Harry Potter: What Magic Sounds Like

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  • čas přidán 14. 11. 2018
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Komentáře • 1,8K

  • @FrenchGuyCooking
    @FrenchGuyCooking Před 5 lety +8836

    "People understand what they see, but feel what they hear." *Gone framing this one*

    • @liamwatson-barber9400
      @liamwatson-barber9400 Před 5 lety +32

      Alex French Guy Cooking I love your videos! I just made some ramen from scratch based on your videos! Thanks for all the cooking help :)

    • @Sevendogtags
      @Sevendogtags Před 5 lety +29

      Two of my favorite youtubers in one place? hell ya!

    • @sonkeschmidt2027
      @sonkeschmidt2027 Před 5 lety +12

      @@burgzaza deaf people do not have their brain wired like non deaf people however. They do have a lack of input that they compensate through their other senses. This is very apparent in the limited world of film, which works with just two senses, one of which they lack which makes them miss a very big part of the films "feeling". That doesn't say anything about the experience being better or worse, that's very subjective, but fact is, that they miss out on a lot of how the film feels like.

    • @burgzaza
      @burgzaza Před 5 lety

      @@sonkeschmidt2027 Sure they miss out of the sounds and musics, but my point is, a clever film maker can convey feelings trough imagery, and not only exposition, like what Nerwriter said.

    • @mariekeschoutsen
      @mariekeschoutsen Před 5 lety +4

      "Moguls don't see anything.." - "no, but if you jab em with a fork, they feel!"

  • @Stehako
    @Stehako Před 5 lety +4527

    Sound designers are no doubt unsung heroes of film.

    • @politereminder6284
      @politereminder6284 Před 5 lety +69

      or perhaps, the singing heroes?

    • @bluebell8557
      @bluebell8557 Před 5 lety +5

      I honestly think its the writers.

    • @SamHeadphaze
      @SamHeadphaze Před 5 lety +9

      Thanks for saying this. We don't get enough credit really because sound is usually such a subliminal aspect of the film.

    • @jd3924
      @jd3924 Před 5 lety

      Stephen H. Koontz or villains

    • @turbotaquitogoogle8095
      @turbotaquitogoogle8095 Před 5 lety +9

      @@bluebell8557 Writers generally get tons of cred. When people praise characters etc they're praising the writers. Sound design (minus music) doesn't get as much acclaim colloquially unfortunately

  • @flavio4923
    @flavio4923 Před 4 lety +2365

    That water sound from Dumbledore's trapping spell is chilling. Very cool.

    • @AMoistBum
      @AMoistBum Před 4 lety +86

      Saw the movie in theaters and can still hear that sound in my head to this day

    • @mrhuntalot123
      @mrhuntalot123 Před 4 lety +3

      Reminds me of the sound of stables being opened

    • @vxwk
      @vxwk Před 4 lety +25

      Sounds like a strange exotic bird call to me

    • @LEVRAN
      @LEVRAN Před 4 lety +17

      1:56 yess

    • @deadfr0g
      @deadfr0g Před 4 lety +1

      **rimshot**

  • @friestailor
    @friestailor Před 5 lety +4376

    Missed opportunity to call this video:
    Harry Potter and
    the sound of magic

  • @DanMarinerMan
    @DanMarinerMan Před 5 lety +447

    I still get chills every time Harry yells “EXPECTO PATRONUUUUUM!” At the end of PoA. Chills. Every. Damn. Time.

    • @hola542
      @hola542 Před 4 lety +38

      Daniel Radcliffe did an incredible job with showing that sincerity of emotion. Incredible talent for such a young age.

    • @lonerwithaboner8891
      @lonerwithaboner8891 Před 3 lety

      All I could think of was his voice crack

    • @emimurase813
      @emimurase813 Před 3 lety +1

      also the beginning of OftP that one is crazy

    • @atribecalledlen3567
      @atribecalledlen3567 Před 3 lety

      Emi Murase wasn’t as iconic as when he did it in PoA

    • @pilar8323
      @pilar8323 Před 3 lety +2

      Same. It's so good that for a minute I forget to be disappointed that his patronus isn't a stag.

  • @tikaedits
    @tikaedits Před 5 lety +893

    harry's expecto patronum in prisoner of azkaban gets me every time

    • @hainigill450
      @hainigill450 Před 5 lety +61

      Me too..i get goosebumps..

    • @burgulize
      @burgulize Před 5 lety +6

      Loved it when they sampled it for the Harry Potter and the Chamber of Bangers mushup.

    • @mjg_____
      @mjg_____ Před 5 lety +21

      B U R S T into tears omFg. was not ready.

    • @thekiss2083
      @thekiss2083 Před 5 lety +38

      Best moment in the series hands down.

    • @hola542
      @hola542 Před 5 lety +38

      Completely agree, I get chills. And the white noise of the patronus charm that follows, adds to it as well. Daniel Radcliffe has his moments.

  • @olivia.martin
    @olivia.martin Před 5 lety +2331

    I love love LOVE the spell sounds from Prisoner of Azkaban, aka the best Harry Potter movie period. There’s something so hauntingly whimsical about the spells that give me goosebumps every time.

    • @Henchman.24
      @Henchman.24 Před 5 lety +44

      Please explain the phrase "hauntingly whimsical"

    • @alexsmith12
      @alexsmith12 Před 5 lety +111

      Yes, I agree. Cuaron did a great job with that film. He didn't miss alot from the books, and you get more detail on harry's friendships and everyday life (eating sweets in the dormitory, ghosts performing, etc). Also, the way he moves the camera around is incredible. The music also shows the more medieval castle side of hogwarts. It's just a magical piece if art.

    • @Dukeybookey
      @Dukeybookey Před 5 lety +3

      Olivia Martin ngl i kinda find those sounds annoying. i think the crackling is much better or the zooms. goblet of fire and POA where werid to me, kinda sounded like whooshes and lasers

    • @lileenleen
      @lileenleen Před 5 lety +4

      HapaxHog So full of whimsy that it haunts you.

    • @AM-nw2iz
      @AM-nw2iz Před 5 lety

      Same

  • @cezarcatalin1406
    @cezarcatalin1406 Před 5 lety +4246

    Most powerful spells according to Lord Voldy mcMortbutt :
    1.) NYAAAH
    2.) AAAARGH
    3.) UUAAAAH
    4.) SAAAAAH
    5.) AAAVALAHHADAAVAAH
    6.) YYYAAAAA
    7.) NAAAAAAH
    8.) WOOOOOH
    9.) WAAAAAH
    10.) * smiling in creepy *

    • @user-ho6du8hp2w
      @user-ho6du8hp2w Před 5 lety +23

      Haa haaa heaaa ha hea ha

    • @Ranger1812
      @Ranger1812 Před 5 lety +7

      ᏰĪᏝᏝ ՇÎρɧᏋƦ It's emotion.

    • @Ranger1812
      @Ranger1812 Před 5 lety +3

      Variklis It's emotion.

    • @Ranger1812
      @Ranger1812 Před 5 lety +6

      Shaggy It's emotion.

    • @Jc-go3mz
      @Jc-go3mz Před 5 lety +26

      DBen Tarr Bro, if you reply to one person, the other people who have made a comment in the thread will see it to, you don’t need o say the same the three times

  • @jamiewindsor
    @jamiewindsor Před 5 lety +2847

    I was literally just thinking about how Harry Potter is carried so much by the sound design. I think this is best exemplified by the fight between Dumbledore and Voldemort at the end of The Order of the Phoenix. There's no incidental music or dialogue. Just pure sound effect design, and it makes the fight seem very powerful and real. You can almost feel all those tiles exploding around you.

    • @antiseth3964
      @antiseth3964 Před 5 lety +111

      While there are plenty of interesting battles in the series, I consider Dumbledore v Voldemort the single best battle. Two of the most powerful wizards in history flexing their power and duking it out. There is something so visceral about that fight. Dumbledore is almost always defensive, Voldemort is almost always attacking.

    • @GewoonRood
      @GewoonRood Před 5 lety +18

      Order Of The Phoenix is easily the best movie in the series

    • @antiseth3964
      @antiseth3964 Před 5 lety +5

      @@GewoonRood See _that_ we might disagree on, but it comes down to personal preference. I can see why you might like it. I think I like it less just because it's such a dark film and the tone is really unrelenting.

    • @sakshamchawla2280
      @sakshamchawla2280 Před 5 lety +5

      @@antiseth3964 The battle between Dumbledore and Voldemort in Order of The Phoenix is not the greatest battle in the Harry Potter universe. The greatest battle to ever exist in the universe was Dumbledore vs Grindelwald in the chapter The Greater Good. There's a fan-made movie about it, but I heavily expect to see the fight in Fantastic Beasts.
      Edit: They talk about it in the chapter but I don't think the books tell how exactly it happened.

    • @antiseth3964
      @antiseth3964 Před 5 lety +17

      @@sakshamchawla2280 Ahh good point. I was referencing the battles within the context of the movies that have been made so far. Of all the fights they have shown on screen I prefer Dumbledore v Voldemort.

  • @geri4367
    @geri4367 Před 5 lety +749

    -"People understand what they see, but feel what they hear".
    That's a super tip for film makers and game developers like myself!

    • @KR1S71ANthenoob
      @KR1S71ANthenoob Před 5 lety +11

      Geri visuals definitely can be felt too, I wouldn't underestimate how much of an emotional response visuals can evoke. That being said I do think sound provokes more emotion though.

    • @Tomasz.Nowakowski
      @Tomasz.Nowakowski Před 5 lety +7

      @@KR1S71ANthenoob that's why timing is the key, great sound effect + great visual = magnificent experience

    • @Harshhaze
      @Harshhaze Před 5 lety +4

      "You're not trouble if you tell me the truth."
      *Mom reaches for the wooden spoon anyway*

    • @Kevinmadefilms
      @Kevinmadefilms Před 5 lety +1

      this sums up sound design so perfectly and concisely

    • @bazonga9085
      @bazonga9085 Před 5 lety

      Geri
      Ahaha everyone a game developer nowadays Jesus Christ. Your stuff is mediocre. Don’t call yourself that.

  • @rubend5191
    @rubend5191 Před 4 lety +307

    A nice sound effect is 'Lumos Maxima' in Prisoner of Azkaban, used at the very beginning of the movie

    • @danmaloney9215
      @danmaloney9215 Před 3 lety +12

      Almost makes up for how annoying it is that he's using magic outside school with no repercussions

    • @piotrnowak8725
      @piotrnowak8725 Před 3 lety +8

      @@danmaloney9215 The Ministry didn't mind in Prisoner of Azkaban given that Sirius Black was at large. In the Chamber of Secrets though they shouldn't ignore that warning letter he got.

    • @danmaloney9215
      @danmaloney9215 Před 3 lety

      @@piotrnowak8725 Yeah they do ignore it in the end but he wouldn't just be casually casting Lumos without thinking about it because he didn't know they'd ignore it

    • @leandroisaac2000
      @leandroisaac2000 Před 3 lety +3

      @@danmaloney9215 I thought you weren't supposed to use magic outside of the school only if it was in front of a muggle.

    • @ahriik
      @ahriik Před 2 lety +5

      @@danmaloney9215 he was under a blanket. the same technique used by millions of children to continue playing gameboy or DS past bedtime with no repercussions

  • @ellja9399
    @ellja9399 Před 4 lety +124

    Bellatrix: Avada Kedavra
    Snape: Avada Kedavra
    Voldemort: AVUADAAA KEDAVRRAAA

  • @TommoCarroll
    @TommoCarroll Před 5 lety +3388

    Nerdwriter plus Harry Potter... *TODAY IS A GOOD DAY!*

    • @user-pi8pi3wj7h
      @user-pi8pi3wj7h Před 5 lety +2

      Nerd

    • @Brikxar
      @Brikxar Před 5 lety +1

      Aspect Science :)!

    • @rawvid9065
      @rawvid9065 Před 5 lety +5

      Damn didn't knew you also watched Harry Potter and all
      It's like seeing someone like s.l. Jackson or Obama watching game of thrones or something

    • @dripstein6130
      @dripstein6130 Před 5 lety

      LOL i was gonna say the same thing

    • @MediumDSpeaks
      @MediumDSpeaks Před 5 lety +4

      Oh hey, you're that guy that's famous now.

  • @Micoolaw
    @Micoolaw Před 5 lety +182

    "People understand what they see, but they feel what they hear" That's good

    • @turbotaquitogoogle8095
      @turbotaquitogoogle8095 Před 5 lety +1

      It is but I'd argue you can feel what you see too. Cinematography isn't as powerful as sound in my opinion, but it can still be intensely emotional

    • @LichlordKazam
      @LichlordKazam Před 5 lety

      I doubt it. I showed my mother the computer setup, and she undestood nothing. Not sure what you mean with "feel what you hear". If someone says fuck you, should i feel like fuck you?

  • @kanal2123a
    @kanal2123a Před 5 lety +270

    My favourite spell is "Nyaaaaaaa"

  • @pepijnstreng4643
    @pepijnstreng4643 Před 5 lety +764

    For the patronus sounds in the Prisoner of Azkaban, you've got to give some credit to John Williams. When you hear Harry do the patronus, listen to the harmonies in the choir - he wrote those. Especially the great one with Sirius at the lake that you showed, listen how it harmonizes with the horn playing a recurring theme from the music (you can also hear it, for example, when he talks to Remus about his parents, only then it's played by a recorder), signifying the personal significance for Harry. I sang in a choir once for a live performance of the music along with the movie, and you really notice how important the music is for the pacing and drama of the entire film. Music and sound design are so tightly woven together that you don't always hear which is which. It's an amazingly made movie, and I agree with you that it's the best (although I love the Half Blood Prince as well).

    • @draxiss1577
      @draxiss1577 Před 4 lety

      This comment reminds me of the interplay of music and sounds design in *Babylon 5.* Some of the most iconic space battle scenes in the series use an incredible interplay of music, sci-fi weapon sounds, and battle shots.

    • @aidanthornton4827
      @aidanthornton4827 Před 4 lety

      I agree totally= it also weirdly reminded me of some of the (amazing) choir work in Halo 3 xD but youre right it toally boosts the scene and adds to the goosebump effect alright

    • @pranavjoshi9833
      @pranavjoshi9833 Před 3 lety

      The Half Blood Prince is also a haunting film about loss and coming of age. Though Cuaron's POA is masterful, HBP's Hogwarts finally comes of age and is almost unbearably atmospheric and ominous.

    • @PeterParker-kg4xe
      @PeterParker-kg4xe Před 3 lety +3

      I always knew it coz John William him self is a wizard. Waving his wand to people who are sitting in front of him and making magical music.

    • @zmanrockz6358
      @zmanrockz6358 Před rokem

      That piece of music is Window to the Past, for anyone looking for it.

  • @NateandNoahTryLife
    @NateandNoahTryLife Před 5 lety +1205

    Alfonso Cuaron is one of my favorite directors, and conveniently he made my favorite Harry Potter film.

    • @apullcan
      @apullcan Před 5 lety +28

      Hope he wins more Oscars this year for Roma...

    • @t500010000
      @t500010000 Před 5 lety +65

      What he did for Harry Potter is art and creation in it's purest form

    • @joemagill4041
      @joemagill4041 Před 5 lety +39

      The other directors made decent to good HP films... Cuaron just made a good film.

    • @KyleGallagher
      @KyleGallagher Před 5 lety +107

      Prisoner of Azkaban is the best one for many reasons, but for me it's because it's the only film in the series where Voldemort isn't the antagonist: it's Harry. He has to overcome, and save himself.

    • @NateandNoahTryLife
      @NateandNoahTryLife Před 5 lety +8

      @@KyleGallagher I agree, but I do think they revisit this thematically later because of the parallel between Voldemort and Harry. Voldemort is inside Harry's head, telling him how similar they are. Harry has to overcome the self doubt and insecurity wondering "am I like him?". I think it is explored best in Azkaban.

  • @FutureNow
    @FutureNow Před 5 lety +2523

    If only Harry knew more than two spells.

    • @swapnilbatle
      @swapnilbatle Před 5 lety +415

      *Hermione eye roll*

    • @soufian2733
      @soufian2733 Před 5 lety +202

      Expelliarmus & Stupefy ?

    • @MegaClaymore123
      @MegaClaymore123 Před 5 lety +410

      All dueling spells are pretty much useless when you can just disarm your foe ... hence Harry's affinity for expeliarmus.

    • @Enthalpiste
      @Enthalpiste Před 5 lety +46

      Still more than Rincewind...

    • @UnusGrunus
      @UnusGrunus Před 5 lety +175

      @@MegaClaymore123 never really thought about it but that's true. Effective but peacefull aprouch to a duel that fits harry very well

  • @KassidyJMoore
    @KassidyJMoore Před 5 lety +59

    3:47 still gives me goosebumps to this day. I'll always be a kid when Harry Potter comes on lmao

  • @Sam-0827
    @Sam-0827 Před 4 lety +34

    3:28 The Prisoner of Azkaban will always be my favorite. Every hint from the previous books tied together and creates a dark atmosphere, preparing us for what the rest of the movies would be like. The characters developed more and relationships started to develop. Even something as seemingly simple as a wand sound was different, more creative. Love harry potter.

  • @TMWriting
    @TMWriting Před 5 lety +216

    I just rewatched all of these movies in a row, and one of the things I noticed and was really impressed by was how the spells begin before the incantation is completed. It’s a really subtle decision but, for all of the reasons you mentioned, it does something really interesting with the movement of a spell. Instead of it being “word *then* result”, the two are intertwined as one incredibly potent action that lends a powerful rhythm to any act of magic, no matter how isolated or cacophonous the spell is in the scene. Great movies are built on great details and Harry Potter has yet to disappoint.

    • @SunnyBear
      @SunnyBear Před 5 lety +4

      that's an excellent point that I have never considered, thanks for pointing it out! I'll be watching (listening) more closely when I rewatch them again now :)

    • @MSephirroth
      @MSephirroth Před 5 lety

      however, word-then-result had a certain logic, you know. intertwined word and result takes away the point of learning the spells right. now no one would care if it is windgardium levioooosa or windgardium leviosaaa, because the object would start to fly around "lev" already. but based on what?
      you inner intention of doing that specific spell? ok I can take it as a base of non verbal magic, where your intention is the only thing that matters, obviously. But with this we have another problem. first: why are the students taught to cast spells with voice and incantations, that are in fact irrelevant? Afterwards they have to relearn the spells to cast them solely with their intent instead. It is easier to use incantations, but do we want to teach things, that are rather easy than right?
      Second: not even Voldemort is able to use Avada Kedavra without incantation. He does need to say something along the line Avada Kedavra and even though he messes up the pronunciation, he gets the result. At around the same time as he shouts those words. And again it takes away the feeling, that you need to know the incantation properly in order to execute the spell. It is contradictory to magic of Lockhart. remember when his honest intention was to help Harry? he removed the bones in his hand instead of healing them. Based on previous logic, his intention should prevail against the words, that he mumbled wrongly. But it did not happen - what he SAID was definite.
      Though we might try to explain this with "Voldemort, well, even Harry, both are much better wizards and therefore their intentions will prevail, because they can direct their magic to the task they need with much better focus..." or something like that, it still does sound like a bit forced defence of disconnectedness.
      Maybe I would, in the name of technical and logical correctness, divide the casting into two cathegories: non verbal, where you intention defines the spell, and verbal - where the incantation defines the spell. In first, you need to be really good in directing your magical power to perform magical result exactly as you wanted it plus wand movement if necessary. In second, you need to master the spell with proper pronunciation and wand movement. Wrongly said spell would therefore ruin your intention and because you can ruin your incantation at the end of it, it is logical that first you need to cast it properly and only then the result will come.
      I understand, that blending those two helped the movies. because it would be weird to always wait until the incantation is complete. It looks better, feels better, smoother and more dramatic when the spells are flying around faster, that they would, if we waited for incantation to be completed - but still, I repeat: it takes away the logic of spell casting.

    • @Ranger1812
      @Ranger1812 Před 5 lety

      MSephirroth Using words makes it easier. And you don't need to relearn the entire spell...
      It doesn't remove the need for correct pronunciation, it's still a part of it.

    • @MyrthexLatoya
      @MyrthexLatoya Před 5 lety +1

      @@MSephirroth I always saw it like learning to ride a bicycle. Once you master it you will never lose the ability to ride a bicycle. However if you want to learn how to ride it without hands (non-verbal spells) you first need to know how to ride a bicycle properly in the first place (verbal spells). You can't start by learning how to ride a biclyce without hands, you will absolutely fail if you don't know how to ride it in the first place. Casting spells non-verbally is extremely difficult and not something everyone will succeed in learning how to do. That's why they start by teaching the verbal spells and don't just rush to the non-verbal ones. But I do believe that once you have mastered a certain spell and have used it a lot of times, learning how to cast it non-verbally will become easier. And maybe that makes that you can do a combination of verbal and non-verbal at the same time, you are not skilled enough to use it non-verbally yet, but you are getting there. That would explain the different ways in which the Killing Curse is cast in the movies: Bellatrix, Snape and Wormtail all finish their verbal spells before the actual curse is cast, but Voldemort doesn't need to use the whole verbal spell because he has used it countless times before. I also don't think it is not a question of either the incantation or the wand movement or your intention, but a combination of all of these. Using an incantation makes the spell easier because it directs your intention and guides your movement, but it is not always necessary to say the incantation out loud. For example if you use the Unforgivable Curses you need to 'mean' it. What better way to drive your intention home than to say it out loud? However if your intention is strong enough, like with Voldemort, you can already cast the spell without completing the incantation. I believe that combined with the fact he knows the spell inside and out and has already used it a lot of times makes that he doesn't need to verbally complete the incantation to make the spell work.

    • @UltimateKyuubiFox
      @UltimateKyuubiFox Před 5 lety +1

      MyrthexLatoya We know based on JK’s writing about African magic schools that young mages in Africa primarily learn how to perform nonverbal magic and they don’t even have wands. It would appear that wands in the Wizarding World are more like cyphers for magical power-training wheels, essentially. They make your magic more potent and easier to control, but they also reduce your magical capability into specific spells you need to memorize.

  • @LetsbeHonestOfficial
    @LetsbeHonestOfficial Před 5 lety +588

    It must take a lot of time to collect all the little scenes and make it all go together so seamlessly. Good job, Nerd

    • @morriscolenbrander1395
      @morriscolenbrander1395 Před 5 lety

      that last part made it sound like you are sarcastic

    • @LetsbeHonestOfficial
      @LetsbeHonestOfficial Před 5 lety

      @@morriscolenbrander1395 Not meant as sarcasm in any way. Just a play on his channel's name meant in a funny tone

  • @mr.krepshus1467
    @mr.krepshus1467 Před 5 lety +389

    This video is pure greatness

  • @TeleBlur
    @TeleBlur Před 4 lety +356

    Movie noises: *exists*
    Nerdwriter1: I'm about to analyze this man's whole career.

  • @houston-coley
    @houston-coley Před 5 lety +317

    Loved this! I’ve been thinking about the sound design in HP for awhile - I’ll never forget watching a featurette for Order of the Phoenix where the Foley artist talked about how the apparating sound effect was a combination of a cloak flapping in the wind, firecrackers, and some kind of bicycle sound. It’s creativity like that that blows my mind.

    • @turbotaquitogoogle8095
      @turbotaquitogoogle8095 Před 5 lety

      @@Churro_Flaminguez Plus you can be WILDLY creative with Foley. It's really a phenomenally underrated part of film

    • @maxlewis5975
      @maxlewis5975 Před 4 lety

      If you want to see some other creative sound design look into Doom 2016. Both the music and in game sound effects have a neat history behind them.

  • @moonlitproductions7182
    @moonlitproductions7182 Před 4 lety +56

    Magic sounds like waves of energy or sparkling of light.

  • @Jagosvault
    @Jagosvault Před 4 lety +70

    I feel like they missed a trick on Avada Kedavra, since in the books it is described as "the sound of speeding death", but in the films it sounds more like a bot of energy (powerful, yet not like speeding death)

    • @draxiss1577
      @draxiss1577 Před 4 lety +24

      I always envisioned it as being less flashy and less like an arc of green electricity. In my mind, it barely has a shape before it hits something, but it's more like a projectile. Just a *Fffsss* and someone''s dead before they hit the ground.

    • @adisaster8734
      @adisaster8734 Před 4 lety +30

      while reading the book i definitely imagined it silent just a chilling silence and then the thump of a body falling. in the movies i liked that they went with electricity cuz the wand movement is in he shape of a lightning bolt and its why harry's scar is that shape. the way from the book wouldnt really make it dramatic in the movie and the way from the movie would make it over dramatic in the book. idk if im making sense lol. basically in my head the tone from the movie and book is different. movie is dramatic and book is realistic and quiet? (lmao realistic for a magic book i know)

  • @iliketochasegibbons8015
    @iliketochasegibbons8015 Před 5 lety +13

    If there’s one memorable sound that I’ll always remember hearing in these movies, it’d have to be the water sound when Dumbledore fight Voldemort. It just sounds so right and seems to be handled with elegance and care, while you can see within seconds what kind of damage can be done with it. Marvelous.

  • @CDHord
    @CDHord Před 5 lety +180

    First rule of Harry Potter magic: No pew pews!

    • @VocalBear213
      @VocalBear213 Před 5 lety +1

      Mmm... Are you taking about the last 3 movies? Oh, and add a poor Guinea portrayal and puke jokes..

  • @NateandNoahTryLife
    @NateandNoahTryLife Před 5 lety +451

    *now that’s what I call magic*

  • @ghian89
    @ghian89 Před 3 lety +4

    I love how every fight scenes it gets quiet and you would hear crisp sounds of the spells, the breathing, peoples feet running or walking. Its magical.

  • @vrindajourno
    @vrindajourno Před rokem +3

    The slight tremble with which Alan Rickman says 'Avada Kedavra' at 6:03 is so meaningful when you know about his actual relationship with Dumbledore and his place in the war that was to ensue.

  • @thazl
    @thazl Před 5 lety +96

    2:55 Just close your eyes and imagine a bunch x-wings and tie fighters flying all over space in an epic battle.
    That´s a star wars sequence right there.

    • @franks8462
      @franks8462 Před 5 lety +14

      That's what I was thinking during the whole sequence. The sounds established in the first film were thrown out the window in the second. Coincidentally, the second film was also (arguably) the worst film in the franchise.

    • @_coffeebean_
      @_coffeebean_ Před 5 lety +20

      Thought the same. Seems like they completely ignored the "no modern sounds" part in this one. Good thing that they quickly got away from that and changed it in the third one

    • @RohannvanRensburg
      @RohannvanRensburg Před 5 lety +1

      @@franks8462 I don't know what it is about Chamber of Secrets but it feels so unnecessarily long.

    • @THENBASTORYTELLER
      @THENBASTORYTELLER Před 5 lety

      !!!

  • @Jdpoz
    @Jdpoz Před 5 lety +129

    I still think the movie battle between Voldemort and Dumbledore was the single best use of "magic" in the sense I think of it, because of its basis in more of what seemed to be an extension of a battle of wits.
    So many of the Harry Potter films' magical battles consisted of these non-descript energy blast style spells that seemed to either just knock someone over or clash against another energy spell... but the battle between V and D was about various spells and ways to counter them.
    V casts fire? Dumbledore pulls a ball of water. V shatters all glass and then sends them towards Harry and Dumbledore in a shower of deadly needles? Dumbledore turns them to snow.
    It reminded me of the Disney animated film - The Sword and the Stone - specifically the scene where Merlin and Mad Madam Mim had a "wizard duel." They each changed to various creatures to try to defeat one another, wherein Merlin only won when he became a virus against Mim's dragon (which also was her cheating - since mythical creatures weren't allowed from the outset).
    The battle between Merlin and Mim wasn't about whose "magic beam" they fired by pointing their wand at the other wizard was stronger. It was about which wizard was more clever... I just wish there had been more of that sort of magic throughout the films, because it made the battles less abstract and more exciting.

    • @JudePhilips
      @JudePhilips Před 5 lety +6

      JDPoZ Very Well Analyzed ! I completely agree.

    • @DeadlyDeadlyBeees
      @DeadlyDeadlyBeees Před 5 lety +3

      I've always thought that was one of the best battles, and you just explained why perfectly.

    • @subbtopewd7266
      @subbtopewd7266 Před 5 lety +18

      Doesn't he turn the glass into sand because that's what it's made of? Not snow?

    • @liiindseyyy
      @liiindseyyy Před 5 lety +3

      Subb ToPewd Yeah he turned it to sand not snow

    • @matthewcooper4248
      @matthewcooper4248 Před 4 lety

      Well first off he turned the glass to sand not snow.
      Secondly, while I want to agree, you have to realize Dumbledore was the most powerful wizard of all time. That's the only reason they went that way. As you remember, they started with the energy spell blast thing. Voldemort knew it was going to stay a stalemate, so he made the snake.
      The example you brought up from the sword in the stone is fine because it worked for that system of magic. But knowing HP's system of magic, in the movies at least, most magic is the 'energy blasts', so that's what most people would use.

  • @whereeveritgoes
    @whereeveritgoes Před 5 lety +1231

    Voldemort: "Abra kadabra!"
    *rabbits jumps out from the tip of his wand*
    Potter: wtf?
    Voldemort: "Shit! Avada Kedavra!"
    *rabbit dies instead of Potter*
    Potter: bruh

  • @AaditDoshi
    @AaditDoshi Před 5 lety +16

    My game design professor used to say
    "visuals tell you what to think, audio tells you what to feel"

  • @nicholascureton933
    @nicholascureton933 Před 5 lety +47

    Voldy Mort will never be able to use magic spells if he have to pronounce spells correctly.

    • @m.h.9994
      @m.h.9994 Před 5 lety +1

      I'm sure he can do magic without using words ;)

  • @beccalanning6370
    @beccalanning6370 Před 5 lety +18

    "Okay, that was a corny line, I can't end on that. Let's do Voldemort instead"
    Laughed so hard at this XD

  • @drruid7645
    @drruid7645 Před 4 lety +87

    No one, literally no one:
    Voldemort:”Auadaa kedaaavaaah”

  • @JustNicole6400
    @JustNicole6400 Před 4 lety +23

    Great now I’m in the mood to watch the entire series in one night

    • @NicolaLarosa
      @NicolaLarosa Před 3 lety +1

      How's it going up there in the Arctic (or down there in the Antartic)? ;-)

  • @LoverboyMedia
    @LoverboyMedia Před 5 lety +1295

    Here for literally any praise for these movies. We're so lucky to have them.

    • @wendel5868
      @wendel5868 Před 5 lety +6

      Its called being a fanboy.

    • @koenmvandeurzen613
      @koenmvandeurzen613 Před 5 lety +26

      I think Warner is a perfect studio for the hp movies, especially the later more gritty ones, but which studio do you propose?

    • @MrLizardLab
      @MrLizardLab Před 5 lety +17

      They could have been better, but I'm very happy with how it turned out.
      Rushed movies can go wrong in soo many ways.

    • @LoverboyMedia
      @LoverboyMedia Před 5 lety +34

      You're probably underestimating how crazy it was for things to line up as well as they did with WB, David Heyman and Chris Columbus. I doubt any other studio, especially if they were made today, would have been crazy enough to throw Alfonso Cauron at a Harry Potter movie, and because of that, it paved the way for a franchise that consistently delivered exciting, adventurous, artistically stimulating blockbusters that critics loved.
      Sure, they could have been better in a number of places, but getting 8 films as good as what we got is kind of incredible.

    • @TheRishijoesanu
      @TheRishijoesanu Před 5 lety +2

      Doctor Strange does a better job with magic sounds

  • @jamesheydenrych3466
    @jamesheydenrych3466 Před 5 lety +114

    That patronus scene at the beginning of the Order of Phoenix reminds that Umbridge ordered the dementors to kiss Harry and Dudley, she truly was the most horrid character.

    • @SharpDesign
      @SharpDesign Před 5 lety

      kiss?

    • @NobodyC13
      @NobodyC13 Před 5 lety +11

      The dementor's ultimate attack is called "the dementor's kiss": they latch onto their victim's mouth like a violent kiss when really they're sucking out their soul, rendering the victim an empty husk for the rest their life. Rowling describes it like becoming catatonic or living in a persistent vegetative state, your body still lives but the things that make you you are gone and can no longer enter any kind of afterlife.

    • @SharpDesign
      @SharpDesign Před 5 lety

      @@NobodyC13 oh, thank you. I forgot the meaning.

    • @EricGraham94
      @EricGraham94 Před 5 lety +5

      That wasn’t openly mentioned onscreen but heavenly implied when Umbridge says during the trial “It sounded for a moment as though you were suggesting the Ministry had ordered the attack on this boy.”

  • @JustAHat
    @JustAHat Před 4 lety +10

    I love the sound of lumos maxima when the prisoner of azkaban title appears

  • @AmbitionMusic
    @AmbitionMusic Před 5 lety +84

    god I love your videos about Harry Potter. please make more

  • @MelanieAnneAhern
    @MelanieAnneAhern Před 5 lety +33

    Love this. Solid sound design is so under appreciated in filmmaking, but it’s impact is huge.

  • @manuelunger6386
    @manuelunger6386 Před 4 lety +4

    06:21 'People understand what they see, but they feel what they hear'

  • @OfTwoLands
    @OfTwoLands Před 5 lety +155

    Brilliant, as always. Harry Potter is such an amazing story on so many levels and luckily the movies did it justice.

    • @melaniemagdalene1616
      @melaniemagdalene1616 Před 4 lety +1

      Unlike those Peter Johnson movies...

    • @RabiyaRavenclaw
      @RabiyaRavenclaw Před 6 měsíci

      Humbly disagree. Apart from the first two, the rest of the HP movies couldn't possibly catch the magic of Rowling's Wizarding World. Also Becoz they omitted out so much information and details from the books, it created a significant amount of plot holes in the movies.

  • @Rocksteady72a
    @Rocksteady72a Před 5 lety +11

    "Let's end with Voldemort instead"
    *twisted wilhelm scream*

  • @MaluzOrozco
    @MaluzOrozco Před 5 lety +36

    “They feel what they hear” That’s exactly why I’m a sound designer 😎

  • @thehopeofeden597
    @thehopeofeden597 Před 5 lety +184

    Something I forgot that this video made me remember: Daniel Radcliffe has very pretty eyes.

  • @Tondadrd
    @Tondadrd Před 5 lety +5

    5:50 You know, Harry is around very often when the Death Curse is being cast...

  • @nazeefchowdhury2226
    @nazeefchowdhury2226 Před 5 lety +94

    I feel that the music of harry potter is underappreciated and needs more credit. Its beauty could battle with hans zimmer.

    • @biggainallbran8937
      @biggainallbran8937 Před 5 lety +26

      Google accounts Well the first three films were scored by John Williams, so that’s hardly surprising.

    • @obiwankenobi687
      @obiwankenobi687 Před 5 lety +6

      BigGainAllBran even though I love John Williams, I’ve always preferred the soundtrack of goblet of Fire onwards.

    • @ohwellwhateverr
      @ohwellwhateverr Před 5 lety +16

      ​@@obiwankenobi687 The GOF soundtrack was a travesty. I much preferred the medieval route that Williams took on the third film. Though Desplat did really well on the last few. Lily's Theme and Dumbledore's Farewell are beautiful.

    • @obiwankenobi687
      @obiwankenobi687 Před 4 lety +2

      ohwellwhateverr and Obliviate, which is my favorite overall piece of any of the films. And then a new beginning, which is just beautiful

    • @irai_nesanOfThamizhOrigin
      @irai_nesanOfThamizhOrigin Před 4 lety +1

      @ohwellwhateverr I don't know man, but "The story continues" from GOF is something else. It fits the dark turn the movie had took

  • @TheRockerX
    @TheRockerX Před 5 lety +716

    Even more evidence that Prisoner of Azkaban is the best Harry Potter movie

    • @vaibhavgupta20
      @vaibhavgupta20 Před 5 lety +48

      i don't know why he didn't direct anymore movie. IMO Prisoner of Azkaban is better than the book itself.

    • @horizon92lee
      @horizon92lee Před 5 lety

      The Rocker X goblet ftw

    • @camerono.3183
      @camerono.3183 Před 5 lety +75

      @@vaibhavgupta20 After that film came out, despite it earning more than enough to carry on the franchise, the director was still treated as if he had tarnished the entire series. Think about it, this was the first HP film to ever delve into darker territories and to discuss matters of the human experience, and people didn't like that. They wanted their happy, wizard, school, kiddy films back. Of course, it is nowadays regarded as the best one in retrospect in many ways.

    • @vaibhavgupta20
      @vaibhavgupta20 Před 5 lety +8

      how do you like the David Yates' movies? after i watched order of Phoenix i hated and stopped watching happy potter entirely.
      Biggest problem i find is lack of colors in the movies.
      only recently watched rest after i read the novel.

    • @Cavers
      @Cavers Před 5 lety +6

      @@vaibhavgupta20 What are you talking about? Order of the Phoenix had plenty of colours.

  • @thehopeofeden597
    @thehopeofeden597 Před 5 lety +11

    Nerdwriter brings me so much joy. I love the comment he made about Prisoner of Azkaban in an older video. That Harry Potter is there to help people learn how to read literature, and the movies help people learn how to "read" cinematically.
    Just the idea that someone like you Evan, is willing to put the effort in to helping people understand what they're passionate about, why they're passionate about it, and why art and society become effective at making us feel the way they do, is really uplifting.
    I think that's why this is my favorite CZcams channel. So, I just wanted to say thank you.

  • @LiamThompsonOfficial
    @LiamThompsonOfficial Před 5 lety +1

    Awesome, well thought out video. Thanks for sharing!

  • @johngleason4376
    @johngleason4376 Před 5 lety

    It's so wild, so many of those clips rip right through me. There's so much nostalgia and emotion packed into so many of those moments. I mean in the context of the movie there's tons of build up and prep to those intense moments so it makes sense in context that I'd get chills and feel emotional. But I (and many others i imagine) only need to see that short clip to trigger all those feelings. I love it.
    Also I don't want to leave this big comment and not mention the video. Loved this video, another killer video I always look forward to these.

  • @Robbscarey
    @Robbscarey Před 5 lety +43

    As much as the book loyalist in me doesn't like how in the last few films the incantations went kinda out of the window. the film student in me loves how in the later and more recent movies, particularly deathly hallows pt1, the wand battles have the aesthetic and intensity of close quarters gun battles. really great directing choice from yates.

    • @rayaqin
      @rayaqin Před 5 lety +6

      i think it is atrocious and horrible what they have done with wand battles... but it could definitely have been better in the books as well
      anyway, the best part of all the movies is that few seconds/minutes when voldemort and dumbledore fight in the ministry, it is VERY well done

    • @franks8462
      @franks8462 Před 5 lety +1

      This seems like the similar case between the Shining film/book debacle. The book is great and so is the film, but I would much rather see a hedge maze on screen than silly topiary animals prancing around. If we put the books through a "real world" lens, incantations are clunky (and rather silly).

    • @Robbscarey
      @Robbscarey Před 5 lety +1

      I think it's very much a case of what's cinematic and what makes sense on the page. You don't get the feeling of being in the room in a book that you do with a films use of sound design and visuals. In a book you have to do the visualisation for yourself and it feels more like you're being told a story than actual being there. Both approaches work in their particular mediums but when adapting the page to the screen the film makers do need to take the more cinematic approach to make the pace of the film better (there's a really good essay here)

    • @Erika-gn1tv
      @Erika-gn1tv Před 5 lety +1

      To be fair, the books establish that that is possible.

  • @IAmGeorgeLucas
    @IAmGeorgeLucas Před 5 lety +347

    One day they'll remake the Harry Potter movies and all of us will hate it.

    • @matthewfrancis4511
      @matthewfrancis4511 Před 5 lety +72

      Bit rich coming from you George

    • @IAmGeorgeLucas
      @IAmGeorgeLucas Před 5 lety +19

      @@matthewfrancis4511 At least the prequels were original. Can't say the same for the Mouse...

    • @user-ly2ll5od1r
      @user-ly2ll5od1r Před 5 lety +8

      @@IAmGeorgeLucas i'd rather take decent movies with unoriginal ideas that doesn't do anything fantastic rather than the shitty stinking hot turd garbage prequels. Anyone with iq above 50 could make an "original" movie.

    • @SubscribersWithoutAnySubscribe
      @SubscribersWithoutAnySubscribe Před 5 lety +2

      I really hope they do, because I hated everything after the second movie. First Dumbledore lost his blue eyes and gentle demeanor, then John Williams stopped doing the music scores, and then directors just started doing progressively more stupid stuff like having characters punch each other, and not bothering to read up on what spells actually do. It just got worse and worse until finally death eaters and order members were somehow wisps of corporeal smoke flying around and I switched off completely. Started off great, ended up like the fight scenes from Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon.

    • @SubscribersWithoutAnySubscribe
      @SubscribersWithoutAnySubscribe Před 5 lety

      @Zach Arbogast It was the third best you... peanut plundering.. dustbin doll.

  • @im19ice3
    @im19ice3 Před 5 lety +5

    i'm glad someone notices these things, many of the collaborators on such projects only really prove how competent they are when we don't notice what they did

  • @CED3
    @CED3 Před 5 lety +12

    “The Sound of Magic”, the Harry Potter musical, coming soon.

  • @bramlelieveldt
    @bramlelieveldt Před 5 lety +36

    Simply amazing,
    You managed to show me a part of The cinematic Harry Potter series which I had never noticed! Thank you a lot

  • @Maxificent
    @Maxificent Před 5 lety +3

    Awesome video! I love the sound design in HP, the music is also brilliant.
    It's the heart and soul of the movies and the sound effects themselves clearly help to no end.

  • @TheOneTrueErica
    @TheOneTrueErica Před 5 lety

    Your channel deserves so many more views. I love that your videos get me to look at and appreciate aspects of film making that I hadn't as deeply before.

  • @aMilling
    @aMilling Před 3 lety +1

    Harry saving himself by the lake will always be amazing.
    The sound of his Patronus is just so fucking awe inspiring.

  • @MadKingOfMadaya
    @MadKingOfMadaya Před 4 lety +5

    *_6:21_**_ ”Who said that?”_*
    *_Nerdwriter1: ”Me...”_*

  • @artloveranimation
    @artloveranimation Před 5 lety +4

    I love how harry potter uses music for memorable magical moments, like when Harry first casts a patronus.

  • @bobbycritz
    @bobbycritz Před 5 lety

    For one of the larger video essay channels out there, you guys do a really good job with not being super tacky with concepts. I was really excited when i saw this video in my recommended and i was very happy with all 7 minutes of the essay

  • @kingoffongpei
    @kingoffongpei Před 5 lety

    Bless you, Nerdwriter, for making the aspect ratio widescreen instead of putting in black bars on the top and bottom. This ultrawide monitor user is very grateful

  • @jp3813
    @jp3813 Před rokem +4

    I hate how the spells in the later films basically began resembling gunshots, especially in the cafe scene of Deathly Hallows 1.

  • @ohyeayea68
    @ohyeayea68 Před 5 lety +13

    Me: Voldemort is the most intimidating villa-
    Voldemort: HUHVRIVAKUHDABRA!!
    Me: ...nevermind.

    • @emopeterparker7
      @emopeterparker7 Před 4 lety

      burst out laughing when it came on
      im sorry voldie

  • @SebastianTinajero
    @SebastianTinajero Před 5 lety

    Sooooo much care goes into your videos, it’s like that one dessert you don’t really get to eat often but when you do it’s worth every bite

  • @thathsaraamarasinghe6774
    @thathsaraamarasinghe6774 Před 3 lety +1

    5:20 Jesus christ this gives me the CHILLS

  • @toshibavoodoo
    @toshibavoodoo Před 5 lety +3

    favorite channel and favorite franchise, LOVE IT!!

  • @BUDGETBALLER
    @BUDGETBALLER Před 5 lety +40

    My favorite sound designs are definitely 2 and 3
    The latter movies commit the sin of making magic sound like electricity

    • @ellentheeducator
      @ellentheeducator Před 5 lety +6

      Also, the later movies leaned a bit too much into making wand fights just blaster duels. (And I won't talk about the Harry/Voldemort showdown)

    • @henreebee6561
      @henreebee6561 Před 5 lety +5

      Allen Baker yeah, I hated how they portrayed the battles between Harry and Voldemort, where their wands connected. They tried to make it look exciting with a lot of camera cutting and movement but if you were just watching that in real life it would look lame. They’re just standing in place and yelling!

    • @videosfavoritosdegle
      @videosfavoritosdegle Před 5 lety +1

      Henry Barbee you mean like the fight of Gohan vs Cell in Dragon Ball Z? 🤣

  • @haleyhope24
    @haleyhope24 Před 5 lety +1

    I've recently been rewatching Sabrina the Teenage Witch, and something I didn't notice until rewatching an adult was the "sound of magic" changes from character to character- the sound and special effects changes depending on who casted the spell. Funny I was just thinking about this when you posted this video, it was fascinating!

  • @KoOkiEzRoCkz
    @KoOkiEzRoCkz Před 5 lety

    You never fail to create videos that just reel me in. Im not just watching a video of you talking about something, it feels like youre pulling me through the physical incarnation of your ideas/perspective and giving me a tour and explaining them. That is what I love about your vids and it is a skill I would like to learn :)

  • @calebconnor850
    @calebconnor850 Před 5 lety +13

    Nerdwriter1 + Harry Potter is always good

  • @JustABoy
    @JustABoy Před 5 lety +10

    Excellent video, but what aspect ratio is this and why is it used??

    • @SnuffWoodChannel
      @SnuffWoodChannel Před 5 lety +2

      first thing I noticed as well, glad I wasn't the only one

  • @wind-flower
    @wind-flower Před 5 lety +1

    4:44 This is probably one of my favourite "spell sound" moments in the movies. I love the slightly delayed "whip sound" of Sirius's disarming spell combined with his hand motion and the abruptly ending "snare sound" of Avada Kedavra combined with Sirius's expression when he gets hit by it - you only see pain for a short moment and then he's already dead, there's no time for a drawn out dying moment.

  • @jacobcolorado
    @jacobcolorado Před 5 lety

    Your PoA video was the first I watched of yours! Stoked you brought it back for another HP highlight video!! Alfonso is incredible

  • @Calucig
    @Calucig Před 5 lety +13

    great as always. Do you plan to do any Van Gogh?

  • @Evan-nx9ng
    @Evan-nx9ng Před 5 lety +198

    Nerdwriter grew up with Harry Potter

    • @KSG__
      @KSG__ Před 5 lety +36

      As every other mid to late 20s person on the planet

    • @KillahMate
      @KillahMate Před 5 lety +19

      HE WAS BORN IN IT, MOLDED BY IT

    • @enonymuz8627
      @enonymuz8627 Před 5 lety +17

      Harry Poter, Lord of the Rings, Matrix, some Jackie chan, Spy Kids, Classic Tom and Jerry, and some Mr. Bean. Care to elaborate?

    • @channalbert
      @channalbert Před 5 lety +6

      We all did

    • @ihateunicorns867
      @ihateunicorns867 Před 5 lety +4

      Did he go to Hogwarts with him?

  • @ryodark
    @ryodark Před 5 lety

    I love that you do video essays on topics that I never would imagine I'd LIKE to see a video essay on, but boy am I enthralled and happy that you DID make it!

  • @FullTheoss
    @FullTheoss Před 5 lety

    I really love how you design your videos, even more how you pay attention to the sound especially. That's kind of cheap to say so on this video, but I think this one is really more impactful than the others. That's just fantastic work. You have this way of editing that gives importance to sound and music, I just love it.
    Have a good day and please never stop doing CZcams !

  • @_baert
    @_baert Před 5 lety +3

    Unrelated to HP, but my favorite sound in a movie ever is the seismic bomb in the Star Wars prequels, but also the complete silence before it goes off. The absence of sound can be just as impactful as it was shown again in The Last Jedi.

  • @naomigreene4114
    @naomigreene4114 Před 5 lety +13

    I see Nerdwriter+Harry Potter, I have to see the video right then and there! 🤩😍

  • @takui3802
    @takui3802 Před 5 lety

    I love this video! It is intriguing that just pure sound effect design play a big role in how people feel and makes the fight seen very powerful.
    I just watched your another video about harry potter and both of the videos inspired me to look into filming more seriously.

  • @FilmflickerCinema
    @FilmflickerCinema Před 5 lety

    You really help me understand things in film I don't often think about

  • @whazee
    @whazee Před 5 lety +34

    Guy: "What do you wanna do tonight?"
    Girl: "Let's do Voldemort."
    Guy: "Uh-wha?"

  • @MrPollfer
    @MrPollfer Před 5 lety +3

    4:21
    Sir, I think the Dementors feed on the person's happiness, not despair.

  • @AAWHEEEE
    @AAWHEEEE Před 5 lety

    This was really cool! I had never ever thought about the sound design of the spells, or even sound design in movies at all much. Love the thought that goes into it for each different type of spell and person - really cool video!

  • @coleeckerman1390
    @coleeckerman1390 Před rokem +2

    I like the idea that the spells act/sound differently based on the caster's thoughts, I think the aggressive whoosh or electric sound shows the emotional intensity of the caster. And I think Dumbledore and Voldemorts battle is partly incantation, but mostly wandless magic or an extension of a basic spell, I believe Dumbledore was using augamenti against Voldemort to trap him in a water bubble, but it was Dumbledore's mastery of magic that allowed him to use a spell meant for filling a bucket with water into a very powerful offensive spell. I think the same thing about the Inferi fire ring scene, I don't think it was fiendfyre, it was a fire rope charm but cast so powerfully to fill a massive cave with it and control it precisely, so Dumbledore is so powerful that even powerful dark magic fails to compete with his level of talent in basic magic.

  • @MAZaini93
    @MAZaini93 Před 5 lety +85

    To be honest one of the main reasons why I wasn't a big fan of every Harry Potter from Goblet of Fire onward is because I feel like they became too "pew-pew" with the spell sounds. The first 3 movies really made you feel like magic was happening when a spell was cast, it was always unique and creative. Then you move onto the movies after that and it just became mindless colourful flashes with bland noises. Wands basically became guns.
    For me the eclipse of all magic in the series was Harry casting that patronus charm in Prisoner of Azkaban. It was truly magical.

    • @whenthedustfallsaway
      @whenthedustfallsaway Před 5 lety +11

      Yes in the last two films it seems like everyone was having a war with Avada Kadabra

    • @robbegeens2885
      @robbegeens2885 Před 5 lety +7

      @@whenthedustfallsaway yes in GoF I thought the killing curse was super hard and only the best of the best could perform them but in the next movies it just seems too easy, still great movies though

    • @jimchoong1215
      @jimchoong1215 Před 5 lety +6

      @@robbegeens2885 you needed to mean it which most people couldn't, but in a situation of war this can change making the urgency to kill the enemy stronger

    • @matthewcooper4248
      @matthewcooper4248 Před 4 lety +5

      Given that they were using the spells to fight, it makes sense that they would sound more like that. And no, they did not sound like guns, at least not any real world guns. They were made to sound fast and weighted, but not made out of real material. That's what they did. He even brings up the different sound profiles of the killing curse in the later movies. Honestly did you even watch the video or did you just want to write your comment and move on?

    • @BlackXSunlight
      @BlackXSunlight Před 4 lety +3

      David Yates definitely has an eye for dramatic shots, grand sets, and tighter action, but the worst thing he ever did to Harry Potter was make the magic an indistinct gumbo of wand flicks. There’s a point where you don’t hear incantations anymore, all spells are little jets of white mist with similar effects. Stupification being red is iconic and a missed opportunity visually.

  • @games2507
    @games2507 Před 5 lety +3

    The visuals in Harry Potter are amazing.

  • @nickymo
    @nickymo Před 5 lety

    Such a neat video! Seen these movies so many times growing up and never thought about the sound design, it usually goes over my head. Awesome highlight!

  • @ElizabethRainey
    @ElizabethRainey Před 4 lety +3

    Still incredibly mad about how they changed Sirius' death from him falling into an object so mysterious and impossible to explain and disappearing from earth, to just getting hit by the killing curse like thousands of others before and having his body evaporated.

  • @doantidoto
    @doantidoto Před 5 lety +157

    In film, magic sounds like this. In real life, there's a very good composition that captures hie magic does sound like in reality. It is called 4'33, by John Cage.
    Bad jokes aside: great job, Evan! Still a major source of inspiration!

    • @MrJoao3334
      @MrJoao3334 Před 5 lety

      aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa sabia q vc via nerdwriter seu safado kkkkkkkkk seus videos sao pica pacero

    • @NoNameAtAll2
      @NoNameAtAll2 Před 5 lety +1

      Oooooh
      4'33 has no sound == magic does not exist...

    • @sirmoros8951
      @sirmoros8951 Před 5 lety +15

      @@NoNameAtAll2 4'33 does have sound. It is the sound of your surroundings, what you hear. Magic is around you, what your hear.

    • @lewisb9226
      @lewisb9226 Před 5 lety +1

      @@sirmoros8951 I was trying to think of a way to say this, then I saw that you got there first and said it better than I could!

    • @bryanchu5379
      @bryanchu5379 Před 5 lety

      gottem good

  • @rustinvk
    @rustinvk Před 5 lety

    I enjoyed your break of character on the last line. I appreciate your thoughtful tone, which is why I think the self effacing joke at the end was a nice touch. Thanks for your work. It’s inspiring.

  • @JoshHenderson16
    @JoshHenderson16 Před 5 lety

    What an amazing video. Your examples were so on point and made me appreciate the spellcasting on a whole other level. Incidentally, the very point about spells being an extension of the person and really resonating with the incantations is an aspect I feel was very clearly missing from FB.

  • @tinolorenz6996
    @tinolorenz6996 Před 5 lety +5

    This Video is absolut AMAZING.