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After Dan and I got home from seeing The Order of the Phoenix, I decided to reread volumes 5 and 6 before starting in on 7. Here I am, still mired in 5, so Dan's reading our copy of 7 first, under strict instructions to say nothing at all about it. I don't want to hear even one sentence in advance of reading it for myself.

(The current Harry Potter film is the best so far, which surprised me, because that book in the series was my least favorite on first reading. It's that the Hollywood-kid-movie sentimentality that marred the early films is finally gone. It always baffled me when the various directors lapsed into mawkishness, since the story doesn't need it. So hooray for David Yates, the first director in the bunch who really got it right.)

I'm zipping past all the Rowling-related posts on lj as fast as I can. Please, don't tell me a thing.

And yet, some of the non-spoiler comments on the book have caught my eye.

[livejournal.com profile] elphaba_of_oz says, There are many small moments of comfort in the book.

And I think that's one of the main virtues in the previous volumes that makes it possible for readers to go on, even very young readers, despite the relentlessly increasing bleakness. It's also one of the main virtues I think of when I see writing advice about tension. Tension is the big fetish these days, and as usual, fetishization is an indication that people have stopped thinking. Is your book not yet sold? That can only be because there's not enough tension in it. Do you have even one moment when the tension lets up? Expunge that moment, quick!

Right.

Well.

There's nothing on earth more boring to watch than a too-long car chase scene. And there's nothing on earth more tedious to read than a book whose primary virtue is tension. I say that having read literally thousands of freshman composition papers, so I know what boring looks like. There are fantasy series for adult readers that have lost me, after four or five volumes of avid reading, because the author's attempts to raise the stakes resulted in a string of calamities that turned just plain monotonous. If the outcome of every step for the protagonist is increasingly tense misery and failure no matter what s/he tries to do, fast pacing isn't going to be enough to restore suspense.

Books in which terrible things happen need to be leavened by small moments of comfort. Anybody who wants to know why J.K. Rowling's readers have been willing to follow her across thousands of pages from that first children's book about an 11-year-old all the way to the Deathly Hallows needs look no further than that.

Date: 2007-07-23 07:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kistha.livejournal.com
Interesting that you liked tOotP movie and thought it was the best of the bunch. I really didn't like it. It was too jerky, poorly plotted and banal even though it was very, very pretty. 3 is still the worst movie out there of the set so far, IMO.

I loved Luna, Umbridge was spot on and obviously someone's vision for the movie was "falling breaking glass".

About to start book 7 as soon as I finish LJ.

Date: 2007-07-24 04:29 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dr-pretentious.livejournal.com
I always wonder how the movies work for people who haven't read the books. I can sit there and fill in the gaps, but are the gaps problematic for non-Potter-readers.

I liked a lot of things about 3, but there's that scene in the infirmary when the director gets a cheap laugh by having Dumbledore thumping on an the cast on an injured student's broken limb. It's such a terribly false note that it breaks the suspension of disbelief for every second of the remaining running time. Instead of being immersed in the film's climax, I'm sitting there seething about how the director clearly has no idea who the characters are, if he thinks Dumbledore would callously, repeatedly cause major physical pain to a child who was right there in front of him, either out of cluelessness or in order to get a laugh.

I did like the way Cuaron used the Whomping Willow to show the passing of the seasons, though.

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