That's classic. I remember when i finally sat down with my wife and watched
a few of those earlier movies.....i was struck by how little Harry POtter
did. He just kind of stood around and looked dorky while his cute friend
did all the actual work. It makes sense...she was a better actor, a better
character....so making her the focal point made sense, even if they
couldn't actually name the book after her.

On Wed, Jan 4, 2012 at 2:34 PM, Michael Dinowitz <[email protected]
> wrote:

>
> I don't hate Harry Potter so much as to totally emasculate him. I'm
> sure Sady Doyle doesn't hate him either but that did not stop her from
> cutting his balls off and handing them over to (in her eyes) the star
> of the 'Potter' series, Hermione Granger.
> After reading this, I'm very torn between taking her article at face
> value or as satire. It's just too 'right' to just be a joke.
>
> http://globalcomment.com/2011/in-praise-of-hermione-granger-series/
>
> It’s the end of an era. The entertainment which has stretched across
> books, movies, and countless marketing tie-ins, which has captivated
> children and adults for well over a decade and which has, for better
> or worse, managed to become the defining myth for an entire
> generation, is winding to its close. I speak, of course, of the
> Hermione Granger series, by Joanne Rowling.
>
> So, before she goes away for good, let us sing the praises of
> Hermione. A generation could not have asked for a better role model.
> Looking back over the series — from Hermione Granger and the
> Philosopher’s Stone through to Hermione Granger and the Deathly
> Hallows — the startling thing about it is how original it is. It’s
> what inspires your respect for Rowling: She could only have written
> the Hermione Granger by refusing to take the easy way out.
>
> For starters, she gave us a female lead. As difficult as it is to
> imagine, Rowling was pressured to revise her initial drafts to make
> the lead wizard male. “More universal,” they said. “Nobody’s going to
> follow a female character for 4,000 pages,” they said. “Girls don’t
> buy books,” they said, “and boys won’t buy books about them.” But
> Rowling proved them wrong. She was even asked to hide her own gender,
> and to publish her books under a pen name, so that children wouldn’t
> run screaming at the thought of reading something by a lady. But
> Joanne Rowling never bowed to the forces of crass commercialism. She
> will forever be “Joanne Rowling,” and the Hermione Granger series will
> always be Hermione’s show.
>
> And what a show it is. In Hermione, Joanne Rowling undermines all of
> the cliches that we have come to expect in our mythic heroes. It’s
> easy to imagine Hermione’s origin story as some warmed-over Star Wars
> claptrap, with tragically missing parents and unsatisfying parental
> substitutes and a realization that she belongs to a hidden order, with
> wondrous (and unsettlingly genetic) gifts. But, no: Hermione’s normal
> parents are her normal parents. She just so happens to be gifted.
> Being special, Rowling tells us, isn’t about where you come from; it’s
> about what you can do, if you put your mind to it. And what Hermione
> can do, when she puts her mind to it, is magic.
>
> Ditto for the whole “Chosen One” thing. Look: I’ve enjoyed stories
> that relied on a “Chosen One” mythology to convince us that the hero
> is worth our time. I liked Buffy the Vampire Slayer as much as anyone.
> But it’s hard to deny that “Chosen Ones” are lazy writing. Why is this
> person the hero? Because everyone says he’s the hero. Why does
> everyone say he’s the hero? Because everyone says so, shut up, there’s
> magic.
>
> Hermione is not Chosen. That’s the best thing about her. Hermione is a
> hero because she decides to be a hero; she’s brave, she’s principled,
> she works hard, and she never apologizes for the fact that her goal is
> to be very, extremely good at this whole “wizard” deal. Just as
> Hermione’s origins are nothing special, we’re left with the impression
> that her much-vaunted intelligence might not be anything special, on
> its own. But Hermione is never comfortable with relying on her “gifts”
> to get by. There’s no prophecy assuring her importance; the only way
> for Hermione to have the life she wants is to work for it. So Hermione
> Granger, generation-defining role model, works her adorable British
> ass off for seven straight books in a row. Although she deals with the
> slings and arrows of any coming-of-age tale — being told that she’s
> “bossy,” stuck-up, boring, “annoying,” etc — she’s too strong to let
> that stop her. In Hermione Granger and the Prisoner of Azkaban, she
> actually masters the forces of space and time just so that she can
> have more hours in the day to learn.
>
> --- continued at
> http://global
>
> 

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