Tags / David Yates

"David Yates"

4 BuzzVerdicts

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2

4.1

2011 · David Yates · 130 min · Fantasy

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 delivers the epic finale the franchise earned, anchored by Alan Rickman's extraordinary Snape revelation and a Battle of Hogwarts that brings ten years of storytelling to a thunderous climax. Neville Longbottom's hero moment and the sheer emotional weight of watching these characters face death make this a powerful conclusion. The film stumbles with Voldemort's CGI disintegration, which undermines the book's thematic point about mortality, and the epilogue feels rushed past earned goodbyes. But as a payoff to a decade-long investment, it delivers where it matters most.

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1

3.8

2010 · David Yates · 146 min · Fantasy

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1 is the franchise's quietest and most emotionally honest film, a road movie about three young people bearing impossible weight while the world they knew collapses around them. The animated Tale of the Three Brothers is a masterpiece of visual storytelling, the opening action sequences deliver genuine thrills, and Dobby's final scene provides the series' most devastating emotional moment. The camping stretches test patience by design, and the film is incomplete by nature. But as a portrait of what war costs the people fighting it, this is Potter at its most mature.

Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix

3.7

2007 · David Yates · 138 min · Fantasy

Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix turns the series' longest book into its shortest film, and the compression leaves marks. Imelda Staunton's Umbridge is one of the franchise's great villains, Daniel Radcliffe finally commands the screen as a leading man, and the Dumbledore-Voldemort duel delivers a spectacular climax. But the rush to fit everything in leaves supporting characters stranded and narrative threads dangling. It's a film that works best as a chapter in a larger story rather than a standalone experience.

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince

3.6

2009 · David Yates · 153 min · Fantasy

Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince is the most visually accomplished film in the franchise and features some of the series' strongest individual performances, particularly from Jim Broadbent and Tom Felton. Its balance of teenage humor with encroaching darkness works when the film commits to either mode. But the decision to prioritize romance over Voldemort's backstory, combined with the inexplicable Burrow attack and a muted emotional climax, leaves this as one of the more frustrating Potter adaptations. It's gorgeous to look at and often funny, but it tells the wrong story.