• B
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone | 13210__potter_l
HOCUS FOCUS Radcliffe, Grint, and Emma Watson in the rote ''Sorcerer's Stone''
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone: Peter Mountain

Credits

Release Date: Nov 16, 2001; Rated: PG; Genres: Action/Adventure, Fantasy; With: Robbie Coltrane, Rupert Grint, Richard Harris, Daniel Radcliffe and Alan Rickman...; Distributor: Warner Bros.

EW's Complete Coverage

Harry Potter

We expected great things from you, Harry Potter. J.K. Rowling's boy wizard, who keeps nations of readers young and old under his spell, should have come to sweet life in his feature-film debut. Sadly, his on-screen adventures are woefully inert, sucked dry of delight. Bound by the page rather than inspired by it, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone is a drag. Director Chris Columbus (''Mrs. Doubtfire'') might draw courage from Peter Jackson, who not only paid great respect to J.R.R. Tolkien's ''The Lord of the Rings'' but responded to it as well. Here, Columbus does such a rote retelling of book 1 that his film feels like a slick supplement; it hits all the story's high points -- a Quidditch game here, the twirl of an invisibility cloak there -- without ever relaxing into real storytelling. If Columbus bows down before the book, Daniel Radcliffe is scared stiff, literally. His Harry is rigid: a stoic, capable young man that one need not waste time worrying about. Root instead for vulnerable Ron Weasley (played by the puffy-eyed Rupert Grint), anxious and amazed by the wand in his hand. Ron's boyish stabs of courage during a wicked game of wizard chess are heartbreaking. Such a sidekick deserves better from his hero. We all do.


 

Add Your Comments

The rules: Keep it clean, and stay on the subject or we might delete your comment. If you see inappropriate language, e-mail us. You must have javascript enabled to submit a comment.
--
Change/Edit your grade
characters remaining