Blogcritics on Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire
Published November 19, 2005
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, the fourth in the film saga and first directed by a Brit (Mike Newell), has arrived to tremendous buzz, a PG-13 rating amid warnings of intense danger and action, a central threesome deep in the throes of puberty, and a whole lot of box office.
Blogcritics reports and reviews (and check out our extensive coverage of book-oriented Pottermania from the summer's publication of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince):
DVD Review: Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire
Never judge a film by its hype...
Posted to Video by Film School Rejects on March 7, 2006 10:05 AM
Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix Begins Filming Next Week
Who can now imagine the contemporary cultural space without Harry Potter? the most dominant all-time publishing phenomenon (over 250 million copies sold worldwide), AND an impossibly successful film series ($3.5 billion in worldwide box office). Yes, J.K Rowling's boy wizard...
Posted to Video by Eric Olsen on February 3, 2006 04:39 PM
A Harry Potter Film for Fans
Will we ever get one?
Posted to Video by Rohan Venkat on January 3, 2006 05:51 AM
Movie Review: Harry Potter & The Goblet of Fire
Welcome to the magical world of visual Cliffs Notes...
Posted to Video by Modern Pea Pod on December 13, 2005 09:27 PM
Movie Review: Harry Potter And The Goblet Of Fire
I think that following up on Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban was a bigger task than anticipated.
Posted to Video by Jeliel on December 3, 2005 06:24 PM
Movie Review: Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire
The whimsical details and repetitious passages in the Harry Potter series can't, of course, be put on the silver screen, but this fourth movie sometimes opts action over character development.
Posted to Video by Purple Tigress on December 2, 2005 09:33 PM
Blogcritics.org on SUBJECT2DISCUSSION
Blogcritics.org has partnered with Shaun OMac Daily's popular weekly web radio show SUBJECT2DISCUSSION, which airs Tuesday nights at 7 pm PT, 10 pm ET on the LV Rocks site, for a weekly pop culture report on the show...
Posted to Culture by Eric Olsen on November 30, 2005 10:45 AM
Box Office Update for 11/23-11/27: Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire
Welcome back! I hope you all saw plenty of movies over your Thanksgiving weekend. This week's update is for the entire 5 day holiday. Read on, my faithful! This week's champ is, once again, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire....
Posted to Video by Chris Beaumont on November 29, 2005 07:19 PM
Movie Review: Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire
Let's hope as the series progresses that this standard is maintained; Harry deserves it.
Posted to Video by gypsyman on November 29, 2005 06:57 AM
- Blogcritics on Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire
- Published: November 19, 2005
- Type: Review
- Section: Video
- Filed Under: Culture: Administrative
- Writer: Eric Olsen
- Eric Olsen's BC Writer page
- Eric Olsen's personal site
- Spread the Word
- Like this article?
- Email this
Save to del.icio.us
Comments
We are very excited about seeing this - we're going when we're over at Dawn's sister's house for T-day weekend. The reviews I've seen are almsot all positive
Two points of view on this:
-My 13 year old nephew loved it!
-My 7 year old nephew was scared silly!
What does that tell you?
I think the series, like the Beatles, has grown with its fans. However, the younger ones are just not up to speed. They will be someday. Just not right now.
Victor -- I have an almost 7-year-old who wants to see it... what is your recommendation?
Allow me to be the first splash of cold water.
My wife and I are both dedicated HP fans (her moreso than me but we've both read the books and seen the movies multiple times).
This was easily the worst of the movies- in both our views. We were shaking our heads in disbelief and laughing at it, not with it. Our reasons were many (and I might write them in a subsequent review, don't want to go overboard here on the thread). My wife was particularly disappointed because 'Goblet' is her favorite book in the series. The movie? Not so much.
EO, hope you and the fam love it. We were less than thrilled.
Normally, Im not the biggest fan when it comes to the movies but GoF really surprised me. I had expected to hate it, just like PoA the first time I watched it. Of course, the movie did make me want to scream and at certain times more so since GoF is my favorite book in the series but I forced myself to remember that they couldnt have everything in the movie and that it atleast had the most important parts. They also altered the story a bit and I was surprised but it makes sense for the people who have not read the books. I recommend the movie, just be prepared for a bit of disappointment.
Meryl,
The seven year old was up all night, wanting to sleep with his parents. He was scared out of his little mind. It's up to you, depending on how he handles the fear stuff.
The movie was 2.5 hours long, and still it seemed rushed. Time passed by so quickly in the movie, and there isn't much dialogue.
I was dissapointed, because, like Prisoner of Azkaban, they failed to include and explain certain things.
The ending of Goblet ended abruptly as well, let me add some teenage words here-
It was pretty cool if you read the book and understood what was happening, but it sucked because you realize what WASN'T happening.
wow, Victor, that's pretty intense - we are going over the holiday and couldn't keep the 6 year-old away with wild horses. I hope she can handle it.
Josh, you can't expect a movie to give the same ifnormation as a book - it's simply a different medium. But a movie can also visually convey in an instant what it may take words pages to convey. There is always a trade-off
Goblet of Fire movie review:
It all comes down to separating the book from the movie in terms of interpretation and tone.
Dumbledore in the book is always under control, eyes twinkling, on the edge of humor under the most extreme conditions. The movie Dumbledore is stressed, tense, and slightly mad (as he grabbed Potter and gave him a shake while asking if he put his name in the Goblet).
For special effects and set design creations the movie was entertaining but as a book purist the movies remain a separate entity regarding storylines.
I am sure CrimsonLight will get on board and start talking about this one. They have a little already.










I haven't seen it yet so I don't want to look at the reviews! If I know I'm going to see something, I try not to take a peak... although sometimes I can't help myself.