Chapter 406 [Movie Watch] The Ruthless Voldemort

Rupert sighed, "But Harry is too anxious. In fact, in the novel this is also related to Kreacher."

"Harry is not so reckless. He is still planning to find someone to confirm."

"But writing letters is not allowed. The owls are being monitored, and Heydwig was attacked by Umbridge."

"Harry had no choice but to venture into Umbridge's office and use the Floo network inside, and that's how he was caught."

"But unfortunately Kreacher lied to Harry and Sirius went to the Department of Mysteries."

("Kreacher?" Sirius was a little bit unbelievable that a house-elf could betray his master.)
(He wasn't angry though, Kreacher was a loyal servant of Regulus.)
(He already knew the story of Regulus, the younger brother he considered a coward.)
"Is he like Dobby?" asked Movie Ron.

Rupert shook his head. "Kreacher followed the orders of the Black heir. Sirius's actions were not in line with the heir status defined by him and his former master. Sirius also kept ignoring Kreacher's feelings as an intelligent life form."

"And Bella, who appeared at this time, Narcissa, became a replacement."

"Being from the Black family, they have more weight in Kreacher's heart than Sirius."

(Sirius was relieved. He did not treat Kreacher the way Rupert said.)
(Now Kreacher also understood the concept that Voldemort was the enemy who killed his Master Regulus. Miss Sissi and Miss Bella were no longer loyal to him as before.)
"Is that so," said Ron in the novel, "in the novel, is Umbridge also so brave as to use a Binding Curse to strangle one of the centaurs in front of so many centaurs?"

After the golden river appeared, he occasionally encountered centaurs on the riverbank. Their arrows were faster than most wizards' magic and very accurate.

Rupert said, "The Umbridge in the movie is stronger. Although Umbridge in the novel has superb spells and can summon a physical patronus, she has been pampered for many years. She did not block the arrows of the centaur, and the binding spell only tied up the centaur's body."

"The centaurs took Umbridge captive straight away."

"Hermione revealed her intention to use the centaurs to help them out of trouble. The arrogant and self-deprecating centaurs felt that they were being used. They thought that the noble centaurs were like servants, being used by wizards like tamed hounds."

"The angry centaurs even wanted to break the rule of not harming foals and attack Harry and his friends."

"Luckily, Grawp, who was looking for Hagrid, showed up in time and saved Harry and the others."

"Are these centaurs so outrageous?" Ron was a little bit unbelievable. Most of his impressions of centaurs came from Delia.

"That's understandable," Rupert said. "They have their own wisdom and culture, but their status is similar to that of protected animals, even lower than that of goblins. Not every centaur is a Fizeron."

"It's obviously their own request. They voluntarily registered to become beasts. Okay, but -" Movie Ron looked at himself in the movie with envy, "Riding a Thestral to London, how cool!"

(Mrs. Weasley's face is grim and serious.)
(In her opinion, it was foolish and ignorant for a group of children to dare to break into the Ministry of Magic and face the Death Eaters.)
(She was already thinking about how to punish Ron when she saw him.)
"You didn't think it was cool in the novel. The Thestrals were invisible, and their bloodthirsty nature made you feel very uncomfortable throughout the whole process, and you stumbled when you landed." Rupert shrugged. "I always thought that the part about running on the street could be cut out and saved for more interesting plots."

“Only audiences in London, England, can relate to this scene.”

"Don't they find it suspicious?" Draco was a little speechless. "The Ministry of Magic, the Department of Mysteries, they broke in so easily, and there was no one in sight. No one tried to stop them."

"That's understandable," Neville said, "because Harry thought Voldemort had captured Sirius, right? They must have thought Voldemort's people had taken care of everything."

Then he shuddered, and not because of Lucius Malfoy in the movie.

It was the woman who appeared with a sharp, delicate, yet neurotic laugh—Bellatrix Lestrange.

("That's ridiculous, Bella," Sirius sneered. "You say Harry is a bastard, but according to your theory, Voldemort is even more of a bastard than a bastard. Harry is at least two wizards.")
(Bella: "How dare you - how dare you - you pure-blood traitor, you depraved bastard!")
Movie Draco looked at his aunt in the movie with disdain, "Why do I feel like her wand is always pointed at my dad?"

Ron in the movie quipped, "You still don't understand, she thinks he's a traitor."

Rupert said, "I asked Ms. Helena Bonham Carter about this detail. The actress who plays Bellatrix told me her understanding of the role."

"She believes that any Death Eater who has not fought for the Dark Lord to the last moment like her and is imprisoned is not trustworthy, especially Lucius Malfoy."

"He was the one who received the most love from his master, but he behaved so poorly."

"If it wasn't for the master's order, she would have killed him."

"Kill my father?" Movie Draco was speechless, "She is such a lunatic, my father is her sister's husband!"

"She is a lunatic." Ron's body shook subconsciously.

But it wasn't because of Bella, but because of the crushing spell that Ginny used in the movie. Everyone else used the stunning spell, but Ginny dared to kill people with a calm face.

"The movie still hasn't been adapted well." Rupert sighed, "There are many places in the Department of Mysteries that are worth filming. The novel describes the battles in the Time Hall and the Brain Hall."

"But it's okay. Some of the details about Hermione in the novel are too much."

"A Death Eater whose head was transformed into a baby's due to the power of the Time Hall."

"With Death Eaters all around, they locked Harry's wand hand on it, saying a baby couldn't be harmed."

"I didn't use any killing spells in the subsequent battles. I thought I could just use Silent Death to make the enemy unable to cast spells, but I ended up getting hit by black magic and fell to the ground."

"Everyone else performed well, but she was the only one holding them back."

Neville pointed at himself, "'I'm' doing better too?"

Rupert nodded, "In the novel, you were first controlled except for Harry, and then you used the prophecy to escape and ran to other halls to fight. The battle was also more brutal, and everyone else was knocked down."

"Neville was the only one who still resisted bravely and was tortured by Bellatrix with the Cruciatus Curse."

(Augusta Longbottom, who wanted to say how great her grandson was, deleted her words. She was more distressed now. She hoped that the grandson in the story could be more ordinary and cowardly, and stay in Hogwarts safely.)
"Then the Order of the Phoenix arrived."

"Of course, it's not as cool as in the movies, vaporizing the body to fly and move. In the novel, only Voldemort can do that. Snape can only fly."

(The audience from the magic world is amazed.)
(Is it really that difficult to fly without a flying gadget?)
(The magic level in this world is lower? But it doesn't look like it.)
(Only Bajir knows that this is because the magic power of the two worlds is different.)
(The magic in the novel world is of a higher nature and more difficult to control.)
(The magic in the movie world also resides in the brain at the material level, and the brain can cast spells, making them easier to control.)
"This is a good adaptation that can connect with Snape's painful memories, especially the strange 'well done, James'. Sirius died too suddenly in the novel."

(James: "Sirius.")
(Sirius: "James.")
"He was fighting with Bella, and had the upper hand just now, dodging a beam of light, but when he was taunting Bella, he was hit by her killing curse and fell into the archway of the Hall of Death just like in the movie."

(In order to prevent James and Sirius from expressing their homosexuality and saying something more outrageous that might hurt Lily, Dumbledore began to analyze the movie, "Normally, the killing curse kills wizards instantly, and no wounds can be found on their bodies.")
("Sirius could, perhaps because he was standing right at the edge of [the arch], the entrance to the afterlife, and made some facial expressions in response to Harry's expression as a dead person with flesh.")
"Sirius is dead." Even though the person in front of him was different from the one he knew, Harry was still shocked. "Bellatrix Lestrange! She's a lunatic." "One second she was distraught because she killed her cousin, and the next second she was sneering."

Rupert said, "She's not crazy enough. In the novel, she just let out a smug shriek of laughter, and she left because of Dumbledore's appearance."

"The teaching of the Cruciatus Curse in the novel was said by Bella, not whispered by Voldemort."

"She started by saying, 'Haha... do you love him very much, Potter darling?'"

"Harry used the Cruciatus Curse."

"If I'm not mistaken," said Draco in the movie with a complicated expression, "Voldemort is teaching Harry how to use the Unforgivable Curse, and the target is his most loyal servant, my aunt?"

For the first time, he felt Voldemort's ruthlessness so clearly.

Even his most devoted servants seemed insignificant before him.

(Lucius Malfoy: "Yes, my former master was such a man. The Dark Lord is not worth following.")
"He wants Harry to be his weapon," said Ron, "or rather, Voldemort does need a weapon, and the prophecy is just an extra."

"Harry, who can be connected to his brain and controlled by him, is his best weapon."

"For this, he was willing to sacrifice his most loyal servant."

(Bella: "I do! Little boy!")
"Luckily Dumbledore arrived." Ron breathed a sigh of relief, "Otherwise Harry might have really killed someone."

Harry frowned. "Is this how you cast spells? Like welding. And why do I feel like Dumbledore is a little overwhelmed and at a disadvantage against Voldemort?"

Rupert said: "In the novel, Dumbledore completely suppressed Voldemort. After all, Dumbledore still had the advantage of the Elder Wand."

"In the novel, Voldemort also possessed Harry, but when Harry thought that he could see Sirius after his death, he got rid of Voldemort immediately."

"It's not as long-winded as in the movies, and there are so many memories."

"The grief of losing Sirius finally freed him from Voldemort's influence over him."

"Voldemort can no longer control or deceive him through the connection between their brains."

"I can no longer even sense Harry's glimpse into his thoughts and the scene before his eyes when their brains are connected."

Movie Ron found the key, "Just get rid of the influence?"

Rupert nodded. "In the seventh book, when Dobby died, Harry finally mastered Occlumency, making it impossible for Voldemort to penetrate his mind."

"Dobby?" Movie Ron asked in confusion.

(Harry and Ron were thinking alike at this moment. He couldn't understand why he had such deep feelings for Dobby.)
Rupert said, "In the novel, Dobby is more polite and lovely, and he has a lot of interactions with Harry later, but the movie deleted these details and plots."

"If you just watch the movie, this is indeed a little hard to understand."

"At this time, Harry was actually holding the two-way mirror that Sirius gave him, trying to communicate with Sirius. He also found Nick, hoping that Sirius could come back as a ghost."

"Let's talk about something light." Movie Ron said, "Haha, the Ministry of Magic finally admitted that Voldemort has been resurrected!"

"Okay," said Rupert, "in the novel, Harry actually smashes up Dumbledore's office."

(“That’s as it should be!”)
(Many viewers said in unison.)
(Dumbledore's performance lost a lot of their favor.)
"How disgusting." Movie Ron said, "These Ravenclaws are even worse, especially after Luna and Harry's adventure together. Luna is awesome! She was bullied, but she still thought of comforting Harry."

"I'm sorry I ever called her a crazy girl."

(Professor Flitwick was even more ashamed, as he thought Ravenclaw was not worthy of such a good Luna.)
"Well we have more than Voldemort, Harry said."

"Love, friendship and the nose," said Little Ron.

"And eyebrows," Harry added.

Everyone in the room burst into laughter.

However, the smiles quickly disappeared from everyone's faces.

Because of the opening of the sixth part.

Under the flash lights, Harry, who was hugged by Dumbledore, looked dejected and calm.

(Snape wasn't shy about the 'Half-Blood Prince' in the title of the upcoming film.)
Rupert coughed. "In the novel, Dumbledore took Harry's feelings into consideration. He simply changed a portkey in front of Fudge and let Harry return to the office. He never exposed him to the flash lights."

"But this is illegal--" Movie Ron stopped talking halfway.

He suddenly remembered that Dumbledore in the novel seemed to be more courageous. He could beat people up at the behest of the Minister of Magic, not to mention making portkeys.

"How come these Death Eaters showed up openly?"

("Fennel Greyback." Lupin's face suddenly turned grim.)
"Wreaking havoc in Diagon Alley and breaking the viaduct."

"Dumbledore did nothing?"

He looked at Rupert.

Rupert said, "In the novel, Diagon Alley is fine. Well, to be precise, it's not that obvious. They just secretly kidnapped a few people, Ollivander, and the guy who runs the ice cream shop. The Death Eaters only dared to let the Dementors and the giants take the lead in causing trouble in the Muggle world."

"Florin—" Ron was about to say what the owner of the ice cream shop had done to someone, but he was attracted by the scene in the movie, "Who is this girl? Harry seems to be interested in her."

(Florin Fusco: Keep asking. I want to know what happened to me, too.)
"So is this girl!"

(Ginny frowns.)
(End of this chapter)

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