Harry+potter+and+the+deathly+hallows+part+2+20+fix [top]
The "20-minute fix" for Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2
refers to a popular sentiment among fans—and frequently discussed in video essays—that a few relatively minor changes to the final 20 minutes could have significantly improved the film’s thematic resonance. The Flaws in the Final Act
While the film is a commercial and critical success, many fans argue the cinematic finale sacrificed character depth for spectacle. Key criticisms include: The Lack of Dialogue:
In the book, Harry and Voldemort engage in a tense verbal exchange in the Great Hall, where Harry explains the "wandlore" that makes Voldemort vulnerable. The movie replaces this with a physical, largely silent struggle that many felt lacked narrative weight. Voldemort’s Death:
Instead of dying like a man—collapsing as a mortal body—the movie has Voldemort "flake away" into ash. This undermined the theme that, despite his horcruxes, he was ultimately just a human named Tom Riddle. The Broken Wand:
A major point of contention is Harry snapping the Elder Wand without first using it to repair his own holly and phoenix feather wand, a meaningful moment of restoration that occurred in the book. Proposed "Fixes" for the Final 20 Minutes
Based on the filename format provided, this appears to be a query for a specific type of edit or fan-fix for the movie Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 (2011). The "fix" usually implies a "Fan Edit" intended to correct continuity errors, restore deleted scenes, or re-edit the narrative to be more faithful to the book.
Here is a breakdown of the specific features often associated with the popular fan-fixes for this movie (such as the Intellectual Exercise, Hogwarts Rewritten, or similar edits):
Fix #18: Name Albus Severus’s Full Backstory
The epilogue feels rushed. The fix: When Harry tells Albus, “You were named for two headmasters,” the camera lingers on Snape’s portrait in the headmaster’s office. A silent nod to Rickman’s legacy.
20‑Point Fix Guide — Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2
This is a focused 20‑point guide of tweaks, fixes, and enhancements (story, pacing, character beats, visuals, and editing) to tighten, clarify, and emotionally deepen the film while keeping its core intact.
-
Clarify the timeline at the start
- Add a brief onscreen caption (“Days until the final battle: X”) and a tighter montage showing Hogwarts preparing for war.
-
Shorten the opening chase on the car
- Cut repetitive beats; keep key reveals (Gordon’s death, arrival at Shell Cottage) to speed momentum.
-
Reinforce Harry’s agency early
- Insert a short scene of Harry privately resolving his plan before meeting allies, so he feels less reactive.
-
Expand Hermione and Ron’s emotional reconciliation
- Add one intimate, quiet exchanged memory or line that shows why they heal, making the reunion more earned.
-
Show Dumbledore’s portrait giving explicit guidance
- Have the portrait confirm one specific Horcrux detail to remove ambiguity about the plan.
-
Make the Horcrux-search montage more specific
- Show clear clues found (a locket fragment, a memory) instead of vague montage flashes to increase stakes.
-
Streamline the fake death of Ollivander
- Reduce screen time on wandering; focus on the crucial reveal that wandlore matters to destroying Horcruxes.
-
Give Neville a short heroic setup earlier
- Add a micro‑scene of Neville rallying students or practicing, so his final act feels foreshadowed.
-
Strengthen Minerva’s leadership presence
- Show McGonagall issuing concise, tactical orders and comforting students to emphasize her command.
-
Make the Room of Requirement break‑in logical
- Show the students preparing a coordinated distraction or plan so the break‑in isn’t purely cinematic convenience.
-
Improve pacing of the “Snape memories” sequence
- Tighten cross‑cuts: fewer, clearer memories emphasizing Snape’s love and his true motives.
-
Adjust the exposition about the Deathly Hallows
- Have one character summarize the three Hallows succinctly to avoid overlong dialogue and confusion.
-
Shorten the Ministry flashbacks
- Keep one impactful memory (e.g., Snape’s patronus) rather than multiple repetitive scenes.
-
Heighten the cinematic reveal of the Elder Wand transfer harry+potter+and+the+deathly+hallows+part+2+20+fix
- Add a clearer, discrete shot showing the moment of mastery changing hands between Dumbledore and Draco/Harry to resolve confusion over wand allegiance.
-
Add a small beat where Harry contemplates killing Voldemort with/without the Elder Wand
- One silent reflection (e.g., looking at the wand, then choosing) to underline moral choice.
-
Make the Forbidden Forest walk more poignant
- Insert a short, visual hallucination or memory montage of loved ones to amplify stakes before the sacrifice.
-
Tighten the final duel choreography
- Shorten prolonged back‑and‑forth; focus on a few decisive moves and visual symbolism (broken wand, sparks) to maintain clarity.
-
Resolve lingering character arcs briefly in aftermath
- One‑line closures for key characters (e.g., Luna, Ginny, Kingsley) to satisfy the ensemble without slowing the ending.
-
Fix tonal shifts in the epilogue setup
- Smooth transition from battle aftermath to 19 years later with an intermediate montage of rebuilding Hogwarts and the wizarding world.
-
Trim the epilogue and add a single emotional callback
- Shorten the 19‑years‑later scene to one strong visual callback (a familiar prop or line) and a concise final shot focused on legacy rather than extended family logistics.
If you want, I can turn these into a shot‑by‑shot revision, draft new lines for specific scenes (e.g., Ron/Hermione reconciliation or Snape memory), or produce a condensed cutlist for editing.
Related search suggestions: functions.RelatedSearchTerms("suggestions":["suggestion":"Harry Potter Deathly Hallows Part 2 alternate endings","score":0.8,"suggestion":"Neville Longbottom character arc analysis","score":0.7,"suggestion":"Elder Wand ownership explanation","score":0.9])
Title: The Resurrection Stone’s Echo: 20 Fixes for ‘Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2’
Introduction: A Near-Flawless Finale
Let’s be clear from the start: Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2 (2011) is a monumental achievement in blockbuster filmmaking. It delivered emotional closure, stunning visuals (Gringotts dragon, the Room of Requirement fire), and Alexandre Desplat’s haunting score. After eight films, it stuck the landing for millions.
But for book readers and obsessive re-watchers, the film is a collection of brilliant moments held together with fraying spellotape. In the rush to the finish line, director David Yates and screenwriter Steve Kloves made baffling cuts, puzzling changes, and one infamous character assassination.
Below are 20 targeted fixes—not to rewrite the film, but to repair it. These range from single lines of dialogue to entire scene restorations. Each fix addresses a specific wound in the final chapter.
The Big Structural Fixes
Fix #1: Restore the Full Backstory of the Elder Wand The film reduces the wand’s history to a 30-second Ollivander info-dump. Fix: Insert a 2-minute flashback during the “Prince’s Tale” montage. Show young Grindelwald stealing it from Gregorovitch, then Dumbledore defeating Grindelwald in their legendary 1945 duel. This makes Harry’s realization that the wand’s allegiance is fluid—and Dumbledore’s plan to die undefeated—land with actual weight.
Fix #2: The Prince’s Tale Needs 5 More Minutes The film’s version is beautiful but truncated. Add: Snape berating Phineas Nigellus for using the word “mudblood,” Snape saving Lupin’s life during the “Seven Potters,” and the crucial line: “Lately, only those whom I could not save.” Most critically: include Dumbledore’s plea—“After all this time?” / “Always.”—and the reveal that Harry must die willingly. The film glosses over that sacrifice being voluntary.
Fix #3: Voldemort’s Death – No Confetti, No Dust The film’s artistic choice (Voldemort disintegrating like ash) undermines the entire theme. Fix: As in the book, he falls as a mundane, broken human body. Harry and Tom circle each other in the Great Hall. Harry explains the wand’s allegiance in front of everyone. Voldemort’s body hits the floor with a thud. The silence that follows is the point: he was always just a man.
Fix #4: Harry’s Resurrection Walk – Add the Inner Monologue In the film, Harry walks to the Forest confused. Fix: As he walks, overlay a whispered montage of voices: “Your father’s coming back…” (Quirrell), “He’s gone, Harry” (Sirius), “He trusted Severus” (Dumbledore), “Take my body back” (Mad-Eye’s eye). Then silence. Then the Resurrection Stone figures speak to him, not at him.
Character-Specific Fixes
Fix #5: Ron Gets His Hero Moment (Destroying the Cup) In the film, Ron stabs the Horcrux… and that’s it. Fix: Restore the book’s version where Ron’s Parseltongue attempt is clumsy, desperate, and works. Hermione’s awed look, Ron’s relief, and the line: “That’s the second time you’ve saved my life” from Harry. Ron is not comic relief—he’s a tactician.
Fix #6: Ginny Weasley – Add Three Lines Ginny is a cardboard cutout in DH2. Fix: When Harry enters the Room of Requirement, give her the book line: “I know, I just wanted to… look at you one more time.” Later, during the final battle, add her fighting alongside Molly and Bellatrix. One shot of her dueling a Death Eater restores her agency.
Fix #7: McGonagall’s Full Command The film has her leading the defense, but omits her most badass moment. Fix: When Harry reveals he must find a lost diadem, McGonagall silences the room and says, “I’ve always wanted to use that spell.” Then she animates the suits of armor. Keep her final line to Voldemort’s voice: “He’s not alone… he never was.”
Fix #8: Fred’s Death – A Pause, Not a Cut The film rushes Fred’s death in the explosion. Fix: After the blast, show Percy shaking Fred’s body. Then cut to Ron and Hermione seeing it from a distance. Ron’s scream is silent under the score. Then cut to Harry’s face. Let grief sit for 10 seconds before moving on. The "20-minute fix" for Harry Potter and the
Fix #9: Lupin & Tonks – One Shared Look The film shows them dead on the floor with no context. Fix: During the final battle, give them a 3-second shot fighting back-to-back. Then later, Harry sees their bodies with Teddy’s orphaned status echoing his own. Add Harry whispering, “Remus… Dora…” It costs nothing and pays immense emotional dividends.
Dialogue Fixes (One-Liners That Change Everything)
Fix #10: Dumbledore’s “Of course it is happening inside your head…” The film includes the line, but rushes it. Fix: Pause after “Why would it be?” Let Harry smile. Then Dumbledore says warmly, “Of course it is happening inside your head, Harry. But why on earth should that mean it is not real?” Then fade to black. That’s the thesis of the entire series.
Fix #11: Molly’s “Not my daughter, you bitch!” – Restore the Setup The film delivers the line, but Bellatrix hasn’t just nearly killed Ginny. Fix: Show Bellatrix laughing as a curse flies past Ginny’s ear. Molly’s face shifts from fear to fury. Then the line. Then the duel. The line works because it’s earned.
Fix #12: Harry’s “I’m about to die” to Neville In the film, Harry just says, “Neville, something you need to know.” Fix: Harry grabs Neville’s arm and whispers, “The snake. It’s the last Horcrux. You have to kill it. No matter what happens to me.” This clarifies why Neville acts.
Fix #13: Voldemort’s “Why do you live?” – Add the True Answer After Harry survives the Killing Curse again, Voldemort shrieks “Why?” The film has no reply. Fix: Harry says calmly, “Because you’re missing something, Tom. Something you’ve never understood. It’s not about power. It’s about mercy and sacrifice. And you’ve never known either.”
Action & Sequence Fixes
Fix #14: The Escape on the Dragon – Don’t Cut Away The film cuts from the dragon flying over the lake to the trio in the forest. Fix: Keep them on the dragon’s back for 30 more seconds. Show them nearly falling, Ron clutching Hermione, Harry steering by pulling a spine. Then a hard crash-landing. It’s a transition, not a fade-out.
Fix #15: The Fiendfyre Sequence – Make It Understandable In the film, the Room of Requirement burns with little setup. Fix: Show Crabbe (Goyle in the film) casting the spell incorrectly. Harry shouts, “He doesn’t know how to control it!” Then show the fire taking shapes—serpents, dragons, wolves. Ron pulling Hermione up just before a fiery chimera strikes. Visual storytelling.
Fix #16: The Final Duel – Slow Down The film’s final Harry vs. Voldemort duel is a frantic chase around the courtyard. Fix: They should circle each other in the Great Hall, surrounded by the living and the dead. Every line of dialogue from the book (“Try for some remorse, Tom”) delivered face to face. Then simultaneous spells: Voldemort’s Killing Curse, Harry’s Disarm. The Elder Wand refuses to kill its true master. Voldemort’s own curse rebounds. He falls. Done.
Fix #17: The 19 Years Later – Remove the Obvious Aging The makeup is distractingly bad. Fix: Don’t age them at all. Just let Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint, and Emma Watson play the scene as is, with slightly grayer hair and quieter voices. Audiences will accept it. The current makeup looks like a school play.
The Emotional Core Fixes
Fix #18: Harry Uses the Resurrection Stone BEFORE the Forest The film shows him finding it, then immediately cuts to the Forest. Fix: In the Forbidden Forest, Harry stops. He turns the stone three times. Then the ghosts of James, Lily, Sirius, and Lupin appear gradually, not all at once. Let Harry ask his mother, “Does it hurt?” Let her say, “Not as much as leaving you.” Then he drops the stone.
Fix #19: The “All Was Well” – Restore the Book’s Final Line The film ends with a shot of the trio at King’s Cross and a cut to black. Fix: After the train departs, cut to Harry’s face. He touches his scar. Nothing. He smiles. Then a title card: “All was well.” Fade to black. Credits. That’s the closure millions of readers waited for.
Fix #20: One Post-Credit Shot (No Dialogue, No Sequel Bait) After the final credits roll, a single 10-second shot: the Hogwarts Great Hall, empty and in ruins. A single house-elf (not Dobby, but another) places a small knitted hat on a fallen stone. Then a soft glow of sunrise. Black. End.
Conclusion: The Difference Between Good and Immortal
Deathly Hallows: Part 2 is a good film. But with these 20 fixes—totaling maybe 12 extra minutes—it could have been an immortal one. The material was all there in the book: emotional logic, thematic consistency, character payoffs. The film chose spectacle over stillness, pace over pathos.
These fixes aren’t about fan service. They’re about completing the arcs that J.K. Rowling so carefully built. A fallen Voldemort, a speaking Ron, a mourning Percy, a silent McGonagall, a sad Dumbledore, and an “all was well” that lands like a whisper.
Because in the end, the Boy Who Lived deserved a finale that lived as fully as he did.
What fix would you add? Or disagree with? Let’s debate in the comments.
The 2011 conclusion to the Harry Potter saga, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2, is widely considered a masterclass in franchise filmmaking. However, even the most beloved finales have room for refinement. A "2.0 fix" of the film would focus on enhancing emotional payoffs, honoring the source material's thematic depth, and clarifying the logistics of the final battle. 1. The Emotional Core: The "Missing" Remembrances
The greatest critique of the film is its breakneck pace, which occasionally sacrifices emotional weight for spectacle.
The Deaths of Lupin, Tonks, and Fred: In the film, these characters die off-screen, and we only see their bodies in the Great Hall. A "fix" would include brief, poignant moments of their final stands. Seeing Fred’s laugh cut short or Lupin and Tonks reaching for each other one last time would transform their loss from a plot point into a visceral tragedy. Clarify the timeline at the start
Dumbledore’s Backstory: The film largely ignores the "Life and Lies of Albus Dumbledore" subplot. Integrating Harry’s disillusionment with his mentor would have made their reunion in "King’s Cross" far more powerful, moving it beyond a mere lore dump to a moment of genuine forgiveness. 2. The Final Showdown: Atmosphere over Action
The film’s climax turns the Harry vs. Voldemort duel into a physical brawl across the castle, ending with Voldemort disintegrating into ash.
The Dialogue: In the book, Harry and Voldemort circle each other in the Great Hall, surrounded by everyone they’ve fought for. This allows Harry to explain why he wins—the power of Lily’s sacrifice and the true mastery of the Elder Wand.
Voldemort’s Death: The "ash" effect was cinematic but missed the point. Voldemort feared being ordinary more than anything. Having him fall as a "mundane" corpse, as he does in the text, would have been the ultimate thematic victory, proving that despite his Horcruxes, he was just a man. 3. The Epilogue: A Visual Update
The "19 Years Later" scene is often mocked for its "aging" makeup, which many felt looked uncanny or insufficient.
The Fix: A revised version would lean into subtle digital de-aging or more realistic practical effects. More importantly, the dialogue could be deepened to show the lasting impact of the war—perhaps a brief nod to Neville Longbottom’s career or the reformed state of the Wizarding World—rather than just focusing on the next generation's names. 4. Continuity and Logic
The Elder Wand: In the film, Harry simply snaps the wand and throws it off a bridge. While symbolic, it leaves a massive magical artifact destroyed without explanation. Reverting to the book’s ending—where Harry uses the Elder Wand to fix his original holly and phoenix feather wand before returning the Elder Wand to Dumbledore’s tomb—provides a much more satisfying "full circle" moment for his character. Conclusion
A Deathly Hallows Part 2 "2.0" wouldn't need to change the plot, but rather the texture of the storytelling. By slowing down to honor the fallen, restoring the philosophical weight of the final duel, and polishing the epilogue, the film would shift from a great action movie to a flawless emotional epic.
While there is no official "20+ fix" version of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2
, the phrase often refers to the 20th Anniversary celebrations or technical troubleshooting (like the "2 movies into 1" Plex matching error) that fans encounter when digitizing their collections.
Released in 2011, Part 2 serves as the high-stakes conclusion to the decade-long saga, focusing on the Battle of Hogwarts and the final showdown between Harry Potter and Lord Voldemort. The Final Stand: A Cinematic Legacy
The film picks up immediately where Part 1 ended, with Harry, Ron, and Hermione hunting the final Horcruxes. Directed by David Yates, it is noted for shifting the tone from a whimsical school adventure to a gritty, high-stakes war film. Key highlights include:
Snape’s Redemption: Flashbacks reveal Severus Snape’s lifelong double-agent role and his protection of Harry, driven by his love for Lily Potter.
The Master of Death: Harry realizes he is the true master of the Elder Wand because he disarmed Draco Malfoy, who had previously disarmed Dumbledore.
Neville’s Heroism: Neville Longbottom completes his transformation into a true hero by beheading the snake Nagini, destroying Voldemort's final Horcrux. Differences from the Source Material
Fans often debate the "fixes" the movie made to the book, or the areas where they feel it fell short. A significant point of contention is the final duel: in the book, Voldemort dies as a mortal man, leaving a physical body; in the film, he disintegrates into ash, a choice some feel undermines the theme of his mortality. Other film-specific changes include the trio breaking the Elder Wand instead of returning it to Dumbledore’s tomb and the omission of Dudley’s redemption scene. Technical "Fixes" for Collectors
For those organizing digital libraries, the "fix" usually involves metadata. Because Deathly Hallows is split into two parts, media servers like Plex sometimes merge them incorrectly. Users can "fix" this by:
Renaming Files: Ensure the release year (2011) is in parentheses in the filename.
Splitting Apart: Using the "Split Apart" feature on the media server to separate the two entries manually.
Manual Matching: Selecting the specific database entry for Part 2 to ensure the correct posters and cast lists appear.
Beyond the 19 Years Later: 20 Essential Fixes for ‘Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2’
When Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2 hit theaters in July 2011, it was a cultural seismic event. Audiences wept, cheered, and said goodbye to the most beloved film franchise of a generation. Director David Yates and screenwriter Steve Kloves delivered a spectacular, emotionally charged finale that rightfully earned critical acclaim and over $1.3 billion at the box office.
And yet… even the most devoted Potterheads will admit: Part 2 is not perfect.
Nearly 15 years later, fans are still searching for a “harry+potter+and+the+deathly+hallows+part+2+20+fix” — a deep-dive wish list of two dozen corrections, restorations, and reimaginings that would elevate the finale from great to legendary. From missing character moments to logical plot holes, these 20 fixes address what went wrong, what was left on the cutting room floor, and how Warner Bros. could finally give the Eighth Story its definitive director’s cut.