Most Popular
Recent Blog Posts
National Features >
Magic StoneSorcery makes cynicism vanish in the big-screen Harry Potter.By Gregory WeinkaufPublished on November 15, 2001Lovely magic, this. An enchanting family classic. If you believe in magic, you'll love Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone. And if you don't, you will, and you will. True, the hype has been a bit much. And yes, a mad, desperate world choked with reproduction and reprobation could hardly be expected to resist such a high-concept commercial incantation. Even if the overzealous executives at AOL Time Warner had scrawled their ads on weathered cardboard and waved them at passing motorists, we'd still be deafened by this franchise's echoing global ka-ching! Nonetheless, for all the marketing mayhem, it's impossible to dislike this movie, so today is a cynic's holiday. First of all, children will love Harry Potter. While this is as much a media mandate as a seat-filling shoo-in, the movie's target audience is served very well here, with blithe whimsy to spare balanced by some sinister elements lurking beneath the trapdoor of nightmare. For every talking hat or zooming broomstick, there's a gruesome specter or vicious beastie, and it's all good. Since many parents these days seem hell-bent on bowdlerizing their kids' cultural experiences -- inadvertently depriving them of the emotional fortification of intelligent storytelling -- it's refreshing to take in an old-fashioned yarn that's wise enough to match its estimable light with edifying shadow. Meanwhile, most adult viewers may not help but apprehend Harry Potter as a gentle juggernaut, a formidable worldwide literary movement, a massive phenomenon the full impact of which remains to be seen. Children are celebrating these books all over the place, but young Mr. Potter is also making the rounds of libraries, universities, car stereos on long rides. Mothers are reading Harry to their kids but also sharing the books with their mothers. For legions of fans, this cinematic adaptation represents the culmination of countless shared dreams. Happily, then, the first movie of the Harry Potter series casts a splendid spell, as screenwriter Steve Kloves has transcribed J.K. Rowling's novel nearly perfectly, with precious little tweaked or trimmed. Even better, director Chris Columbus (Home Alone, Mrs. Doubtfire) strides beyond his established predilection for syrup and pratfalls, finally challenging himself in the field of awe and beauty. Purist detractors will lodge myriad complaints, but by giving the film a two-and-a half-hour running time, Columbus and editor Richard Francis-Bruce have struck an ideal compromise between practical duration and supernatural atmosphere. Now, for the remaining three or four residents of earth who don't yet know the story, the titular Harry (Daniel Radcliffe) is a bespectacled English boy enduring his painfully prissy foster family, the Dursleys (Fiona Shaw, Harry Melling and the lovably horrid Richard Griffiths, of Withnail and I). On Harry's eleventh birthday -- much to the family's ire -- he is invited to enroll at the prestigious Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, to which he is shepherded by a friendly giant named Hagrid (Robbie Coltrane), who reveals Harry's true identity as a wizard. During a shopping spree for supernatural school supplies (where he meets John Hurt in a poofy wig, and Warwick Davis and Verne Troyer as goblin bankers), Harry learns about the lightning-shaped scar on his forehead. Hagrid reveals that an evil wizard named Voldemort killed Harry's parents (whom the Dursleys told him perished in a car crash), and, as a baby, Harry narrowly escaped. Soon thereafter, on a northbound steamer called the Hogwarts Express, Harry learns from two new friends, humble Ron (Rupert Grint) and not-so-humble Hermione (Emma Watson), that his wizardly fame precedes him. What follows is a wonderful yearlong adventure at Hogwarts, wherein Harry's destiny is gradually revealed by various professors and classmates. The ever-transforming Warwick Davis (Willow) shows up again as Charms Professor Flitwick, and Zoë Wanamaker is the cat-eyed Madame Hooch, who teaches the children to fly on their brooms. Also aboard are quirky Professor Quirrell (Ian Hart) and the feline Professor McGonagall (a sublime Maggie Smith). At the helm is the venerable Professor Albus Dumbledore (a stately Richard Harris), the most powerful and enlightened wizard. Rather than turning the palatial Hogwarts into a ghastly new-age colony, Rowling and Columbus have impregnated it with malevolence, with corridors leading to certain death and a forbidden forest filled with sinister creatures. There are also agents of darkness about the grounds, particularly Professor Snape (Alan Rickman). Although supposedly specializing in potions, the dubious Snape is obviously spearheading some clandestine mission, as Harry, Ron and Hermione learn from inopportune sightings and clumsy Hagrid's loose lips. Fun may be had, but danger is afoot. One of Harry Potter's sweetest charms is that it delivers exactly the miracles one would expect under the auspices of a wonderful cast. Rickman does his best work yet as the treacherous Snape, unleashing his dank purr and leering effeminately from beneath what appears to be Trent Reznor's scalp. Another standout is Coltrane, whose Hagrid is basically the coolest older brother any kid could ask for. As Harry, Radcliffe performs with an elegance almost unknown for his age, and the other children employ beaming naturalism to offset the abundant supernatural elements. It's only unfortunate that some leads aren't afforded more screen time. For example, Ron's mother (Julie Walters, of Billy Elliot) flits by in seconds, and as the ghost Nearly Headless Nick, John Cleese is almost literally invisible.
write your comment
|