Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire
The latest incarnation of J.K. Rowling's series of wizarding school has
met with highly favorable reviews. The world of reviews, however, is
decidedly divided into two camps. Those that have read the book and
those that have not. Every reviewer that has read Harry Potter and the
Goblet of Fire has numerous positive things to say about the movie.
Given that they know the plot and the nitty gritty of the book the
movie would therefore simply be an extension of something already
enjoyed. Those that have not read the book, however, are generally
favorable of the movie.
I am not. Though other reviewers have formed the same opinion as I
have, their reasons behind their dissatisfaction generally falls upon
different subjects. My primary headshake has to do with the manner by
which the movie covers the plotline of the book.
If we liken the book to a lake then the movie itself is a stone cast
skipping across it. The opening 20 minutes of the movie bounce so
quickly through scenes that you are, in the end, left wondering why
those scenes were included since there is so little in the way of
import attached to them. Combine that with cinematography that is
continually too close or too far away, at an odd angle from below or an
obtuse angle from above and you get the feeling that were you to
finally sink into the lake that feeling of distortion and leaping
narrative would disappear.
I have read the books. I knew what could happen in the movie and what
would happen in the movie. So I was not particularly surprised as the
stone skipped over many parts in what would doubtlessly make a 5 hour
movie had its entire depth been plumbed. And I also admit that each
subsequent movie, based on each subsequent book, will be of greater and
greater difficulty for screenwriters and directors alike due to the
mounting meta-plot enmeshed in the sub-plot of each book. But the movie
is written by fans of the material who delighted in particular scenes
and acknowledge that certain of them need remain to appease those
hungry fans.
Let us take, for example, the quidditch world cup, which predominates
the first 1/3 of the book. In the movie the characters are roused from
bed, proceed to the boot portkey on the top of a hill and are
immediately spun to a campsite where witches and wizards abound in
anticipation of The Quidditch World Cup. The characters settle in and
relax in a spacious four room pup tent with a fully functional kitchen
and then jump up to rush off to the game where they are seated in the
attic of the game's stadium. We then see the entrance of the Irish team
followed by the Bulgarian team. Cut scene to the Weasley twins
celebrating Ireland's win. Quidditch, afterall, isn't important to the
meta-plot, but since everything preceding it and following it is of
great import, those things need to be shown, but not the game. The only
problem is that those plot devices are concealed by the fervent
enjoyment of the Quidditch game; while in the movie they are shown in
stark relief so brightly it's like they are zeroed in on and backlit by
the sun.
Reviewers have been torn regarding the acting in the movie. Several
state that it has become easy to denote the professionals from the
children, whereas several others remark that our central 3 characters
have grown into the characters exceptionally well. The director of Four
Weddings and a Funeral definitely shows his roots in romantic comedy in
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire in some of the rare scenes of
lightness and wizarding school normalcy.
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire is worth the price of admission and
snacks. It is even worth paying for the date's ticket. But it isn't the
finest movie ever made. It lacks the sense of wonder the first two
films possessed and also the dramatic plot and drama of the third
movie. It has its own charm though, which is why I believe it's a 3
stars out of 4.
Kyle Gould is a University of Calgary Graduate in
English devoutly trying to make the 25,000 dollar piece of parchment
not just a glorified ink blot. Currently it would serve better as a
Rorschach test. Feel free to throw some ink his way at wkkgould@hotmail.com.