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Originally Posted by
Jolie Rouge
We are planning to go see a matinee feature ( 'cause it's cheaper ... ) and we already have plans to be at the barnes & Nobles Potter Party when the book comes out - in cosumes, no less. ( I am always Prof Sprout ) Then we go buy it at Walmarts cause it is cheaper .... and fewer lines.
That is too cool!!
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06-19-2007 08:33 AM
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Going to the drive-in to see it. It is there the second week its out. Only $5 per person and the youngest is free, plus we take our own food. All in all it will cost us $20 for the whole family to see it.
I have the book pre-ordered from amazon, it better be here release day! lol
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DH will be home around July 19th. We're going to go see it for a weekday matinee very soon after that. We love Harry Potter, have at least 2 copies of each book, and all the movies. I also have 3 free admission tickets to a movie theatre so it will cost us one matinee ticket and popcorn.
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I just had to post again. I feel like a little kid on christmas, I can hardly contain my excitement! My best gf and I are going to a Wednesday matinée show since it's cheaper, and it's an over 18 theater where you can get good drinks. Martinis and Harry Potter...it's going to be a fun afternoon. I'm going with my hubby over the weekend to see it again. I did see on the news that the guys who play the Weasley twins will be in town all this week for a meet and greet. It's going to be a madhouse! I'm not a ppl person, so a few drinks will help deal with an unruly crowd. LOL
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Review: `Potter' spins more of the same
By DAVID GERMAIN, AP Movie Writer
33 minutes ago
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070709/..._tkqh0R4us0NUE
Harry Potter seems to be living the same school year over and over. And it's starting to wear thin.
The fifth adventure for the teen wizard, "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix," is another visual marvel, yet it suffers from a problem similar to other sequels this summer: We've seen it all before.
Or at least, we've seen most of it. Sure there are new characters introduced, new perils, new responsibilities for Harry and his pals and new revelations about the kid's early life and connection to the dark Lord Voldemort.
And Harry even has his first kiss.
Those fresh details aside, though, and despite a new director and screenwriter, "Order of the Phoenix" sticks safely and at times monotonously to the Potter formula: Show a bit of Harry's drab summer among his heartless Muggle relations, branch off into a magical interlude, then land him back at Hogwarts School of Wizardry and Witchcraft, where the same old issues resurface — classmate rivalry, teacher trouble, and a slow build toward another showdown with Voldemort.
Granted, this is the formula of J.K. Rowling's books, and with fans counting the days until the arrival of the seventh and final novel July 21, the recipe has served the series well.
A good deal of the charm of the earlier movies results from the baubles the filmmakers have kept in from the books: Odd little interactions with Hogwarts' resident ghosts and living portraits, some sports action on the quidditch field, quirky classroom happenings — stuff that doesn't really have much to do with the main story.
In casting aside most of those trappings, director David Yates and screenwriter Michael Goldenberg deliver the shortest Potter movie yet, though "Order of the Phoenix" is the longest novel at 800-plus pages.
The movie gains in momentum but loses a lot of the fun and wonder of previous installments. Granted, the stories grow gloomier as Harry's ultimate challenge approaches in book seven, but he's faced doom and death before and still managed to have a good time.
An air of calamity hangs over Harry (Daniel Radcliffe) from the outset in "Order of the Phoenix." At the end of his interminable summer, he's attacked by soul-sucking Dementors, then he's expelled from Hogwarts for unauthorized use of magic to drive them off.
Hogwarts headmaster Dumbledore (Michael Gambon) intercedes on Harry's behalf at a Ministry of Magic appeals hearing. But Dumbledore, previously a tender mentor for Harry, distances himself from the youth throughout the school year.
Harry and buddies Hermione (Emma Watson) and Ron (Rupert Grint) face the same old tormenting from classmates. But this time it's amplified by scorn for Harry, who is branded a liar for insisting that Voldemort (Ralph Fiennes) had returned to physical form during their battle at the end of the last school year.
The magical world is so shaken and divided that the Ministry of Magic assigns repressive teacher Dolores Umbridge (Imelda Staunton) to the Hogwarts staff to keep an eye on Dumbledore and impart her bland, useless, "Ministry-approved" curriculum.
Dolores is all about toeing the line and outlawing original thought, leaving the kids without the knowledge and skills they sense they will need as Voldemort and his stooges close in.
It falls on Harry to organize and instruct volunteers in a gang they name Dumbledore's Army — Hogwarts students who band together to learn how to defend themselves against the dark forces.
One of the most comforting things about the "Harry Potter" movies is how Radcliffe, Watson and Grint have grown into the roles and advanced as performers. No longer awkward, inexperienced children, they nicely project both the camaraderie of best friends and the gravity of youths forced to mature far too soon.
Some returning characters step to the forefront again, notably Harry's godfather, Sirius Black (Gary Oldman, who delivers with passion and wistfulness). As always, Alan Rickman delights as Professor Snape, whose dour disposition and disdain for Harry is explained to a degree.
Most other key characters are back, including Professor McGonagall (Maggie Smith) and Sybil Trelawney (Emma Thompson), both sadly underused; Mrs. Weasley (Julie Walters); Hagrid (Robbie Coltrane); and Mad-Eye Moody (Brendan Gleeson).
Staunton dominates the movie with her perky facade and underlying cruelty. She's a perfect pillar of duplicity and self-righteousness whose aims and methods inject a bit of McCarthyism into Hogwarts.
Helena Bonham Carter makes the most of a brief appearance as deliriously fiendish Voldemort ally Bellatrix Lestrange. Also new to the show is Evanna Lynch as spacey student Luna Lovegood.
Much of the movie is a setup for things to come and an explanation of things that came before — personal histories, disclosures and prophecies, hints of an unholy bond between Harry and Voldemort.
At times, "Order of the Phoenix" is as dry as studying Latin grammar by rote. A climactic tussle between Harry and Voldemort's forces is among the most impressive visual creations in the "Harry Potter" flicks; yet dramatically, it's mostly another tease in their endless grudge match.
Familiarity is not quite breeding contempt for Harry and his friends and enemies. But it's starting to breed indifference.
"Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix," a Warner Bros. release, is rated PG-13 for sequences of fantasy violence and frightening images. Running time: 138 minutes. Two and a half stars out of four.
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Motion Picture Association of America rating definition:
PG-13 — Special parental guidance strongly suggested for children under 13. Some material may be inappropriate for young children.
Carter plays sorceress in `Potter' film
By JILL LAWLESS, Associated Press Writer
46 minutes ago
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20070709/...U_b9Dyvb6mG78C
LONDON - Some actors might balk at being cast as an evil witch. Not Helena Bonham Carter.
The British actress revels in the role of sadistic sorceress Bellatrix Lestrange — fanatical follower of evil Lord Voldemort — in "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix," the fifth film adapted from J.K. Rowling's wizarding saga.
Bonham Carter blazes her way across the screen in her one big scene — a dramatic battle between Voldemort's Death Eaters and Harry's ragtag band of friends. "I had about five lines and I think they cut about three of them," Bonham Carter, 41, told The Associated Press. "So I knew I had to be conspicuous."
Black-clad, wild-haired and cacklingly sadistic, Bellatrix escapes from Azkaban prison to join the resurgent Voldemort in his quest to destroy Harry and control the magical world.
Bonham Carter says she had a big say in creating her character's voluptuous-but-disheveled look. "At first they thought, `Oh, we'll just put her in a sack,'" Bonham Carter said. "But I said, `There's no way I'm going to wear a sack. I've got to be a sexy witch.'"
"I wanted a sort of bodice thing to give me a shape," she said. "There is a bit of the warrior about her — Bellatrix means warrior. She's the right-hand Death Eater to Voldemort. I also wanted everything to be splitting at the seams and a bit of `Sunset Boulevard' disintegration to be going on, because she's been in prison for so long. She has a very posh, aristocratic carriage, because she's pureblooded, but at the same time she's completely divorced from reality."
Like other Harry Potter fans worldwide, Bonham Carter is awaiting the July 21 publication of Rowling's seventh and final Potter novel, "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows," to learn the characters' fate. But she's been given a hint that Bellatrix may play a part.
While she was considering whether to accept the relatively small role in "Order of the Phoenix," she says, "J.K. Rowling sent a message saying she's going to be very significant in the last one."
"Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix," a Warner Bros. Pictures release, opens in theaters around the world starting Wednesday.
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On the Net:
Harry Potter: http://harrypotter.warnerbros.com/
J.K. Rowling: http://www.jkrowling.com/
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I"ve only seen the first one so I would probably be lost with all the goings on. That is how it was with the Pirates movie. I need to rent the others to catch up.
And this is the last book. Rowlings is again killing someone off. Could it be Harry? The kids would never forgive her.
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I still can't believe she killed off Dumbledore and Sirius. I confess I cried at both parts.
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Registered User
big brother 8
Anyone have spoilers for bb8?
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Originally Posted by
sandet
Anyone have spoilers for bb8?
wrong thread hunny lol
I confess that I too cried when Dumbledore and Sirius died. Dumbledore was the worst though, I knew it was going to happen so towards the end of the book I just quit reading for awhile, dreading it but the day came for me to finish it. So hard, so hard.
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