Harry Potter books and movies are loved for their magical details. Harry Potter is like the ultimate escape from our mundane Muggle lives. It’s a ticket to the magical world where anything is possible. Every time we dive into those books or movies, it’s like a mini-vacation from reality.
Recently, David Yates, the director of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part One, shared insights into why this film (part of an epic saga) shouldn’t have worked as a standalone story.
Yates joined the Harry Potter franchise with Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix and continued to direct all three of the remaining sequels, including the two-part finale. But he has explained why Deathly Hallows – Part 1 was a “great challenge.”
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part One Had Excitement Concerns for Third Act
Filmmaker David Yates shared some insights with Collider regarding the challenges of capturing and editing Deathly Hallows – Part 1, stating:
“Oh, that’s a good question. Probably [Harry Potter and the] Deathly Hallows: Part 1]. The great challenge of that film was it didn’t actually have a third act. It kind of ran out of steam halfway through, and Mark [Day – the editor on the final four Potter films] and I would often sit there kind of figuring it out and saying, ‘This movie doesn’t have a third act. How are we gonna…? Hang on, this is crazy. It doesn’t have a third act.”
The ending of Deathly Hallows – Part 1, starring Daniel Radcliffe and Emma Watson, delivered an emotional punch with Dobby’s sacrifice. However, there were concerns about the excitement level of the third act, especially since the movie essentially set the stage for the epic Battle of Hogwarts in Part 2.
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part One was Difficult to Complete
Later, in the same interview, the director David Yates explained how difficult it was to complete the project, saying:
“Those two movies, Part 1 and Part 2, the idea was the first one was a road movie that was very sort of, like, take the kids out of the school, put them in jeopardy outside of that safe place, and see how they grow up and their relationship is tested. But then you go straight into the climax and the fireworks to the final one. So, we noodled Part One to bits to try and feel that the end of the movie had an escalation when, in fact, it’s Jazz Hands. [Laughs] There’s not much going on at the end in the second half of the movie, and I say that with great– People still say to me, ‘My favorite film is Hallows: Part One, mate. That was so amazing. It felt like a European road movie.’ And I’m going, ‘Yeah, but the work we did in the edit was unbelievable.”
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part One had a distinctive visual style and atmosphere compared to the other films in the franchise (as it is the only movie in the franchise to take place entirely outside of Hogwarts). That’s the reason people say to Yates that it’s their favorite film in the franchise.
As the filmmaker explained, splitting Rowling’s final book into two movies was challenging. It’s understandable because the first part kind of feels like a prelude to the big events. The third-act climax is a mini prison break – it feels low stakes compared to the other movies (not the epic battles we’re used to).
But besides this, Deathly Hallows – Part 1 took some storytelling risks and kept things exciting, so it feels like a worthy start to the franchise (because things get way more intense in other movies).
Source: Collider