Thoughts on the lack of color separation in Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince? I was re watching this movie yesterday and realized that the colouring was purposefully made in a way that the skin tones would never pop out. Skin tones always blend with the background. And in general there is little colour separation.
Without knowing anything about principal photography, I did notice that the color scheme in the movies often changes. Particularly, when Lord Voldemort is shown on screen, the colors green, gray, and black seem to be kind of emphasized, almost as if they cancel out all other colors. And Voldemort is not the only wizard using Avadakedavra in the movies, but his iteration of the spell seems to.
A colour correction comparison video for 2009's Harry Potter and the Half. The Potter account manager goblin named Sharpclaw bared his teeth in a toothy grin and replied coldly from behind his desk "His actual magical guardian was here yesterday and gave irrefutable documentation that he was indeed by law his actual magical guardian. So, there you have it: the colour scheme of the wizarding world.
Spend enough time delving into pottermore.com and you'll begin to realise what a mammoth and magical job it has been bringing Harry Potter's world to life. For whatever reason, I decided to also watch the last Harry Potter film as well afterwards-mostly just to see how the cast aged. But what I noticed, due to the discussion of color in my last post, was how different everything looked from the first film to the last.
I'm not talking the actors here-I'm talking about everything. Welcome to r/HarryPotter, the place where fans from around the world can meet and discuss everything in the Harry Potter universe! Be sorted, earn house points, debate which actor portrayed Dumbledore the best and finally get some closure for your Post. >t.
doesnt understand the story of harry potter at all the reason why the films get darker and less saturated is because the magic world and the world as harry knows it is literally dying. its like expecting a movie showing the life of a israelite in nazi germany to be super saturated and bright and colorful and vibrant. CREDIT: Warner Bros.
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix, and Harry Potter and the Half. The biggest problem with the Harry Potter movies wasn't that they cut cool stuff from the books. It's that they just decided to stop using color halfway through.