Harry Potter And The Chamber Of Secrets ★ Must Watch
For 2002, the basilisk is impressive—but it hasn’t aged well. Its movements are floaty, and the climactic sword-fight between Harry and the snake is awkwardly staged. The practical Fawkes (animatronic) holds up far better.
Columbus is a master of fidelity but not of subtlety. His camera is static and functional; he rarely uses visual language to build suspense. Compare the basilisk fight here to the dragon in Goblet of Fire —the latter is kinetic, while here it’s more like a stage play. He also overuses reaction shots and explanatory dialogue (“He’s a Parselmouth! He can talk to snakes!”). Harry Potter and The Chamber of Secrets
Jason Isaacs as Lucius Malfoy is perfectly oily, but he disappears for most of the film, only emerging at the end. Likewise, Tom Riddle (a pre-Voldemort Christian Coulson) is chillingly handsome and polite, but his transformation into a memory-ghoul is rushed. The film could have lingered on the diary’s manipulation. The Great (Spoilers) The Final Reveal The twist—that Ginny Weasley is the one opening the Chamber, possessed by a memory of a teenage Voldemort—is handled with real pathos. Coulson’s Tom Riddle is a masterpiece: soft-spoken, charismatic, and utterly evil. When he reveals that he framed Hagrid (played with heartbreaking sincerity by Robbie Coltrane), the betrayal stings. For 2002, the basilisk is impressive—but it hasn’t
Harry pulling the Sword of Gryffindor from the Sorting Hat, Fawkes blinding the basilisk, and the line: “You’ll find I am not a snake to be charmed.” Columbus is a master of fidelity but not of subtlety