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A Harry Potter Series is Too Much, Too Soon
Perhaps if more time had passed between adaptations, or if there was radically different take for the HBO Harry Potter, we wouldn’t be having this discussion. However, most of the casting announcements and leaked behind-the-scenes photos depict a rather straightforward translation of the first novel, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, on screen. Just like the movies, which not only were box office successes, but also were critically acclaimed over the decade they released in theaters. Even with such talented creatives helming the series, Succession’s Francesca Gardiner is showrunning while Game of Thrones‘s Mark Mylod directs, without some radically different perspective on how Harry’s story, it will be hard for the show to meaningfully distinguish itself from the films that precede it.

A major part of the problem is how fresh the films and the larger franchise are in the collective consciousness. The last Harry Potter film, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 premiered in 2011 and the majority of leading actors from the movies are working and remain in the zeitgeist today. Furthermore, the spinoff trilogy, Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them, concluded not three years ago, and the follow-up play The Cursed Child is currently playing in five major cities along with a North American tour. Harry Potter is as ubiquitous as ever. Perhaps if Warner Brothers had waited another ten to twenty years, a Harry Potter remake would be embraced rather than met with questions. This is only compounded by the fact that we now live in a world of easily accessible physical media and streaming. Warner Brothers hasn’t given us a chance to forget about Harry Potter, so there’s no thrill or real need to rediscover him.
By contrast, the film A Star is Born has been remade three times. However each incarnation allowed for twenty years to pass, which meant a new take on the classic tale and a new voice of generation to lead it. One of the things the Harry Potter movies did best was mix the best of character actors from the United Kingdom with a compelling group of fresh faces. Despite legends like John Lithgow, Janet McTeer, and Nick Frost joining the cast of the Harry Potter series, nothing about the new cast of actors feels distinctive or exciting from the first class of performers to play the now iconic characters that populate Harry’s world.
The one aspect the series will have to lean into and nail is its difference in medium. The fact that the show will have anywhere from six to ten hours to retell each novel instead of the two and a half afforded in a feature film seems to be the only notable draw HBO’s Harry Potter has. And yes, it will certainly be exciting for more of the supporting characters from the books to be explored on screen, especially given the caliber of talent the show has secured.









