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The film skips the explanation of why the wand belongs to Harry (disarming Draco). Without this, the final duel feels like luck rather than lore. The Battle of Hogwarts

The book features a massive final brawl where centaurs, house-elves (led by Kreacher!), and the residents of Hogsmeade join the fray. The film’s focus is a bit too narrow.

While Alexandre Desplat’s score is beautiful, a more frequent use of John Williams’ original themes during the final charge would have provided a stronger emotional bridge to the beginning of the journey. harry+potter+and+the+deathly+hallows+part+2+20+fix

Fred Weasley dies with a laugh on his lips while joking with Percy. Seeing him already dead on the floor in the film felt like a missed opportunity for a truly gut-wrenching scene.

A final quiet moment between Harry, Ron, and Hermione before the 19-years-later jump would have helped the pacing. Technical & Aesthetic Fixes The film skips the explanation of why the

The film largely ignores the "Life and Lies of Albus Dumbledore." We needed more context on his youthful dalliance with Grindelwald to understand his motivations.

In the book, Harry and Voldemort circle each other in the Great Hall while Harry explains exactly why Voldemort is going to lose. This verbal dismantling is more powerful than the silent "shredding" duel in the film. The film’s focus is a bit too narrow

In the book, Harry uses the Elder Wand to fix his original phoenix feather wand. In the film, he just breaks the Elder Wand and is left wandless. Emotional Resonances

The film is notoriously dark and desaturated. A bit more color during the "King's Cross" limbo scene would have emphasized the shift in reality.