Where Love and Magic Prevail

At last. It’s here. And “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince� is funny, moving, and mostly faithful enough to the book that Potter nerds were satisfied.

   Harry, wearing the mantle of “The Chosen One,â€�  must join with his mentor, Professor Dumbledore, and gain the skills he needs to defeat Voldemort. His counterpart, the nasty Draco Malfoy, has also been singled out and must prove himself in an equally difficult mission

    All the young actors acquit themselves well. Emma Watson, Daniel Radcliffe and Rupert Grint, having worked together for half their lives, have an easy camaraderie that shows on screen.

   As Ron Weasley, Grint shows his talent for broader comedy on the Quidditch pitch and caught in a love triangle he’s only dimly aware of. Emma Watson has always seemed the least natural of the three stars, and she has less to do here than in some of the earlier films — she spends more time in lovesick mooning after Ron than showing off her smarts or her wicked punch.

   Daniel Radcliffe has matured into a real actor, though his character is strangely passive in many crucial scenes, including the moment when he finally kisses Ginny Weasley. Unlike the book, where he hurls himself into her arms after a Quidditch match, here he just waits, eyes shut, for her to kiss him. But Radcliffe is expressive and very present, able to carry scenes on his own. 

   The troupe of adult English actors is in fine form: Alan Rickman has perfected his characterization of the ambiguous Snape. He projects power, hatred and fury while barely moving a muscle other than to curl his lip.

   Maggie Smith is, once again, bracingly funny as the crisp head teacher, Professor McGonnagall.

   As always, newcomers spice up the mix: Jim Broadbent is the vain and cowardly Horace Slughorn, called out of retirement to provide a crucial piece of the puzzle that is Voldemort’s background. He is a perfect blend of pomposity, hypocrisy, fear, and in one scene, genuine love, as he recalls a particularly exquisite bit of magic that Lily, Harry’s mother, peformed for him, years before.

   By now, the magic of the Potter world is taken for granted by its characters. Statues and newspaper pictures move, books fly into their places on the shelves. But the most cliched magic, the jets of red and green light that emanate from wands during a battle, are kept to a minimum.  Shot in rich tones of brown, Hogwarts has never looked so gloomy and forbidding. In fact, as if to telegraph the mounting threats, the sun never comes out for the entire school year.

   We Potter nerds did have a few quibbles, either with scenes that were added or cut from the book. But the important elements are in place — the emotional weight of the story, the breathtaking magic, the message that love conquers even the greatest evil.

“Harry Potter and the Half-blood Prince� is rated PG for scary images, violence, language and mild sensuality.

It is playing at the Movie House in Millerton, NY, and elsewhere.

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