David Yates has finally decided to read the book from which to draw the film in question, and after a humiliating sixth chapter redeems itself with a decent product.
Harry, Hermione and Ron can not return to Hogwarts, now fallen into the clutches of Death Eaters, and start looking for the Horcruxes, the fragments of Voldemort's soul that has torn itself perpetrating heinous crimes. Along the way they discover the existence of three objects that can make their possessor "Lord of Death" are the gifts that made the death of three travelers to reward them for their skill in circumventing.
addition to the feeling of inadequacy with which it is facing since its thunderous entrance into the magical world, Harry begins to compete with the temptation to abandon the path semiobbligato which was already mapped out for him by Dumbledore for personal gain.
Ron finds its proof in overcoming the inferiority complex that has always stuck, while Hermione is still struggling to get rid of a certain narrow-mindedness that allows her surprising insights.
Already in the previous chapters we observed a progressive darkening of the setting, which now border on the pitch-black: sometimes you guess a scene rather than see it and even if the choice of style is interesting, sometimes it is too radical: the cinema is to see, first of all. Nothing new on the soundtrack front, a bit 'flat; underused secondary characters, from H. Bonham Carter.
Very nice sequence of the story of the Peverell brothers to their meeting with the Sickle: the drawings are evocative and the narrative is clear and functional, directly written by JK Rowlings.
The biggest limitation in the plot of the film is convoluted and fragmented, not easily understandable to non- read the book. Moreover Yates does what it can ...
the next, and final, episode, hoping to see finally developed the character of Ginny.
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