

By the time the film ends, we learn what the powerful information was that Dumbledore was trying to get from Slughorn, and the Dark Lord’s plan shifts things drastically – forever changing Hogwarts and the situation Harry Potter finds himself in, setting everything up for the two-part finale coming in 20.ĭirected by David Yates (who directed the previous Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix), the film is certainly a step up from the last outing, with a bit more emotional drama.

While the mystery of who the “Half-Blood Prince” is occupies Potter cursorily, his friends Hermione Granger (Emma Watson) and Ron Weasley (Rupert Grint) are dealing with plenty of teenage high school romance angst, with a few different love triangles forming and hearts being broken left and right. Notations and spell modifications are all over book, which Potter uses to his advantage. In the potions class that Slughorn teaches, Potter gets an old used book which is inscribed “property of the Half-Blood Prince”. Meanwhile, headmaster Professor Dumbledore (Michael Gambon) wants Harry to use his fame and influence to gain important information from the new faculty member, Professor Slughorn (Jim Broadbent). Though he’s not really in the film at all, Voldermort’s loyal gang of Death Eaters are busy trying to work out some kind of devious plan to break into Hogwarts, with the help of Draco Malfoy (Tom Felton). Fortunately, screenwriter Steve Kloves (who wrote the first four adaptations) returns for this one, and the improvement is palpable.Īfter the events of the last film, it is now widely known that Lord Voldermort (Ralph Fiennes) has returned, and he’s after Harry Potter (Daniel Radcliffe).

After the relatively uninspiring outing that was Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, I was a little apprehensive about the next chapter in the Harry Potter series, since most of the same people who did the last film were coming back for the new one.
