Zoe: Next time we smuggle stock, let's make it something smaller. Wash: Yeah, we should start dealing in those black-market beagles.

'Safe'


Buffista Movies 4: Straight to Video  

A place to talk about movies--old and new, good and bad, high art and high cheese. It's the place to place your kittens on the award winners, gossip about upcoming fims and discuss DVD releases and extras. Spoiler policy: White font all plot-related discussion until a movie's been in wide release two weeks, and keep the major HSQ in white font until two weeks after the video/DVD release.


Gris - Aug 23, 2005 6:25:47 am PDT #6641 of 10002
Hey. New board.

Is she really all that de-nerded? She still takes bunches of classes, and has that long, totally ignored conversation about Arithmancy, and tries to stop them from breaking the rules most of the time. Her nerdiness isn't thrown in your face as much as it is in the books, but the movies are not really great at the character development - part of that whole cutting for time thing, since the kids sitting in the library studying for hours at a time while Ron and Harry go slowly insane can be done in 4 paragraphs in the book but would require actual screen time in a movie.

I've always thought of it more as the movies focusing less on the school aspect of the stories entirely, which is, in my opinion, the obvious place to cut stuff. So it never bothered me.

And I haven't read cast interviews with Emma, so I don't know about that bit.


DebetEsse - Aug 23, 2005 6:29:18 am PDT #6642 of 10002
Woe to the fucking wicked.

Book Hermione would never ever have punched Draco. (This is my "Girls can be strong characters without physical violence being involved" rant)

That, along with the being awfully pretty and stylishly dressed.

It was in the Philosophers Stone stuff that I got the Emma doesn't like Hermione thing. Don't have a specific cite, though.


Lee - Aug 23, 2005 6:30:48 am PDT #6643 of 10002
The feeling you get when your brain finally lets your heart get in its pants.

Book Hermione would never ever have punched Draco. (This is my "Girls can be strong characters without physical violence being involved" rant)

Actually, she smacked him in book 3, which I just finished rereading.


Kate P. - Aug 23, 2005 6:37:16 am PDT #6644 of 10002
That's the pain / That cuts a straight line down through the heart / We call it love

"Girls can be strong characters without physical violence being involved"

And boys!

It doesn't bother me at all that Hermione is prettier in the movies than she (supposedly) is in the books. Actually, I've never gotten the sense from the books that she's supposed to be not good-looking. Apart from her teeth, which she fixes pretty handily in book 4, what about her is mentioned as being unattractive? And anyway, was there ever any chance that the producers and directors would cast someone in the role who isn't pretty?


Gris - Aug 23, 2005 6:41:26 am PDT #6645 of 10002
Hey. New board.

Apart from her teeth, which she fixes pretty handily in book 4, what about her is mentioned as being unattractive?

Her very bushy hair is mentioned over and over again, throughout the books. She's never described as pretty, though she's also never described as ugly, really.

I tend to follow the argument that this is partly because Harry isn't attracted to her, and the book takes his perspective on appearances. I've always imagined her character to be fairly pretty, though Emma Watson gorgeous is another thing. There's only about 5 high school students in the world as pretty as her, so Hermione probably wouldn't be one of them, but that's how movies work.


DebetEsse - Aug 23, 2005 6:43:48 am PDT #6646 of 10002
Woe to the fucking wicked.

I guess I need to re-read, then. Do you recall the situation, Perkins?

Of course, Kate. I think of it as somewhat of a post-Buffy thing that that's the mold for a "strong girl".

I got the not so pretty (really, mostly taken in a "mostly not so concerned with or spending time on looking pretty") impression from the supposed transformation of the ball (which would be far less striking for someone who did themselves up on a regular basis) and other things I can't remember right now (I know, not so helpful)


Lee - Aug 23, 2005 6:52:27 am PDT #6647 of 10002
The feeling you get when your brain finally lets your heart get in its pants.

Heh. I went and looked it up to make sure I wasn't confused. Page 293 of the US hardback. Draco insults Hagrid, and Hermoine smacks him.


Volans - Aug 23, 2005 6:53:14 am PDT #6648 of 10002
move out and draw fire

Actually, I've never gotten the sense from the books that she's supposed to be not good-looking. Apart from her teeth, which she fixes pretty handily in book 4, what about her is mentioned as being unattractive?

Same here. "Bushy hair" doesn't mean ugly, and Emma Watson has the bushy hair.

mostly taken in a "mostly not so concerned with or spending time on looking pretty"

This I could definitely get behind as describing Hermione though. And the movies were doing fine with this up until the trendy scarf outfit for Hogsmeade last movie.

And I kinda hate Hermione's ball gown in GoF-the-movie.

And, psst, Debet, you are pretty! So wanting Hermione to be not pretty because you identify with her is not of the sense-making


Vonnie K - Aug 23, 2005 7:04:58 am PDT #6649 of 10002
Kiss me, my girl, before I'm sick.

Emma Watson's hair in the first movie was a lot bushier, and she had a sort of scrunched-up face as a 11-year-old--cute as a button, but not what I would call a beautiful child. She really blossomed in the third movie, and... well, I'm sure the producers of the films are not overly lamenting the fact that Watson is turning into a knockout.

I don't mind the down-playing of her booksmarts as long as we are shown her intelligence in action in other ways. I ADORED the take-charge Hermione with the time-turner in the climax of the third flick. Smart chicks are so hot. [/Xander]


Kathy A - Aug 23, 2005 7:08:45 am PDT #6650 of 10002
We're very stretchy. - Connie Neil

I just hope that they show her being unreasonably jealous of the HBP in the adaptation of Book 6. That's a good example of her stubborness in adhering to the rules, which they didn't show in the movie version of PoA (since they took out the whole "where did the Firebolt come from" issue).