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Posted

I'm so sad, but glad it's over... When I watched the movie I was overcome by joy... I really like the books and movies and I hope they will have another movie/book like it :)

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the author made something called Pottermore.

Think its a website

  • Author

ooh something for me to do :)..... Thanxxxx!!!!!!!!!!!!

pottermore is an online game idk if it's up yet.

The finale was awesome, an epic ending for such an epic saga.

Eh they missed the whole point of the ending. Sure it was to show Harry and all of them have kids, but in the book it also mentions Harry seeing Malfoy for the first time in years and his scare hurting.

  • Author

That's why you read the books ^.^

Okay, J.K. Rowling has pretty much sworn she won't be writing any other Harry Potter books in the forseeable future. However, there's Pottermore, which isn't a game in itself, more of an interactive HP-related community where you read through the books again through the site and are given new information, facts, extra chapters, etc. They haven't released much, but upon signing up (which will be pretty hard at first, I imagine, judging by how difficult it was to even submit an email address when the site first opened due to the popular demand, you're given a set of questions from a huge pool of them, which sort you into one of the houses- you get information about the founders and history of the house right off the bat, and go on from there.

 

And I... well, I sobbed like a baby throughout a good third of the film, from when Snape walked into the boathouse (before anything was even SHOWN) to Harry facing Voldemort in the forest. And then I cried again at the end of the epilogue. Overall, I thought it was good for a film, but it had nothing on the books- and the inaccuracies in some parts drove me half-insane, like them needing to destroy the diadem with the fang venom, when the flames they were running from should have done it for them. And the boathouse replacing the Shrieking Shack.

 

In the epilogue, Harry DID see Draco, though. They shared a glance and as far as I can remember Draco smiled a little, far more than he got with Ginny or Ron, pretty much. And his scar never hurt in the epilogue in the book. "The scar had not pained him for nineteen years. All was well." I'm certain THAT'S the end to the book.

 

Oh, and Pottermore isn't officially open until October. A "few" fans will be granted access on the 31st of July, but you'd have to be among the first million and the odds aren't really in anyone's favour on that one.

  • Author

Okay, J.K. Rowling has pretty much sworn she won't be writing any other Harry Potter books in the forseeable future. However, there's Pottermore, which isn't a game in itself, more of an interactive HP-related community where you read through the books again through the site and are given new information, facts, extra chapters, etc. They haven't released much, but upon signing up (which will be pretty hard at first, I imagine, judging by how difficult it was to even submit an email address when the site first opened due to the popular demand, you're given a set of questions from a huge pool of them, which sort you into one of the houses- you get information about the founders and history of the house right off the bat, and go on from there.

 

And I... well, I sobbed like a baby throughout a good third of the film, from when Snape walked into the boathouse (before anything was even SHOWN) to Harry facing Voldemort in the forest. And then I cried again at the end of the epilogue. Overall, I thought it was good for a film, but it had nothing on the books- and the inaccuracies in some parts drove me half-insane, like them needing to destroy the diadem with the fang venom, when the flames they were running from should have done it for them. And the boathouse replacing the Shrieking Shack.

 

In the epilogue, Harry DID see Draco, though. They shared a glance and as far as I can remember Draco smiled a little, far more than he got with Ginny or Ron, pretty much. And his scar never hurt in the epilogue in the book. "The scar had not pained him for nineteen years. All was well." I'm certain THAT'S the end to the book.

 

Oh, and Pottermore isn't officially open until October. A "few" fans will be granted access on the 31st of July, but you'd have to be among the first million and the odds aren't really in anyone's favour on that one.

 

lol at the crying thing
  • 2 weeks later...

snapes and fred's death was sad but the movie was awasome it was awasome how nevle came out of nowhere and killed naginey nevel went from nerd to awasome freind of harry

Eh they missed the whole point of the ending. Sure it was to show Harry and all of them have kids, but in the book it also mentions Harry seeing Malfoy for the first time in years and his scare hurting.

 

Actually, in the epilogue it mentioned how Harry's scar hadn't hurt in nineteen years, and how all was well.

 

Actually, in the epilogue it mentioned how Harry's scar hadn't hurt in nineteen years, and how all was well.

 

In the book.

 

In the book.

 

Yeah, that's what I meant. Ace326 was saying how in the book Harry's scar was hurting from seeing Draco for the first time in a while. I was saying what the book was actually mentioning by how Harry's scar hadn't been hurting since the battle with Voldemort, which meant there hadn't been another threat from him or any of his followers.

Okay, J.K. Rowling has pretty much sworn she won't be writing any other Harry Potter books in the forseeable future. However, there's Pottermore, which isn't a game in itself, more of an interactive HP-related community where you read through the books again through the site and are given new information, facts, extra chapters, etc. They haven't released much, but upon signing up (which will be pretty hard at first, I imagine, judging by how difficult it was to even submit an email address when the site first opened due to the popular demand, you're given a set of questions from a huge pool of them, which sort you into one of the houses- you get information about the founders and history of the house right off the bat, and go on from there.

 

And I... well, I sobbed like a baby throughout a good third of the film, from when Snape walked into the boathouse (before anything was even SHOWN) to Harry facing Voldemort in the forest. And then I cried again at the end of the epilogue. Overall, I thought it was good for a film, but it had nothing on the books- and the inaccuracies in some parts drove me half-insane, like them needing to destroy the diadem with the fang venom, when the flames they were running from should have done it for them. And the boathouse replacing the Shrieking Shack.

 

In the epilogue, Harry DID see Draco, though. They shared a glance and as far as I can remember Draco smiled a little, far more than he got with Ginny or Ron, pretty much. And his scar never hurt in the epilogue in the book. "The scar had not pained him for nineteen years. All was well." I'm certain THAT'S the end to the book.

 

Oh, and Pottermore isn't officially open until October. A "few" fans will be granted access on the 31st of July, but you'd have to be among the first million and the odds aren't really in anyone's favour on that one.

 

Actually, me and some other member managed to enter in the "few"!

Guess I need to look back. its been almost 2v years since I read it

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