Harry Potter movie
This one felt more like filler than any of the others so far. (Chamber of Secrets is the other candidate.) It looks like the major goal of this episode was to teach Harry to work with others and groom him as a leader. That can be a compelling plot; this particular rendition didn't compel me, but the movie was still ok overall.
We are starting to see the government corruption that affects the school, but motives are still pretty murky. (Yes, I am somewhat familiar with the politics of academia, so I know the real world doesn't always make sense here either, but I hope for more from fiction.) And, once again, aside from "boy-hero stories require it", I find myself wondering why those with power who do know about the grave threat aren't doing more to help instead of leaving Harry to figure it out on his own. Trying to teach him self-defense is all well and good, but I'm left feeling that wizards of Dumbledore's calibre could do more.
I'm left wondering some other things, but probably not the things the author had in mind:
- It appears that magic is limited only by caster knowledge and concentration, and not by something like energy or daily manna. What stops the baddies from going around casting the instant-kill spell all day to their hearts' content?
- What is the mechanism by which unauthorized student casting is detected and acted on within the hour, and why isn't it used to monitor the baddies (or extra-judicial magical torture for that matter)?
- It appears that the wand is a wizard's single point of failure. Why don't wizards carry wands the way assassins carry daggers -- two at the belt, one in each boot, one up the sleeve, a six-pack in the backpack, etc? It appears that broken ones can be replaced (from an earlier movie), but maybe there's some sort of attunement ritual that lets you have only one (at a time) and that is too time-consuming to use in combat?
- What's the effect of the shattered prophecy? Just "no more answers for you", or something more metaphysical?
Trailers:
- Bee Movie: Looks cutesy, so it comes down to the quality of the writing. I'm unlikely to bother absent good reviews from people whose assessments are good predictors of mine.
- Golden Compass: We'll see this. (This reminded me to try their web site again. It still fails for me, differently in Firefox and IE. Oh well; I guess I wasn't meant to have a daemon.)
- The Enchanted: This looks funny; I laughed out loud multiple times during the trailer. Definitely worth learning more about and hoping the trailer didn't contain all the funny parts.
- I don't remember the name of the Loch Ness movie. At the beginning of the trailer it evoked memories of E.T., but the trailer suggests that a good chunk of the movie is about the search for and secrets of Nessie, more than it is about a boy and his pet alien, and that doesn't grab me.
- Fred Claus: No thanks. Actually, a pretty good heuristic seems to be to write off anything billed as a holiday story. The snowflake logo at the beginning of the trailer told me everything I needed to know.
- Get Smart: I was never a fan of the TV show, and the trailer hasn't led me to reconsider.

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