Nono, I'm very spiritual. I've even studied spirituality and dozens of different religions. I'm just wondering what parts and why you considered it spiritual.
And yes, Harry Potter is built on fantasy. It's fantasy meets real-life.







Delmaar wrote:I've thought about it and I think the failure of the movie, for an American audience, was the fact that they dropped out the "American" part and made it too Eastern.
The emphasis on spirituality that does not involve a monotheistic god. Yes it was there in the show, but the movie really kicked it up a notch and made it more central to the plot.
The name changes.
Dropping out the humor. The humor in the cartoon is so strongly based on 100's of years of American slapstick humor traditions (which led to cartoon humor traditions), that by taking it out, it de-Americanized the movie and made it harder for American audiences to get into.



Delmaar wrote:I've noticed with most franchise adaptions that really succeed - like Harry Potter, Lord of the Rings, and even Twilight, part of the success is being really faithful to the source material. I just don't think you could stay faithful to the source material and turn it into a movie. The only way to do that would be to make a new adventure with a new story, keep it a cartoon, and make a movie out of it.

elaborinth wrote:M.Knight Shamalan dumb down the movie to relate to the "majority" americans.



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