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Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone |
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As far as Harry knows, his
parents were killed in a car crash when he
was an infant, and he’s stuck with his aunt
and uncle, Petunia and Vernon Dursley. Like a
modern Cinderella, Harry sleeps in a closet
and waits on his relatives hand and foot while
his pudgy cousin Dudley is spoiled rotten. But
as Harry’s 11th birthday approaches, all of that
changes. A gentle giant named Rubeus
Hagrid shows up to inform Harry that he is a
wizard by birth and invite him to study at
Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry.
At Hogwarts, Harry finds much of what his
pitiful life has lacked. Close friends. Bits of his
own family history. Magical skills. Recognition.
And a starting position on the Quidditch team
(think airborne soccer)—an honor unheard of
for a "first-year." But he also gets a few things
he didn’t bargain for, including a mystery and
a ferocious three-headed dog named Fluffy.
Most formidably, he finds he’s the object of
renewed hatred from the evil Voldemort, who
killed his parents. Harry meets the challenge
head-on and faces off with this villain so
wicked other wizards won’t even speak his
name. Voldemort gets what’s coming to him,
but you can be sure he’ll be back in the
sequels.
• positive
content: Two prominent teachers at
Hogwarts, Albus Dumbledore and Minerva
McGonagall, are some of the finest authority
figures to grace a kids’ movie in quite some
time. Professor McGonagall is stern and a
stickler for rules. But rather than scorning her,
Harry and his friends like and respect her.
Dumbledore proffers wise advice and teaches
common sense. He becomes like a father to
Harry, comforting him when he misses his
parents and taking time to talk through his
questions and problems.
When Harry is being assigned to one of
Hogwarts’ four houses, the "sorting hat"
assesses his character, then applauds him
for having "courage, talent, not a bad mind and
a thirst to prove [himself]." During the course
of the story, it becomes clear to Harry
that—just as Lucifer was once a high
angel—these talents could just as easily have
landed him in the malevolent Slytherin house
as in the noble Gryffindor. His own human
potential for "going bad" bothers Harry until
Dumbledore reminds him that he
asked not to be put in Slytherin and
teaches him that choosing the good
over the bad makes all the difference.
The evil acts of dark-side wizards—such
as killing a unicorn for its life-giving
blood—are denounced. In addition, lines
spoken by villains expose dark-side
philosophy, which is then refuted when the
scoundrels are defeated. For example, one of
Voldemort’s followers says to Harry, "There is
no such thing as good and evil. There is only
power and those too weak to seek it." Harry
swiftly and strongly opposes both this villain
and his sentiments.
When Harry discovers that it wasn’t a car
crash that killed his parents, he also learns
that his mother actually died saving his life.
Dumbledore instructs him on the importance
of sacrificial love, telling Harry, "love leaves a
mark that lives in your very skin."
Harry, Ron and Hermione go on an
Indiana Jones-like adventure, solving
puzzles and dodging obstacles to unravel their
mystery and find the sorcerer’s stone. One leg
of the course is a life-sized chess game in
which captured pieces get smashed by their
opponents. As an accomplished chess player,
Ron gets to call the shots, and in a heroic act,
he sacrifices his knight (and gets injured in
the process) in order to save Harry.
•
spiritual content: The big debate
about Harry Potter, of course, is
whether its magic is of a spiritual or
mechanical nature. More on that follows, but
for now, magical elements are listed here as
"spiritual content."
Before he discovers he’s a wizard, Harry
accidentally dissolves the glass over a snake
cage at the zoo. This begins to make sense to
Harry when Hagrid comes to take him to
Hogwarts. The giant asks, “Did you ever make
things happen that you couldn’t explain?” The
light comes on for Harry—his mysterious
power comes from being a wizard. Hagrid
makes Dudley grow a
pig’s tail. Doors open Ali Baba-style to a
series of taps from Hagrid’s pink umbrella
(which also happens to shoot fire). Harry and
friends get to the platform for the Hogwarts
Express by walking through a brick wall in a
London train station. On the train, Ron tries to
put a spell on his pet rat to turn it yellow. Other
spells are of similar sort, spoken in Latin and
intended to make changes in the
physical realm. Harry and his friends take
classes in Potions, The History of Magic,
Defense Against the Dark Arts, etc. Their
school supplies include robes and magic
wands which they purchase on a magical
street called Diagon Alley. When Harry goes to
pick out a wand, he finds that it is the wand
that instead “picks” him. Wandmaker Mr.
Ollivander tells Harry that the wand he was
“destined for” is “brother” to the wand
Voldemort used to kill Harry’s parents and
give him his scar. At Hogwarts, the ceiling in
the Great Hall is “bewitched” to look like the
night sky. Staircases move under the
influence of permanent spells. The school
celebrates Halloween with a huge banquet,
but it also celebrates Christmas in the same
way. The dormitories are supervised by
silvery-gray ghosts. The head of Harry’s
dormitory is Nearly Headless Nick, who died
500 years previously in a botched
decapitation.
Missing from the movie (and at no great
loss) is the one class that, in the book, came
closest to mentioning supernatural
contact—Divination. Also missing is a
particularly troublesome line in which
Dumbledore says, "To the well-organized
mind, death is just the next great
adventure."
All the villains in The Sorcerer’s Stone
are practitioners of “The Dark Arts.” Their
spells come in the form of curses and are
used to harm other wizards. Foremost on the
dark side is Voldemort, who uses a death
curse to kill Harry’s parents and to try to kill
Harry.
Also very troubling is the overarching idea
that
Harry is "rescued" from a miserable life by a
bunch of wizards and witches. Of course,
there are two ways to see this. Viewers who
bring to the movie a background in Christian
fantasy may see it as somewhat similar to
C.S. Lewis’ Narnia—a magical world far more
exciting and "fitting" for the human spirit than
the plain physical world. On the other hand,
there’s the likely interpretation that Harry is
being "saved" by witchcraft, a disturbing idea
to say the least. The immediate emotional
impact of film makes the concept even more
dangerous, because passive thrill-seekers
won’t necessarily ponder and process it as
they might while reading a book.
•
sexual content: None.
•
violent content: Uncle Vernon never
hits Harry, but he treats him roughly at times.
He also tries to shoot at Hagrid, but the giant
bends the end of his shotgun. Scenes that
flash back to the death of Harry’s parents are
short and discreet, showing only a flash of
light and Harry’s mom falling to the ground.
Hagrid kicks down a door when he comes to
retrieve Harry from the Dursleys. (He then
apologizes and puts it back in place.) One
student gets caught on a runaway broom,
crashes into a building and falls, breaking his
wrist. Ron accidentally gets hit in the nose
with a
broom handle. A huge digitally animated troll
smashes up a school bathroom and tries to
hurt Hermione. A wand up the nose (gross!)
distracts him and his own club eventually
knocks him out. A Quidditch match turns ugly
and Harry is nearly knocked from his flying
broom. Ron, Harry and Hermione get trapped
in the clutches of a vining plant with a vicious
will of its own. The chess scene is intense,
with many shattering chess pieces. Ron gets
forcefully knocked to the ground.
Because watching film footage takes less
time than reading pages, Harry’s final battle
scene is actually shorter in the movie than in
the book. Thankfully missing is a lot of
Voldemort’s dialogue in which he repeatedly
instructs a follower to kill Harry. Still, the scene
is intense, and for young viewers, scary.
Things look grim for Harry at first, until he
discovers that his mother’s love has placed a
seal on him that makes it impossible for his
enemy to touch him. (Instead, physical contact
causes his foe to be charred to a crisp.) The
evil wizard Voldemort leaves the building in a
dramatic and somewhat frightening rush.
•
crude or profane language: There’s a
line about someone falling on his "a--." Ron
once exclaims, "Bloody hell!" Also: three
misuses of God’s name and one use of
"d--n."
•
drug and alcohol content: On several
occasions, Hagrid talks about visiting a pub.
He enters one and the bartender says, "The
usual, Hagrid?" to which Hagrid replies, "Not
today. I’m on official Hogwarts business." One
student tries to turn water to rum, but fails.
•
other negative elements: Though it’s
arguably played down from the book, Harry
and his friends sometimes break rules with
impunity. For example, Harry is told not to fly
on his broomstick; he does it anyway (albeit
for noble purposes) and ends up being
rewarded with a starting spot on the Quidditch
team.
•
conclusion: Aside from the
exceptions noted, Harry Potter the
movie is quite faithful to Harry Potter the
book—a smart move on the part of
filmmakers, who knew any significant
departure would quickly alienate the target
audience. The masterfully made film offers
virtually no surprises. That leaves us dealing
with the same questions that have been
lurking since the first copy of J.K. Rowling’s
book rolled off the press. Is it fantasy magic or
occult magic? Does the distinction even
matter?
These questions are both difficult and
worthwhile. Fantasy (not just "make believe,"
but a rich literary tradition with extensive
principles and precedents) has made use of
wizards and magic for centuries. Even
Christian fantasy has employed "good
witches." Sometimes it has been as clear-cut
as Lewis’ Chronicles of Narnia,
sometimes not. Christian fantasy fans
contend that such tales have a powerful ability
to convey truth and that real-world rules don’t
apply in fantasy land. Well-respected Christian
author Chuck Colson explains that
Harry’s magic is of an entirely different
nature from real-world witchcraft: "Harry and
his friends cast spells, read crystal balls, and
turn themselves into animals—but they don't
make contact with a supernatural world."
Similarly, Wren Walker, a practicing witch
in Clearwater, Fla., and co-founder of the
Witches Voice, an umbrella group for witches
and Wiccans worldwide, insists that Harry
Potter could never be an instructional
piece for real-life witchcraft. "Spells tend to be
more like prayers for most Wiccans and
witches that practice it in the religious sense,"
says Walker. "We don’t use ‘abracadabra.’ If
somebody wanted to pick up the book and do
the things in it, it wouldn’t be witchcraft."
Richard Abanes, author of the book
Harry Potter and the Bible, disagrees.
While Rowling insists her stories are
imaginary, she "admits she has been
studying witchcraft to make the books more
'accurate,'" Abanes told Crosswalk.com,
which reports that Rowling also claims a
significant minority of the sorcery
appearing in her books is "material that was
once believed in Britain."
"What she fails to mention," Abanes says, "is
that the vast amount
of the occult she borrows from historical
sources still plays a role in modern
witchcraft."
Such debate within the Christian
community (and outside of it) will continue
to rage. But even if Harry Potter's
magic isn't of the occult, it still
carries with it serious dangers. First,
Rowling's stories—unlike Lewis' or
Tolkien's—are
neither a Christian allegory, nor do they
subscribe to a consistent Christian
worldview. And second, we live in a culture
that glorifies and promotes witchcraft
and the occult. No matter what the
essence of Harry’s magic, the effect
of it is undoubtedly to raise curiosity
about magic and wizardry. And any
curiosity raised on this front presents a
danger that the world will satisfy
it with falsehood before the church or the
family can satisfy it with truth.
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone
definitely raises those curiosities.
That, accompanied by violent and scary
scenes, a few mild profanities, and hints
at moral relativism should be enough to keep
families from shouting hurrah for
Harry.
Magic & Morality
A collection of Harry Potter reviews.
Book Review: Harry Potter
and the Deathly Hallows
Book Review: Harry Potter
and the Half-Blood Prince
Book Review: Harry Potter
and the Order of the Phoenix
Book Review: Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire
Book Review: Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
Book Review: Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets
Book Review: Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone
Movie Review: Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
Movie Review: Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire
Movie Review: Harry Potter and the Prisoner of AzkabanMovie Review: Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets
Movie Review: Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone
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