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Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets

cover  

Directed by
Chris Columbus

Writing credits
J.K. Rowling (novel)
Steven Kloves (screenplay)

 

 

Authentic U.S. Region 1
U.S. Factory Sealed
 

Genre: Adventure / Family / Fantasy / Mystery  

Tagline: "Dobby Has Come To Warn You Sir."  

Plot Outline:  Harry Potter (Daniel Radcliffe) returns to Hogwarts School of Wizardry for his second year. After a confrontation with a house elf named Dobby, Harry escapes to the Weasley house with Ron Weasley (Rupert Grint) in a flying car. They are then late for the train and have to ride it to school. When they get there, strange happenings invade the school. "Mudbloods" (people of Muggle families) are "petrified" by an evil monster lurking in the grounds. When every one suspects that it is him, the trio then set out to find the culprit and find out more than they bargained for: the diary of Tom Riddle, why Hagrid was expelled and what the Chamber of Secrets is and why is it so feared in Hogwarts.

User Comments: Character palette and story drives me to read the books  

User Rating:  7.3/10 (45,928 votes) 
 
Cast overview, first billed only:
  Daniel Radcliffe .... Harry Potter
  Rupert Grint .... Ron Weasley
  Emma Watson .... Hermione Granger
  Richard Griffiths .... Uncle Vernon
  Fiona Shaw .... Aunt Petunia
  Harry Melling .... Dudley Dursley
  Toby Jones .... Dobby the House Elf (voice)
  Jim Norton .... Mr. Mason
  Veronica Clifford .... Mrs. Mason
  James Phelps .... Fred Weasley
  Oliver Phelps .... George Weasley
  Julie Walters .... Molly Weasley
  Bonnie Wright .... Ginny Weasley
  Mark Williams .... Arthur Weasley
  Chris Rankin .... Percy Weasley
  

Also Known As:
Incident on 57th Street (UK) (fake working title)
MPAA: Rated PG for scary moments, some creature violence and mild language.
Runtime: 161 min / Germany:152 min (cut)
Country: USA
Language: English
Color: Color Widescreen
Sound Mix: DTS-ES / Dolby Digital EX / SDDS
Certification: Canada:PG (Alberta/British Columbia/Manitoba/Nova Scotia/Ontario) / Germany:12 / USA:PG / Thailand:PD-7 / Argentina:Atp / Australia:PG / Austria:10 / Brazil:Livre / Canada:G (Quebec) / Finland:K-11 / France:U / Germany:6 (cut) / Ireland:PG / Italy:T / Norway:11 / Peru:PT / Philippines:G / Singapore:PG / South Korea:All / Spain:7 / Sweden:11 / Switzerland:10 (canton of Geneva) / Switzerland:10 (canton of Vaud) / Switzerland:6 (canton of the Grisons) / UK:PG / USA:PG (certificate #39363) / Greece:K / Netherlands:MG6

Trivia: During the shoot, the part of Dobby was played by an orange ball on a stick (he was added digitally later, of course).  

Goofs: Continuity: Ron receives the "Howler" from his mother. After his owl, Errol crashes into the table, you can see that the red envelope is open, as Ron removes it from Errol's mouth. We then see Ron breaking the seal on this envelope so he can read it.  

Quotes:
[ first lines]
[ Hedwig wants to be let out of her cage]
Harry : I can't let you out, Hedwig! I'm not allowed to use magic outside of school. Besides, if Uncle Vernon...
Uncle Vernon : [ yells] Harry Potter!
Harry : Now you've done it.
 

Awards: Nominated for 3 BAFTA Film Awards. Another 7 wins & 24 nominations  
 

User Comments:

10 out of 19 people found the following comment useful:-
Character palette and story drives me to read the books, 1 December 2002
7/10
Author: EVANOC (eto201@nyu.edu) from New York, NY
 

A lot has been made about the pubescence of the three leads in this new Harry Potter installment and it is a bit disconcerting when Harry (Daniel Radcliffe) and Ron Weasley (Rupert Grint) speak their first lines in those awkward cracks of pre-adolescence. However, their growing up, along with the physical blossoming of their friend Hermione (the perky and smart actress Emma Watson) seem mark a general growing up of the whole Harry Potter series. This one is more for grown-ups: the first one hooked the kid demographic and no doubt they will still be enraptured by "Chamber of Secrets." This is the film, however, that hopes to attract a whole new audience in the parents of those kids. It is darker and has more layers. The explanations about wizardry are less cursory and the acting seems stronger.

I have never read the books so I bring an outlook to the films that is free of personal bias toward the quality of the adaptation or the faithfulness to Rowling's words. One thing this film does do, that the first one did not, is it made me want to read the books. I was more drawn in, in a literary sense, to the world, to the stories, and particularly to the characters. Whereas the first film was a passable introduction to everything Harry Potter is about, this seems like a deeper riff on some of the same themes that the first one only glossed over.

However, I might not have enjoyed Chamber of Secrets as thoroughly if I had not first seen Sorcerer's Stone. It gave me (and Chris Columbus' production team) a framework that invited expansion. Without the background of the first film, I might not have been as emotionally invested in Hagrid (Robbie Coltrane), or have understood the mechanics of "Quidditch," or even have cared about the tenuous future of Hogwarts School for Wizards.

In a word, the performances are "marvelous." I read somewhere that Rowling wrote with a Dickensian sense of character and that seems to carry over to the film. Robbie Coltrane as the affable Hagrid is still my favorite. Maggie Smith and Alan Rickman are woefully underused in this film but I can only hope they will resurface in the others; they can still steal their scenes with the tiniest pursing of the lips or eye flickers. (As a side note: Outside of Coltrane's Hagrid, I find Rickman's Professor Snape the most interesting and multi-layered character across both films). Richard Harris is suitably noble and wily in one of his last roles. And Kenneth Branagh, as the egomaniacal new Hogwarts professor and author of wizardry books, is perfectly cast and very funny. One thing this film does is allow room to explore these characters in a full sense and give the audience time to get under their skin.

Chris Columbus has been called a tactless director and I can see where some of his scenes, particularly the action ones, are played so broadly that they lose all semblance of meaning. He is not particularly adept at handling the young actors, who come across as pretty bland and uninteresting (Rupert Grint as Ron is sort of annoying, overplaying the stuff that was likeable at first). Likewise, he is unable to invigorate some of the scenes (the car scenes, the spider scene, and even the final encounter between Harry and the Chamber of Secrets' monster) come off as overlong and particularly flat. The running time of 2 hours and 41 minutes is a bit exorbitant: To me it just suggests that Columbus doesn't have the necessary audacity to deviate too much from Rowling's source material. I know that he has to maintain a certain level of faithfulness to the books but, to be honest, what is exciting on the page does not always translate well onscreen. Perhaps Alfonso Cuaron, slated to direct the new film, will have a better, snappier sense of how to energize the action scenes without losing the obvious positives of sticking to the novels.

However, the movie did energize me enough to want to go and read the books. The scope, the palette of, yes, Dickensian characters, and the intertwining of stories makes me want to see how Rowling fits it all together. Then maybe I'll be able to talk more intelligently about faithfulness when Cuaron releases `Prisoner of Azkaban.' Maybe I'll undergo a massive reading program this holiday season.

UPC  085392359226