Before the first Harry
Potter film came out in 2001, many fans were worried that the
eccentric and distinctively English charms of JK Rowling's books would be
lost in the journey from printed page to multiplex screen.
These days, the novels are getting saggier and more bloated (at more than 750
pages in length, the last one was longer than Crime and Punishment), but
ever since Christopher (Home Alone) Columbus vacated the director's seat,
the film adaptations have been getting progressively sharper and more
interesting. The latest even features Jarvis Cocker and members of Radiohead
vamping it up as the Wyrd Sisters at a school ball.
The Goblet of Fire is also the first Harry Potter film to be directed by an
Englishman, Mike Newell, best known for Four Weddings and a Funeral and
Donnie Brasco. Like his predecessor Alfonso CuarĂ³n, he has little time for
anything sappy or sugary. "Dark and difficult times lie ahead" is
one of the things that Hogwarts headmaster Dumbledore (Michael Gambon) tells
Harry early on; and the whole film, an unexpectedly black and at times very
frightening foray into the less fun side of wizardry and magic, fully
deserves its "12A" classification.
Source:http://www.telegraph.co.uk
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