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'''''Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2''''' is the first part of a two-part film adaptation (released 2011) of the 2007 novel ''[[Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (novel)|Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows]]'' by [[J. K. Rowling]], directed by David Yates. Like the other films in the series, it features [[Daniel Radcliffe]] as Harry Potter, with [[Rupert Grint]] and [[Emma Watson]] as Ron Weasley and Hermione Granger, as well as an [[All-Star Cast]].
'''''Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part 1''''' is the first part of a two-part film adaptation (released 2010) of the 2007 novel ''[[Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (novel)|Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows]]'' by [[J. K. Rowling]], directed by David Yates. Like the other films in the series, it features [[Daniel Radcliffe]] as Harry Potter, with [[Rupert Grint]] and [[Emma Watson]] as Ron Weasley and Hermione Granger, as well as an [[All-Star Cast]].


After destroying one Horcrux and discovering the significance of the three Deathly Hallows, Harry, Ron and Hermione continue to seek the other Horcruxes in an attempt to destroy Voldemort, who has now obtained the powerful Elder Wand. The Dark Lord discovers Harry's hunt for his Horcruxes and launches an attack on Hogwarts, where the trio return for one last stand against the dark forces that threaten both the Wizarding and Muggle worlds.
After unexpected events at the end of the previous year, Harry, Ron, and Hermione are entrusted with a quest to find and destroy Lord Voldemort's secret to immortality – the Horcruxes. It is supposed to be their final year at Hogwarts, but the collapse of the Ministry of Magic and Voldemort's rise to power prevents them from attending. The trio undergo an arduous journey with many obstacles in their path including Death Eaters, Snatchers, the mysterious Deathly Hallows, and Harry's connection with the Dark Lord's mind becoming ever stronger.


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The tropes listed below are those specific to this film or altered from those found in [[Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (novel)|the original book]]. Please see that page for those tropes common to both versions.
The tropes listed below are those specific to this film or altered from those found in [[Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (novel)|the original book]]. Please see that page for those tropes common to both versions.


* [[Action Film, Quiet Drama Scene]]: The scene in where Hermione talks about visiting the forest of Dean with her parents when she was little.
* [[Adaptation Correction]]: In a rare case of a Harry Potter film adaptation fixing a plot hole, Harry actually snaps the Elder Wand in two instead of placing it back into Dumbledore's tomb. In the book, both Harry and Dumbledore somehow come to the conclusion that if Harry dies a natural death, the Elder Wand will no longer have a master, when according to the universe's internal consistency, the next person to defeat Harry in battle (a not-unlikely event) would in fact become the Wand's next master.
{{quote|'''Hermione:''' Maybe we should just stay here, Harry...grow old.}}
* [[Adaptation Expansion]]
** The final fight between Harry and Voldemort. In the books, Harry appears from beneath his invisibility cloak in the midst of the battle to deliver a [[Shut UP, Hannibal]] to Voldemort, just before the Dark Lord {{spoiler|tosses a killing curse at him, which backfires horribly. ''Again''}}. In ''Deathly Hallows Part 2'', the fight sprawls the entire breadth of the castle, from Voldemort stalking him in the hallways, battling in the Astronomy Tower, and pulling a [[Superman]]-esque midair fight before landing in the courtyard, where they engage in a [[Beam-O-War]] duel which Harry wins when his Expelliarmus reaches Voldy. [[Rule of Cool|Yes, it is just as epic as it sounds]].
** To a lesser degree, also {{spoiler|the fight between [[Supporting Leader|Neville]] and Nagini}}. In the book, {{spoiler|Neville decapitates her without resistance from her in a moment of surprise, albeit whilst on fire}}. In the film, {{spoiler|he decapitates her [[Thwarted Coup De Grace|mid-launch]] [[Big Damn Heroes|at a helpless Ron and Hermione]]}}. Yes, [[Rule of Cool|also extremely satisfying]].
** We also get to see Ron and Hermione enter {{spoiler|the Chamber of Secrets}}, showing a scene only referred to in the books.
* [[Adaptation Explanation Extrication]]:
* [[Adaptation Explanation Extrication]]:
** A scene explaining the Taboo (Ron mentions hearing about it in the Ministry) was cut from ''Deathly Hallows Part 1'', so it's never explained despite its effects showing up in two plot-critical moments (the book-verbatim Death Eater attack in the café, and a new change to the Lovegood house scene where Xenophilius says Voldemort's name to summon Death Eaters), making them seem like [[Diabolus Ex Machina]] rather than a jinx.
** The explanation of what the Horcruxes might be that was cut from ''[[Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (film)|Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince]]'' is re-introduced in several ways in this film: merely knowing that Bellatrix was afraid of what they might have taken from her vault lets him know a Horcrux is there, and once they get inside, Harry's scar gives him a [[Spider Sense]], letting him track down the object in question ({{spoiler|a cup, theoretically Helga Hufflepuff's but maybe anybody's}}). This same ability allows him to {{spoiler|learn that Nagini is a Horcrux, and another is connected to Rowena Ravenclaw}}, and later to sense the presence of {{spoiler|the diadem}} in {{spoiler|the Room of Requirement}}, hidden {{spoiler|in a velvet jewel box instead of sitting on a warlock statue}}.
** The reason why Harry doesn't realize {{spoiler|Bathilda Bagshot is possessed by Nagini}} in the seventh film is because he is a Parselmouth - snake-talk appears to him as human speech, unlike the gibberish it is to others. In the movie, we hear him and {{spoiler|possessed Bathilda}} talk in Parseltongue from an observer's viewpoint.
** Dumbledore is set up over the course of ''Deathly Hallows'' parts one and two as not being as kind and fatherly as he appeared. Now, in the book, all of this finally comes together and Dumbledore is revealed to still have been a good man who in the end {{spoiler|essentially arranges Voldemort's downfall}}. But in the movie, most of {{spoiler|his conversation with Harry at King's Cross}} is cut, and the subplot is left dangling.
* [[Adaptation-Induced Plothole]]:
** Remus and Tonks announce their marriage in a blink-and-you-miss-it scene in ''Deathly Hallows - Part 1'', and Tonks is apparently about to announce her pregnancy too, but is interrupted. Their relationship is not mentioned again, until the resurrection stone scene when Harry is magically aware of Teddy's existence.
** In [[Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (novel)|book six]], the Prime Minister and the Minister for Magic briefly discuss a terrorist attack by Death Eaters against an unnamed bridge that kills several Muggles. This film decides to [[Show, Don't Tell]] the attack, setting it in London's famous Millennium Bridge for added drama and [[Monumental Damage]]... forgetting that the scene is supposed to take place in mid-1997, whereas construction on the real-life Millennium Bridge began in 1998 and it wasn't opened to the public until 2000.
* [[Adaptation-Induced Plothole]]:
* [[Adult Fear]]: Induced in ''Deathly Hallows Part 1'' - during the fight with Nagini, Harry falls through a wall and Nagini follows him; the room at the other side? A nursery... now with a ''giant'' snake in it. Eep...
** The film removes Dumbledore's explanation of why {{spoiler|Voldemort's Killing Curse in the forest failed to work on Harry}}, leaving {{spoiler|his survival (and why it ''had'' to be Voldemort himself who cast the curse)}} a mystery with no "movie-canon" explanation. While it does explicitly explain why the {{spoiler|Elder Wand wouldn't work properly for Voldemort}} in the film (and {{spoiler|the failure of the Killing Curse}} could be explained simply by that), and [[Info Dump|InfoDumpledore]] also mentions that {{spoiler|Voldemort's [[Soul Fragment]]}} is now gone, (implying it might have served as [[Plot Armor]]), a question mark is still left behind on the completeness of the answer compared with the book's.
* [[Berserk Button]]: Umbridge falsely accusing an innocent witch of lying makes Harry so angry that he attacks Umbridge right then and there, in the Ministry courtroom.
** Krum has [[Mind Control Eyes]] while under the Imperius Curse in ''[[Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (film)|Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire]]''. In this film, the curse is portrayed more like in the book; the Gringotts goblin just has a vacant smile. This could be [[Hand Wave]]'d by the fact that it was Harry who put the goblin under the curse, and he doesn't have as much experience at casting it, so it can't exert as much control on someone as Crouch did.
{{quote|You're lying, Dolores… and [[Call Back|you mustn't tell lies!]]}}
* [[Adaptational Badass]]: Harry is able to hold his own during a protracted duel with Voldemort during the climax of the eighth film. Such a feat would be completely beyond him in the books, where Voldemort held off multiple veteran wizards simultaneously.
* [[Bling Bling Bang]]: Voldemort contemptuously snaps off the ornate silver handle of Lucius Malfoy's wand when he 'borrows' it to use against Harry Potter. [[What Do You Mean Its Not Symbolic|Remind you of anything?]]
* [[Adorkable]]: The awkward moment near the end of the film, where Neville and Luna sit beside each other and grin goofily.
* [[Breather Episode]]: ''Deathly Hallows, Part 1'' notably takes a break from frantically trying to cram as much plot as it can into the movies, instead focusing on long, atmospheric shots of the characters and scenery. It really emphasizes how the Trio are now on their own.
* [[Back for the Finale]]: Pomona Sprout, Ollivander, the Sorting Hat, even the Chamber of Secrets and the Basilisk (though only in skeletal form).
* [[Berserk Button]]:
** Harry mentions Tom Riddle's name to the Grey Lady and what he did with her mother's diadem, the up-to-then serene ghost becomes enraged:
{{quote|'''I know who he is! I know what he's done! He defiled it! With dark magic!!!'''}}
** Also in this film Ron has a minor one in the Room of Requirement when Hermione is attacked:
{{quote|<nowiki>*</nowiki>starting to run after Draco, Goyle, and Zabini* '''That's my girlfriend, you numpty!!'''}}
* [[Beware the Nice Ones]]:
** Harry invokes this to Voldemort before chucking them both off of a cliff.
{{quote|'''Harry''': C'mon Tom. Lets finish this the way we started. ''[[Taking You with Me|Together.]]''}}
** Not to mention his refusal to help Dolores Umbridge;
{{quote|'''Harry''': You're ''lying'', Dolores. [[Ironic Echo|And you mustn't tell lies.]]}}
* [[Big Damn Heroes]]: {{spoiler|Neville jumping out to kill Nagini with the Sword of Gryffindor.}}
* [[The Big Damn Kiss]]: Between Ron and Hermione {{spoiler|after destroying the Hufflepuff's Cup Horcrux and being engulfed in a torrent of water caused by it}}.
* [[Big No]]: Ginny Weasley cries a couple of rather impressive ones, when it is believed that Harry, whom she's been deeply in love with through the whole series, is dead.
* [[Bloodless Carnage]]: Played straight as spells don't leave bulletholes, but averted for effect when {{spoiler|Voldemort walks across a floor strewn with blood and the [[You Have Failed Me...|bodies of the guards and goblins]] who let Harry steal his Horcrux from Gringotts.}}
* [[Body Horror]]: In a departure from the books, every time a Horcrux is destroyed, Voldemort is weakened. He realizes what's going on after the Cup has been destroyed - and once he's only left with {{spoiler|two}} anchors to keep him alive, ''his body starts necrotizing…''
* [[Bond Villain Stupidity]]: In the climax of the film, {{spoiler|Voldemort has Harry tied up in his robes. When we get back to the duo after a cut to the hunt for Nagini, he is just ''slapping him''. Harry, the boy he had set out to kill, is defenseless in front of him, and he's resorting to slapping when he could kill him at any time with the Elder Wand}}. This may, however, qualify as a result of {{spoiler|his [[Villainous Breakdown]].}}
* [[Book Ends]]:
** A musical variation: The film ends with the exact same music that the first film ended with.
* [[Brick Joke]]: After Ron leaves, Hermione ties her scarf to a tree just before she and Harry disparate. They apparate back into the same location and run into a gang of Snatchers. The leader is wearing Hermione's scarf. It is also the same Snatcher who smelled her perfume while walking through the woods.
* [[Brick Joke]]: After Ron leaves, Hermione ties her scarf to a tree just before she and Harry disparate. They apparate back into the same location and run into a gang of Snatchers. The leader is wearing Hermione's scarf. It is also the same Snatcher who smelled her perfume while walking through the woods.
* [[Broken Heel]]: While rushing to aid Harry in Godric's Hollow, Hermione trips over a pile of books on the floor ([[Badass Bookworm|ironically for her]]).
* [[Combat Tentacles]]: During the final fight between Harry and Voldemort, Voldemort briefly uses the longer parts of his robes to ensnare Harry.
* [[Cliff Hanger]]: {{spoiler|Voldemort obtaining the Elder Wand from Dumbledore's grave}}.
* [[Compressed Adaptation]]: [[Doorstopper|Can't really be helped, though: there's just too much plot to stuff into a movie]], even with splitting it across ''two'' films.
* [[Compressed Adaptation]]: [[Doorstopper|Can't really be helped, though: there's just too much plot to stuff into a movie]], even with splitting it across ''two'' films.
* [[Crapsack World]]: Seen when the Golden Trio are wandering through Britain, with [[Scenery Porn]] of beautiful yet cold and empty fields and highways, the scorched remains of a caravan park where the Death Eaters have struck, and their dark contrails overhead.
* [[Curb Stomp Battle]]: The duel between McGonagall and Snape, which was moved to the Great Hall. Snape barely puts up any resistance as opposed to the book where the duel only ended because the other Heads of House interrupted. McGonagall also defeats the Carrows in the same duel.
* [[Culture Equals Costume]]: Kingsley Shacklebolt wears a daishiki.
* [[Deflector Shields]]: Hogwarts is surrounded by one during the Battle of Hogwarts.
* [[Diegetic Switch]]: "O'Children" starts out playing crackling on the radio, then fades into clear background music when Harry and Hermione start dancing.
* [[Disney Villain Death]]: {{spoiler|Fenrir and Scabior}}. Neither were killed in [[Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows (novel)|the book]].
** {{spoiler|Goyle}}, to an extent. {{spoiler|He falls into the fire.}}
* [[Dissonant Serenity]]: Neville gets this after waking up from Voldemort's knock-out blow. It's so bad, he's actually completely oblivious to another fighter being thrown back not more than three feet from where he is.
** Did we mention that the guy getting thrown back was ''on fire?''
* [[Does This Remind You of Anything?]]:
* [[Does This Remind You of Anything?]]:
** The scene where Hermione is tortured by Bellatrix Lestrange. It happens offscreen in the book, but you get to see plenty of it in the film adaptation, [[Rape Is a Special Kind of Evil|and it strongly resembles rape]].
** Possible as another Nazi-esque reference, Lucius' Azkaban number is tattooed on his neck.
** The Nazi-esque posters and pamphlets. Another Nazi-esque bit of symbolism is {{spoiler|Bellatrix scarring Hermione's arm with "Mudblood", which is reminiscent of the serial numbers tattooed onto the forearms of interns in concentration camps}}.
** Ron opens the door to the Chamber of Secrets with some Parseltongue.
* [[Eureka Moment]]: Hermione gets one while she's cutting Harry's hair.
{{quote|'''Ron:''' I learnt that from Harry -- he talks in his sleep, did you know that?
* [[Fascinating Eyebrow]]: Emma Watson finally managed control over her infamous overacting eyebrows to be able to just raise one to punctuate the joke of Ron trying to win Hermione over by "voting" for her idea to see Xenophilius Lovegood.
'''Hermione:''' ''(looking a bit flustered)'' No...of course not!}}
* [[Faux Affably Evil]]: Voldemort has shades of this early in the film, during the meeting at Malfoy Manor.
* [[Exact Words]]/[[Loophole Abuse]]: In Bellatrix's vault:
* [[Foreshadowing]]:
{{quote|'''Griphook:''' I said I'd get you in. I didn't say anything about getting you out.}}
** Harry {{spoiler|thinks that there might be a Horcrux made in Godric's Hollow}}.
* [[Foreshadowing]]: The music that plays at the very beginning while Snape is looking over a decrepit Hogwarts is {{spoiler|[[One-Woman Wail|Lily's theme]]}}.
** During the "Tale of the Three Brothers" segment the elder wand resembles Dumbledore's wand.
* [[For the Evulz]]: Presumably the only reason the Death Eaters torch the Quidditch pitch in the assault on Hogwarts.
* [[Full Name Ultimatum]]: "Harry Potter, you listen to me right now!"
* [[Full Name Ultimatum]]: "Harry Potter, you give me my wand!"
* [[Gory Discretion Shot]]: Inverted and played straight with the discovery of {{spoiler|Bathilda Bagshot's body}}. While you don't see her body, as it is being {{spoiler|used by Nagini like a suit}}, the indication that Bagshot was {{spoiler|brutally murdered is the rather large and gruesome pool of blood dripping from the ceiling of her house.}}
* [[Good Old Fisticuffs]]: When Harry and Voldemort are fighting in the Astronomy Tower, [[Villainous Breakdown|Voldemort is so angry that he resorts to slapping Harry around]] and [[Kick Them While They Are Down|kicking him as he tries to recover]].
* [[Green-Eyed Monster]]: The locket turns Ron into this by inflaming his insecurity about his relationship to Hermione, which sparks jealousy over her appearing to dote on Harry. Part of his motivation for abandoning them is seeing them coming back from the close call with the Snatchers and thinking they've been doing... something else.
* [[Gory Discretion Shot]]: {{spoiler|Severus Snape's death}}. Even then it's a [[Nothing Is Scarier]] moment as we see only a view through a dirty window, but can hear clearly the sound of {{spoiler|the snake striking him again and again}}.
* [[Headphones Equal Isolation]]: The waitress at the diner is in the kitchen with her back turned and headphones playing music on, and doesn't hear the loud and destructive wand battle between the Trio and a pair of Death Eaters.
* [[I Always Wanted to Say That]]: Said by Professor McGonagall of all people, after using the ''Piertotum Locomotor'' spell. Considering [[Sealed Army in a Can|what]] [[Animated Armor|it does]], can you blame her? Especially cute is the schoolgirlish giggle she gives after delivering the line.
* [[Hoist by His Own Petard]]: What ultimately drives Ron to {{spoiler|destroy the locket}} is {{spoiler|the soul fragment presenting itself as Harry and Hermione mocking him and then making out}}, the very thing it was driving him to think was happening earlier on.
* [[I Have You Now, My Pretty]]: Scabior, the head Snatcher. After he captures Hermione, calls her "My lovely" and sniffs her hair. Actor Nick Moran told Entertainment Weekly they cut out his line: "You're going to be my favorite."
* [[I Have You Now, My Pretty]]: Scabior, the head Snatcher. After he captures Hermione, calls her "My lovely" and sniffs her hair. Actor Nick Moran told Entertainment Weekly they cut out his line: "You're going to be my favorite."
* [[Intro Dump]]: Scene Two, when Bill Weasley introduces himself, his injury from Grayback ''and'' his impending wedding, as well as Tonks and Lupin already being married. Partly justified, in the sheer number of subplots left to die in the previous movies.
* [[Lampshade Hanging]]:
* [[Medium Blending]]: Has an animated segment for "The Tale of the Three Brothers", the legendary story of the Deathly Hallows. It's CGI that looks like [Jim Henson]] fantasy productions like ''[[The Dark Crystal]]'' or ''[[Labyrinth]]''.
{{quote|'''Hermione:''' We've got to plan, we've got to figure it out!
'''Harry:''' Hermione, [[Finagle's Law|when have any of our plans ever actually worked?]] [[Zany Scheme|We plan]], we get there, [[Despite the Plan|all hell breaks loose]].}}
* [[Last-Minute Hookup]]: Neville declares that he's crazy about Luna; elsewhere, Luna notes to Harry that she thinks she might fancy Neville. This is contrary to what J.K had happening to the two characters.
* [[Literally Shattered Lives]]: {{spoiler|An [[Mama Bear|enraged Molly Weasley]] casts a curse on Bellatrix that freezes her in place and ''dessicates'' her... followed by a blast that shatters her into a million pieces}}.
* [[Million-Mook March]]: Averted. When Voldomort's men think they've won they just shuffle wearily across the bridge to Hogwarts, exhausted after fighting all night.
* [[Multi-Part Episode]]
* [[Multi-Part Episode]]
* [[Musical Spoiler]]: Whenever the Slytherin locket is influencing someone's behavior, there is a characteristic, high-pitched noise. {{spoiler|The noise appears when Harry talks to Bathilda Bagshot in her home, hinting early that she is in fact Nagini.}}
* [[Mundane Made Awesome]]: The way the film handles {{spoiler|Neville killing Nagini}}. If it wasn't for the slow motion, lack of sound, and the [[Visual Effects of Awesome (Sugar Wiki)|Visual Effects of Awesome]], it probably would have turned out much more embarrassing than it looked.
* [[Oblivious Janitor Cut]]: While the trio is attacked at the diner, the waiter/cook is in the kitchen, blithely listening to music on her headphones.
* [[Musical Spoiler]]: Whenever the Slytherin locket is influencing someone's behavior, there is a characteristic, high-pitched noise.
* [[Oh Crap]]: {{spoiler|When Umbridge realizes Runcorn is really Harry in disguise, just before he stupefies her}}.
* [[No-Holds-Barred Beatdown]]: Voldemort vs Harry in the expanded fight scene. As Voldemort's wand won't work, he retorts to using his fists to give Harry a pummelling.
{{quote|''"You're lying, Dolores... [[Ironic Echo|you mustn't tell lies!]]"''}}
* [[No Body Left Behind]]: {{spoiler|Bellatrix, Nagini, and Voldemort.
* [[Perma-Stubble]]:
* [[Oh Crap]]: {{spoiler|Neville}} has a an Oh Crap look on his face when {{spoiler|the barrier around Hogwarts fades, and hundreds of Voldemort's mooks come rushing towards the bridge he's guarding}}.
** Harry develops some while wandering around, away from civilization, for weeks at a time. At one point, we see Hermione cutting his hair (manually, with a pair of scissors), so he may also have shaving equipment that, because of his circumstances, he can't use daily. Or maybe Daniel Radcliffe didn't want to grow his facial hair out further, but the director wanted another visual indicator of Harry's "on the run" status.
* [[Oh Crap]]: Snape, when he realizes that {{spoiler|Voldemort believes that Snape is the true master of the [[Elder Wand]] and thus Voldemort must kill him to gain the wand's allegiance. [[Slashed Throat|It ends]] [[Right-Hand Attack Dog|badly for]] [[Eaten Alive|him.]]}}
** Lucius Malfoy. His dishevelment symbolizes how far he's fallen from Voldemort's graces.
* [[One-Woman Wail]]: Lily's new [[Leitmotif]].
* [[Pre-Ass-Kicking One-Liner]]: Harry gets an absolutely glorious one just before knocking Umbridge cold and stealing the locket horcrux back.
* [[Out-of-Character is Serious Business]]: When gentle [[Cloudcuckoolander]] Luna Lovegood yells '''"[[Full Name Ultimatum|Harry Potter]]! You listen to me right now!"''', you know she really means it.
{{quote|'''Harry:''' You're lying, Dolores. [[Ironic Echo|And one mustn't tell lies]].}}
* [[Perma-Stubble]]: Lucius Malfoy. His dishevelment symbolizes how far he's fallen from Voldemort's graces.
* [[Putting on the Reich]]:
* [[Pietà Plagiarism]]: The memory of {{spoiler|Snape cradling Lily's dead body}}.
** This film features a private police force stationed in the Ministry of Magic after Voldemort takes over. They all wear red armbands. Subtle. Not to mention all of those anti-Muggleborn propaganda pamphlets.
* [[Pre-Ass-Kicking One-Liner]]: Molly's famous [[Precision F-Strike|line]] before she {{spoiler|kills Bellatrix who was attacking Ginny}}:
** Albert Runcorn's leather trench coat, when combined with his duties and demeanour, give him the appearance of a Gestapo operative.
{{quote|'''Molly:''' Not my daughter, you bitch!}}
** Also from this film, Bellatrix {{spoiler|carves "mudblood" into Hermione's arm, much like how the Nazis tattooed numbers onto the skin of Jews during the Holocaust}}. You know, just in case the allegory was still too subtle at that point.
* [[Precision F-Strike]]: As mentioned just above this sentence, Molly Weasley's line from the novel is kept intact.
* [[Reset Button]]: The Burrow was completely destroyed by Death Eaters in the last film. It's completely restored in this one.
* [[Putting on the Reich]]: The way the students at Hogwarts are marching at the beginning of the movie evokes this. The ''students''. Some of whom are '''eleven'''.
* [[Scare Chord]]: The post-Bathilda Nagini coming from downstairs after being 'killed'.
* [[Sad Battle Music]]: "Courtyard Apocalypse", accompanied by watching the Death Eaters and the Order of the Phoenix fight to the bitter end.
* [[Schrödinger's Cast]]: {{spoiler|Peter Pettigrew's death is omitted from this film. He doesn't return in ''Part 2'', and it's never mentioned if he dies}}. Also a case of [[Karma Houdini]].
* [[Scenery Gorn]]: The half-destroyed Hogwarts.
* [[Shirtless Scene]]: Harry (several times over) during the clothes-changing in the "everyone Polyjuices into Harry" scene, and when he strips down to jump into the pond to get the sword. Ron also has one right after the trio escapes from the Ministry, but it flies straight into [[Fan Disservice]] when we see that his shoulder's laid open to the bone.
* [[Screw This, I'm Outta Here]]:
* [[Shoo the Dog]]: At the start of the film, before the crew are about to fly off, Harry lets Hedwig go. She comes back and attacks one of the Death Eaters chasing Harry during the Battle For Little Whinging, and ends up [[Taking the Bullet|taking a Killing Curse]].
** Several of Voldemort's men noticeably disapparate the moment Harry turns out to be [[Not Quite Dead]].
* [[Took a Level in Badass]]: Ron takes a small but noticeable level between ''Half-Blood Prince'' and ''Deathly Hallows - Part 1'', possibly in response to some fans criticising how he was made into a bit too much of a comic relief in the previous six movies. In ''Hallows'' he becomes a more [[The Lancer|mature and reliable sidekick]], and some of his greatest moments in the last two movies even have him acting more confident and determined than in the books. {{spoiler|After destroying the locket in the book, Ron is understandably upset and is comforted by Harry, while in the film he's rather upbeat about it, and casually quips that there are now "only three to go!"}}
** As the final battle of Hogwarts begins, Narcissa and Draco are calmly, but quickly, walking away from Hogwarts as Lucius tries to catch up with them.
* [[What Happened to the Mouse?]]: Wormtail's death is cut from this film, but {{spoiler|Wormtail doesn't appear at all in ''Part 2''. Timothy Spall was originally intended to reprise the role in ''Part 2'', suggesting that he was intended to be killed off anyway, but his part ended up being cut.}}
* [[Shirtless Scene]]: Harry and Ron changing into dry shirts after the trio emerges from the lake.
** Some believe {{spoiler|Dobby's attack killed him}}, or that {{spoiler|he is among those killed by Voldemort at the beginning of ''Part 2'' after the Gringotts scene}}.
* [[Smooch of Victory]]: Ron and Hermione finally snog after destroying the cup Horcrux.
* [[Zip Me Up]]: Ginny to Harry.
* [[Sphere of Power]]: The ''Protego Maxima'' [[Deflector Shields|shield charm]] that envelops Hogwarts, which not only {{spoiler|deflects bombardment for a while, but actually ''disintegrates'' humans that try to breach it}}.

* [[Spider Sense]]: Harry seems to use his scar and its sensitivity to the presence of Voldemort to recognize horcruxes. This plugs the [[Plot Hole]] caused by cutting dialogue from an earlier film where Dumbledore theorized what they might be.
* [[Stock Footage]]: Scenes from the other seven are used for {{spoiler|Horcrux flashbacks and Snape's Pensieve memories}}.
* [[Tempting Fate]]: After Griphook {{spoiler|abandoned the Golden Trio}}, Ron commented that at least they still had Bogrod. Bogrod was then {{spoiler|burned to death by a dragon}}.
* [[Tranquil Fury]]:
** As {{spoiler|Professor McGonagall calmly and silently [[Curb Stomp Battle|completely overwhelms]] the Carrow siblings as well as Snape at the Great Hall, knocking out the former and forcing the latter to flee}}.
** Harry's basic resting-state throughout the movie. [[Beware the Nice Ones]] indeed.
* [[Trash the Set]]: Hogwarts gets utterly ''destroyed''.
* [[Unskilled but Strong]]: Harry is able to stand toe to toe with Voldemort by this film due to this, though without Voldemort's knowledge and experience he is left running away much of the time. This is notable because up until this point anyone Voldemort has battled has [[Curb Stomp Battle|been slaughtered]], {{spoiler|like the goblins and workers in Gringotts, or the human guards at Azkaban}}. Dumbledore, described by most characters as the most powerful wizard alive {{spoiler|(for awhile, anyway)}} is only able to fight him to a stalemate, making Harry's strength all the more remarkable.
* [[Villainous Breakdown]]: It's safe to say that this happens to Voldemort as the movie progresses {{spoiler|as his Horcruxes are destroyed}}. This results in him randomly killing {{spoiler|Pius Thicknesse}} when he asks Voldy if he's alright. Of course, the murder is completely in line for the guy. By the end of the night, though, even Bellatrix is tip-toeing around him.
* [[Voice of the Resistance]]: Sends out the message to Remus and company: "Abrupt weather report; lightning has struck! I repeat, lightning has struck!"
* [[Why Won't You Die?]]: {{spoiler|Voldemort's [[Villainous Breakdown|reaction]] after everybody finds out Harry has survived the killing curse again}}.
* [[You and What Army?]]: Neville completes his transformation into a badass when he says this to [[Pre-Ass-Kicking One-Liner|taunt the Death Eaters]] when they try to get past the protective enchantments {{spoiler|and three of them end up ''disintegrating''.}} It's all the more awesome considering Neville says this to about ''a thousand'' Death Eaters who are inches away from attacking.
* [[Word of Saint Paul]]: The end of the film suggests a romance (or at least a pair of reciprocal one-sided crushes) between Neville Longbottom and Luna Lovegood, which is a widely fanon supported couple, but not one that happens in canon. Matthew Lewis, who plays Neville, asserted the two had a brief fling, but ended up marrying their canonical partners.


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Latest revision as of 13:26, 11 August 2023

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part 1 is the first part of a two-part film adaptation (released 2010) of the 2007 novel Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows by J. K. Rowling, directed by David Yates. Like the other films in the series, it features Daniel Radcliffe as Harry Potter, with Rupert Grint and Emma Watson as Ron Weasley and Hermione Granger, as well as an All-Star Cast.

After unexpected events at the end of the previous year, Harry, Ron, and Hermione are entrusted with a quest to find and destroy Lord Voldemort's secret to immortality – the Horcruxes. It is supposed to be their final year at Hogwarts, but the collapse of the Ministry of Magic and Voldemort's rise to power prevents them from attending. The trio undergo an arduous journey with many obstacles in their path including Death Eaters, Snatchers, the mysterious Deathly Hallows, and Harry's connection with the Dark Lord's mind becoming ever stronger.

Tropes used in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part 1 include:

The tropes listed below are those specific to this film or altered from those found in the original book. Please see that page for those tropes common to both versions.

Hermione: Maybe we should just stay here, Harry...grow old.

  • Adaptation Explanation Extrication:
    • A scene explaining the Taboo (Ron mentions hearing about it in the Ministry) was cut from Deathly Hallows Part 1, so it's never explained despite its effects showing up in two plot-critical moments (the book-verbatim Death Eater attack in the café, and a new change to the Lovegood house scene where Xenophilius says Voldemort's name to summon Death Eaters), making them seem like Diabolus Ex Machina rather than a jinx.
    • The reason why Harry doesn't realize Bathilda Bagshot is possessed by Nagini in the seventh film is because he is a Parselmouth - snake-talk appears to him as human speech, unlike the gibberish it is to others. In the movie, we hear him and possessed Bathilda talk in Parseltongue from an observer's viewpoint.
  • Adaptation-Induced Plothole:
    • In book six, the Prime Minister and the Minister for Magic briefly discuss a terrorist attack by Death Eaters against an unnamed bridge that kills several Muggles. This film decides to Show, Don't Tell the attack, setting it in London's famous Millennium Bridge for added drama and Monumental Damage... forgetting that the scene is supposed to take place in mid-1997, whereas construction on the real-life Millennium Bridge began in 1998 and it wasn't opened to the public until 2000.
  • Adult Fear: Induced in Deathly Hallows Part 1 - during the fight with Nagini, Harry falls through a wall and Nagini follows him; the room at the other side? A nursery... now with a giant snake in it. Eep...
  • Berserk Button: Umbridge falsely accusing an innocent witch of lying makes Harry so angry that he attacks Umbridge right then and there, in the Ministry courtroom.

You're lying, Dolores… and you mustn't tell lies!

  • Bling Bling Bang: Voldemort contemptuously snaps off the ornate silver handle of Lucius Malfoy's wand when he 'borrows' it to use against Harry Potter. Remind you of anything?
  • Breather Episode: Deathly Hallows, Part 1 notably takes a break from frantically trying to cram as much plot as it can into the movies, instead focusing on long, atmospheric shots of the characters and scenery. It really emphasizes how the Trio are now on their own.
  • Brick Joke: After Ron leaves, Hermione ties her scarf to a tree just before she and Harry disparate. They apparate back into the same location and run into a gang of Snatchers. The leader is wearing Hermione's scarf. It is also the same Snatcher who smelled her perfume while walking through the woods.
  • Broken Heel: While rushing to aid Harry in Godric's Hollow, Hermione trips over a pile of books on the floor (ironically for her).
  • Cliff Hanger: Voldemort obtaining the Elder Wand from Dumbledore's grave.
  • Compressed Adaptation: Can't really be helped, though: there's just too much plot to stuff into a movie, even with splitting it across two films.
  • Crapsack World: Seen when the Golden Trio are wandering through Britain, with Scenery Porn of beautiful yet cold and empty fields and highways, the scorched remains of a caravan park where the Death Eaters have struck, and their dark contrails overhead.
  • Culture Equals Costume: Kingsley Shacklebolt wears a daishiki.
  • Diegetic Switch: "O'Children" starts out playing crackling on the radio, then fades into clear background music when Harry and Hermione start dancing.
  • Does This Remind You of Anything?:
    • The scene where Hermione is tortured by Bellatrix Lestrange. It happens offscreen in the book, but you get to see plenty of it in the film adaptation, and it strongly resembles rape.
    • The Nazi-esque posters and pamphlets. Another Nazi-esque bit of symbolism is Bellatrix scarring Hermione's arm with "Mudblood", which is reminiscent of the serial numbers tattooed onto the forearms of interns in concentration camps.
  • Eureka Moment: Hermione gets one while she's cutting Harry's hair.
  • Fascinating Eyebrow: Emma Watson finally managed control over her infamous overacting eyebrows to be able to just raise one to punctuate the joke of Ron trying to win Hermione over by "voting" for her idea to see Xenophilius Lovegood.
  • Faux Affably Evil: Voldemort has shades of this early in the film, during the meeting at Malfoy Manor.
  • Foreshadowing:
    • Harry thinks that there might be a Horcrux made in Godric's Hollow.
    • During the "Tale of the Three Brothers" segment the elder wand resembles Dumbledore's wand.
  • Full Name Ultimatum: "Harry Potter, you give me my wand!"
  • Gory Discretion Shot: Inverted and played straight with the discovery of Bathilda Bagshot's body. While you don't see her body, as it is being used by Nagini like a suit, the indication that Bagshot was brutally murdered is the rather large and gruesome pool of blood dripping from the ceiling of her house.
  • Green-Eyed Monster: The locket turns Ron into this by inflaming his insecurity about his relationship to Hermione, which sparks jealousy over her appearing to dote on Harry. Part of his motivation for abandoning them is seeing them coming back from the close call with the Snatchers and thinking they've been doing... something else.
  • Headphones Equal Isolation: The waitress at the diner is in the kitchen with her back turned and headphones playing music on, and doesn't hear the loud and destructive wand battle between the Trio and a pair of Death Eaters.
  • Hoist by His Own Petard: What ultimately drives Ron to destroy the locket is the soul fragment presenting itself as Harry and Hermione mocking him and then making out, the very thing it was driving him to think was happening earlier on.
  • I Have You Now, My Pretty: Scabior, the head Snatcher. After he captures Hermione, calls her "My lovely" and sniffs her hair. Actor Nick Moran told Entertainment Weekly they cut out his line: "You're going to be my favorite."
  • Intro Dump: Scene Two, when Bill Weasley introduces himself, his injury from Grayback and his impending wedding, as well as Tonks and Lupin already being married. Partly justified, in the sheer number of subplots left to die in the previous movies.
  • Medium Blending: Has an animated segment for "The Tale of the Three Brothers", the legendary story of the Deathly Hallows. It's CGI that looks like [Jim Henson]] fantasy productions like The Dark Crystal or Labyrinth.
  • Multi-Part Episode
  • Musical Spoiler: Whenever the Slytherin locket is influencing someone's behavior, there is a characteristic, high-pitched noise. The noise appears when Harry talks to Bathilda Bagshot in her home, hinting early that she is in fact Nagini.
  • Oblivious Janitor Cut: While the trio is attacked at the diner, the waiter/cook is in the kitchen, blithely listening to music on her headphones.
  • Oh Crap: When Umbridge realizes Runcorn is really Harry in disguise, just before he stupefies her.

"You're lying, Dolores... you mustn't tell lies!"

  • Perma-Stubble:
    • Harry develops some while wandering around, away from civilization, for weeks at a time. At one point, we see Hermione cutting his hair (manually, with a pair of scissors), so he may also have shaving equipment that, because of his circumstances, he can't use daily. Or maybe Daniel Radcliffe didn't want to grow his facial hair out further, but the director wanted another visual indicator of Harry's "on the run" status.
    • Lucius Malfoy. His dishevelment symbolizes how far he's fallen from Voldemort's graces.
  • Pre-Ass-Kicking One-Liner: Harry gets an absolutely glorious one just before knocking Umbridge cold and stealing the locket horcrux back.

Harry: You're lying, Dolores. And one mustn't tell lies.

  • Putting on the Reich:
    • This film features a private police force stationed in the Ministry of Magic after Voldemort takes over. They all wear red armbands. Subtle. Not to mention all of those anti-Muggleborn propaganda pamphlets.
    • Albert Runcorn's leather trench coat, when combined with his duties and demeanour, give him the appearance of a Gestapo operative.
    • Also from this film, Bellatrix carves "mudblood" into Hermione's arm, much like how the Nazis tattooed numbers onto the skin of Jews during the Holocaust. You know, just in case the allegory was still too subtle at that point.
  • Reset Button: The Burrow was completely destroyed by Death Eaters in the last film. It's completely restored in this one.
  • Scare Chord: The post-Bathilda Nagini coming from downstairs after being 'killed'.
  • Schrödinger's Cast: Peter Pettigrew's death is omitted from this film. He doesn't return in Part 2, and it's never mentioned if he dies. Also a case of Karma Houdini.
  • Shirtless Scene: Harry (several times over) during the clothes-changing in the "everyone Polyjuices into Harry" scene, and when he strips down to jump into the pond to get the sword. Ron also has one right after the trio escapes from the Ministry, but it flies straight into Fan Disservice when we see that his shoulder's laid open to the bone.
  • Shoo the Dog: At the start of the film, before the crew are about to fly off, Harry lets Hedwig go. She comes back and attacks one of the Death Eaters chasing Harry during the Battle For Little Whinging, and ends up taking a Killing Curse.
  • Took a Level in Badass: Ron takes a small but noticeable level between Half-Blood Prince and Deathly Hallows - Part 1, possibly in response to some fans criticising how he was made into a bit too much of a comic relief in the previous six movies. In Hallows he becomes a more mature and reliable sidekick, and some of his greatest moments in the last two movies even have him acting more confident and determined than in the books. After destroying the locket in the book, Ron is understandably upset and is comforted by Harry, while in the film he's rather upbeat about it, and casually quips that there are now "only three to go!"
  • What Happened to the Mouse?: Wormtail's death is cut from this film, but Wormtail doesn't appear at all in Part 2. Timothy Spall was originally intended to reprise the role in Part 2, suggesting that he was intended to be killed off anyway, but his part ended up being cut.
    • Some believe Dobby's attack killed him, or that he is among those killed by Voldemort at the beginning of Part 2 after the Gringotts scene.
  • Zip Me Up: Ginny to Harry.