Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2
2011 Directed by David Yates
Synopsis
It all ends here.
In the second installment of the two-part conclusion, Harry and his best friends, Ron and Hermione, continue their quest to vanquish the evil Voldemort once and for all. Just as things begin to look hopeless for the young wizards, Harry discovers a trio of magical objects that endow him with powers to rival Voldemort's formidable skills.
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OK you guys, seriously. Two words for you. GOLD. CLASS.
That shit is OFF THE HOOK. I'm talking about leather lazyboys, beer (or food) brought to you during the film, cosy two-person booths, and a spot up on high like you're lording it over the peasants and shit. Dope.So Harry is up to his usual hijinx. Find the horcrux, kill the bad guy, friends get killed, blah blah blah. But the effects are amazing, and the 3D really came to the party and added depth rather than being too gimicky. Ron and Hermione ▇▇▇▇▇▇ ▇ ▇▇▇, and Harry ▇▇▇▇ ▇▇▇▇▇▇▇ ▇▇ ▇▇▇▇ when he found out ▇▇▇▇▇ ▇▇▇ ▇▇▇. I thought he was going to ▇▇▇ ▇▇ ▇▇▇▇▇▇ but…
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This review reportedly contains spoilers. I can handle the truth.
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The problem with the Harry Potter series (with the exception of the very first film) is they cannot be viewed as a singular piece of cinema. Each film depends on the others for the audience to have an awareness of what's happening in the story. And the majority of these do not even end and instead lead right on into the next film. So to just pick a film out of the series at random and watch truly shows the weaknesses of the films individually.
I'm not particularly a fan of the series and I've never read the novels but my significant other happens to qualify for both of the aforementioned comments. Watching this finale again, the once magical and…
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This review reportedly contains spoilers. I can handle the truth.
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Emotionally resonating, gripping, hopeful, amazing score, visually amazing, beautifully acted and directed, and not to mention EPIC, everything I could want as a huge Potter fan from a conclusion of this amazing series. Everyone in the cast is perfect, Daniel Radcliffe brings all the needed depth and emotions that Harry needs in this film, delivering probably his strongest performance in the series, and Emma Watson and Rupert Grint are also great. And Ralph Finnies was born to play Lord Voldemort, I couldn't picture anyone else in that role. But, despite how great those four actors and everyone else in the cast are, it is Alan Rickman as Snape, who steals the show. Even if he doesn't have a ton of…
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I won't lie and say I'm NOT a huge Harry Potter fan, when I have a full Ravenclaw outfit hanging in my closet. When the books first came out I was meh about them and purposely avoided reading them because I didn't want to be part of the Potter Cult. You see I hate "belonging", so I really try hard to be difficult when it comes to pop culture.
One day I had a nasty cold and someone loaned me the first 3 HP books. Three boxes of kleenexes later I was sold. That was officially when I joined the Potter cult and fell in love with the wondrous world of wizardry. With yearly pilgrimages to Platform 9 3/4 in…
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This review reportedly contains spoilers. I can handle the truth.
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A great epic conclusion to a great franchise.
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The most biggest final epic movies of all times and so as I say thats it End Of Line Skip The Gutter Mates I'm finish with all the Harry Potter movies, As movies and books come & go we don't know what holds for J.K. Rowlings even though all the Harry Potter cast went their separate ways after 10 years in Harry Potter, I do Like Ron and Hermione's kiss better then the one in Horcrux Locket scene.
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Es harry y punto!!
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There’s an all too familiar sense of nostalgia when one grows up with the Harry Potter franchise, and is able to relive the magic through a visual medium. It certainly goes to show that adaptations of children’s (and I use ‘children’ very cautiously here) novels can be mature, thought provoking, insightful and bold. The last installment in the brilliant 8-part franchise is nothing short of brilliant.
I could spend days introducing each character, but instead, since every person with a beating pulse knows the previous films, I’ll be a naughty mudblood and forgo the introduction. In Deathly Hallows: Part 2 Voldemort assembles his army of death eaters, takes over Dumbledore’s wand, and marches onward to Hogwarts to kill Harry Potter…
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As a fan of the books, I could nitpick it. Too many important characters die off camera. And Molly Weasley's big moment in the final battle comes off a little flat. But those missteps are far outnumbered by the things David Yates and crew get right. Harry's return to Hogwarts, Neville's heroics, Snape's memories, Harry's forest reunion -- all perfect or nearly so. What an astonishing film experience this entire series turned out to be. No, the movies won't replace the books. But I think they'll live along right beside them for a long, long time.
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The only HP movie that's anywhere near as good as the book.
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This review reportedly contains spoilers. I can handle the truth.
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¨Harry Potter, the boy who lived...come to die. Avada Kedavra!¨
After ten years and eight films, the Harry Potter franchise has finally come to its magical conclusion and what a great one it was. As the British might say: It was bloody brilliant! This film is by far the best one of the entire franchise because it brings closure to a series that has been a part of us for a decade. I really never expected to like the Harry Potter series as much as I did and I became more and more hooked to the franchise as each new movie came out. It was like if every new film kept on improving from its predecessor. Not only did the…