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Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows Part 2 Download Reddit UPDATED

Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows Part 2 Download Reddit





Blu-ray + DVD Warner Bros. | 2011 | 130 min | Rated PG-13 | Nov xi, 2011

Video
Codec: MPEG-four AVC
Resolution: 1080p
Attribute ratio: 2.forty:1
Original aspect ratio: ii.39:1

Sound

English: DTS-HD Principal Audio 5.1 (48kHz, 24-flake)
French: Dolby Digital 5.1
Spanish: Dolby Digital 5.ane
Portuguese: Dolby Digital 5.1

English: DTS-HD Master Sound 5.1 (48kHz, 24-scrap)
French: Dolby Digital five.1
Spanish: Dolby Digital 5.1
Portuguese: Dolby Digital v.1
 (less)


Subtitles

English SDH, French, Portuguese, Spanish

English SDH, French, Portuguese, Spanish (less)


Discs
Blu-ray Disc
3-disc prepare (2 BD-fifty, 1 DVD)
DVD copy
Bonus View (PiP)
BD-Live

Digital
Digital copy included

Packaging
Slipcover in original pressing

Playback
2K Blu-ray: Region costless


Price
List price: $7.89
Amazon: $fourteen.98
New from: $iv.67 (Relieve 41%)
In stock at present

Buy Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 on Blu-ray

Moving picture rating

1631

 ratings.

98%
popularity



Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Office ii Blu-ray Review


Some other must-own Potter release materializes in glorious high definition...

Reviewed by Kenneth Chocolate-brown, November iv, 2011

Information technology had to end, and it had to end spectacularly. Later xiv years, seven unexpectedly gripping award-winning books, eight wildly successful record-breaking films, eight billion dollars at the box part, and the franchise GNP of a minor, cocky-sustaining nation, writer J. K. Rowling's burgeoning wizards and warriors deserved a big screen finale of heaven-splitting proportions, and returning director David Yates and series overmind, screenwriter Steve Kloves, were more than happy to oblige. Death, betrayal and magic. Heartbreak, desperation and darkness. Selflessness, cede and redemption. Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 has information technology all. The risky, frequently-criticized proposition of splitting Rowling'due south 7th book into two films? Vindicated. The efforts of the many filmmakers, actors, artists and technicians who've walked through the doors of Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry? Honored. The serial' devoted fans? Thrilled. Rowling's readers? Satisfied. Critics? Uncharacteristically united. It had to terminate, and it ended in style. Spectacularly, though? Most. Near.


Darkness presses in from all sides...

When last we left our faithful heroes -- Harry Potter (Daniel Radcliffe), Hermione Granger (Emma Watson) and Ron Weasley (Rupert Grint) -- the haunted and hunted young wizards were completely isolated from their teachers and friends for the first time in their lives; on the run and battling for their very existences after burying a love friend following a too-close-for-comfort come across with Death Eater Bellatrix Lestrange (Helena Bonham Carter). To its credit, The Deathly Hallows: Part 2 doesn't waste any time. It barely pauses for an opening title sequence; the theme that has so dutifully accompanied Harry Potter for eight films now offers little cheer or refuge, and even less relief or respite. Lord Voldemort (Ralph Fiennes), having seized the Elder Wand from Dumbledore's grave, turns his attending to his favorite pastime: plotting the gory demise of nemesis and beloved Hogwarts messiah, Harry Potter; Hogwarts continues to sacrifice ability to Severus Snape (Alan Rickman, stealing yet another Potter film) and Voldemort's demented Death Eaters; Snape, in turn, reflects on the events that placed Hogwarts in his hands; and Harry, Hermione and Ron prepare out to find and destroy the remaining Horcruxes and put an end to Voldemort'due south reign. Permanently. What follows is an absorbing disharmonism of the titans in which the Potter-led trio break into Gringotts banking company, brand their manner back to Hogwarts, reunite with their hush-hush brothers in arms, and take the fight to Voldemort's legions. Wands crackle, magic sizzles, dragons screech, giants topple, heroes weep, villains shriek, and gods fall.

There's a disconnect between all of the VFX wizardry and narrative power, though, slight as information technology is. Chalk information technology up to the fact that, separated from Part ane, The Deathly Hallows: Function 2 is essentially a cord of climaxes comprising one of the longest third acts Hollywood has e'er given united states of america. Or chalk information technology up to the sheer amount of plot points, characters and set pieces it has to nurture (or, on occasion, neglects to nurture). If Role one was a ho-hum-brew masterpiece of isolation, loneliness and boyish uncertainty (which it admittedly was, no matter how curt-sightedly some have dismissed it as a lesser film), Part 2 is a wands-to-the-wall actioner through and through. Oh, information technology doles out every bit many arresting character beats, tragic developments and heart-wrenching realizations as previous Potter entries, but it does then while drawing upon everything from Die Hard to Braveheart to The Matrix Revolutions (of all things). Part one may have felt equally if information technology had been cut brusque, deprived of a proper ending, but Function ii feels equally if information technology'south been trimmed downwardly and robbed of a proper outset. Thankfully, the magic of home video rectifies the disconnect somewhat, even if there are still too many tiny twists and turns that aren't given enough explanation. Wait, how did the Sword of Gryffindor... but and then how does Harry... so what do the Malfoys really... but can't Voldemort just... then Hogwarts is... is any of this answered in the books? Don't search too long and hard; some answers but aren't provided in the class of the moving picture and can but exist establish in Rowling'south text. Potterphiles who've pored over every final page won't bat an eye at the exclusions, just those weened on the screen adaptations lone will be left wishing Yates and Kloves had added some other ten or xv minutes of fabric, expositional or redundant as some of it may accept been.

Otherwise, The Deathly Hallows: Part 2 is as fitting and fantastic a franchise finale as anyone could hope for. Harry, Hermione and Ron take several bold, long-awaited steps into machismo, each in their own way, and Radcliffe, Watson and Grint come up total circle, their one time-rosy cheeks faded just their talent and performances in full blossom. Most every Hogwarts student, teacher, denizen and outcast is given his or her own moment to shine as well. Onetime favorites return, recent additions stride out of the shadows, friends and foes are stuck down and lifted up, spirits lend support, and rivalries are brought to fruition. No rock is left unturned (least of all the Resurrection Stone), no devious deed is left unpunished (so long every bit you're willing to forgive a trio of villains who walk off into the dusk), no sacrifice goes unrewarded, no downfall or revelation disappoints. (The action itself is a bit pew! pew! pew!, pew! pew! pew!, but there'due south only so much that can be washed when two armies are pointing sticks at one another.) Elsewhere, the mysteries surrounding Snape'south loyalties and motivations are finally put to rest in one of the most stunning, emotionally charged and gratifying sequences of any Harry Potter film to date. Thematically, it makes Snape the about intriguing graphic symbol in the Potterpoesy. Visually, it rivals Part 1's beautifully blithe fairy tale. Ultimately, it might but exist the finest sequence of the series; the one that will modify the way you watch the films the next fourth dimension you phase an eight-entry marathon.

With the double and triple crossing and horcruxing that littered previous Potter films all but exhausted, the story is at long final able to hone in on Harry and Voldemort's contest of wills and wiles. But instead of elevating Harry into a nigh-unstoppable force, it's Voldemort who undergoes crucial changes. Slowly stripped down to his slithery core, the Night Lord finds himself on a crash class with mortality, a descent Fiennes plays with a sense of sweaty unease and weary restlessness; qualities we just haven't seen in Voldemort before now, qualities that brand him that much more fascinating. Harry's is a journeying of actualization, one that isn't dependent on his own force but rather on that of his friends and fellow wizards. He'south come an undeniably long manner, just he reaches his destination thanks to the same never-say-die spirit that's driven him through the entire series. He doesn't rely on a super spell, a doomsday wand, or a surge of supernatural ability. Harry is what Harry's e'er been: a well-intentioned boy learning how to be a man, a leader, an inspiration and, reluctantly perhaps, a savior. Information technology'south in perfect dissimilarity to Voldemort, actually: the unremittent monster expressionless set on doing everything in his ability to abandon his humanity. Voldemort wants to be feared; Harry just doesn't desire to be afraid anymore. For all the darkness that presses in, for all the evil that promises to overcome the boy wizard, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 arguably dares to promise more than any other flick in the franchise, even more so than The Sorcerer'southward Stone and The Chamber of Secrets. The relief that comes at the end of Voldemort'south mad rise is tainted by sadness and loss, only Hogwarts finally earns a moment of existent rest, Harry finally finds some measure of real peace, and Potter filmfans are finally able to truly justify all the love and tears they've invested in the serial from the offset.

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 Blu-ray, Video Quality

4.5 of 5

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 is an fifty-fifty darker descent into Hogwarts than ever before; it makes The Deathly Hallows: Function 1 look cheery by comparing. But fans needn't worry about Warner's 1080p/AVC-encoded video transfer. It's dark, oh yes, but it'south too haunting, evocative, and utterly faithful to managing director David Yates and cinematographer Eduardo Serra'due south overcast-twilight palette and grim intentions. Did I mention it'due south gorgeous? Colors have been mercilessly drained of life, but bursts of magic, chambers of gold, walls of flame and visions of the by nevertheless avowal a spread of bright primaries and rich, storybook hues. Fleshtones are pale but natural, complementing the film'due south tone perfectly; shadows threaten to overwhelm every inch of the screen, but depiction doesn't falter; black levels are as deep, inky and ominous as anyone could hope for; and crush isn't an outcome. Any loss of detail traces back to the original source, not the studio'due south high definition encode. Not that in that location'south anything in the style of actual detail loss. Closeups, midrange shots and, well, everything in between and beyond reveal wonderfully resolved fine textures. Better yet, edge definition is crisp and satisfying (with merely a hint of ringing to contend with), a faint veneer of unobtrusive grain lends the epitome a beautiful filmic quality, every set and costume looks as lived-in and worn as it should, and clarity is, in every example, every bit forgiving or foreboding as Yates and Serra intended.

Moreover, artifacting, banding, aliasing, aberrant dissonance and other unsightly distractions are nowhere to exist establish. Some exceedingly minor and altogether infrequent smearing is present, negligible equally whatsoever affected shot is, but it'south strictly a product of post-product dissonance reduction as it was visible in the film's theatrical presentation. Don't blame the encode, though, if you lot notice any example of information technology at all. Suffice it to say, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part two impresses and then some... providing y'all're willing to embrace the film'due south prevailing shadows and have the image on its own darkly dreaming terms.

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 Blu-ray, Audio Quality

5.0 of 5

The Deathly Hallows: Part 2 conjures up a jaw-dropping, window-rattling, sternum-thumping DTS-HD Chief Audio 5.1 surround track that takes every advantage of the eighth Harry Potter installment's arresting audio design. LFE output isn't just powerful, it'south all powerful. Toppling towers thunder to the ground, rubble roars as it scatters, explosions erupt with ferocity, dragons screech with say-so, rickety vault carts clank and clunk heavily and heartily, giants lumber, halberds crash to the ground, and magic bolts tear through the soundscape. Rear speaker activeness mounts an equally ambitious attack on Hogwarts as armies disharmonism in the oh-so-disarming altitude, chaos erupts around the listener, and directional effects are precise and, in spite of all the nighttime deeds afoot, relatively playful. Simply it isn't all shock and awe. Quiet, thoughtful moments precede every Death Eater storm, and the nuances and subtleties of the film'southward atmospheric soundfield are magnificent. Whether dealing with the vast area of an secret cavern or the wind-swept depths of a slumbering forest, dynamics are impeccable, pans are disarmingly shine, and dialogue, be it whispered, spoken or shouted, is clean, clear and intelligible, no matter how explosive the wand-vs-wand battles become. And Desplat'southward somber score? As delicate, graceful and climactic as it should exist. Brand no mistake, Harry Potter and The Deathly Hallows sounds even better than it looks, and that's saying a lot. Both films will turn heads, thrill fans, and wow audiophiles and neophytes alike.

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 Blu-ray, Special Features and Extras

4.5 of 5


  • Maximum Moving-picture show Style (Disc 1, HD, 167 minutes): Matthew Lewis (Neville Longbottom), producer David Heyman and other notable members of the cast and crew host Warner's latest Harry Potter Maximum Movie Mode experience. Information technology's a terrific Picture-in-Picture track too, one that offers endless interviews, glimpses behind the scenes, VFX breakdowns, production design details, concept fine art, mythology overviews, integrated deleted scenes, and more. The diverse participants break and address key scenes at will, making this item Maximum Movie Mode as extensive and engrossing as Warner's best. Non to exist missed.
  • Focus Points (Disc 1, HD, 26 minutes): Fans tin too access an splendid choice of product featurettes. Segments include "Aberforth Dumbledore," "Deathly Hallows Costume Changes," "Harry Returns to Hogwarts," "The Hogwarts Shield," "The Room of Requirement Set," "The Fiery Escape," "Neville'south Stand" and "Molly and Bellatrix."
  • Terminal Farewells (Disc 1, HD, three minutes): The cast and coiffure bid a bloodshot adieu to Hogwarts, their characters, franchise fans and, most importantly, each other.
  • Deleted Scenes (Disc 2, HD, vii minutes): While you won't discover annihilation boggling or extraordinarily revealing in Part two's eight deleted scenes, fans will enjoy seeing the little moments Yates left on the cutting room floor, even those that are unfinished. Scenes include "Beat out Cottage," "Grave on the Beach," "Sus scrofa'due south Head," "Marble Staircase: Harry & Ginny," "Wooden Bridge," "Hogwart's Battlements," "Slytherin Dungeons" and "Marble Staircase: Ron & Hermione."
  • A Conversation with J.M. Rowling and Daniel Radcliffe (Disc 2, Hard disk, 53 minutes): Rowling and Radcliffe have a wonderful rapport and lovely senses of sense of humor, and this insightful, all-likewise-engaging hour-long chat is easily one of the best features on the disc, if not i of the best special features to appear on any Potter release to date. Over the course of their winningly candid, rapidfire conversation, they delve into Radcliffe'due south casting, the graphic symbol of Harry, Rowling's role in the films' production, the story and its themes, the details about future books Rowling shared with different members of the cast and crew, favorite characters and moments, and much, much more.
  • The Women of Harry Potter (Disc two, Hard disk, 23 minutes): A look at the stiff, atypical heroines and women that populate Rowling'due south books and the world of the films.
  • The Goblins of Gringotts (Disc two, HD, 11 minutes): The serial' creepy, pit-eyed goblins in all their... glory.
  • Warner Bros. Studio Tour London (Disc 2, Hd, 2 minutes): Go behind-the-scenes of the UK attraction.
  • Pottermore (Disc 2, Hard disk drive, 1 minute): Rowling introduces her new website, Pottermore.
  • BD-Live Functionality

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 Blu-ray, Overall Score and Recommendation

4.5 of 5

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows is all-time viewed as one long epic effect, but Part 2 stands on its ain quite well, bringing confident closure to a beloved saga. It isn't a perfect accommodation, nor is it a perfect picture. Simply it'due south a commanding, compelling finale that will top many a fan'due south Best of Harry Potter listing. Warner'southward 3-disc Blu-ray release wields powerful magic of its ain thank you to a fantastic video transfer, a top tier DTS-Hd Chief Audio five.1 surround track, and a marvelous supplemental package certain to continue diehards and casual fans busy for the better part of an afternoon. Don't hesitate, don't expect, don't waste any time. Add The Deathly Hallows: Part ii to your cart post haste.

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part ii: Other Editions


Blu-ray
2-disc set
$7.99

Blu-ray
ane-disc

4K
3-disc set
$29.47

3D
four-disc set
Best Buy

Blu-ray
4-disc set
Target

3D
2-disc set

Blu-ray
one-disc
Best Buy

Blu-ray
-
WBShop

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Role 2


Blu-ray
3-disc set

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 3D


3D
2-disc fix

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Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Office 2 Blu-ray, News and Updates

• Harry Potter Wizards Drove Blu-ray

- March 22, 2012

This autumn, Warner Home Amusement will bring the Harry Potter Wizards Collection to Blu-ray. This thirty-one-disc box set bundles together all eight features in the Harry Potter franchise and contains over 30-seven hours of bonus supplements. The Harry ...

• Blu-ray Sales, Jan 2-eight: Contagion Infects Blu - January 12, 2012

For the week ending 01/08/2012, Contagion infected the No. 1 slot on both the Blu-ray and the overall package media sales charts. Produced with a upkeep of $60 million, the release from Warner Brothers finished its worldwide theatrical box part run with a pocket-sized ...

• Blu-ray Sales, Dec nineteen-25: Harry Potter Redux - December 29, 2011

For the week ending 12/25/xi, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2, topped the Blu-ray sales chart for the fourth fourth dimension. The final picture in the popular Harry Potter serial was a huge success for Warner Bros. as it finished its theatrical run with an ...

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