


The incident is obscured because it is seen through a dirty window, however the viewer does hear the brutality of the multiple strikes and see the blood that splatters on the glass pane as a result. The other depicts a person attacked by a snake. One shows a man walking through a room full of dead bodies, whose bare feet get covered in their blood.

While most of these portrayals (bloody wounds, injuries, implied deaths and corpses) are not very explicit, there are two scenes that are. Of course these battles between good and evil forces include magical weapons use, hand-to-hand conflict, fire-breathing creatures, explosions and falls from great heights. Using this powerful tool, he and his followers descend on Hogwarts School prepared to kill as many people as necessary (and perhaps a few more just for their sadistic nature’s sake) to root out and dispose of Harry Potter.Īs the death toll mounts, the young wizard comes to understand that he alone has the ability to stop the senseless carnage and keep Voldemort from gaining immortality-but to do so will require the ultimate sacrifice. Unfortunately, Voldemort gets possession of the Elder Wand before Harry’s scavenger hunt is complete. They must find and destroy all that remain of these seven items before the Dark Lord gets his hands on the three Deathly Hallows (the Elder Wand, the Invisibility Cloak and the Resurrection Stone), which will make him the master of death, and therefore impossible to destroy. Harry, Hermione and Ron (Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson and Rupert Grint) are still searching for the missing horcruxes into which Voldemort (Ralph Fiennes) divested his soul. (If this doesn’t describe you, you may want to brush up on the previous films so you don’t feel at a complete loss when the story continues from where it left off in November 2010.) They assume you are already familiar with the novels so they don’t need to fill in all the plot details, and that in preparation for this cinematic event you have recently watched the past movies (especially Deathly Hallows - Part 1), which you undoubtedly have sitting on your shelf at home. Screenwriters for Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part 2 have penned the script for just these sorts of viewers.
