Harry Potter Deathly Hallows Part 1 123movies

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part 1 Action & adventure In the first part of the seventh and final adventure, Harry, Ron and Hermione set out on their perilous mission to track down and destroy the secret to Voldemort's immortality and destruction - the Horcruxes. Language Release Owner Download; Arabic: subtitle Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1: nadhem: download: Arabic: subtitle Harry.Potter.and.the.Deathly.Hallows.

  1. Harry Potter Deathly Hallows Full Movie
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Harry Potter Deathly Hallows Full Movie

Watch Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1 on USANetwork.com. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1 is the first instalment of a two-part film based on Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows by J. David Yates, who directed the preceding two films, directed both parts, with Steve Kloves returning to script.2 The first part was released on November 19, 2010, with the second following in July 2011.3 Production of the two films occurred.

Updated February 28, 2017 | Infoplease Staff

A Movie Review

by Dana Quigley
Harry potter and deathly hallows part 1 123movies

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What was your initial reaction upon finishing Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows?

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1, the seventh film in the franchise, leaves die-hard fans satisfied by staying true to the original storyline. On the other hand, casual fans of the series are left without details that clarify the plot. The film follows Harry, Ron, and Hermione as they continue their quest to destroy several artifacts whose obliteration is integral to defeating Voldemort. The movie is rife with beautiful scenery, though the constant shifting of space is disorienting and does not firmly convey a timeline of events. Infrequent moviegoers are left with stunning landscapes and not much context concerning the plot's progression. Aside from this ambiguity, Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint, and Emma Watson deliver their best performances in the series, dominating the screen for most of the movie, running from the forces of evil. In particular, Watson steals a few scenes from her co-leads; such is the case when Hermione wipes her parents' memories of her existence.

Breaking from the Past

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The most notable change in this movie from the previous installments is the location: the grand halls of Hogwarts no longer constrain the set. Harry, Ron, and Hermione find themselves in a dangerous world on the run from death eaters and the like; the variety of astonishing landscapes in the movie causes one to realize the staleness of the wizarding school as a setting. In addition, the brief animation of the Deathly Hallows tale is an unexpected surprise-it is simply fun to watch. Whereas some of the previous titles revolve around mystery, Deathly Hallows: Part 1 can be classified as a big chase movie: death eaters and other baddies no longer wait in the shadows for Harry, but instead pursue him at all costs. The movie breaks the school-setting formula repeated six times previously, and in doing so is much more aesthetically refined than its predecessors.

Setting up for a Big Finish

As the title suggests, the movie is not meant to stand alone as an independent movie. That being said, it is still hard to justify the installment's lack of a climactic event. Sure, the movie ends with the death of a beloved character, but considering the movie has nearly the same amount of footage with people dancing than this particular character, it's an obvious stretch to call this a climax. The entire movie serves as a transition to the final endeavor, though it does this well. Simply put, Deathly Hallows: Part 1 is well crafted and devotes time to some of the details that would not have been possible if the seventh book's plot was crammed into one movie. In a sense, this is the first movie in the series to adhere so closely to its textual counterpart. The plot was not trimmed and condensed to achieve a reduced reproduction. Though some critics claim that the movie was split into two parts in order to reap bigger profits, fans will appreciate the close similarities between the book and movie. In the end, this movie is just the opener to the next and final installment.

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When the Harry Potter books were adapted for film, we had no idea what to expect.

Books had been made into movies before, but never a series on this scale. A series unfinished, so dependent on technical wizardry, and with a cast that would implicitly go from children to adults before our very eyes. We did not know how the films would transition from one director to another, or if they even would. We didn't know how the tone would shift from books one to seven, that we could split books into two movies, or which books would make for better films.

A decade later and with another tepid half-franchise in the mix, let's call it: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part 1 is the best Harry Potter movie.

Nov. 19 marked the 10-year anniversary of this movie, which makes it a great time to revisit what makes Deathly Hallows - Part 1 so fantastic. A less knowledgeable scholar of the Potter film franchise might recall Deathly Hallows - Part 1 as 'the one with the camping,' which is extremely unfair because camping comprises roughly 23 percent of the movie's 146-minute runtime — but we'll get back to that.

The film opens with a montage of Harry, Ron, and Hermione preparing essentially to go to war. Against Alexandre Desplat's 'Obliviate,' one of the most stirring pieces of music in the series, we watch Hermione wipe her parents' memories and disappear from their lives in order to protect them.

It's a powerful starting note, taking just enough liberty from the text. In the Deathly Hallows novel, we begin — as we often do — with Harry, but hear about Hermione's monumental sacrifice later on. The film plunges us in headfirst, declaring that this is a story of children bearing unimaginable burdens, and that Harry is not the only one to lose his loved ones to this war. The magical whimsy of 'Hedwig's Theme' is nowhere to be found.

Of course, Deathly Hallows - Part 1 finds itself in the position of being able to take such creative leaps because of the six films before it. It draws on the gloom of Half-Blood Prince and the adrenaline of Order of the Phoenix and Goblet of Fire. Prisoner of Azkaban set a new bar for what the films could be visually. All of this is owed, as ever, to Chris Columbus's monumental work on the first two films, establishing an entire world of characters, creatures and effects that immerses us wholly to this day.

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But those were kids' movies.

After a woman is eaten by a snake at one of Voldemort's work meetings, the film's first act jumps between moments of brief joy, respite, and humor, amidst a growing cloud of gloom and doom. It's eerily understandable a decade later, with the world in its current state, how Harry attends a wedding and kisses his crush but also confronts corrupt leadership and plans his mission.

Harry potter deathly hallows pdf

One of my few critiques of this movie is the omission of Kreacher's tale: How Voldemort used the Black family's house elf to ensure the safety of his horcrux and how Sirius's brother perished in the quest to retrieve and destroy it. Told through Kreacher's eyes, this is one of the most haunting sections of the book and a disgusting example of how house elves are abused by wizards.

The films skimped on house-elf plot lines at almost every opportunity, to the point that Kreacher's inclusion overall is unnecessary because his role is given no weight. Even his Order of the Phoenix cameo is not meant to set him up as a spy for Death Eaters, as he is in the book. It's seemingly there so we can return to him in Deathly Hallows, but he still doesn't get his due.

After infiltrating the Ministry — something the trio spent months planning in the book, and which is inexplicably played off as a spontaneous shenanigan in the movie — we get to the Camping, roughly a half hour that includes Ron's gruesome splinching injury, his heartbreaking departure, Harry and Hermione's dance (a lovely moment between friends, we'll take no questions), the trip to Godric's Hollow where a snake is walking around in the skin of a dead woman, the mysterious silver doe, Ron saving Harry from being drowned in a frozen lake by a horcrux, and the eventual destruction of that horcrux.

Call it camping again, I f*cking dare you.

And THEN, with the trio reunited, we visit Xenophilius Lovegood and learn about the Deathly Hallows in one of the most mesmerizing scenes in any of these movies: The Tale of the Three Brothers. This scene and animator Ben Hibon did not have to go that hard, but they did, and the result is breathtaking:

Time and time again, Deathly Hallows - Part 1 skillfully shuttles us between vastly different moods. Over the course of its two-and-a-half hours we're in multiple battles, horrifying creature violence, sweet moments between friends, and a captivating story from a children's book. Xenophilius's scene (chewed to within an inch of its life by Rhys Ifans) feels straight out of a spy movie until the tension cracks with the Snatchers' arrival.

The chase through the woods doesn't even feel like a Harry Potter movie. The camera is always moving, either steady or handheld, which the series does rarely if ever (another memorable sequence being the Burrow burning in Half-Blood Prince). The music takes a backseat to the chaos of sprinting and destructive spellwork. It's barely a minute, but it's harrowing every time.

The Malfoy Manor climax is oddly sentimental. Harry Potter became a who's who of British acting talent, but the combination of Jason Isaacs, Helena Bonham Carter, and Helen McCrory is magnificent (I would also like to acknowledge Timothy Spall while NOT acknowledging the absolute disgrace of how Wormtail's plot line was handled).

There's the added layer of Dan Radcliffe, Emma Watson, Rupert Grint, and Tom Felton, who have grown into their own since 2001 and remind viewers of their own school days and simpler times at Hogwarts. Add in Evanna Lynch as Luna, John Hurt as the wandmaker Ollivander, and an iconic return from Dobby, and you have a sequence laced with nostalgia for Potter itself while leading us directly to our final showdown. Such a beautiful place to be with friends (I will see myself out for this quote).

Even without a full recap, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part 1 truly offers some of the best this film series has to offer. It hits critical emotional beats with Harry, Ron, and Hermione, with the lingering loss of Dumbledore, with Harry visiting his childhood home and parents' graves, and with the specter of more death on the horizon, even if those deaths don't come until Part 2. It's packed with excellent performances, dazzling visuals, and a soundtrack that just won't quit.

You can keep your nostalgia for the early films, your dismissal of plot holes in the middle movies, your sentiment for Deathly Hallows - Part 2. Part 1 is the best, and it had no right to be. If anyone needs me, I'll be camping.

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