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Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 [DVD] [2011]

4.5 out of 5 stars 1,190 customer reviews

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Frequently Bought Together

  • Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 [DVD] [2011]
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Product details

  • Actors: Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson, Rupert Grint, Ralph Fiennes, Helena Bonham Carter
  • Directors: David Yates
  • Format: PAL, Subtitled, Dolby, Digital Sound, Widescreen
  • Language: English, Russian, Ukrainian
  • Subtitles: Russian, Lithuanian, Latvian, Estonian, English
  • Region: Region 2 (This DVD may not be viewable outside Europe. Read more about DVD formats.)
  • Aspect Ratio: 16:9 - 2.40:1
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Classification: 12
  • Studio: Warner Home Video
  • DVD Release Date: 2 Dec. 2011
  • Run Time: 125 minutes
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1,190 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B004NBYRYC
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 376 in DVD & Blu-ray (See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray)

Product Description

Product Description

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part 2 is the final adventure in the Harry Potter film series. The much-anticipated motion picture event is the second of two full-length parts.

In the epic finale, the battle between the good and evil forces of the wizarding world escalates into an all-out war. The stakes have never been higher and no one is safe. But it is Harry Potter who may be called upon to make the ultimate sacrifice as he draws closer to the climactic showdown with Lord Voldemort.

It all ends here.

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part 2 stars Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint and Emma Watson, reprising their roles as Harry Potter, Ron Weasley and Hermione Granger. The film's ensemble cast also includes Helena Bonham Carter, Jim Broadbent, Robbie Coltrane, Warwick Davis, Tom Felton, Ralph Fiennes, Michael Gambon, Ciarán Hinds, John Hurt, Jason Isaacs, Matthew Lewis, Gary Oldman, Alan Rickman, Maggie Smith, David Thewlis, Emma Thompson, Julie Walters and Bonnie Wright.

The film was directed by David Yates, who also helmed the blockbusters Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince and Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part 1.

Extra Content

Aberforth Dumbledore
Deathly Hallows Costume Changes
Harry Returns to Hogwarts
The Hogwarts Shield
Room of Requirement Set
The Fiery Escape
Final Farewells from Cast and Crew
When Harry Left Hogwarts
The Goblins of Gringotts
The Women of Harry Potter
Deleted Scenes
Neville's Stand
Molly Takes Down Bellatrix
Pottermore Preview
Warner Bros. Studio Tour London

From Amazon.co.uk

The Deathly Hallows: Part 2 is the film all Harry Potter fans have waited 10 years to see, and the good news is that it's worth the hype--visually stunning, action packed, faithful to the book, and mature not just in its themes and emotion but in the acting by its cast, some of whom had spent half their lives making Harry Potter movies. Part 2 cuts right to the chase: Voldemort (Ralph Fiennes) has stolen the Elder Wand, one of the three objects required to give someone power over death (a.k.a. the Deathly Hallows), with the intent to hunt and kill Harry. Meanwhile, Harry's quest to destroy the rest of the Horcruxes (each containing a bit of Voldemort's soul) leads him first to a thrilling (and hilarious--love that Polyjuice Potion!) trip to Gringotts Bank, then back to Hogwarts, where a spectacular battle pitting the young students and professors (a showcase of the British thesps who have stolen every scene of the series: Maggie Smith's McGonagall, Jim Broadbent's Slughorn, David Thewlis's Lupin) against a dark army of Dementors, ogres, and Bellatrix Lestrange (Helena Bonham Carter, with far less crazy eyes to make this round). As predicted all throughout the saga, Harry also has his final showdown with Voldemort--neither can live while the other survives--though the physics of that predicament might need a set of crib notes to explain. But while each installment has become progressively grimmer, this finale is the most balanced between light and dark (the dark is quite dark--several familiar characters die, with one significant death particularly grisly); the humor is sprinkled in at the most welcome times, thanks to the deft adaptation by Steve Kloves (who scribed all but one of the films from J.K. Rowling's books) and direction by four-time Potter director David Yates. The climactic kiss between Ron (Rupert Grint) and Hermione (Emma Watson), capping off a decade of romantic tension, is perfectly tuned to their idiosyncratic relationship, and Daniel Radcliffe has, over the last decade, certainly proven he was the right kid for the job all along. As Prof. Snape, the most perfect of casting choices in the best-cast franchise of all time, Alan Rickman breaks your heart. Only the epilogue (and the lack of chemistry between Harry and love Ginny Weasley, barely present here) stand a little shaky, but no matter: the most lucrative franchise in movie history to date has just reached its conclusion, and it's done so without losing its soul. --Ellen A. Kim --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Customer Reviews

Top Customer Reviews

Format: DVD Verified Purchase
A bit disappointed! They did 7 films to get to this little lump?! Too bad...it's ok but nothin' more. Did expect a fair bit more epic-like storytelling, on a bigger canvas, than this "how-do-we-end-this-without-overdoing-it" dud? Well, in my opinion they should have overdone it. The series(and story in itself)could have carried it. Yates did well on "Phoenix" and "The Half-Blood Prince", but seemingly have had a great deal of trouble for the last ones, and looks a bit like an amateur with good technical knowledge, but lacking seriously in the storytelling department! It should've ended with a loud bang, the series deserved that, but it sorta' turned into a fizzz!
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Format: DVD
When all is said and done - when the eye candy special effects of Quidditch matches and fantastical creatures has been superseded by advances in technology in Hollywood blockbusters yet to come - it is the little moments that this viewer and his wife will return to.

When a friend one time bemoaned the fact that `Half-Blood Prince' gets bogged down in pointless hormonal teen-angst instead of getting on with the story, I smiled... and shook my head.

No, I said, that IS the story and it's what I love about the Harry Potter series: it never loses track of the characters. It never forgets that, when viewed as a whole, these eight movies are a story of growing up, of the transition from childhood to adulthood. Of love and friendship and death. Because without those little funny and touching moments between the characters - if all you want is for the movies to rush from one plot element to another - then all you're left with is plot... and no story. Remember: plot is what happens TO the characters; story is what happens AS A RESULT of the characters.

That's the real gorgeous beauty of these movies, and it's what will bring viewers back repeatedly to their DVD shelves. As Frodo said to Sam in `The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers': "What are we fighting for Sam?" "That's there's still some good in this world," Sam replies, "and that it's worth fighting for."

That's why you need those little indulgent moments, because without them it's just razzle-dazzle special effects and set-pieces. Harry and Ginny's first kiss: they're in the Room of Requirement and Ginny tells Harry to close his eyes while she hides Professor Snape's copy of Advanced Potion Making.
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Format: DVD
A decent enough action-fantasy but unsurprisingly surrounded by masses of hype and rhetoric, being as it is, the final installment in this juggernaut of a movie franchise.
Dan Radcliffe is certainly starting to show some acting chops, although he, like the majority of characters here, is fairly peripheral to the action. If anyone stands out, it's the goofy but determined Neville Longbottom - a solid role-model for awkward teens the world over, while Ralph Fiennes' Machiavellian 'dark lord', the nasally-challenged Voldemort, finally gets to take centre-stage, but loses much of his power to terrify in the process.
The effects are as impressive as ever, the destruction of Hogwarts immense, and the wand duels exciting; even the cheesy ending feels welcome, despite its indulgences. Overall though, like the last three films (and their parent novels) in the series, this is overblown and poorly edited, which takes away from the enjoyment factor.
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Format: DVD
Hallows II is the antithesis of its counterpart. Instead of contemplation and scenery it's all-action, everything into the cauldron, fireworks mayhem. No time for navel-gazing. One final co-star to introduce, Kelly MacDonald as Thingemee Ravenclaw (?) and then all the old faces, alive or dead, monster or muggle, and on to the showdown with the world's most angry private school alumnus, Lord V.

So, easy to get swept along and enjoy it, but impossible to ignore the feeling of haste, the continually banal and prosaic dialogue (McGonagle: Harry (pregnant pause)...It's good to see yer.) or the absence of interesting duels when battle commences. Meh. Tom really hated that school, you know.

This was the last hurrah for all concerned, but one laced with fatigue. I'd be surprised if there's even anyone who has the energy or interest to be reading these reviews, or finish this sen..........................................
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Format: DVD
It's only taken 3 years but, with a new DVD player, I feel I've finally seen this film properly (when we saw it at the pictures, when it came out, we had a nearly empty cinema with a family of six right behind us, and the five year old explaining the concept of cinema to the three year old. I'd have said something but was afraid of being shot).

It's very good. Right from the first (ish) shot of Snape staring down over Hogwarts, with the students marching in Stalinist blocks. My only regret with the whole thing (I think) is that the Carrows make such a poor showing.

And the far more grown-up emphasis is evident from the first scene in the cottage by the sea. Luna dispassionately stating that wind chimes do not keep evil at bay. The following exchange with Griphook and Olivander are shorn of the whimsical cadences with which adults like to frost a child's world. Griphook is cold-bloodedly mercenary, while Olivander is a broken man (Warwick Davies and John Hurt both on tremendous form) and Harry is no longer too young to tell Olivander 'You're lying', nor too nice not to at least consider double-crossing Griphook.

Of course the goblin is a double-dealing little git, who gets incinerated, and the whole Goblin species seems to lose credibility in Gringotts' treatment of that poor dragon, but part of the new Voldemort-era look of the bank is a modernising of all the old Victoriana, so they all now look, well, like C21 bankers. It's rather as if someone is making a point like 'Don't trust bankers cos they're just like the Goblins in this film'.

(One of my favourite moments is Helena Bonham-Corset playing Hermione disguised as Belatrix - it's very funny)

And from there it's off to Hogsmeade, and then into the school, and then into battle.
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