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HARRY POTTER AND THE PHILOSOPHER’S STONE

byStaff writers
9 December 2001
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Starring: Daniel Radcliffe, Richard Harris, Maggie Smith
Director: Chris Columbus
Rated: PG

HYPE is a terrible thing, raising expectations that are usually disappointed. Harry Potter is hype’s most recent casualty. The first in a quartet of films from J.K. Rowling’s best-selling series of novels, screenwriter Steven Kloves has, on the whole, stayed true to the book, and that’s part of the problem.

Harry Potter’s (Daniel Radcliffe) parents died when he was a baby. Raised by his cruel aunt and uncle, he demonstrates throughout his childhood supernatural gifts. His relatives know he is a wizard.

Harry only finds out about this on his 11th birthday when he is offered a place at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry.

At school, while learning his magical techniques, Harry discovers that his parents were not killed in a car accident, as he was told, but were murdered by the evil wizard, Lord Voldemort. With classmates Hermione (Emma Watson) and Ron (Rupert Grint), Harry confronts Voldemort and avenges his parents’ death.

Warner Brothers ploughed $130 million into this production and it’s a visual feast. The many familiar UK locations, art direction and set designs are all a triumph.

Stuart Craig has won Oscars for his production designs on Gandhi, The English Patient and Dangerous Liaisons. He should be preparing his acceptance speech for next year’s Oscars now.

The lighting is appropriately atmospheric and the costume department had a field day coming up with some of their creations.

As befits a tale about magic, there are terrific special effects and, true to the book, a violent battle takes place on an animated life-size chessboard.

But there are several disappointments with this Harry Potter film. The first is the acting. In recent years we have seen some outstanding child actors emerge from the US and, while Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson and Rupert Grint have some good moments, they don’t hold a candle to their colleagues in California.

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The adults have less developed characters in the book and the screenplay, but Robbie Coltrane as the affectionate giant, Hagrid, is the best by far. Like most of the cast, Maggie Smith, Alan Rickman and Richard Harris are directed to give good old-fashioned pantomime performances.

There are British film stars everywhere in this Harry Potter film, including John Cleese, Julie Walters and John Hurt. Each of these three are on the screen for less than two minutes.

The major problem is that American director Chris Columbus and his writer, fellow American Steve Kloves, have been enslaved by the book. This film doesn’t capture the light touch and the cynical wit in Rowling’s book. John Williams’ wall-to-wall music is far too big and self-important for the story on the screen.

There has been some discussion about how Rowling’s books promote witchcraft. This criticism misses the wood for the trees.

Rowling and Kloves enter the rich world of a child’s imagination and teach some wonderful lessons about sportsmanship, generosity, friendship, loyalty and the importance of study. It condemns violence, cheating and lying.

If fictional stories of wizards and magic turned their childhood readers and hearers into adult occult worshippers, then most of us would have ended up in such groups.

Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone is set to enter the top 10 biggest box office films of all time. This will be another win for hype over substance, but we have a further three films to see if they can get it right.

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