strange_complex: (Snape writing)
[personal profile] strange_complex
Oxford lay buried in a deep, off-white fog all day today. But I didn't mind at all. The only time I had to go out of the house was to walk to and from seeing Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire with [livejournal.com profile] redkitty23, both of us wrapped in gloves, scarves, warm coats, long black skirts and, in my case, my new sexy boots. Especially on the way back, when it was dark and wintry and we walked across my bridge deep in conversation about the film, the fog only served to make the journey feel like a real-life extension of the Hogwarts experience. Perhaps a cut scene featuring two particularly attractive young teachers, set on the rickety wooden walkway which crosses the steep valley behind the school.

Since this magical experience constituted the first time I'd worn my boots out of the house, and they do feel just like the sorts of boots a female teacher at the school might wear, they shall forever after be known as my Hogwarts Boots.

What about the film itself? Pretty damn good, though I agree with others that it wasn't quite up to Prisoner standards. But then, neither was the book. I very much want to see it again while it's in cinemas, anyway. So, good enough to spend another £6.50 on.

It's too late to go into detailed commentary about it now, so, pretty much at random:

Top moments:
  • Snape pulling back his cuffs with obvious enjoyment, ready to whack Harry and Ron on the head for the third time for talking during homework.
  • The Yule Ball.
  • Harry and Cedric's reappearance in the Hogwarts Grounds after the showdown with Voldemort. Especially the way everyone, including Amos Diggory, cheers wildly at first... until they realise what's happened.
Room for improvement:
  • Snape and Karkaroff discussing the Dark Mark - I understand that, like a great deal in the movie, this had to be conveyed quickly and concisely, but who on earth would fling open a door just as they were discussing a highly dangerous and sensitive issue, so that any Tom, Dick, or, say, Harry who was walking past could catch onto what they were saying? Utterly ludicrous.
  • The moment when Harry's name comes out of the Goblet. I didn't find his reaction, or almost anybody else's, in the book convincing at this point, and where the film could have improved on this, it didn't, really. The only slight improvement was that Barty Crouch Snr.'s insistence on following the letter of rules did sound more convincing and in keeping with his character. But otherwise, I really felt this could have been done a lot better.

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