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Archive for the ‘Harry/Ginny’ Category

You can read part one of this series here: http://phoenixweasley.wordpress.com/2011/06/19/harry-potter-and-the-bestiary-of-christ-part-one/  Now on to Part Two, in which the Christian symbolism of the unicorn is explained…

The Slaying of the Unicorn

            In addition to the lion and the griffin, another symbol of Christ is the unicorn. Ancient and Medieval lore indicates that a unicorn’s horn possessed miraculous powers of healing. Anyone who drank from the horn would be protected from disease or poison. The Dictionary of Symbolism by Hans Biedermann gives an account of the unicorn’s power to cleanse water that has been fouled by a serpent. The early Christian Physiologus describes as follows the power of the horn to counter the effects of poison: before the other animals come to drink, “the snake comes forward and spits its venom into the water. The animals, however, knowing that the water is poisoned, do not dare to drink. They await the unicorn. The unicorn comes, goes right to the lake and makes a cross with its horn. This removes the effect of the poison. Only after the unicorn has drunk do the other animals approach and do likewise.” (Biedermann 361)

Unicorns, which were once thought to be real animals, appeared in older translations of the Bible, such as the King James Version:

“…his horns are like the horns of unicorns: with them he shall push the people together to the ends of the earth…” (Deuteronomy 33:17, KJV)

“Will the unicorn be willing to serve thee, or abide by thy crib? Canst thou bind the unicorn with his band in the furrow? Or will he harrow the valleys after thee?” (Job 39:9-10, KJV)

These references to unicorns in the King James Bible occurred due to an error in translation. About three centuries before Christ, a group of scholars known as The Seventy translated the Old Testament from Hebrew into Greek. This translation is known as the Septuagint. The word for a type of wild ox, re’em, was translated monokeros, which means “single horned creature.” The translators were unfamiliar with the word re’em because by that time the animal had become extinct. St. Jerome, in the late 4th century, used the Septuagint as the basis for his Latin translation of the Bible that was in use for many centuries. He translated the Greek monokeros as the Latin word unicornis. Many people understood this word to refer to the mythological unicorn, and therefore believed the animal must be real because it appeared in the Bible. Indeed, Rowling may know this story of why unicorns appeared in the King James Bible because it is apparent that she is familiar with the term re’em. She made use of this Hebrew word to refer to a rare golden ox whose blood gives the drinker immense strength. This reference can be found on page 36 of Rowling’s own Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them. Perhaps she discovered the term when researching the lore of unicorns.

Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them: J. K. Rowling's own bestiary of the creatures in Harry's world.

In addition to the creature’s appearance in the Bible, the early Church fathers wrote about the unicorn as a symbol of Christ. According to St. Basil the Great (329-375 A.D.), “Christ is the power of God, therefore he is called the unicorn because the one horn symbolizes one common power with the Father.” St. Ambrose (339-397A.D.) also saw the unicorn as a symbol of Christ: “Who is the unicorn but the only begotten Son of God?”

            Because of these associations with Christ, both the lion and the unicorn appeared as Christ symbols in Medieval and Renaissance artwork. Reproductions of The Lady and the Unicorn, a set of famous tapestries from the Museum of Cluny in Paris, appear as wall hangings in the Gryffindor Common Room in all of the Warner Brothers Harry Potter films.

 A lion and a unicorn are depicted in each tapestry along with a female figure.  

Another set of famous unicorn tapestries, currently housed in the Cloisters, the Medieval exhibit of the New York Metropolitan Museum of Art, is a set entitled The Hunt of the Unicorn as an Allegory of the Passion. These tapestries, woven in 1495-1505 in the Netherlands, depict the betrayal and passion of Jesus Christ as a unicorn hunt.

The Unicorn is Killed and Brought to the Castle. When the unicorn is slain, notice the holly tree depicted behind the unicorn. Harry's wand is made of holly with a phoenix feather core. In the Deathly Hallows, Harry (like the unicorn) is "killed" and brought to the castle.

 

 Although the unicorn is killed in the sixth of the seven tapestries, he appears alive and well in the seventh tapestry. Here, the unicorn is a collared beast in a small enclosure, surrounded by a field of colorful flowers. “The Unicorn in Captivity” is symbolic of the resurrected Christ.

 

A unicorn tapestry copied from this famous work of art appears in the film Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (2009), and can be seen clearly behind Ginny Weasley when she takes Harry by the hand in front of the Room of Requirement. 

 

Here's a copy of The Unicorn in Captivity again. This is photo I took inside the Hogwarts Castle at the Wizarding World of Harry Potter theme park in the summer of 2010.

 In the second tapestry of this series, entitled “The Unicorn is Found,” the unicorn dips his horn into a stream, and is surrounded by other animals who are also Christian symbols, among them are the lion, the weasel, and the stag. All of these animal symbols are pertinent to this discussion of Harry Potter.

            In the book, The Unicorn Tapestries, by Adolfo Salvatore Cavallo, the author explains the symbolism of the unicorn: “Early bestiaries indicate that the unicorn dips its horn into water that wild creatures need for drinking in order to purify it of the poisons that serpents have spewed into it. The allegory is clear: Christ takes on the sins of Man and so purifies him in order to bring about his redemption. The serpent is the devil; the poison he introduces into the world (the water) is sin. ” (Cavallo 57)

In Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, Harry hears running water as he walks through the Forbidden Forest. He concludes that there must be a stream somewhere close by, and notices spots of unicorn blood along the path. (SS 251) He is aware that there is a creature in the forest that has been killing the unicorns. The stream and the slain unicorn both suggest the imagery of the medieval bestiaries as well as the iconography of The Hunt of the Unicorn as an Allegory of the Passion. Rowling’s description of what Harry sees that night in the forest could be a scene from the crucifixion story that the tapestries portray:

Something bright white was gleaming on the ground. They inched closer.

It was the unicorn all right, and it was dead. Harry had never seen anything so beautiful and sad. Its long slender legs were stuck out at odd angles where it had fallen and its mane was spread pearly-white on the dark leaves.

Harry had taken one step toward it when a slithering sound made him freeze where he stood. (SS 255-256)

This is the hour of the Crucifixion, the hour of the Serpent’s triumph. It was Voldemort who made the slithering sound over the dead leaves; he was the Great Serpent who murdered the unicorn. Harry’s pain at encountering Voldemort in the forest is so great that he falls to his knees. (SS 256) The Dark Lord has done the unthinkable: he has been drinking the blood of the slain unicorn to sustain himself. His fear of death is such that he would slay the most worthy of creatures to sustain his unnatural life.

“…it is a monstrous thing, to slay a unicorn,” said Firenze. “Only one who has nothing to lose, and everything to gain would commit such a crime. The blood of a unicorn will keep you alive, even if you are an inch from death, but at a terrible price. You have slain something pure and defenseless to save yourself, and you will have but a half-life, a cursed life, from the moment the blood touches your lips.” (SS 258)

This passage echoes St. Paul’s teaching on receiving Holy Communion, and those who receive it unworthily:

Wherefore whosoever shall eat this bread, and drink this cup of the Lord, unworthily, shall be guilty of the body and blood of the Lord. But let a man examine himself, and so let him eat of that bread, and drink of that cup. For he that eateth and drinketh unworthily, eateth and drinketh damnation to himself, not discerning the Lord’s body.   (1 Corinthians 11:27-29, KJV)

According to St. Paul, to drink the blood of Christ unworthily at Communion is to drink damnation upon oneself. This parallels Fierenze’s claim that Voldemort has done the very same thing by drinking the blood of a unicorn, thus drinking a terrible curse upon himself.

            Harry had a very strange dream in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, which may provide a link between the unicorn and the next Christ symbol that we will examine.

He was walking through a forest, his Firebolt over his shoulder, following something silvery-white. It was winding its way through the trees ahead, and he could only catch glimpses of it between the leaves. Anxious to catch up with it, he sped up, but as he moved faster, so did his quarry. Harry broke into a run, and ahead he heard hooves gathering speed. Now he was running flat out, and ahead he could hear galloping. (PA 265)

Was it a unicorn that Harry followed in his mysterious dream? Or was it something else? When Harry saw his corporeal patronus for the first time, he thought that, “It was as bright as a unicorn.” (PA 385) But later, Harry will discover that the silvery-white creature that saved him from the dementors wasn’t a unicorn at all…               

Illustration of the Stag and the Unicorn. Both are Christ symbols in Christian alchemical texts.

Please subscribe to this blog so that you don’t miss the next installment of “Harry Potter and the Bestiary of Christ,” which is entitled “The Hunting of the White Stag.” If you would like to order a copy of  my book, The Lord of the Hallows: Christian Symbolism and Themes in J. K. Rowling’s Harry Potter, it can be obtained from www.outskirtspress.com/thelordofthehallows.

You can read more about the symbolism in “The Unicorn is Killed and Brought to the Castle” here: http://tinyurl.com/3e9agbv.

 ”Two episodes of the hunt narrative are brought together in this hanging. At left, two hunters drive their lances into the neck and chest of the unicorn, as a third delivers the coup de grâce from the back. It has been suggested that the doomed unicorn is an allegory for Christ dying on the Cross; the large holly tree (often a symbol of the Passion) rising from behind his head seems to reinforce this association. In the other episode, at right, a lord and a lady receive the body of the unicorn in front of their castle. They are surrounded by their attendants, with more curious onlookers peering through windows of the turret behind them. The dead animal is slung on the back of a horse, his horn already cut off but still entangled in thorny oak branches—probably symbolizing the Crown of Thorns. The rosary in the hand of the lady and the three other women standing behind the lord encourage a deeper reading of the scene, perhaps as a symbolic Deposition by the grieving Virgin Mary, John the Baptist, and the Holy Women.”

 When I think of the name given to that tapestry, I am reminded of how Harry was “killed” and brought to the castle in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows.

I recently found this quotation regarding the Eucharistic symbolism of both the unicorn and the stag, as well as their alchemical significance:

“The tinctures in alchemy relate also to the substances of the Mass, the red wine, the blood, and the white wafer, the body of Christ. Administration of the Sacraments was seen as spiritualising the souls of the partakers. In alchemical terms these white and red stones or tinctures served much the same purpose, though the alchemists achieved this, not through the intermediacy of a priest but by their own inner work of transmutation. Here alchemy links directly with the Grail stories which use similar parallels between the Grail and the Sacraments. The red tincture was occasionally symbolised by a stag bearing antlers. The stag being seen as a noble masculine animal. This links in with the Unicorn as a symbol of the white or feminine tincture. In some alchemical illustrations, such as that of the late 16th century Book of Lambspring, the Stag and Unicorn meet in the forest of the soul as part of the process of inner transformation.” –from “Animal Symbolism in the Alchemical Tradition” by Adam McLean at http://www.levity.com/alchemy/animal.html.

The link between the Grail Stone of Parzival, the Philospher’s Stone of alchemy, and the Resurrection Stone in Harry Potter was explored in The Lord of the Hallows if that topic is of interest to you. But that’s a blog post for another day. :)

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Here’s the rumored track listing for the Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part Two  soundtrack CD by Alexandre Desplat. According to amazon.com, the CD is scheduled for release on July 12, 2011. (These track titles are not confirmed by a reliable source just yet. I’ll update this post when I know for certain.)

UPDATE: June 16, 2011. These were not the real track listings. See below for the correct listing.

1. “Chaos” – 1:23
2. “At Shell Cottage” – 1:34
3. “Ollivander” – 2:15
4. “The Gringotts Assault” – 3:56
5. “Escape from the Vaults” – 2:01
6. “Voldemort’s Dread” – 1:13
7. “Horcruxes” – 2:06
8. “Apparition from the Void” – 3:34
9. “Hogsmeade” – 2:17
10. “Aberforth” – 4:53
11. “Albus and Gellert” – 2:04
12. “Threat over Hogwarts” – 0:49
13. “Dumbledore’s Army” – 1:41
14. “Professor McGonnagall” – 2:07
15. “The Flight” – 0:35
16. “The Dark Lord Conspires” – 2:08
17. “The Battle Theme” – 9:12
18. “The Kiss” – 1:21
19. “Attack on the Woods” – 1:04
20. “Chamber of Secrets” – 2:28
21. “Destruction of Souls” – 2:03
22. “Fiendfyre” – 3:12
23. “Thoughts and Memories” – 3:03
24. “Seeing the Light” – 1:54
25. “King’s Cross” – 2:20
26.”The End of the Battle” – 4:31
27. “Triumph Theme” – 3:46
28. “King’s Cross #2/Hedwig’s Theme (The End Of The Story)” – 6:12

Let’s hope “The Kiss” refers to the Ron/Hermione kiss the fans have been anticipating. After all, Harry and Ginny have a love theme already. I’ve said for years that Ron and Hermione should have their own romantic theme. Their fans have waited long enough! :)

UPDATE: June 16, 2011. The correct track listing has been confirmed.  Here it is:

1. “Lily’s Theme” – 02:28
2. “The Tunnel” – 01:09
3. “Underworld” – 05:24
4. “Gringotts” – 02:24
5. “Dragon Flight” – 01:43
6. “Neville” – 01:40
7. “A New Headmaster” – 03:25
8. “Panic Inside Hogwarts” – 01:53
9. “Statues” – 02:22
10. “The Grey Lady” – 05:51
11. “In the Chamber of Secrets” – 01:37
12. “Battlefield” – 02:13
13. “The Diadem” – 03:08
14. “Broomsticks and Fire” – 01:24
15. “Courtyard Apocalypse” – 02:00
16. “Snape’s Demise” – 02:51
17. “Severus and Lily” – 06:08
18. “Harry’s Sacrifice” – 01:57
19. “The Resurrection Stone” – 04:32
20. “Harry Surrenders” – 01:30
21. “Procession” – 02:07
22. “Neville the Hero” – 02:17
23. “Showdown” – 03:37
24. “Voldemort’s End” – 02:44
25. “A New Beginning” – 01:39

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The Ron/Hermione romance was one of the best things about the new Harry Potter film. I’m glad these reviewers agree.

“I couldn’t really fault the acting, but ironically even though Radcliffe’s Potter is the focal point of the film, the un-requited love affair between Granger and Weasely produces most of the emotional fireworks.”

http://www.laindependent.com/entertainment/movies/The-beginning-of-the-end-of-Harry-Potter-109231694.html

“Hallows 1″ has nice moments of humor even as the trio travels through forests and chilly tundra. Most notably, Ron and Hermione’s maturing (but still cutely immature) relationship offers many giggle-worthy moments. Rowling has always excelled at writing wry little bits that make a reader smile, and after a decade of making these movies, Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint and Emma Watson know how to exchange glances in just the right way to make a moviegoer giggle with glee. Note the scene where Ron unnecessarily calls for a vote on where they should go next, bluntly jumping at the chance to agree with Hermione so she’ll like him again.

Harry doesn’t have as much to do in “Hallows 1,” but that’s fine; I didn’t exactly crave the familiar sequences of him cringing when his scar hurts, and with the spotlight on Ron and Hermione, Harry comes off as mature and contemplative. The short shrift given to his love life will disappoint some: His relationship with Ginny is underplayed, and I’m guessing they’ll barely have time to bond over a butterbeer in “Hallows 2.” Harry gets more love-esque scenes with Hermione than he does with Ginny; those are cute but tension-free, because it’s already clear that Hermione is Ron’s girl, and that Harry is fine with that.

http://www.californiachronicle.com/articles/yb/152508527

As for me, I didn’t like the way the film showed Harry appearing to have an attraction to Hermione when Ron leaves. That is completely out-of-character for the honorable Harry Potter we know from the books, a bloke who would never make a move on his best friend’s would-be girlfriend or betray the girl he truly loves, Ginny Weasley. I’m glad that the film showed that Hermione clearly wasn’t interested in Harry and is totally in love with Ron. You can quote me on that! ;)

I’ll post my own review here later, but for now I’ll say that Rupert Grint and Emma Watson did an outstanding job of portraying Ron and Hermione’s love for one another. They were both wonderful in this film. :)

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The Trio in the "Will of Albus Dumbledore" scene.

Notice that Hermione has The Tales of Beedle the Bard, Ron has the Deluminator, and Harry has the Golden Snitch.

Harry and Ginny at the Burrow on the day of Bill and Fleur's wedding.

Is this the scene when Ron sees Hermione in her dress before the wedding? "Always the tone of surprise."

The Trio at the Muggle diner in London.

Dementor attack at the Ministry of Magic.

Hermione with and injured Ron in the tent.

Harry and Hermione

 

Harry and Hermione in the woods.

Bellatrix and Hermione at Malfoy Manor

Lucius and Draco at Malfoy Manor

Ron is worried about Hermione.

Ron and Hermione on the beach near Shell Cottage

On the set of Deathly Hallows 2: Ron, Hermione, and Neville (with the Sword of Gryffindor!) Is that one of the twins with Percy that I see?

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If you have not read Looking for the King: An Inklings Novel by David C. Downing, you may wish to read my review of it at http://phoenixweasley.wordpress.com/2010/10/11/my-review-of-looking-for-the-king-an-inklings-novel/

I just read a short interview with author David C. Downing here:

http://ignatiusinsight.com/features2010/ddowning_interview_nov2010.asp

While visiting the Ignatius Press website you may want to look at the books that they have published on Lewis and Tolkien. I’ve read nearly all of the Inklings-related titles that Ignatius Press has released, and just about every one of them was a great read. In the interview, David Downing made a statement with which I wholeheartedly agree: “I’m sure that part of my attraction to both Lewis and Tolkien is simply that both are master story-tellers. But there is also a power of Goodness in their work. As an English major in college, I spent much of my time reading contemporary novelists who are experts at portraying troubled people–selfish, neurotic. brutish, and downright evil. But very few twentieth century novelists besides Lewis and Tolkien (and Chesterton) have the power to show us what good people look like–characters with integrity, compassion, courage, and a willingness to sacrifice for others. I’m sure this ability to portray good characters convincingly is derived from their Christian world-view, a sense that ultimately, it is not evil or chaos, but Goodness that reigns in the universe.”

I believe that this ability to portray good characters with whom readers can easily love or identify with is one of secrets of the success of the literary works of J. R. R. Tolkien, C. S. Lewis, and J. K. Rowling. Aren’t Harry Potter and his friends good examples of characters who have “integrity, compassion, courage, and a willingness to sacrifice for others,” as Dowling described it? Bonds of loyalty, love, and friendship strengthen Harry, Ron, and Hermione as much as Frodo and Sam on their seemingly impossible mission to defeat the Dark Lord. True romantic love can be found in Tolkien and Rowling’s stories. Yes I like Aragorn/Arwen and Harry/Ginny as couples…

"I do not believe this darkness will endure." This is one of my favorite scenes from The Return of the King Extended Edition.

…but I just adore Faramir and Eowyn,…

A Hobbit Wedding

…Rosie and Sam, and these two stubborn kids:

My most favorite couple.

 

Every sinner who has turned away from temptation to follow the difficult path of repentance can find hope in the stories of Boromir of Gondor and Severus Snape.

"I would have followed you, my brother, ...my captain, ...my king."--Boromir to Aragorn

This beautiful fanart, "Severus and Lily" by Wmash, can be found at deviantart.com.

 

“All the heroes in all the stories in the world are heroes only because they are in some ways like Jesus.”–Peter Kreeft in Because God Is Real, page 212.

The loving self-sacrifice of Lily Evans Potter, her brave son Harry, humble Frodo Baggins, wise Gandalf, and Aslan all resonate with the Greatest Story Ever Told, the story of Christ. Seek and ye shall find: if you look for the King of Kings in these stories, you will find him.

What are your thoughts on my ramblings? Comments are welcome. :)

 

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Here’s yet another new TV spot featuring a romantic moment between Harry and Ginny, Bill and Fleur dancing at their wedding, a couple of Ron/Hermione moments, and a nice shot of four of the six Weasley brothers. (Percy isn’t there because he’s being a git. And of course, we never see Charlie, do we?)

Does anyone know where I can find a higher quality version of this TV spot?

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Harry/Ginny fans will love this romantic and hilarious moment in the Deathly Hallows Part One film.

credit to galaxylight

credit to kaitlynnicolelove

George: “Morning!” lol! :)

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I just found this fan-made video made from clips from Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows on YouTube. It also contains some behind-the-scenes footage from the Deathly Hallows sneak previews that were televised several weeks ago. The music for this fan video is the song “This Is War” by 30 Seconds to Mars, and I thought it was a very appropriate song, especially the lyrics that refer to “pariah,” “victim,” and “Messiah” that can be heard during moments when film clips of Harry are shown. Harry Potter is referred to as “The Chosen One” in the books and films, and I’ve always thought that the term had deliberate messianic overtones. In The Lord of the Hallows, I explained how Harry Potter may be viewed as a literary Christ figure, a character whose self-sacrificial nature is quite similar to that of Lewis’s Aslan and Tolkien’s Frodo Baggins. The literary themes of good vs. evil, truth vs. lies, life vs. death, and love vs. hate from the Harry Potter books and films are present in this fan video in both the imagery and the song lyrics. 

I also loved the Ron/Hermione moments in the Deathly Hallows film clips that we have seen so far. The Harry/Ginny and Ron/Hermione love stories provide the much-needed happy ending to the epic finale of the Harry Potter series. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows is a tale of war, suffering, tragedy, and death in which courage, loyalty, the bonds of friendship, and self-sacrificial love triumph over the forces of evil. The literary event of the decade has indeed become the “motion picture event of a generation.” Accio November 19th!

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Here’s a link to an article that I just read about the new Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows trailer.

http://www.moviefone.ca/2010/06/08/harry-potter-deathly-hallows-teaser-trailer/#comments 

I loved what was said about Ron Weasley in the article:

The Ron Factor: One of the most important character arcs in ‘Deathly Hallows’ belongs to Ron Weasley. And while Ron’s film persona has been mostly relegated to comic-relief sidekick for six films, this movie shows Ron’s emotional side. Grint has to shed the buffoonery and act angry, moody and tortured (as evidenced in the tent fight), but also selfless, loving and heroic. “I just need to see Ron having his chance to be heroic and wonderful,” wrote one Ron fan in a message board.
 
 

Ron Destroys the Locket Horcrux.

Of course, Harry Potter fans who have read all of the books have always known that Ron is ”selfless, loving, and heroic,” but it seems that some of Ron’s finest moments have been downplayed or omitted in the films. I really hope that Rupert Grint was allowed to portray Ron’s passionate and courageous nature to the fullest extent in these final two Harry Potter films. If these films do get it right, the audience should fall in love with Ron right along with Hermione.  In other words, we want more scenes like this one:

Speaking of the Ron/Hermione romance, the article had something to say about that as well:

 Harry and Ginny can kiss all they want in a trailer and not incur the wrath of the Potter fandom, but the majority of fans absolutely DO NOT want to see the kiss to end all kisses between Ron and Hermione. Book fans had to wait 10 years for the best friends to muster up the courage to pucker up on the page, and apparently they don’t mind waiting until Part II hits theaters in 2011 to see the much-anticipated snog on the big screen.

All of the Ron/Hermione fans that I have spoken to wholeheartedly agree with this. We have been waiting for those two to get together for a decade, and we would hate to have the moment spoiled by seeing it beforehand in a theatrical trailer or television commercial. Although I do love spoilers, this is one moment that I don’t want spoiled. However, if they do spoil it for us, I probably won’t be able to resist looking at it again and again….
I am really looking forward to Malfoy Manor and the aftermath. I really enjoyed seeing the beach and Shell Cottage in the trailer, especially since these photos of the location shooting were all over the internet a few months ago.
 
 Another moment that I am really looking forward to is the scene in which Harry finds his parents’ tombs in Godric’s Hollow. In this scene, Harry and Hermione read the two Biblical quotations on the tombstones from Matthew 6:21, “Where your treasure is there will your heart be also,” and 1 Cor. 15:26, “The last enemy that shall be destroyed is death.” Rowling herself has said that these two quotations , “sum up–they almost epitomize the whole series.” I hope they get this part right. If they do, I expect that there will be a lot of discussion in the media about the Christian content of the Harry Potter books and films that should spark some exciting debates reminiscent of the ones that followed the release of the final Harry Potter novel in the summer of 2007.

What do you think of the new Deathly Hallows trailer? Comments are welcome!

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Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince received the following nominations for the 2010 MTV Movie Awards:

Best Female Performance – Emma Watson was nominated. Kristen Stewart won.

Best Male Performance – Daniel Radcliffe was nominated. Winner: Robert Pattinson.

Global Superstar – Daniel Radcliffe was nominated. Robert Pattinson won.

Best Movie - Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince was nominated.  New Moon was the winner. The acceptance speech was mostly F-words. No class whatsoever, like most of this program.

Best Villain – Tom Felton is the winner! Congratulations, Tom!  Felton displayed dignity and class during his acceptance speech despite the rude behavior of other celebrities on (or above) the stage.  Bravo!

 While waiting for the preview of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, I posted these Ron/Hermione spoiler pics. ;)

Ron and Hermione are so cute together!

My first impressions of Deathly Hallows preview:

We saw Hermione in the foreground with bloody hands and Harry in the background with Ron, who splinched himself and is lying on the ground. Then we got a quick peek at the Harry/Ginny kiss. I loved the glimpse of Harry, Ron, and Hermione on the beach by Shell Cottage right after Dobby’s murder by Bellatrix LeStrange. We got a quick R/Hr moment right there and more emotion from the three leads than we have seen in the entire series thus far. Daniel crying: awesome! The Harry vs. Ron fight was really intense. Rupert’s delivery of the line, “Your parents are dead! You have no family!” was perfect. We saw the dragon breaking out of Gringotts, Voldemort planning to kill Harry, Ron with the sword of Gryffindor in full attack mode going up against the Horcrux… in summary: WOW! Spectacular! I can’t wait to see this movie!

UPDATE  There’s a video of the Deathly Hallows preview at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Mhlwd5qoOtQ. Thanks, Travis, for posting this over at the Hog’s Head. :)

And now for a Harry/Ginny spoiler!

In the book, Ginny gives Harry a kiss on his 17th birthday, and this will probably be in the film. Rumor says it takes place at Bill and Fleur’s wedding in DH Part 1.

The H/G kiss in the preview we just saw takes place in DH Part 2, during the Battle of Hogwarts, so it seems that we are getting a H/G kissing scene in DH parts 1 and 2. Excellent! :)

I’m posting these DH set photos because you can never have too much Ron/Hermione. ;)

UPDATE: The Leaky Cauldron has posted some stills from the new trailer. Here’s a sampling:

Visit www.the-leaky-cauldron.org for more trailer pics, then come back here and tell me what you think of the preview we saw last night. Comments are welcome!

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