Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (DVD)
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2.5 | ![]() |
2.3 (6) |
About The Film
Info
| Directed By | David Yates |
| Actors | Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint, Emma Watson, Tom Felton |
| Genre | Science Fiction/Fantasy |
| Run Time | 2 hrs 33 mins |
| MPAA Rating | PG |
| Release Date | Dec 8, 2009 on DVD |
Synopsis:
Though HARRY POTTER AND THE PRISONER OF AZKABAN director Alfonso Cuaron still holds the crown for best film in the series, David Yates is making an attempt at a coup with HARRY POTTER AND THE HALF-BLOOD PRINCE. Dark, gleefully funny, and beautifully shot, this adaptation of J.K. Rowling’s novel should please fans despite numerous changes to the 650-page source material. In this sixth film in the series, Harry’s (Daniel Radcliffe) inevitable confrontation with the dark wizard Voldemort grows closer, and Hogwarts headmaster Dumbledore (Michael Gambon) wants the young student to be prepared. He guides Harry through a memory of a young Voldemort, but an important moment is missing. Harry must extract this memory from the new Hogwarts teacher, Horace Slughorn (a perfectly slimy Jim Broadbent), who is as eager for fame as he is reluctant to revisit this painful moment. Meanwhile, romance rules the school of witches and wizards, with Hermione (Emma Watson) and Ron (Rupert Grint) refusing to admit their feelings for each other. Harry also harbors a secret love of his own: Ron’s younger sister, Ginny (Bonnie Wright).
But despite his crush, Harry keeps an eye on Snape (Alan Rickman) and Draco Malfoy (Tom Felton), who may be responsible for attacks on the school. HALF-BLOOD PRINCE deftly balances the humor of Hogwarts heartbreak and the thrills of dark villains attacking the school. The cast is as talented as ever, and the youngest members--Radcliffe, Grint, and Watson--have developed their talent well.
However, this film is most remarkable for its fine cinematography from AMELIE director of photography Bruno Delbonnel. Using a muted palette, Delbonnel makes Hogwarts look hauntingly beautiful in a way that fans have never seen. There’s always plenty of fun and adventure in the series, but this entry boasts impressive visuals as well.
Top Industry Reviews
Editor Review(s)
Editor reviews
The Magic Is Gone...
"Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince" is not a bad movie, but it is far, far from being a good one. Running an obscene 2 1/2 hours, presenting a story which could have made a halfway decent half-hour episode of a half-assed TV series, this "Potter" has no focus, a comprehensive plot, any semblance of cohesion, purpose, meaning.
Given this view of David Yates' work (a director without much to his credit beyond the BBC Trollope miniseries "The Way We Live Now," and of "Potter" No. 5, but entrusted with both parts of the concluding "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows"), how is it possible to say that it's "not a bad movie"?
The reason is great cinematography (by Bruno Delbonnel), excellent special effects, a sterling class, headed by such outstanding stars of the London stage as Michael Gambon (Dumbledore), Jim Broadbent (Prof. Slughorn), Alan Rickman (Severus Snape), Timothy Spall (Wormtail) - in addition to the fine "Potter" regulars: Daniel Radcliffe (Harry), Emma Watson (Hermione), Rupert Grint (Ron Wesley), and some new characters. Helena Bonham Carter has her usual ridiculously overblown turn as Bellatrix Lestrange.
So, given all these assets, good things happen - for a few minutes here, a few lines there. At the beginning, the leisurely pace even creates an atmosphere of "literariness," creates hope for something intelligent. But pretty much everything goes up in smoke as an endless thread of side-stories, diversions, non-sequiturs use up two hours of the film.
Half soap, half sitcom, half "let's see how we can waste some more time," I had half a mind every 15 minutes to leave "Half-Blood Prince," and the fact that I stuck it out doesn't speak well of my judgment.
The central story - if you can find it - is trite and uninteresting. So much so that if I revealed the identity of mysterious prince in the title, it wouldn't make the least bit of difference.
The vast majority of the plot is described well by the unintentionally mind-numbing IMDB synopsis. Just try to follow this and imagine sitting through 153 minutes of it:
"Harry and his friends go through daily life, busy with school work, Quidditch (in which Harry has been made captain of the team), and, of course, romance. Ron has found a new girlfriend, Lavender Brown, a perky (if not obnoxious) Gryffindor student, and Hermione is not happy about it. Ron and Hermione's friendship takes a toll throughout the school year and Harry, as usual, is stuck in the middle. Harry, meanwhile, is facing a romantic dilemma of his own: he realizes he is falling for his best friend's sister, Ginny Weasley, who is unfortunately dating Harry's classmate, Dean Thomas. Harry's pining for Ginny and Ron's hilarious relationship with Lavender give this story a large dose of reality."
A large dose of *whose* reality?!
Fan Reviews
User reviews
Average user rating from: 6 user(s)
December 20, 2009
| Rating: | 2.5 |
Really want it to be better
I grew up with HP and I really like HP even now. I so wanted it to be a really good movie. But it just wasn't. The filming is good, the acting is good, and I know the story is good because I read the books. Whoever the writers are or maybe the directing? They just aren't getting it pulled together well.
December 19, 2009
| Rating: | 3.0 |
The Harry Potter Saga Continues!
It is wild to see these characters grow up right in front of our eyes and what role models they have become. In a world where weak, overly dramatic characters prone to angst and worthlessness (Twilight) are so popular, it is good to see strong girls like Hermione and Ron's sister, Ginny Weasley.
Bella by contrast is immature, suicidal and her whole life is wrapped up...in a man. Yes, this is what we want for our teenage daughters. Hermione, on the other hand, is smart, ambitious with goals, understands the value & depth of friendship and doesn't let her letdown with Ron derail her other interest.
Go Hermione and Ginny. We need more characters like this in the movies.
Slow Love Teenage Lovestory
User Review
| User Reviews | The movie focused too much on the 3 main characters love interest and too little time developing the storyline. This left the viewer a little lost as to what is happening. I had to ask my daughter several times why they were doing what they were doing (she reads HP, I don't). She was disappointed in the movie as well. |
December 19, 2009
| Rating: | 2.0 |
Didn't know what was going on
I admit it. I didn't read any of the HP books. That is why I am totally lost in these movies. I think the writers are trying to shove too much stuff in each movie. Maybe the books don't lend themselves easily to bookmaking. Either/or the movie didn't make sense, I didn't know how or why they knew where to "fly" off to, it seemed like they jumped around a lot and overall dragged out those unrequited love scenes too long.
Better than I hoped
User Review
| User Reviews | Potter is back in better form with this sixth sequel. This is the best film in the series by far, with The Prisoner of Azkaban in second and The Order of the Phoenix in third. Looking forward to the final chapter. |
December 15, 2009
| Rating: | 1.5 |
getting worse
For me personally this was the worst of a progressively declining series of Harry Potter movies. I wouldn't spend the money to see it at the theaters despite the hype and now I wish I hadn't spent the time to watch it at home on DVD.







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