Opentopia Directory Encyclopedia Tools

Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (film)

Encyclopedia : H : HA : HAR : Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (film)


Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire is the fourth film in the popular Harry Potter series, begun with the novel by J.K. Rowling. It was directed by Mike Newell and was released on November 18, 2005. It is rated PG-13 for sequences of fantasy violence and frightening images in the US, 12A for cinema and 12 on DVD in the UK and M in Australia. This is the first Harry Potter film to receive a "PG-13" or equivalent rating, the preceding films having been rated PG or one of its international equivalents.

The film concerns Harry Potter's fourth year at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. Hogwarts has been selected to hold the recently returning wizard competition known as the Triwizard Tournament. Though Harry does not apply, the Goblet of Fire mysteriously selects him as a second representative of Hogwarts in the tournament.

Three days after its release, the film had grossed approximately USD102 million at the North American box office, the highest first-week tally for a Harry Potter film, and enjoyed an immensely successful run at the box office, earning over $892 million worldwide, making it the highest grossing film of 2005 worldwide and the 8th highest grossing worldwide film of all time. It is currently the second highest grossing Harry Potter film, behind Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone.

The film was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Art Direction, but lost to Memoirs of a Geisha while the DVD set the Guinness World Record for being the fastest selling DVD of all time.

Synopsis

The fourth year of Hogwarts rolls around after an attack on the 422nd Quidditch World Cup by Death Eaters.

Harry struggles to maintain hold of his wand during the Priori Incantatem.
Enlarge
Harry struggles to maintain hold of his wand during the Priori Incantatem.
Hogwarts will be hosting the Triwizard Tournament, a traditional tournament which pits three schools against each other. When Beuxbatons and Durmstrang, the rival schools, arrive, the rules are announced. All seventh years interested must insert their name into the Goblet of Fire, and those chosen will be the Champions of their respective school. But Harry, a fourth year, has his name appear out of the Goblet of Fire, even though Harry never entered and isn't even allowed to. Harry soon finds himself thrown into a brutal test of strength and mind only to ultimately find himself in the middle of Lord Voldemort's trap as he plans to return. Now Harry has to face the greatest challenge yet: defeat a revived Lord Voldemort.

Cast

Teaser poster for Goblet of Fire
Enlarge
Teaser poster for Goblet of Fire

Role Actor
Harry Potter Daniel Radcliffe
Ron Weasley Rupert Grint
Hermione Granger Emma Watson
Lord Voldemort Ralph Fiennes
Albus Dumbledore Michael Gambon
Severus Snape Alan Rickman
Rubeus Hagrid Robbie Coltrane
Alastor "Mad-Eye" Moody Brendan Gleeson
Minerva McGonagall Dame Maggie Smith
Rita Skeeter Miranda Richardson
Sirius Black Gary Oldman
Cedric Diggory Robert Pattinson
Viktor Krum Stanislav Ianevski
Fleur Delacour Clémence Poésy
Cho Chang Katie Leung
Cornelius Fudge Robert Hardy
Parvati Patil Shefali Chowdhury
Padma Patil Afshan Azad
Ginny Weasley Bonnie Wright
Peter Pettigrew Timothy Spall
Draco Malfoy Tom Felton
Lucius Malfoy Jason Isaacs
Neville Longbottom Matthew Lewis
Olympe Maxime Frances de la Tour
Igor Karkaroff Predrag Bjelac
Karkaroff's Aide Tolga Safer
Arthur Weasley Mark Williams
Fred Weasley James Phelps
George Weasley Oliver Phelps
Barty Crouch Roger Lloyd-Pack
Barty Crouch Jr. David Tennant
Moaning Myrtle Shirley Henderson
Amos Diggory Jeff Rawle
Argus Filch David Bradley
James Potter Adrian Rawlins
Lily Potter Geraldine Somerville
Frank Bryce Eric Sykes
The Weird Sisters band
Lead Singer Jarvis Cocker
Drummer Phil Selway
Lead guitar Jonny Greenwood
Bass Guitar Steve Mackey
Rhythm Guitar Jason Buckle
Keyboards Steve Claydon

Locations

The film was mainly shot in Leavesden Film Studios. Other locations used in filming are as follows:

Soundtrack

The soundtrack to this film was composed and scored by Patrick Doyle1. The track listing is as follows:

  1. The Story Continues
  2. Frank Dies
  3. The Quidditch World Cup
  4. The Dark Mark
  5. Foreign Visitors Arrive
  6. The Goblet Of Fire
  7. Rita Skeeter
  8. Sirius Fires
  9. Harry Sees Dragons
  10. Golden Egg
  11. Neville's Waltz
  12. Harry in Winter
  13. Potter Waltz
  14. Underwater Secrets
  15. The Black Lake
  16. Hogwart's March
  17. The Maze
  18. Voldemort
  19. Death of Cedric
  20. Another Year Ends
  21. Hogwart's Hymn
  22. Do The Hippogriff2
  23. This Is The Night2
  24. Magic Works2
Note 1: The Harry Potter themes from the first three films were composed by John Williams. Patrick Doyle incorporated these themes into this soundtrack, usually in a slightly altered form. The change of composer caused some minor upset; John Williams was simply too busy to score this film.
Note 2: Tracks 22-24 Not composed by Patrick Doyle

Alterations from the book and previous films

The layout of Hogwarts Castle and its surrounding landscape has changed in each film adaptation. The following are the new changes made to Hogwarts Castle in the Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire film adaptation.

Weird Sisters lawsuit

In the runup to the movie, a Canadian folk group called the Wyrd Sisters filed a US$40-million lawsuit against Warner Brothers, the North American distributor of the film, Jarvis Cocker from Pulp, and Jonny Greenwood and Phil Selway of Radiohead for the use of their group's name. In the book, the band is called the "Weird Sisters" after the witches in Shakespeare's Macbeth but was reportedly renamed the "Wyrd Sisters" for the film. Before the film was released, however, Warner Brothers removed all references to either name for the band. Nevertheless, the Wyrd Sisters moved for an injunction in a Canadian court to prevent distribution of the film in Canada. This motion was dismissed by an Ontario judge.

Reaction

The film was received very positively by critics, garnering an 89% rating at Rotten Tomatoes. The film was praised for being smarter and much wittier than its predecessors, and the young actors were credited with some of the most human performances in all of the movies so far. New cast members who were greeted with particular praise included Ralph Fiennes for his portrayal of Lord Voldemort, Brendan Gleeson as Mad-Eye Moody, and Miranda Richardson as Rita Skeeter.

Negative criticisms of the movie included that its story was too clunky, jerky and confusing (because it was an abridgement of a much longer novel), that Ralph Fiennes was not scary enough and that Alan Rickman, Gary Oldman, Jason Isaacs, Miranda Richardson and Maggie Smith did not get enough screen time. Also, some deemed Michael Gambon's aggressive portrayal of Albus Dumbledore as being too similar to Gandalf the Grey. The film has also been criticised for leaving out too much of the source material, specifically those parts of the story that set-up events that occur later in the series. These negative criticisms are similar to those made about the previous film.

Academy Awards

Award Person
Nominated:
Best Art Direction, lost to ''Memoirs of a Geisha Stuart Craig
Stephanie McMillan

Box office

After an opening day of $40m at the North American box office, Goblet of Fire enjoyed a successful run at the box office, running for 20 weeks in theaters and closing on April 6, 2006. The film set numerous records including the highest non-May opening weekend in the US and the most successful opening ever in the UK, earning £14.9m in its opening weekend. Goblet of Fire then drew $102.7 million from 3,858 locations its opening weekend at the North American box office, setting a new opening high for the franchise and selling about as many tickets as the first movie, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, did in its opening weekend. The debut marked the fifth $100 million weekend in history, behind Spider-Man's $114.8 million, ''s $108.4 million, Shrek 2's $108 million and ''s $102.8 million.

As of April 6, 2006, Goblet of Fire has earned $892.2 million worldwide according to Boxofficemojo, making it not only the highest grossing international and worldwide release of 2005, but one of the few films to have ever passed $600 million in international box office receipts. It has joined four other titles that have passed the $600 million mark, including Titanic, Return of the King, and the first two Harry Potter films. Its worldwide total includes $290 million from the U.S. and Canada.

The film was also released in IMAX theaters and grossed a total of $20,033,758 million worldwide for a cumulative per screen average of $188,998 thus setting a new record and a new milestone for a digitally re-mastered 2D IMAX release (Source: [YahooFinance]).

In January 2006, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire surpassed the box office takings of Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets, to become the eighth-highest grossing film of all time, and the second-highest grossing film in the Harry Potter series so far, behind Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone.

The film ranks third in the North American box office (domestic) behind ' and ' for 2005 though both films rank lower than Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire in worldwide terms.[link]

DVD

DVD cover art for Two-Disc Special Edition.
Enlarge
DVD cover art for Two-Disc Special Edition.

The film was released on DVD in North America on March 7 2006. It was available in one- and two-disc editions, as well as part of an 8-disc boxset that includes all four films to date.[link] The bonus disc features three interactive games, as well as seven behind the scenes featurettes. The film was also released in UMD format for PSP.

Wal-Mart had a special bonus disc available for purchase alongside the single-disc editions that features extra features and a sample of the Harry Potter edition of the Scene It? DVD game.

On its first day of release in North America, over 5 million copies were sold, recording a franchise high for first-day sales. Within its first week it sold over a total of 9 million units of combined sales of both the widescreen and full screen versions of the DVD.[link]

The UK edition was released on DVD on March 20 2006 and became the fastest selling UK DVD ever, selling six copies per second on its first day of release. According to the Official Charts Company, the DVD sold 1.4 million copies in its first week alone. It is also available in a two-disc edition with special features similar to the North American two-disc edition.[link], [link]

The DVD currently holds the Guinness World Record for being the fastest selling DVD of all time. The achievement will be added to the 2007 edition of The Guinness World Records book which will be released this coming August and will include a picture of the award being presented at Leavesden Studios in April. [link]

[Future Shop] has an exclusive promotion including a holographic cover for the two-disc edition.

[Warner Home Video] announced the HD DVD edition of Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, was to be released on April 11 2006[link]; however, due to the delayed release of Toshiba's HD-DVD player, the HD DVD edition of Goblet of Fire was pushed back to April 18 2006 [link].

The Chinese DVD edition was released 2 weeks before the North American release as an effort to combat DVD piracy in the country of China. The DVD was sold at a low price of $2.73 USD.

More DVD release dates

[link]

Trivia

References

External links

Movie stills

Movie sites

Reviews

Trailers

J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series
Philosopher's Stone book film game
Chamber of Secrets book film game
Prisoner of Azkaban book film game
Goblet of Fire book film game
Order of the Phoenix book film)
Half-Blood Prince book film)
Unnamed seventh book book)
Other books Other games
Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them
Quidditch Through the Ages

CharactersPlacesTranslationsFandom – Related articles

  1. redirect

 


From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.

Search Titles
0123456789
ABCDEFGHIJ
KLMNOPQRST
UVWXYZ?

E-mail this article to:

Personal Message: