Throughout the pages of Goblet of Fire, Harry also has to confront the horrors of growing up. At most, he was aware that Professor Quirrell and maybe a few others wanted Voldemort to return, but not that there was a powerful and motivated group of people who not only want Voldemort to return to power, but that have been doing their part in secret to keep his cause alive. Prior to Goblet of Fire Harry mostly knew that Voldemort was evil, killed his parents, and was trying to return to the land of the living. This is the book where Harry meets those who want Voldemort to return to his evil ways and the entire world is thrown off its axis. The absolute best of the best, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire is not only the pivotal story in the saga for the Harry/Voldemort dynamic, but it represents a turning point for just about every character. Rowling isn't the author of that book, which is also a stage play rather than a novel) And what is more fundamental than ranking the books that started a worldwide craze (also, we're not including Cursed Child since J.K. And it is because of that we need to take a look at the books themselves and see which ones are genuinely superior, either in style, form, plot or any connection therein.
#Harry potter movies rated series
All that passion and excitement to read made this series what it is. That shared interest opened doors to all sorts of unusual friendships. And, as for the addicted reader, they had a very important thing in common with people that typically don’t know what they’re talking about in terms of books.
These books opened doors to other fantasy series, and encouraged kids who had very little interest in reading to pick up a book and give this one a try. The video was posted earlier this week and has already racked up over a million views, perhaps proving that the next time Harry Potter is rebooted, the movies could be rated R.The Harry Potter series was a formative phenomena for a generation. Of course, as visual artists, the Corridor Crew could not resist taking a few liberties with some of the actual details of the story, such as Colin Creevy getting his head blown off by a quaffle and Professor Lockhart getting impaled by a spike after getting owned by Snape in their duel.
Several members of the team got to choose moments from the Harry Potter films that they felt didn’t properly depict the level of violence that actually would have occurred, such as Harry and Draco’s legendary duel and Neville being the victim of Petrificus Totalus. So they got to work re-imagining some of the most iconic magic scenes from the series as R-Rated and the results are extremely graphic and extremely badass… and definitely not for children. Sam, fellow VFX lead, agreed, and fortunately, as visual effects experts, they were able to do something about it. Niko, one of the members of the team, complained about the movies “pussyfooting” around the reality of magic being “very dangerous and very deadly.” That didn’t sit right with the Corridor Crew, a production studio that makes pop culture videos in Los Angeles.