Jul 7, 2011

Watch Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows – Part 2 Movie Without Download And Loading

Watch Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows – Part 2 Movie Online
 The Harry Potter series has been under criticism for supposedly supporting witchcraft and occult. Before publication of Deathly Hallows, Rowling refused to speak out about her religion, stating, “If I talk too freely, every reader, whether 10 or 60, will be able to guess what’s coming in the books”. However, many have noted Christian allegories apparent in Deathly Hallows.[36] In an August 2007 issue of Newsweek, Lisa Miller commented that Harry dies and then comes back to life to save mankind, like Christ.
She points out the title of the chapter in which this occurs—”King’s Cross”—a possible allusion to Christ’s cross. Also, she outlines the scene in which Harry is temporarily dead, pointing out that it places Harry in a very heaven-like setting where he talks to a father figure “whose supernatural powers are accompanied by a profound message of love”. Miller argues that these parallels make it difficult to believe that the basis of the stories is Satanic. Rowling also stated that “my belief and my struggling with religious belief … I think is quite apparent in this book”, which is shown as Harry struggles with his faith in Dumbledore.
Deathly Hallows begins with a pair of epigraphs, one by Quaker leader William Penn and one from Aeschylus’ The Libation Bearers. Of this, Rowling said “I really enjoyed choosing those two quotations because one is pagan, of course, and one is from a Christian tradition. I’d known it was going to be those two passages since Chamber was published. I always knew [that] if I could use them at the beginning of book seven then I’d queued up the ending perfectly. If they were relevant, then I went where I needed to go. They just say it all to me, they really do”.
Watch Harry Potter And The Deathly Hallows – Part 2 Movie Online
Raymond Keating also outlines several Christian themes of the last book in an article in Newsday, concluding that “It’s possible to read Lord of the Rings and Narnia without recognizing the religious aspects. That’s even more so the case with Harry Potter. But Christian themes are there nonetheless”. Christian commentator Jerry Bowyer says of Rowling’s “fundamentalist bashers”, “So much of the religious right failed to see the Christianity in the Potter novels because it knows so little Christianity itself …The gospel stories themselves, the various metaphors and figures of the Law and the Prophets, and their echoes down through the past two millennia of Christian literature and art are largely unknown to vast swaths of American Christendom”. As regards Rowling’s belief that discussing her faith would spoil the books, Bowyer says, “For once, I disagree with her: I don’t think [the bashers] would have guessed the ending. Most of them can’t recognise the ending of the story even after it’s been told”.
When Harry visits his parents’ grave, the biblical reference “The last enemy that shall be destroyed is death” (1 Corinthians 15:26) is inscribed on the grave. The Dumbledore’s family tomb also holds a biblical quote: “Where your treasure is, there your heart will be also”, which is from Matthew 6:21. Rowling states, “They’re very British books, so on a very practical note Harry was going to find biblical quotations on tombstones …[but] I think those two particular quotations he finds on the tombstones at Godric’s Hollow, they sum up – they almost epitomise the whole series”.
Christian author Nancy Carpentier Brown also noted many Christian themes, such as Harry marking Mad-Eye Moody’s grave with a cross, showing remorse and giving Voldemort a chance to redeem himself, and the Resurrection Stone. She also pointed out that Harry becomes a godfather to Tonks and Lupin’s son, Teddy Lupin, which is a Christian term.
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Asda, along with several other UK supermarkets, having already taken pre-orders for the book at a heavily discounted price, sparked a price war two days before the book’s launch by announcing they would sell it for just GB£5 a copy (about US$8). Other retail chains then also offered the book at discounted prices. At these prices the book became a loss leader. This caused uproar from traditional UK booksellers who argued they had no hope of competing in those conditions. Independent shops protested loudest, but even Waterstone’s, the UK’s largest dedicated chain bookstore, could not compete with the supermarket price. Some small bookstores hit back by buying their stock from the supermarkets rather than their wholesalers. Asda attempted to counter this by imposing a limit of two copies per customer to prevent bulk purchases. Philip Wicks, a spokesman for the UK Booksellers Association, said, “It is a war we can’t even participate in. We think it’s a crying shame that the supermarkets have decided to treat it as a loss-leader, like a can of baked beans.” Michael Norris, an analyst at Simba Information, said: “You are not only lowering the price of the book. At this point, you are lowering the value of reading.”

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