Well, it looks like they're going to include every major scene, and some scenes that are only alluded to in the book.
For example,
the train being stopped by a Deatheater is probably the scene where Luna gets kidnapped.
But yes, I'm very keen to see Luna's room.
Worth delurking: Neville sitting at the end, with the sword, just casually hanging, fully comfortable with himself as the Ginormous Hero that I always knew he was. I mean, it won't be the same because it's not a very theatrical moment, but a good shot that stops and observes it needs to be in there.
I was always thrilled with how Neville ended up.
edit: And all the things in the books that ended up being important that the movie people shrugged off and now have to account for or just flail about dealing with.
You know, I think I'm one movie behind. I don't think I ever saw HBP. How did I manage to miss that?
And all the things in the books that ended up being important that the movie people shrugged off and now have to account for or just flail about dealing with.
Which is where I think WB and the franchise in general went wrong by starting the movies BEFORE the freaking series was finished. How could Steve Kloves have known that S.P.E.W. was going to end up being the crux for Ron and Hermione? Hell, Jo worked really closely on the screenplays and didn't (AFAIK) push to have things like that in. I know that by waiting, we would maybe not have had the actors we do, but I think it might have done the franchise a solid to have waited.
That all being said, WHY NOT NOVEMBER PLZKTHX!
My little moment will be Harry's birthday kiss and Newborn Teddy.
I need to rewatch HBP again.
I just read The Windup Girl, and for you cyberpunk fans who are looking for updated cyberpunk, here it is.
I really really enjoyed this book. The worldbuilding was just fantastic - you could tell he'd really done his research.
I don't know that I want a sequel, exactly, but I'd love to read other books set in that universe. (Say, set in Japan or India instead of Thailand.)
I don't know that I want a sequel, exactly, but I'd love to read other books set in that universe.
It looks like he's written a few short stories in the same world, but set in NYC and the American Southwest and cetera. I'll be ordering that as soon as I have book money again.
The Windup Girl
made me think that the steampunk gestalt right now isn't just about looking to the past, to a time when you could figure out how things work, take them apart, and repair them yourself...it's also about preparing for a future that's post-Peak Oil and necessarily more DIY.
I'm rereading the Emily of New Moon series now. Every time I read these, I struck by just how many characters in these books have psychological problems. And they're not played for laughs or as "local color" like I've seen similar characters in other kids' books of the period. The one that always gives me the most, "Whoa, really?" reaction is Teddy's mother. She's totally possessive about Teddy, and gets incredibly jealous of anyone or anything that she thinks Teddy might like more than her. Teddy mentions that he doesn't play with his pets much in front of her anymore, because she killed two cats that she thought he loved too much. Parts of these books are presented in an almost fantasy-like way, but most of the scenes with Teddy's mother are done really realistically -- like this is just another part of the everyday troubles. I really can't think of any other kids' book from that period that deals with mental illness in this way.