Warner Bros. Pictures bought the film rights to the book in 1999 for a reported £1 million ($1.65 million). Production began in the United Kingdom in 2000, with Columbus being chosen to helm the film from a short list of directors that included Steven Spielberg and Rob Reiner. Rowling insisted that the entire cast be British and Irish, with the three leads chosen in August 2000 following open casting calls. Filming took place at Leavesden Film Studios and historic buildings around the United Kingdom from September 2000 to March 2001.
Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone was released to cinemas in the United Kingdom and Ireland on 10 and 11 November 2001 for two days of previews. The film opened on 16 November in the United States, Canada, and Taiwan as well as officially in the United Kingdom and Ireland. It became a critical and commercial success, grossing $974 million at the worldwide box office during its initial run, and over $1 billion with subsequent re-releases. It became the highest-grossing film of 2001 and the second-highest-grossing film at the time. The film was nominated for many awards, including Academy Awards for Best Original Score, Best Art Direction and Best Costume Design. It was followed by seven sequels, beginning with Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets in 2002 and ending with Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows – Part 2 in 2011.
Ten years later, just before Harry's eleventh birthday, owls begin delivering letters addressed to him. When the abusive Dursleys adamantly refuse to allow Harry to open any and flee to an island hut, Hagrid arrives to personally deliver Harry's letter of acceptance to Hogwarts. Hagrid also reveals that Harry's late parents, James and Lily, were killed by a dark wizard named Lord Voldemort. The killing curse that Voldemort had cast towards Harry rebounded, destroying Voldemort's body and giving Harry the lightning-bolt scar on his forehead. Hagrid then takes Harry to Diagon Alley for school supplies and gives him a pet snowy owl whom he names Hedwig. Harry buys a wand that is connected to Voldemort's own wand.
At King's Cross, Harry boards the Hogwarts Express train, and meets fellow first-years Ron Weasley and Hermione Granger during the journey. Arriving at Hogwarts, Harry also meets Draco Malfoy, who is from a wealthy wizard family; the two immediately form a rivalry. The students assemble in the Great Hall where the Sorting Hat sorts the first-years into four respective houses: Gryffindor, Hufflepuff, Ravenclaw, and Slytherin. Harry is placed into Gryffindor alongside Ron and Hermione, while Draco is placed into Slytherin, a house noted for dark wizards.
As he studies magic, Harry learns more about his parents and Voldemort, and his innate talent for broomstick flying gets him recruited for the Gryffindor Quidditch team as the youngest Seeker in a century. While returning to the Gryffindor common room, the staircases change paths, leading Harry, Ron and Hermione to the third floor, which is forbidden to students. There they discover a giant three-headed dog named Fluffy. On Halloween, Ron insults Hermione after she shows off in Charms class. Upset, she spends the entire afternoon crying in the girls' bathroom. That evening, a giant marauding troll enters it but Harry and Ron save Hermione; they make up and become close friends after Hermione takes the blame for the incident by saying she went looking for the troll.
The trio discover that Fluffy is guarding the philosopher's stone, a magical object that can turn metal into gold and produce an immortality elixir. Harry suspects that Severus Snape, the Potions teacher and head of Slytherin, wants the stone to return Voldemort to physical form. When Hagrid accidentally reveals that music puts Fluffy to sleep, Harry, Ron and Hermione decide to find the stone before Snape. Fluffy is already asleep, but the trio face other barriers, including a deadly plant called Devil's Snare, a room filled with aggressive flying keys, and a giant chess game that knocks out Ron.
After overcoming the barriers, Harry encounters Defence Against the Dark Arts teacher Quirinus Quirrell, who wants the stone; Snape had figured this out and had been protecting Harry. Quirrell removes his turban to reveal a weakened Voldemort living on the back of his head. Dumbledore's protective enchantment places the stone in Harry's possession. Voldemort attempts to bargain the stone from Harry in exchange for resurrecting his parents, but Harry sees through his trick and refuses. Quirrell attempts to kill Harry. When Harry touches Quirrell's skin, it burns Quirrell, reducing him to ashes. Voldemort's soul rises from the pile and escapes, knocking out Harry as it passes through him.
Harry recovers in the school infirmary. Dumbledore tells him the stone has been destroyed to prevent misuse, and that Ron and Hermione are safe. He also reveals how Harry defeated Quirrell: when Lily died to save Harry, a love-based protection against Voldemort was placed on him. At the end-of-school-year feast, Harry, Ron, and Hermione are rewarded extra house points for their heroism, tying Gryffindor for first place with Slytherin; Dumbledore then awards ten points to their housemate Neville Longbottom for having had the courage to stand up to the trio, granting Gryffindor the House Cup. Harry returns to the Dursleys for the summer, happy to finally have a real home at Hogwarts.
Daniel Radcliffe as Harry Potter: An 11-year-old orphan living with his unwelcoming aunt, uncle, and cousin, who learns of his own fame as a wizard known to have survived his parents' murder at the hands of the dark wizard Lord Voldemort as an infant when he is accepted to Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry. Columbus had wanted Radcliffe for the role since he saw him in the BBC's production of David Copperfield before the open casting sessions had taken place but had been told by casting director Susan Figgis that Radcliffe's protective parents would not allow their son to take part.[6] Columbus explained that his persistence in giving Radcliffe the role was responsible for Figgis' resignation.[6] Radcliffe was asked to audition in 2000 when Heyman and Kloves met him and his parents at a production of Stones in His Pockets in London.[7] Heyman and Columbus successfully managed to convince Radcliffe's parents that their son would be protected from media intrusion. They agreed to let him play Harry.[6] Rowling approved of Radcliffe's casting, stating that "having seen [his] screen test I don't think Chris Columbus could have found a better Harry."[8] Radcliffe was reportedly paid £1 million for the film, although he felt the fee was "not that important" to him.[9] The Saunders triplets appear as Harry as a baby.[10]
Rupert Grint as Ron Weasley: Harry's best friend at Hogwarts and a younger member of the Weasley wizarding family. A fan of the series, Grint decided he would be perfect for the part "because [he has] ginger hair".[9] Having seen a Newsround report about the open casting he sent in a video of himself rapping about how he wished to receive the part. His attempt was successful as the casting team asked for a meeting with him.[9]
Emma Watson as Hermione Granger: Harry's other best friend and the trio's brains. Watson's Oxford theatre teacher passed her name on to the casting agents and she had to do over five interviews before she got the part.[11] Watson took her audition seriously, but "never really thought [she] had any chance of getting the role."[9] The producers were impressed by Watson's self-confidence and she outperformed the thousands of other girls who had applied.[12]
Robbie Coltrane as Rubeus Hagrid: A half-giant and Hogwarts' gamekeeper. Coltrane was one of the two actors Rowling wanted most, along with Smith as McGonagall.[14][15] Coltrane, who was already a fan of the books, prepared for the role by discussing Hagrid's past and future with Rowling.[16][17]
Richard Harris as Albus Dumbledore: Hogwarts' Headmaster and one of the most famous and powerful wizards of all time. Harris initially rejected the role, only to reverse his decision after his granddaughter stated she would never speak to him again if he did not take it.[21][22][23]
Maggie Smith as Minerva McGonagall: The Deputy Headmistress, head of Gryffindor and transfiguration teacher at Hogwarts. Smith was one of the two actors Rowling wanted most, along with Coltrane as Hagrid.[14]
In 1997, producer David Heyman searched for a children's book that could be adapted into a well-received film.[39] He had planned to produce Diana Wynne Jones' novel The Ogre Downstairs, but his plans fell through. His staff at Heyday Films then suggested Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone, which his assistant believed was "a cool idea."[39] Heyman pitched the idea to Warner Bros.[40] and in 1999, Rowling sold the company the rights to the first four Harry Potter books for a reported £1million.[41] A demand Rowling made was for Heyman to keep the cast strictly British and Irish; the latter's case has Richard Harris as Dumbledore and Fiona Shaw as Petunia Dursley, and not to cast foreign actors unless absolutely necessary, like casting of French and Eastern European actors in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (2005) where characters from the book are specified as such.[42] Rowling was hesitant to sell the rights because she "didn't want to give them control over the rest of the story" by selling the rights to the characters, which would have enabled Warner Bros. to make non-author-written sequels.[43]
Although Steven Spielberg initially negotiated to direct the film, he declined the offer.[44] Spielberg reportedly wanted the adaptation to be an animated film, with American actor Haley Joel Osment to provide Harry Potter's voice,[45] or a film that incorporated elements from subsequent books as well.[46] Spielberg contended that, in his opinion, it was like "shooting ducks in a barrel. It's just a slam dunk. It's just like withdrawing a billion dollars and putting it into your personal bank accounts. There's no challenge."[47] Rowling maintains that she had no role in choosing directors for the films and that "[a]nyone who thinks I could (or would) have 'veto-ed' [sic] him [Spielberg] needs their Quick-Quotes Quill serviced."[48] Heyman recalled that Spielberg decided to direct A.I. Artificial Intelligence instead.[46] In a 2023 interview, Spielberg stated that he turned down the project so he could spend time with his family.[49]
"Harry Potter is the kind of timeless literary achievement that comes around once in a lifetime. Since the books have generated such a passionate following across the world, it was important to us to find a director that has an affinity for both children and magic. I can't think of anyone more ideally suited for this job than Chris."
After Spielberg left, talks began with other directors, including Chris Columbus, Terry Gilliam, Jonathan Demme, Mike Newell (who would later direct the fourth film), Alan Parker, Wolfgang Petersen, Rob Reiner, Ivan Reitman, Tim Robbins, Brad Silberling, M. Night Shyamalan and Peter Weir.[46][51][52] Petersen and Reiner both pulled out of the running in March 2000,[53] and the choice was narrowed down to Silberling, Columbus, Parker and Gilliam.[54] Rowling's first choice director was Terry Gilliam,[55] but Warner Bros. chose Columbus, citing his work on other family films such as Home Alone (1990) and Mrs. Doubtfire (1993) as influences for their decision.[50] Columbus had become a fan of the book series after his daughter persuaded him to read the first three books, leading him to call his agent to arrange a meeting at Warner Bros. to direct the film. When his agent told him that at least 25 other directors were eager to helm the project, Columbus requested his agent to secure his meeting to be the last one so he could give a "lasting impression" and be the studio's "freshest person in their memory". During two weeks of waiting, Columbus wrote a 130-page director's version of the screenplay to explain his vision for the film's tone. The day of his meeting with Warner Bros. executives including Alan F. Horn, Columbus delivered an "impassioned 45-minute talk" and showed them his annotated script. Weeks later, the studio notified Columbus that he had got the job and sent him to Scotland to meet with Rowling and Heyman.[56] Columbus pitched his vision of the film for two hours, stating that he wanted the Muggle scenes "to be bleak and dreary" but those set in the wizarding world "to be steeped in color, mood, and detail." He took inspiration from David Lean's adaptations of Great Expectations (1946) and Oliver Twist (1948), wishing to use "that sort of darkness, that sort of edge, that quality to the cinematography," while being further inspired by the colour designs from Oliver! (1968) and The Godfather (1972).[46]
Steve Kloves was selected to write the screenplay. He described adapting the book as "tough", as it did not "lend itself to adaptation as well as the next two books."[57] Kloves often received synopses of books proposed as film adaptations from Warner Bros., which he "almost never read", but Harry Potter jumped out at him.[40] He went out and bought the book, and became an instant fan of the series.[57] When speaking to Warner Bros., he stated that the film had to be British, and had to be true to the characters.[57] Kloves was nervous when he first met Rowling as he did not want her to think he was going to "[destroy] her baby."[40] Rowling admitted that she "was really ready to hate this Steve Kloves," but recalled her initial meeting with him: "The first time I met him, he said to me, 'You know who my favourite character is?' And I thought, You're gonna say Ron. I know you're gonna say Ron. But he said 'Hermione.' And I just kind of melted."[40] Rowling received a large amount of creative control, an arrangement that Columbus did not mind.
Warner Bros. had initially planned to release the film over 4 July 2001 weekend, making for such a short production window that several proposed directors pulled themselves out of the running. Due to time constraints, the date was put back to 16 November 2001.[58]
Casting
Rowling insisted that the cast be kept British.[42] Susie Figgis was appointed as casting director, working with both Columbus and Rowling in auditioning the lead roles of Harry, Ron and Hermione.[59] Open casting calls were held for the main three roles,[60] with only British children being considered.[61] The principal auditions took place in three parts, with those auditioning having to read a page from the novel, then to improvise a scene of the students' arrival at Hogwarts, and finally to read several pages from the script in front of Columbus.[61] Scenes from Columbus' script for the Young Sherlock Holmes (1985) were also used in auditions.[62] On 11 July 2000, Figgis left the production, complaining that Columbus did not consider any of the thousands of children they had auditioned "worthy".[62] By August 2000, Alan Rickman and Richard Harris were in final talks to play Severus Snape and Albus Dumbledore, respectively,[63] and were confirmed later that month. Tim Roth was the original choice for Snape, but he turned it down for Planet of the Apes.[64][8]Christopher Lee and Sean Connery were offered the role of Dumbledore, but both declined.[65][66] On 14 August 2000, Rowling's favourites Maggie Smith and Robbie Coltrane were cast as Minerva McGonagall and Rubeus Hagrid. According to Figgis, Robin Williams was interested in participating in the film, but was turned down for the Hagrid role because of the "strictly British and Irish only" rule which Columbus was determined to maintain.[15][67][14] On 21 August 2000, Daniel Radcliffe and newcomers Rupert Grint and Emma Watson were selected to play Harry Potter, Ron Weasley and Hermione Granger, respectively. Hundreds of young stars also auditioned for Harry Potter, including Tom Felton (who was cast as Draco Malfoy), Jamie Campbell Bower,[68]Jack Whitehall,[69]Nicholas Hoult,[70] Jamie Clifton,[71]Liam Aiken, and William Moseley (who was later cast as Peter Pevensie in The Chronicles of Narnia series).[72][73][74] According to Columbus, Harry was the hardest role to cast.[75] Hatty Jones, who starred in the lead role in Madeline (1998), was considered for the role of Hermione Granger and had auditioned alongside Watson; she was later deemed outgrown.[76]Thomas Brodie-Sangster auditioned for Ron Weasley, but was rejected.[77][78][79] In November 2000, Julie Walters and John Cleese joined the cast as Molly Weasley and Nearly-Headless Nick, respectively.[26][80]David Thewlis auditioned for Quirinus Quirrell; he would later be cast as Remus Lupin in Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban.[81] Right at his career's beginning, James McAvoy auditioned for Lord Voldemort, but the deal proved unsuitable for him as the filmmakers wanted to put him on a retainer with at apparently ten other actors who decide who would they cast in subsequent installments, so McAvoy declined at his agent's advice despite being offered £40,000 pounds in spite of his few credits as they required him to not work anywhere else the next seven months.[82]J. K. Rowling, the author of the books, was considered for Lily Evans; Harry's mother, but she turned down the role and Geraldine Somerville was cast.[83]
Filming
Two British film industry officials requested that the film be shot in the United Kingdom, offering their assistance in securing filming locations, the use of Leavesden Film Studios, as well as changing the UK's child labour laws (adding a small number of working hours per week and making the timing of on-set classes more flexible).[46] Warner Bros. accepted their proposal. Principal photography began on 29 September 2000 at Leavesden Film Studios.[84] Filming at the North Yorkshire's Goathland railway station took place on 2 October 2000.[85]Canterbury Cathedral and Scotland's Inverailort Castle were both touted as possible locations for Hogwarts; Canterbury rejected Warner Bros. proposal due to concerns about the film's "pagan" theme.[86][87]Alnwick Castle and Gloucester Cathedral were eventually selected as the principal locations for Hogwarts,[6] with some scenes also being filmed at Harrow School.[88] Other Hogwarts scenes were filmed in Durham Cathedral over a two-week period;[89] these included shots of the corridors and some classroom scenes.[90]Oxford University's Divinity School served as the Hogwarts Hospital Wing, and Duke Humfrey's Library, part of the Bodleian, was used as the Hogwarts Library.[91] Filming for Privet Drive took place on Picket Post Close in Bracknell, Berkshire.[89] Filming in the street took two days instead of the planned single day, so payments to the street's residents were correspondingly increased.[89] For all the subsequent film's scenes set in Privet Drive, filming took place on a constructed set in Leavesden Film Studios, which proved to be cheaper than filming on location.[92] London's Australia House was selected as the location for Gringotts Wizarding Bank,[6] while Christ Church, Oxford, was the location for the Hogwarts trophy room.[36]London Zoo was used as the location for the scene in which Harry accidentally sets a snake on Dudley,[36] with King's Cross Station also being used as the book specifies.[93] Filming concluded on 23 March 2001, with final work being done in July 2001.[51][94][84]
Because the American title was different, all scenes that mention the philosopher's stone by name had to be shot twice, once with the actors saying "philosopher's" and once with "sorcerer's".[51] The children filmed for four hours and then did three hours of schoolwork. They developed a liking for fake facial injuries from the makeup staff. Radcliffe was initially meant to wear green contact lenses as his eyes are blue, and not green like Harry's, but the lenses gave Radcliffe extreme irritation. Upon consultation with Rowling, it was agreed that Harry could have blue eyes.[95]
The steam engine used in the film as the Hogwarts Express was GWR 4900 Class 5972 Olton Hall, but it was originally not the first locomotive to be selected as the Hogwarts Express. To promote the books, the Southern Railway locomotive 34027 Taw Valley was repainted and renamed temporarily, but was rejected by director Chris Columbus as looking 'too modern' for the film.[96][97]
Design and special effects
Judianna Makovsky served as the costume designer. She re-designed the Quidditch robes, having initially planned to use those shown on the cover of the American book, but deemed them "a mess." Instead, she dressed the Quidditch players in "preppie sweaters, 19th-century fencing breeches and arm guards."[98] Production designer Stuart Craig built the sets at Leavesden Studios, including Hogwarts Great Hall, basing it on many English cathedrals. Although originally asked to use an existing old street to film the Diagon Alley scenes, Craig decided to build his own set, comprising Tudor, Georgian and Queen Anne architecture.[98]
Columbus originally planned to use both animatronics and CGI animation to create the magical creatures, including Fluffy.[59] Nick Dudman, who worked on Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace, was given the task of creating the needed prosthetics, with Jim Henson's Creature Shop providing creature effects.[99] John Coppinger stated that the magical creatures that needed to be created had to be designed multiple times.[100] The film features nearly 600 special effects shots, involving numerous companies. Industrial Light & Magic created Lord Voldemort's face on the back of Quirrell, Rhythm & Hues animated Norbert (Hagrid's baby dragon); and Sony Pictures Imageworks produced the Quidditch scenes.[101]
John Williams was selected to compose the score, having previously collaborated with Chris Columbus for Home Alone and Home Alone 2: Lost in New York.[102] Williams composed the score at his homes in Los Angeles and Tanglewood before recording it in London in September 2001. One of the main themes is entitled "Hedwig's Theme"; Williams retained it for his finished score as "everyone seemed to like it," and it became a recurring theme throughout the series.[103]James Horner was the first choice to compose the score but turned it down.[104]
Differences from the book
Columbus repeatedly checked with Rowling to make sure he was getting minor details correct.[99] Kloves described the film as being "really faithful" to the book. He added dialogue, of which Rowling approved. One of the lines originally included had to be removed after Rowling told him that it would directly contradict an event in the then-unreleased fifth Harry Potter novel Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix.[105]
Several minor characters have been removed from the film version, most prominently Peeves the poltergeist. Actor Rik Mayall was cast in the role, but his scenes were ultimately cut from the film and never released. The book's first chapter, told from the viewpoint of Vernon and Petunia Dursley, is absent from the film. Harry and Draco's first encounter in Madam Malkin's robe shop and the midnight duel are not in the film. In the film, the responsibility of taking Norbert away is given to Dumbledore, while in the book, Harry and Hermione have to bring him by hand to Charlie Weasley's friends.[106] This necessitated a change in the detention plotline: in the book, Filch catches Harry and Hermione leaving the Astronomy Tower and puts them in detention with Neville and Malfoy, while in the film, all three protagonists receive detention after Malfoy finds them in Hagrid's hut after hours.[106] According to Kloves, this was "the one part of the book that [Rowling] felt easily could be changed".[98] The Quidditch pitch is altered from a traditional stadium to an open field circled by spectator towers.[98]
The book's timeline is not enforced in the film. In the book, Harry's eleventh birthday is in 1991.[107] On the film set for 4 Privet Drive, Dudley's certificates from primary school bear the year 2001.[108]
Distribution
Marketing
The first teaser poster of the film was released on 1 December 2000.[109] The first teaser trailer was released via satellite on 2 March 2001 and debuted in cinemas with the release of See Spot Run.[110] A video game based on the film was released on 15 November 2001 by Electronic Arts for several consoles.[103] A port for the game, for the GameCube, PlayStation 2, and Xbox, was released in 2003.[111]Mattel won the rights to produce toys based on the film, to be sold exclusively through Warner Brothers' stores.[112]Hasbro also produced products, including confectionery products based on those from the series.[113] Warner Bros. signed a deal worth US$150million with Coca-Cola to promote the film,[93] although some pegged the deal at $40 million-$50 million worldwide for the movie.[114]Lego produced a series of sets based on buildings and scenes from the film, as well as a Lego Creator video game.[115]
The film had previews in the United Kingdom on 1,137 screens at 491 theatres on 10 and 11 November 2001.[117] It officially opened on 16 November 2001 on 1,168 screens at 507 theatres in the United Kingdom and Ireland; in 3,672 theatres in the United States and Canada. It was the widest release at the time in the United Kingdom and the United States.[118][119]
Home media
Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone was first released on VHS and DVD on 11 May 2002 in the United Kingdom[120] and 28 May 2002 in the United States.[121]
Between May and June 2002, the film sold 10million copies, almost 60% of which were DVD sales.[122] It would go on to make $19.1 million in rentals, surpassing The Fast and the Furious for having the largest DVD rentals.[123] This record was surpassed by The Bourne Identity in January 2003.[124]
In December 2009, a 4-disc "Ultimate Edition" was released, with seven minutes of deleted scenes added back in, the feature-length special Creating the World of Harry Potter Part 1: The Magic Begins, and a 48-page hardcover booklet.[125] The extended version has a running time of about 159 minutes, which had previously been shown during certain television airings.[126] The film was re-released on DVD as part of the 8-disc Harry Potter: The Complete 8-Film Collection in November 2011,[127] and on Blu-ray as part of the 31-disc Hogwarts Collection in April 2014.[128] It was released on UHD Blu-ray as part of the 16-disc Harry Potter: 8-Film Collection in November 2017.[129]
Reception
Box office
In the United Kingdom and Ireland, Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone grossed a record single day gross of £3.6million during the first day of previews, beating Toy Story 2's record. It grossed a record £3.1million for a Sunday, bringing its total to £6.7million from the previews.[117][130] It broke the record for the highest-opening weekend ever, both including and excluding previews, making £16.3million with and £9.6million without previews ($13.8 million), setting a further record single day gross on the Saturday with £3.99million.[131][132][130] It set another Sunday record with a gross of £3.6million.[132] It had a record second weekend of £8.4 million.[133][130] It remained at number one in the UK for five weeks.[130] The film went on to make £66.1million in the UK alone, making it the country's second-highest-grossing film of all-time (after Titanic), until it was surpassed by Mamma Mia!.[134]
In the United States and Canada, it made $32.3million on its opening day, breaking the single-day record previously held by Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace (1999).[135] On the second day of release, the film's gross increased to $33.5million, breaking the record for biggest single day again. It made $90.3million during its first weekend, breaking the record for highest-opening weekend of all time that was previously held by The Lost World: Jurassic Park (1997).[136] It held the record until the following May when Spider-Man (2002) made $114.8million in its opening weekend.[137] Plus, the film broke Batman Forever's record for having the largest opening weekend for a Warner Bros. film.[138] It would hold this record for two years until it was surpassed by The Matrix Reloaded (2003).[139] Additionally, it shattered other opening records, surpassing Monsters, Inc. for having the biggest November opening weekend, Planet of the Apes for having the largest non-holiday opening weekend, the highest Friday gross and the biggest opening weekend of the year, The Mummy Returns for scoring the highest Saturday gross, Home Alone 2: Lost in New York (1992) for having the highest opening weekend for a Chris Columbus film and Mission: Impossible 2 (2000) for having the largest number of screenings, playing at 3,672 theaters.[140] In just five days, it became the fastest film to approach the $100million mark.[141] The film grossed $2.3 million in its first two days in Taiwan,[118] giving it a worldwide opening weekend total of $107 million. The film held onto the number 1 spot at the US box office for three consecutive weekends before getting overtaken by Ocean's Eleven.[142][143][144] The film also had the highest-grossing 5-day (Wednesday-Sunday) Thanksgiving weekend record of $82.4million, holding the title for twelve years until both The Hunger Games: Catching Fire (2013) and Frozen (2013) surpassed it with $110.1million and $94million respectively.[145] By Christmas, it went on to become the highest-grossing film of the year, dethroning Shrek.[146]
Similar results were achieved across the world. A week after opening in the United States, the film added 15 additional markets and set an opening week record in Germany, grossing $18.7 million. It also set opening records in Austria, Brazil, Denmark, Finland, the Netherlands, Norway, Sweden and German-speaking Switzerland.[133] In the following weekend, after expanding to 31 countries, the film set a record overseas weekend gross of $60.9 million, including record openings in Australia, Greece, Israel, Japan ($12.5 million), New Zealand and Spain.[147] It set another overseas weekend record with $62.3 million from 37 countries the following weekend, including record openings in France, Italy and French-speaking Switzerland.[148] The international opening weekend record would be held until it was given to Star Wars: Episode II – Attack of the Clones (2002) a year later.[149] During its theatrical run, the film earned $974million at the worldwide box office, $317million of that in the US and $657million elsewhere,[5] which made it the second-highest-grossing film in history at the time,[150] as well as the year's highest-grossing film.[151] In addition, it surpassed Twister (1996) to become the highest-grossing Warner Bros. film of all time.[152] It is the second-highest-grossing Harry Potter film after Deathly Hallows – Part 2.[153]Box Office Mojo estimates that the film sold over 55.9million tickets in the US and Canada.[154]
In August 2020, The Philosopher's Stone was re-released in several countries, including a 4K 3D restoration in China,[155] where it earned $26.4million, for a global $1.017billion, making it the second film in the series to surpass the billion-dollar mark, after Deathly Hallows – Part 2.[5]
Critical response
On Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 81% based on 200 reviews, with an average rating of 7.1/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone adapts its source material faithfully while condensing the novel's overstuffed narrative into an involving – and often downright exciting – big-screen magical caper."[156] On Metacritic the film has a weighted average score of 65 out of 100, based on 36 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[157] Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A" on an A+ to F scale.[158]
Roger Ebert called Philosopher's Stone "a classic," giving the film four out of four stars, and particularly praising the Quidditch scenes' visual effects.[159] Praise was echoed by both The Telegraph and Empire reviewers, with Alan Morrison of the latter naming it the film's "stand-out sequence".[160][161] Brian Linder of IGN also gave the film a positive review, but concluded that it "isn't perfect, but for me it's a nice supplement to a book series that I love".[31] Although criticising the final half-hour, Jeanne Aufmuth of Palo Alto Online stated that the film would "enchant even the most cynical of moviegoers."[162]USA Today reviewer Claudia Puig gave the film three out of four stars, especially praising the set design and Robbie Coltrane's portrayal of Hagrid, but criticised John Williams' music, stating the "overly insistent score lacks subtlety and bludgeons us with crescendos", and concluded that "ultimately many of the book's readers may wish for a more magical incarnation."[163]
The sets, design, cinematography, effects and principal cast were all given praise from Kirk Honeycutt of The Hollywood Reporter, although he deemed John Williams' score "a great clanging, banging music box that simply will not shut up."[164]Todd McCarthy of Variety compared the film positively with Gone with the Wind and put "The script is faithful, the actors are just right, the sets, costumes, makeup and effects match and sometimes exceed anything one could imagine."[19]Jonathan Foreman of the New York Post recalled that the film was "remarkably faithful," to its literary counterpart as well as a "consistently entertaining if overlong adaptation."[165]
Richard Corliss, of Time magazine, considered the film a "by the numbers adaptation," criticising the pace and the "charisma-free" lead actors.[166]CNN's Paul Tatara found that Columbus and Kloves "are so careful to avoid offending anyone by excising a passage from the book, the so-called narrative is more like a jamboree inside Rowling's head."[167] Ed Gonzalez of Slant Magazine wished that the film had been directed by Tim Burton, finding the cinematography "bland and muggy," and the majority of the film a "solidly dull celebration of dribbling goo."[168]Elvis Mitchell of The New York Times was highly negative about the film, saying "[the film] is like a theme park that's a few years past its prime; the rides clatter and groan with metal fatigue every time they take a curve." He also said it suffered from "a lack of imagination" and wooden characters, adding, "The Sorting Hat has more personality than anything else in the movie."[29]
Excellence in Production Design for a Period or Fantasy Film
Stuart Craig, John King, Neil Lamont, Andrew Ackland-Snow, Peter Francis, Michael Lamont, Simon Lamont, Steve Lawrence, Lucinda Thomson, Stephen Morahan, Dominic Masters, Gary Tomkins
Clinton County County in de Verenigde Staten Situering Staat Iowa Coördinaten 41°53'34NB, 90°31'39WL Algemeen Oppervlakte 1.839 km² - land 1.800 km² - water 39 km² Inwoners (2000) 50.149 (28 inw./km²) Overig Zetel Clinton FIPS-code 19045 Opgericht 1837 Foto's Bevolkingspiramide Clinton County Statistieken volkstelling Clinton County Portaal Verenigde Staten Clinton County is een county in de Amerikaanse staat Iowa. De county heeft een landoppervlakte van 1.800 km² en telt...
يفتقر محتوى هذه المقالة إلى الاستشهاد بمصادر. فضلاً، ساهم في تطوير هذه المقالة من خلال إضافة مصادر موثوق بها. أي معلومات غير موثقة يمكن التشكيك بها وإزالتها. (ديسمبر 2018) المراصب - قرية - تقسيم إداري البلد اليمن المحافظة محافظة صنعاء المديرية مديرية بني مطر السك
الفضاء الإلكتروني أو الفضاء السيبراني هو الوسط الذي تتواجد فيه شبكات الحاسوب ويحصل من خلالها التواصل الإلكتروني.[1][2][3] وبمفهوم أشمل يعرف بأنه مجال مركَب مادي وغير مادي يشمل مجموعة من العناصر هي: أجهزة الكمبيوتر، أنظمة الشبكات والبرمجيات، حوسبة المعلومات، نقل...
Panglima Kodam XII/TanjungpuraLambang Kodam XII/TanjungpuraPetahanaMayjen TNI Iwan Setiawansejak 28 April 2023TNI Angkatan DaratKantorMarkas Kodam XII/Tanjungpura, Kabupaten Kubu Raya, Kalimantan BaratDibentuk17 Juli 1958Pejabat pertamaKolonel. Inf. SoehartoSitus webkodamtanjungpura-tniad.mil.id Daftar Pejabat Berikut adalah nama nama para perwira TNI AD yang pernah memimpin Kodam XII/Tanjungpura: No Foto Nama Awal Menjabat Akhir Menjabat Pangkat Terakhir Komando Daerah Militer XII/Tanju...
Alca unicórnea Ejemplar adulto en JapónEstado de conservaciónPreocupación menor (UICN 3.1)[1]TaxonomíaDominio: EukaryotaReino: AnimaliaFilo: ChordataClase: AvesOrden: CharadriiformesFamilia: AlcidaeGénero: CerorhincaBonaparte, 1828Especie: C. monocerataPallas, 1811[editar datos en Wikidata] El alca unicórnea (Cerorhinca monocerata)[2] es una especie de ave caradriforme de la familia Alcidae, una ave marina y un familiar cercano de los frailecillos. E...
This page list topics related to San Marino. Contents: Top 0–9 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z 0-9 This section is empty. You can help by adding to it. (July 2010) A Abortion in San Marino Apennine Mountains Associazione Guide Esploratori Cattolici Sammarinesi Ausa River Azienda Autonoma di Stato per i Servizi Pubblici B Antonello Bacciocchi Banca di San Marino Birds of San Marino C Capital punishment in San Marino Captains Regent Carcere dei Cappuccini Cassa d...
グランド・イリュージョン Now You See Me 監督 ルイ・ルテリエ脚本 エド・ソロモンボアズ・イェーキンエドワード・リコート原案 ボアズ・イェーキンエドワード・リコート製作 アレックス・カーツマンロベルト・オーチーボビー・コーエン(英語版)製作総指揮 ボアズ・イェーキンマイケル・シェイファースタン・ヴロドコウスキー出演者 ジェシー・アイゼンバーグマー
العلاقات الكويتية الكازاخستانية الكويت كازاخستان الكويت كازاخستان تعديل مصدري - تعديل العلاقات الكويتية الكازاخستانية هي العلاقات الثنائية التي تجمع بين الكويت وكازاخستان.[1][2][3][4][5] مقارنة بين البلدين هذه مقارنة عامة ومرجعية للدولتي
Asterix and the Power of the Gods is a 1995 platform game for the Sega Mega Drive based on the comic book series Asterix, most notably Asterix and the Chieftain's Shield.[1] Some of this article's listed sources may not be reliable. Please help this article by looking for better, more reliable sources. Unreliable citations may be challenged or deleted. (December 2020) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) 1995 video gameAsterix and the Power of the GodsCover artDevelope...
Species of flowering plant Burlew's onion Conservation status Vulnerable (NatureServe)[1] Scientific classification Kingdom: Plantae Clade: Tracheophytes Clade: Angiosperms Clade: Monocots Order: Asparagales Family: Amaryllidaceae Subfamily: Allioideae Genus: Allium Species: A. burlewii Binomial name Allium burlewiiDavidson Allium burlewii is a species of wild onion known by the common name Burlew's onion. It is endemic to California, where grows in the granitic soils of sev...
Юнацька збірна Уругваю (U-17) Асоціація Асоціація футболу Уругваю Тренер Сантьяго Остоласа Код ФІФА URU Домашня Виїзна Чемпіонат світу (U-17) Виступів 6 (вперше у 1991) Найвище досягнення віце-чемпіон : 2011 Юнацький чемпіонат Південної Америки (U-17) Виступів 17 (вперше у 1985) Найвище д�...
TVRI Kalimantan TengahLPP TVRI Stasiun Kalimantan TengahPalangka Raya, Kalimantan TengahIndonesiaSaluranDigital: 30 UHFVirtual: 2BrandingTVRI Kalteng (alternatif)SloganTelevisi Je Ayun ItahPemrogramanBahasaBahasa Indonesia, Bahasa Dayak Tambun Bungai, Bahasa BanjarAfiliasiTVRI Nasional, SEA Today & ANTARA TVKepemilikanPemilikLPP TVRIRiwayatDidirikan17 Februari 1995Siaran perdana17 Februari 1995Bekas tanda panggilTVRI PalangkarayaBekas nomor kanal29 UHF (analog)Bekas afiliasiTV EdukasiInfo...
Tentara Prancis di wilayah Ruhr pada tahun 1923. Pendudukan Ruhr antara tahun 1923 hingga 1925 oleh tentara Prancis dan Belgia adalah tanggapan terhadap kegagalan Republik Weimar (dibawah pimpinan Kanselir Cuno) untuk membayar ganti rugi Perang Dunia I. Tindakan Prancis ini menimbulkan kritik dari dunia internasional. Namun, Liga Bangsa-Bangsa tidak turun tangan karena tindakan ini legal menurut Perjanjian Versailles.[1] Referensi ^ Walsh, hal. 142 Artikel bertopik sejarah ini adalah ...
Tidak sama dengan satuan faraday. Untuk pemukiman zaman kuno di California, lihat Farad, California. FaradSuatu kapasitor 1 farad yang relatif kecil, untuk voltage dan aliran listrik rendahInformasi umumSistem satuanSatuan turunan SIBesaranKapasitansiSimbolFAsal penamaanMichael FaradayDalam satuan pokok SI:1 F = 1 s4·A2·m−2·kg−1 Farad (symbol: F) merupakan satuan turunan SI untuk kapasitansi listrik, yaitu kemampuan suatu benda untuk menyimpan muatan listrik. Dinamakan menurut fisikawa...
This article is about a TV network in Ehime Prefecture. For the same abbreviation of English name of 東森電視, see Eastern Broadcasting Company. Ehime BroadcastingTrade nameEhime Broadcasting Co., Ltd.Native name株式会社テレビ愛媛Romanized nameKabushikigaisha terebiehimeTypeKabushiki gaishaFoundedJanuary 20, 1969; 54 years ago (1969-01-20)Headquarters110 Masago-cho, Matsuyama City, Ehime Prefecture, JapanKey peopleMakio Otani (President and Representative Direct...
يفتقر محتوى هذه المقالة إلى الاستشهاد بمصادر. فضلاً، ساهم في تطوير هذه المقالة من خلال إضافة مصادر موثوق بها. أي معلومات غير موثقة يمكن التشكيك بها وإزالتها. (ديسمبر 2018) حارة اللجنة الدائمة - حارة - تقسيم إداري البلد اليمن المحافظة محافظة صنعاء المديرية مديري�...
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