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Still hasn’t got *His Nose* back after his *first* death - because it’s not his *original* body : “I don’t care what you say; you *lose* something when you die - *even Superman.* maybe not His Mind; perhaps His Soul.”
It would be cool to see him as a different doctor that took the face of the 3rd, kinda like capaldi and the roman guy and John from torchwood, and also the 14th doctor being a different doctor but looking like the 10th
I always liked this part of the book. Especially when they describe carrying his body to an empty room or empty hallway next to the dining hall. It's been years but I recall reading how they described his body as just a normal human.
The attempt to censor the gruesome images of the dead bodies of Lestrange and Riddle allowed them to have, in the movie, the only unhuman deaths. EXACTLY the opposite of what the books intended (and explicitly narrated in Voldemort's case).
Having a body for everybody to see is going to help prevent conspiracy theories that he survived. Think of real world conspiracy theories around OBL and AH. Come to think of it, did anyone in the movies actually see Voldamort die, other than Harry?
I would've added a bunch of the characters surrounding Voldemort's broken and dying body. As he lay there unable to talk and move in his final seconds of life, he wouldve seen the looks of contempt and possibly even pity they all had for him at the moment showing that after all of the crap he put everyone through for decades, he was just a human like the rest of them.
After rereading this I'm more and more disappointed with this. Where are the people around them? Where is the intense light of the Sunrise falling on them a Moment before the spells? Where is the first Reaction of all others when Voldemort is dead? I could live with him turning to Ash if I got all that.
3 death scenes that I didn't like: 1) *Voldemort's*: If he just dropped dead like in the book, it would have been better, showing the people who feared him that he was just a man. 2) *Bellatrix's*: Her popping like a balloon looked dumb to me. If she was thrown into a wall and died, it would have been better. If they wanted her to pop, they could have made her insides splashed around like Victoria Neuman popping someone. 3) *Nagini's*: If after Neville slices her like ham, her remaining body would have wiggled like a lizard's tail before giving up the ghost, it would have given me paramount satisfaction.
Much like what George did with Star Wars, some of these changes aren't that bad, where as some of them take you out of the film. But at the end of the day they are Georges films, so who are we to judge what he decides to with his own characters, worlds, and ideas.
Really emphasises the fact that despite all his attempts at becoming immortal, despite all his power, Voldemort died faster than the average british lifespan
The entire ending was terrible. Almost as if the writers never read the book. This ending would have made so much more sense, solidifying the fact that Voldemort was just a man.
It was actually even better when he died in front of all the students in the book.. i always imagine that scene being brought to life. Though i prefer this location of his death rather than the great hall
George Lucas's changes to Star Wars make sense and help harmonize the two original trilogies ensuring that the technological differences between the two eras aren't jarring.
I'd like to see THE FOUR DOCTORS using clips from the shows 15th anniversary in 1978. When the Missing Adventures novels were first published in the mid 90's when I was a kid, I tried writing it myself as a sequel to Planet of the Spiders. It involved Sarah Jane Smith becoming possessed by the great one queen spider & contacting the Doctor & Romana 1 in order to use the blue crystal to turn earth into Metebelis 4, the power from wich fragments The Doctor into his 4 Incarnations up until then & scattered through a web in time that they all had to reach the centre of to become whole again
He sort of evaporated into smoke so often throughout the series that this way also provides a more impactful visual contrast. When I saw the ending in theaters it just didn't feel distinctive enough from how he was defeated at the end of other books or when Horcruxes were destroyed.