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The biggest example of this, for me, comes from what’s actually (and incorrectly) the lowest-rated Harry Potter movie on Rotten Tomatoes: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 1, which, as a whole, is an installment that’s only grown on me over time (and I now think it’s underrated). Harry’s dance with Hermione in this movie is a scene that I didn’t like when I watched it in theaters back in 2010. Following Ron’s dramatic departure from the Horcrux hunt, as the pair showed off their moves in a tent to Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds’ “O Children,” I cringed. It looked awkward, it felt awkward, and, outrageously, it wasn’t even in the novel (something that aggravated me as an insufferable book purist).
In the years since, having grown up at least a little bit (maybe), while it still divides fans, it’s a scene that’s become one of my very favorites in the entire franchise. I love Harry and Hermione’s friendship, and there actually aren’t that many scenes where it’s just the two of them, so allowing for a sweet bonding sequence between the pair is really great to have (there’s another in The Half-Blood Prince, where she cries on Harry after seeing Ron with Lavender Brown, that this feels like a neat follow-up to). It’s a rare tender moment, one that allows them to be free and childlike at their lowest, darkest point, showcasing the resiliency of youth and the power of friendship, yet also displays a level of emotional maturity the series hadn’t really reached before then.








