Tuesday, May 6, 2014

“Harry Potter is about confronting fears, finding inner strength and doing what is right in the face of adversity. Twilight is about how important it is to have a boyfriend” –Stephen King

Ever since the Twilight exploded around 2007 and 2008, Harry Potter and the twilight series have constantly been compared and contrasted with each other before any other series. Maybe it was the fact that they both had to do with imaginary creatures such as vampires and werewolves, or maybe it had to do with how both of the series were very popular among the same demographic of people. But nonetheless, people who loved Harry Potter seemed to hate Twilight, and vice versa. Even worse, people who loved Harry Potter seemed to hate the people that loved Twilight. There was a lot of hate being passed around during that time. But, using the above Stephen Hawking quote as evidence,  I personally cannot stand Twilight. Not because of the people that like Twilight, but because of the messages that it puts across. And also due to the fact that it has been pounded into my head since the moment that it became popular.
When Ron left Hermione while they were looking for the rest of Voldemort's horcruxes, there was no way in hell that Hermione was going to sit around and mope in such a dire situation. When Bella was put in the same situation in Twilight, she was distraught, left in this great depression that swam inside her. The fact that she was so distraught over a guy is NOT a good message for girls, especially young girls, to have put in front of them. It teaches them that having a guy is the most important thing in the world, that without a guy you'll be shrunk down to nothing, without a guy, you will be sad all the time. That isn't true, and girls shouldn't think that that's true. They should have the message that losing a guy isn't a fantastic thing, and can make you sad, but that you are capable of getting back up and fighting. Just like Hermione did.
And can we just talk about how much Robert Pattinson, the actor who played Edward in the twilight series, absolutely hates the Twilight series with a burning passion. The following pictures kind of say it all.



image





More importantly however, Robert Pattinson played Cedric Diggory in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, and he still talks about how much he loved it. Even though it was almost ten freaking years ago. (How old does that make you feel?)
I feel like if anyone has the authority to officially decide which series is better, in any circumstances, it would be an actor who has portrayed in both series, just like Robert Pattinson has. And if he likes Harry Potter better, I suppose that means that Harry Potter is better than Twilight, but I'm not biased or anything.
Until next time, Potterheads!

Tuesday, April 8, 2014

"'Trevor!' cried Neville blissfully, holding out his hands," - Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone

One of the most severely underestimated characters in the Harry Potter series, in my opinion, is Neville Longbottom. He was constantly an awkward, passive, and victimized character, when in reality, I think that he was one of the best characters in the series. He grew into a very distinguished man throughout the series, and I love him for that.
Once I started being an active member of the Harry Potter fandom, I did a lot of research. One of the things that I found the most shocking (long before I read the seventh book) was that Neville could have been the chosen one. In the prophecy, the Chosen one was described as a boy born in the end of July, which described Harry, but could have described Neville as well. He did end up destroying Voldemort by killing the last Horcrux, so does that mean that Neville really was the Chosen One? It's something that I've been trying to figure out since I found out that Neville being the Chosen One was even an option. 
I have always thought that Neville could be such an inspiration to so many people. You were really awkward as a kid? You were bullied all throughout school? Well, Neville Longbottom survived all of that, and ended up saving the wizarding and Muggle worlds, so maybe you could do something very significant with your life too! I personally think that is a perfect end to Neville's story in the books. 
Until next time, Potterheads!

Monday, February 3, 2014

"J.K. Rowling, author of the Harry Potter series, is a witch an in league with Lucifer himself." - Some Insane Lunatic Who I Believe to Be In League With Lucifer Himself

Let us just have a little discussion here about how absolutely insane and terrifying it as that people actually think that Harry Potter is a book about evil.
The title of this blog was a quote taken from the website www.godhatesgoths.com/godhatesharrypotter (the official site for parents against goths, in case you were wondering). The author goes on to say that J.K. Rowling is "straight from the pits of Hell," that the Harry Potter books are "Satanic," and that it encourages the readers to work with "actual demon spirits."
Take a step back and reevaluate your life, please.
Let's break this down really fast here. One of their arguments is that names such as Hedwig, Cliodna, Nicholas Flamel, and Agrippa are names of actual witches and wizards. Well, gee, I wonder why this book about witches and wizards uses that names of actual wizards and wizards. Oh, maybe it's because the books are about witches and wizards.
This next argument might just be my favorite, because it is so absurd that is makes me laugh until I cry. This article states, AND I QUOTE THAT "DUMBLEDORE WAS A FAGGOT PEDOPHILE, AND WAS GROOMING HARRY POTTER FOR HOMOSEXUAL SEX."
I, in the most literal sense of the phrase, can not even.
Just reading articles like this, and I assure you that there are many of them, makes my blood absolutely boil. Why would people accuse a simple book about love, friendship, family, and the defeat of evil as being evil itself. Yes, there is evil in the Harry Potter series. I can think of infinite things that Voldemort did that were unforgivable. But the only people that were following Voldemort were the people that Harry and his friends were working hard to defeat. Anyone's argument is invalid. Harry Potter is not a book about evil. It is a book about overcoming evil.
And also, I cannot think of one single time that Dumbledore was 'grooming' Harry for homosexual sex. "Hey, Harry, can you please help me defeat the most evil wizard of this time? Yeah, and also, while you're at it, take your pants off." No. That never one happened.
So I don't rant on and on for hours, I will end this post here. I promise that I will write more about this topic.
Until next time Potterheads!

UPDATE: If you click 'Enter this Site as a Goth' on the homepage of www.godhatesgoths.com, the welcome letter is started as "Dear Loser." So I think that all credibility if pretty much wiped off of this site's map.

UPDATE AGAIN: This site is also associated with 'God Hate Retards' and 'God Hates Women' and all four of the sites are run by a Reverend, so this is just fantastic.

"Ah, music ... a magic far beyond all we do here," - Albus Dumbledore ... again

Hello, fellow Potterheads! 
Today I would love to talk about the score in the Harry Potter movies. I know I have published a post about this topic before, but I can not stress enough to you all how much the score to Harry Potter is one of the most flawless things going on in my life right now.
For me, my Harry Potter obsession has always come in waves. Sometimes I'll think, 'wow, how was I so addicted to a series,' or, 'oh my god, I was one of those people." then the next day I' reading all the books and playing the music on repeat while watching the movies and drinking tea out of my /harry Potter mug. And the happiness that I get on those overly obsessed Potterhead days outweighs the day filled with the embarrassment that I get when I think about how obsessed I am. I am prous to be a Harry Potter fangirl, and there is nothing I can do about it.
I am going through one of my overobsessed fangirl waves at the moment (I read the first book last night within two hours) and I am currently listening to the soundtrack of the first movie on repeat. And, let's be honest here, when you are as obsessed with something as I am with Harry Potter, you can get pretty emotional. For instance, whenever I hear Leaving Hogwarts I bawl my little eyes out. But when I hear Hedwig's Theme, my sad tears suddenly turn into happy tears. The music from Harry Potter can flip my attitude upside down with one note. Props to you, John Williams. 
I can't be the only person on the planet that thinks this way about the Harry Potter scores. When you can envision a scene from the movies or books from just hearing the song that was played in the background, you know that your love (obsession) with that series is powerful. And that you've watched the movies, read the books, and listened to the music far to many times to still be considered a mentally healthy person. So I invite you all to, if you haven't done so recently or ever, grab one of the Harry Potter books, listen to one of the Harry Potter scores scores, and drink some really good tea out of your best Harry Potter mug, and wallow in all that is the happiness of our Harry Potter universe.
Until next time!

Monday, January 20, 2014

"Mummy, have you seen my jumper?" - Ginny Weasley

Here it is, as promised, more Ginny.
So what seems entirely too unrealistic to me is that fact that Ginny was completely in love with Harry when she was a young girl. She was obsessed with him. She was a fangirl. It was a celebrity crush. How likely is it, really, that she actually ends up marrying him and having three kids with him? It is completely unrealistic in every way shape and form. It would never happen in real life.
Let us take a journey back to the first time that Ginny actually gets to meet Harry: when he unexpectedly shows up at the Burrow when Fred, George, and Ron go to get him from the Dursley's. She is looking for her jumper, and doesn't know that Harry is there, and when she sees him, she does that exact same thing that I would do if Tom Felton was sitting in my living room and I didn't know about it. She freaked out, started majorly blushing, and ran away. She was so in love with him, that being faced with actually having to talk with him was too much for her to handle. It seems way too impossible for her to end up spending the rest of her life with him, am I wrong?
I really don't think that they should have ended up together, to be completely honest. It seems to perfect to fit the Harry Potter series. I think that they both should have ended up with someone that wasn't really known in the series. Someone that wasn't just a teen romance. Someone new that led to more of a plot. It just seems like a better option to me, but I am not JK Rowling, and the series is still perfect anyways.
Until next time, fellow Potterheads!

"There he is, Mom! There he is, look!" - Ginny Weasley

Hello, fellow Potterheads!
Today I am going to talk about Ginny, both in the books and in the movies.
As I'm sure you have realized by now, I am fully convinced that the book characters and the movie characters are completely different. I love Harry in the books, but hate him in the movies, while I hate Draco in the books, but absolutely adore him in the movies. And that isn't me being rude to either the directors of the movie, or to JK Rowling for writing the books. It's just me interpreting the plotline as I see it.
So when it comes to Ginny, I love her in the books. She seems like such a strong character, and such an amazing witch! She was one of the most powerful witches of her time, right up there with Hermione. She just seemed like she was a really chill girl, and her romance with Harry was amazing to read about.
But in the movies, all of that Ginny magic seemed to fall extremely flat. It was dull. It was boring. It is the part of the movie that I would most likely sleep through. There was so much potential in Ginny for a book to movie interpretation, but it wasn't shown, and I honestly do believe that it is partially because of how romanticized Cho and Harry were, and I think that it was partially because of how the directors wanted the films to be.
In the movies, Cho and Harry were so romanticized, it was almost ridiculous, while Ginny and Harry kind of appeared out of the blue. If someone hadn't read the books and just saw the movies, they would have probably seen Ginny and Harry as a complete shock. He doesn't end up with Cho? Or maybe Hermione? Nope, all of a sudden, Ginny is Harry's everything. It's like the directors completely swapped Harry and Cho's awkward relationship and made the awkward relationship happen with Harry and Ginny instead. Then made the most intimate relationship between Harry and Cho, when it was completely supposed to happen with Harry and Ginny. It is completely backwards.
I'll probably talk more about Ginny in my next post, because I have a lot of mixed feeling about her. Until next time, Potterheads!

Sunday, January 12, 2014

"Draco Malfoy, The Amazing, Bouncing Ferret." - Ron Weasley

Hello, fellow Potterheads!
Something that has always bothered me about the Harry Potter fandom, is that Ron is commonly viewed as a comic relief character. I will never think that he is solely in the series to be a comic relief. He is so much more than that in my eyes. He killed a horcrux at the same time that he was watching his greatest fear: the girl he was head over heels in love with choosing his best friend instead of him. It was something that involved a great deal of bravery, and absolutely no comedy whatsoever. He didn't crack a joke while he was doing that, and I don't think anyone was laughing at that scene in the theater.
It also really bothers me that people don't think that Ron "deserved" Hermione.
...
No.
Remember, kids, women aren't objects that can be stolen or owned. I think that people forget that way too often. Most of the time, the people who claim that Ron wasn't "deserving" of Hermione are the same people that say that James wasn't "deserving" of Lily.
If these strong and independent women didn't want to marry who they did, they wouldn't have said yes to the marriage proposal. I don't think either Hermione or Lily would have been with someone they didn't think was good for them.
Unless it was in an over dramatic fanfiction.
Until next time, Potterheads!