From the opening frames, the film fails to capture its' audience. The first hour or so barely entertains, stringing together only the bare minimum of dialogue and plot to lay the foundation of the movie, jumping from one scene to the next with a furious pace and little cinematic joy. The second half of the film gets markedly better, although it consistently fails to keep up the dark themes from its' predecessors. Forget monsters and high action, The Half-Blood Prince focusses more on relationships, intrigue and churning the plot out before anything else. The acting of the leading three impresses, but some of the supporting actors disappoint and they only serve to water-down the maturity level further to a point where five year olds in the audience were laughing uncontrollably.
As the lights rose in the theatre after nearly three hours of movie, a pebble of disappointment grew in my stomach. What I had just seen was a major step back in the Harry Potter franchise which will take some work to be undone. If the plot of The Half-Blood Prince did not end with a lot of loose ends, I'd probably be thinking twice about seeing the next installment. And now I hear they producers are splitting Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows into two parts, undoubtedly to milk the franchise for all it's worth. I really hope that the final Harry Potter films return to their original fan base, the now late-teenagers and early twenty year olds who have grown with Harry through the years, because The Half-Blood Prince has strayed so far from the sinister and dark film they deserve. Although I've heard some argue that The Order Of The Phoenix was worse than this latest installment, I think we can all agree that if the final films are anything short of a near R-16, or at least an M, the franchise will undoubtedly end in an anti-climax.
I'm going to see the film next Thursday with my nan and cousin, so I'll be writing up my thoughts of that when I've seen it.
ReplyDeleteSpoiler Alert! Ron dies!!! ; ]
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