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Post by hermoine on Jul 8, 2004 7:49:39 GMT -5
You should really try visiting Spain when they've got this tomato feast Rubes. You'd get all wet in tomato sauce. ;D
But JK doesn't have that much control on the movie. She is asked if some things should or shouldn't be done, you know like that Shrunken Head thing in the Knight Bus. By hints you might be suggesting stuff like Ron and Hermione relationship? That was the only thing which I saw as a hint, which wasn't much of a big one since we had already figured that out.
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Post by Ritsu on Jul 9, 2004 6:33:19 GMT -5
/me agrees with Rubes on the Time Travel thing
It does make more sense like that, like, everything ending in that 3 hour period. It was too confusing, the thought of 'they're always going back in time because there's always one Harry and one Hermione behind other Harry and other Hermione'. Kinda confusing. But like you said, I'll just accept it as it is and keep on reading and watching the movie.
It'd be fun if she changed it, though. If all of a sudden someone new appeared for Hermione or for Ron. Then some scenes would have to be deleted because Ron and Hermione were not getting together after all. But if she said 'yes' to that kind of thing, she made it pretty clear already. Let's see what happens in Book 6
The good news is, I like Sirius. Gary's Sirius. I like him already so much... I was a bit worried when I first saw the movie, but I've seen it three times and I'm fully convinced now. I believe no one could do it as well as Gary did [well, no one ever does].
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S.S Tigress
Slytherin Alumni
Shots in the dark from empty guns, never heard by anyone
Posts: 1,345
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Post by S.S Tigress on Jul 12, 2004 16:11:34 GMT -5
Perhaps the movie has clues to future story lines. After all, JKR is in charge Not exactly....Movies from books are created because of contracts. These kind of contracts state that the auhtor has leagally signed over the rights of the book and storyline to the director/producers etc..(whoever is mentioned in the particular contract).
But directors who do those kind of movies are usually big fans of the book and want the author to be satisfied of their vision and ask him/her permission on some things.
Sadly, this doesn't always happen. ie; Stanley Kubrick's The Shining.
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