made you make a lot more sense, especially to people who have not read your book counterpart.  I don’t really want to spend any more talking about this part, because there are other pressing issues, but you can read what someone else has said in this very “clean cut” movie review.

You really missed an opportunity to develop several characters:

  • What I loved about the book was that Draco became a really complex character. You did not show any of his struggle (c’mon, that bathroom scene was simply not enough).  Therefore, it was really hard for me or my friends to have any sort of sympathy for him.
  • Next, you dismissed the quest to find out who the Half-Blood Prince is with that one little scene where Harry and his pals were walking in the snow, but in actuality, pursuing the quest would have made you far more balanced and made what was supposed to be part of a climactic scene (you know which part I’m talking about – the reveal) a lot less cheesy, not to mention, it would have made some sense.  I mean, this is KEY!  Related, this would have allowed you to deepen Snape a lot more.  Thankfully, Alan Rickman does a spot-on job of portraying Snape every time, but again – a missed opportunity.
  • Most frustrating was the fact that you did not develop Dumbledore at all. This is, after all, Dumbledore’s book.  He could have become way more interesting, complicated, and we would have been able to connect with his moral dilemma.  (The familiar motif most recently highlighted in the relationship between Master Shifu and Tai Lung from Kung Fu Panda.)  It just didn’t make a lot of sense to people.  The hand?  The relationship between Dumbledore and Harry?  I was expecting to cry, but I didn’t.  And the benefit you would have yielded in the way of deepening Dumbledore as well as giving us more of a window into he-who-must-not-be-named far outweighs the cost of devoting a little more time in the flashbacks (you know which really important one I’m talking about!).

Oh, another thing. I just thought it was really unrealistic how you skipped over the process of Bellatrix & Co. arriving at the climactic scene.  It just didn’t make sense (I sound like a broken record, but “that’s the problem. THAT’S the problem!”)

I did, however, think your special effects were neat.

I’ll be honest.  I didn’t have high expectations of you, because your counterpart (the book) is one of my favorite ones in the entire Harry Potter series, and I knew it would be impossible to capture everything.  That being said, I was still disappointed.  Given the choices you had to make with regard to the time limit (though I think enough people would have sat through the movie no matter how long you needed…was it a matter of budget?) I think you made some fairly poor decisions.

I know, I know, you’re sick of living in the shadow of the book, hearing people compare you to it all the time,  and you want people to accept you for who you are.  But look, even apart from the book, people ended up feeling like you didn’t tell the whole story.

I know it might hurt your feelings but I want to tell you what I’ve heard some people saying about you:

“It felt like one long trailer for the 7th movie.”

“It wasn’t Harry Potter.  It was Harry bboh-bboh!” (sorry, I can’t make the Korean characters show up)

“It was ok.”

“Where was the action?  It started about 2 hours in and then it was over.  I was confused.”

Overall, my friends who have never read any of the books said they felt lost and that there wasn’t the mystery, magic, and wonder your sister movies possessed.  And well, I don’t think you want to hear the details of what my friends who have read and love the book said.  But I hope you know where I’m coming from.  I just wanted you to know the truth about what I and others think.

On the bright side, I think your lack of story-telling, plot and character development will push people to actually read Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince to fill in all the holes you left!

Regards,

H. (not Hermione) Emily Kim, bibliophile

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9 Comments »

  • Clean Cut Media said:

    Thanks for the reference to Clean Cut Media – Harry Potter Movie Review
    Great open letter. Completely Agree.

    Though I have not read the book, I am tempted to go read it as I feel like I just missed out on a ton of story…

  • eileen said:

    awesome letter!

    and Clean Cut Media – you MUST read the book. you’ll probably have more to say in your post after having read the book.

  • Gary said:

    I completely agree with everything Emily said.
    My main complaint about the film is that if all the teenage romance stuff were all removed, the film would have ended within an hour, which brings into focus just how much the real plot of the story was lacking.

    After finishing the film and hearing what was MISSING, I seriously want to read the book to get the real story.

  • maurice said:

    This, and the ending to ‘Prince Caspian.’ Major fail!! That unnecessary scene (and the whole budding romance) with Susan and Cas’ wasn’t even in the book. The director himself said that he added that in there because he felt that’s what teens wanted. I say, let’s give teens a little more credit!! (let’s hear from y’all teens yourselves!)

    I was sad that he took such a liberty with what could have been a much more stirring and inspiring movie that touches on grander themes, rather than focusing on the exclusivity that necessarily abides with romance. Which has its place, but let’s not force it in places it was never designed for.

    I guess as far as faithful movie treatments of books go, at least LOTR was pretty faithful =D I guess we still have that.

  • william said:

    Hey Maurice, thanks for the comment. I’d like to see you write a post for us one day. Let me know if you’re interested.

  • maurice said:

    Absolutely! I’d be honored! By the way, rocking site! Clean design and I foresee myself coming back here to relive my teen days! (which were only a couple months ago I think…)

  • Vivian Lai said:

    Well said, Emily. Your post was an amazing read, especially since it voiced a lot of my own complaints about the movie. Now only if I could’ve voiced it in a similar witty way.

  • SarahY said:

    Hemily! Indeed you are right on a lot of points, but in defense of HP6, I think that the film improved significantly from the previous ones… Like acting, in little details like their mannerisms and dialogue – in that one disgusting scene where Lav-Lav draws a heart on the train car window for Ron, Harry is awkwardly pulling on the armrest!

    Also, I think that they had to sacrifice some of the Half-Blood Prince plot to the Malfoy plot… which is kind of an interesting directorial choice since Rowling only hints and suggests at it, never shows exactly what is going on with Malfoy the same way that the movie did. Which is also kind of bad, because based on certain fansites I’ve seen, it created an ‘I feel sorry for Malfoy, I love him’ camp. Ahem. But I don’t think that excuses the… I don’t know… saturation of romance with Ginny awkwardly tying Harry’s shoes, the drawn out ‘feelings’ conversations, etc. I think I made more noise gagging during those parts than during the whole rest of the movie.

    Also, WHAT is with the random Burrow scene? Uh, you might need that place in the 7th movie… so I don’t think you should destroy it just yet… but, you know, do what you want… AND! SERIOUSLY! You can’t just SPRING Snape on us like that!

    (This is the part where HP fans take a collective sigh and let their blood pressure go down…)

  • Anon E. Mouse said:

    TOTALLY agree with SarahY; lot like new Percy Jackson movie! All romance there isn’t ’till the 5th book, and you shouldn’t make the characters so…shallow!!! You could’ve saved some scenes for later, Burrow scene would’ve been real dramatic in HP7. But still, liked the little details and extras.

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