Prisoner may not be perfect, but when it's good, it's very good indeed.
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban (2004)
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Reviews Counted:225
Fresh:201
Rotten:24
Average Rating:7.8/10
Consensus: In Cuaron's hands, Azkaban has emotional depth to go along with the technical wizardry.
Rated: PG [See Full Rating] for frightening moments, creature violence and mild language
Runtime: 2 hrs 22 mins
Genre: Action/Adventure
Theatrical Release:31-05-2004
Synopsis: Thirteen year-old Harry Potter (DANIEL RADCLIFFE) has reluctantly spent yet another summer with the Dursleys, his dismal relatives, “behaving himself” and not practicing any magic. That is, until... Thirteen year-old Harry Potter (DANIEL RADCLIFFE) has reluctantly spent yet another summer with the Dursleys, his dismal relatives, “behaving himself” and not practicing any magic. That is, until Uncle Vernon’s bullying sister, Aunt Marge (PAM FERRIS), comes to visit. Aunt Marge has always been particularly horrible to Harry and this time pushes him so far that he “accidentally” causes her to inflate like a monstrous balloon and drift away! Fearing punishment from his Aunt and Uncle (and repercussions from Hogwarts and the Ministry of Magic, which strictly forbids students from using magic in the non-magic world), Harry escapes into the night. He is promptly picked up by the Knight Bus, a fantastic triple-decker purple vehicle that whisks him off to the Leaky Cauldron pub. Upon arrival, Harry is met by the Minister of Magic, Cornelius Fudge, who inexplicably doesn’t punish the teenager for his errant wizardry and instead insists that he spend the night at the Leaky Cauldron before heading back to Hogwarts for his third year of study. It quickly transpires that a dangerous and enigmatic wizard, Sirius Black (GARY OLDMAN), has escaped Azkaban prison and is believed to be searching for Harry. Legend has it that Black was responsible for leading Lord Voldemort to Harry’s parents and ultimately to their subsequent deaths; it is also believed that he is determined to kill Harry too. To make matters worse, Hogwarts is playing host to the Dementors, the terrifying Azkaban guards who are stationed at the school in an attempt to protect the students from Black. The Dementors suck the souls from their victims and, unfortunately for Harry, they seem to have more of an effect on him than the rest of his classmates. Their ominous presence chills the young wizard to the bone, rendering him virtually helpless, until Professor Lupin (DAVID THEWLIS), the new Defense Against the Dark Arts teacher, trains Harry in how to use the Patronus Charm to shield himself from the Dementors’ paralyzing effects. Meanwhile, Harry’s third year at Hogwarts is filled with exciting new creatures like Buckbeak, a magical half-horse, half-eagle creature called a “Hippogriff”; eerie encounters with Divination Professor Sibyll Trelawney (EMMA THOMPSON) and the omen of death known as the “Grim”; and breathtaking adventures, including clandestine visits to the wizarding village of Hogsmeade, deciphering secrets hidden in the enchanted Marauder’s Map, and a terrifying trip to the Shrieking Shack (the most haunted dwelling in Britain). Along the way, Harry will try to make sense of Hermione’s (EMMA WATSON) puzzling appearances and disappearances, with the help of Ron (RUPERT GRINT) and the giant Hagrid (ROBBIE COLTRANE), who has taken on a new position at Hogwarts as the Care of Magical Creatures teacher. A confrontation between Harry and the menacing Sirius Black seems inevitable…but what exactly is Professor Lupin’s relationship with Black? What is the dark secret that Professor Snape (ALAN RICKMAN) is so eager to reveal? And just why is Ron’s pet rat Scabbers so frantic to escape his grasp? Harry will need all of the courage, magic and support he can muster to answer these questions and uncover the truth behind Sirius Black and his ties to the gifted young wizard’s mysterious past. Warner Bros. Pictures presents a Heyday Films / 1492 Pictures production, an Alfonso Cuarón film, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, starring DANIEL RADCLIFFE, RUPERT GRINT, EMMA WATSON, ROBBIE COLTRANE, MICHAEL GAMBON, RICHARD GRIFFITHS, GARY OLDMAN, ALAN RICKMAN, FIONA SHAW, MAGGIE SMITH, TIMOTHY SPALL, DAVID THEWLIS, EMMA THOMPSON and JULIE WALTERS. Directed by ALFONSO CUARÓN, the film is produced by DAVID HEYMAN, CHRIS COLUMBUS and MARK RADCLIFFE. The screenplay is by STEVE KLOVES, based on the novel by J.K. ROWLING. The executive producers are MICHAEL BARNATHAN, CALLUM McDOUGALL and TANYA SEGHATCHIAN. The director of photography is MICHAEL SERESIN; the production designer is STUART CRAIG; the editor is STEVEN WEISBERG, and the music is composed by JOHN WILLIAMS. This film has been rated “PG” by the MPAA for “frightening moments, creature violence and mild language.” Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban will be distributed worldwide by Warner Bros. Pictures, a Warner Bros. Entertainment Company. -- © Warner Bros. [More]
Starring: Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson, Rupert Grint, David Thewlis
Starring: Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson, Rupert Grint, David Thewlis, Gary Oldman, Emma Thompson, Michael Gambon, Robbie Coltrane, Maggie Smith, Alan Rickman, Warwick Davis, Miriam Margolyes, David Bradley, Sally Mortemore, Gemma Jones, Timothy Spall, Bonnie Wright, Tom Felton, Julie Walters, Mark Williams, John Cleese, Shirley Henderson, Jason Isaacs, Richard Griffiths, Fiona Shaw
Director: Alfonso Cuaron
Director: Alfonso Cuaron
Screenwriter: Steve Kloves
Producer: Chris Columbus, David Heyman
Composer: John Williams
Studio: Warner Bros.
Reviews for Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
In a series that's episodic by definition, too many of these episodes lack any climax or payoff.
An adaptation worthy of Rowling's marvelous creation—a chapter that spins the story to ever more thrillingly dark, treacherous heights.
The best Harry Potter adaptation so far... more emotional, scarier, and demands more from the actors portraying the young wizards, but they all deliver.
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban is the best entry, yet, in the series
Those who feared the franchise might grow as stale as Batman or Alien need not worry, as Cuarón proves there is still a little magic left up Potter’s sleeve.
While voluptuously bringing to luscious life the kid-lit world of witchcraft, wizardry and bizarre creatures, has script and plotting as bland as the Hardy Boys.
The best book in the series is now the best film in the series. We all have a better movie in our heads, but I had a blast seeing what lurked inside Curon's.
More adult, and seeing this series become gradually more sophisticated, along with its three stars, is a real treat.
Cuarón is... having fun with the neverwhere between childhood and adolescence in a deliciously metaphoric way that Chris Columbus wouldn’t or couldn’t venture near...
If the first two films could easily have been tightened up by a half-hour or so, this one left me wishing that there were an 'extended edition' DVD coming.
This film tells the exact same story more effectively than J.K. Rowling.
Cuarón brings a greater sensibility to his topic than did his predecessor Chris Columbus in the two previous Harry Potter movies.
A change in directors brings the third installment of the boy-wizard saga even closer to greatness.
(Director Alfonso) Cuaron has created a darker, more sinister world for Harry, while also opening up more of the grounds around Hogwarts.
A highly entertaining epic - arguably the best of the films to date - and one that will entrance fans of the books as well as newcomers.
At some point you have to start asking with all the mystical potions and gifts of foresight, how do these wizards keep fingering the wrong people for these crimes?
Less a proper story in itself than a reminder to enjoy the wonders [J.K. Rowling] has conjured.
The literal sensibility that director Chris Columbus gave to the first two Potter films has been replaced by Cuaron's richly cinematic one.
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