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Harry
Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
So here it is, the
first installment of J.K. Rowling’s wildly successful series
about a young wizard. It’s
undoubtedly the most anticipated movie in years, with six more
movies hinging on the success of this one.
The good news is, the movie is spectacularly well made,
with great performances from its cast of all-star thespians
and some of the most luscious set pieces you’ve ever seen.
The bad news is, it’s seriously lacking in one key
department, and that alone, I believe, will be what prevents Harry
Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone from being the all time
box office champ like some are predicting.
It’s still a very good first step, though.
For the first ten
years of his life, Harry Potter (Daniel Radcliffe) has lived
with the Dursleys, his mean and horribly narrow-minded aunt
and uncle. They
have a son Dudley, who’s the most atrociously spoiled kid
you’ve ever seen (think
Veruca Salt times ten). They
despise Harry so much that they make him sleep in a utility
closet underneath the stairs. Then on his 11th birthday, Harry receives a visit
from a gentle giant named Hagrid (Robbie Coltrane), who
informs Harry that he’s a wizard, and he has been accepted
into Hogwart’s, the most prestigious school of wizardry in
the country.
At Hogwart’s, he
meets benevolent headmaster Albus Dumbledore (Richard Harris,
in a reprise of sorts of his character from Gladiator), and
makes friends with Ron Weasley (Rupert Grint) and bookworm
Hermione Granger (Emma Watson).
He also, however, discovers that he has enemies as
well, most notably Severus Snape (Alan Rickman), the professor
of potions who has it out for Harry the second he arrives.
Not all wizards are good, he discovers, and few fit his
profile for a bad wizard better than Snape.
What is he really up to?
Film snobs like me
groaned upon hearing that Chris Columbus would be directing Harry
Potter. The
man who made his name with Home Alone, Mrs.
Doubtfire and, um, Bicentennial Man seemed a poor
choice as capturing the book’s essence without coating it in
sap. (Rowling’s first choice for director was Terry Gilliam;
my first choice was Tim Burton)
However, I must give credit where credit is due, and
Columbus turns in his best work here.
He was incredibly faithful to the source material, down
to the last detail. There
were a few scenes I wish had made the final cut (I’m
particularly upset about the omission of the nasty ghost
Peeves, voiced by Young Ones cast member Rik Mayall),
but with a current running time of 152 minutes, I understand
the need to streamline things a bit, if you can call a two and
a half hour movie streamlined.
I’ve never known
Chris Columbus to be an actor’s director - a terrible
phrase, really, since it really means letting actors run amok,
ala Mike Leigh - but he coaxed some marvelous performances out
of this cast of UK superstars (even John Hurt signed on for
the small part of wand shop owner Ollivander).
Rickman steals the movie as Snape, oozing menace but
also being riotously funny at the same time.
The three child leads were strong as well.
The movie doesn’t work without a good performance
from Radcliffe, and he proves himself more than capable of
carrying the movie (unlike, say, Jake Lloyd in The Phantom
Menace). Emma
Watson also shines as Hermione, though I’d argue she’s way
too cute for the part. The
Hermione in the book was buck toothed and not all that
attractive, whereas Watson looks like a stunner in the making.
Here’s the
problem with Harry Potter, and it’s something I’d
never expect from Columbus; it doesn’t have much heart.
This is a man who’s made his entire career pulling
the heartstrings until they snap and, when unsure what to do,
turned up the Mush Factor.
This time he was so focused on getting it all
technically accurate that he left out the most important
ingredient. John
Williams’ score was also overbearing, with a refrain that
borrowed a lot from his “Imperial March” from The
Empire Strikes Back.
Given the
ridiculous hype surrounding this movie, I would say that
Columbus & Co. have made a well crafted, perfectly
competent movie. There
is room for improvement, however, and since the next book in
the series, Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, is
probably the weakest of the four released so far, let’s hope
they get it right next time.
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