Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Review: Spellbinding and Hypnotic

Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson and Rupert Grint starring Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part I has hit theatres worldwide and has cast a mesmerising spell on its sea of muggle fans.

The film is a brilliant outing by director David Yates who offers a sublime yet dark adventure ride to the movie goers. The film is basically a road movie as the 3 wizard friends- Harry Potter and his allies Emma Watson and Rupert Grint set out on their mission to hunt down and destroy Vodemort’s secret to immortality.

But in their Hogwarts-free environment, the comfort of safety is replaced by the omnipresent lurking fear of some dark power or a sneaking Death Eater. Even amidst solitude and quarrels, the power of friendship survives and takes the trio to a tumultuous ride.

Radcliffe is brilliant as usual; Rupert shines in the garbs of a revolting friend but the film clearly belongs to Emma who is right there from the very beginning till the end planning out their activities and assisting them to apparate and disapparate.

The film is certainly darker than its prequels and has moments of wit thrust in some rib-tickling scenes. The camera work and cinematography is of unassailable quality and the climax is perfectly suited triggering intense curiosity about the final battle which shall mark the conclusion when Deathly Hallows Part II releases on July, 2011.

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