Vatican comes around on Harry Potter

It’s finally here. Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince opens in theaters tomorrow after an eight-month delay. The world is abuzz with anticipation for this picture, the sixth film to be released in the last eight years. This morning I spotted four sleeping teenagers who had camped out overnight already in line for tickets in ...

By , an editor at Foreign Policy from 2013-2018.
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XXX arrives for the premiere of 'Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince' at Warner Bros Movie World on July 12, 2009 on the Gold Coast, Australia.

It’s finally here. Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince opens in theaters tomorrow after an eight-month delay. The world is abuzz with anticipation for this picture, the sixth film to be released in the last eight years. This morning I spotted four sleeping teenagers who had camped out overnight already in line for tickets in front of DC’s Uptown Theater.  

Apparently, this magical mood surrounding The Half-Blood Prince has even traveled as far as the Vatican, casting its spell on the pope. In its review of the film L’Osservatore Romano — the Vatican’s official newspaper — praised this latest cinematic adaptation of J.K. Rowling’s work (written by Steve Kloves and directed by David Yates) as being the best one yet, highlighting its distinct moral compass. 

There is a clear line of demarcation between good and evil and [the film] makes clear that good is right. One understands as well that sometimes this requires hard work and sacrifice.”

While longtime Potter readers all over the world might respond with a resounding, “duh,” this is certainly a shift for the pope who, until recently was not a Potter fan, once condemning the books as “subtle seductions.” In 2008, the Vatican newspaper said young Harry “…proposes a wrong and malicious image of the hero, an unreligious one, which is even worst that an explicitly anti-religious proposition.” 

In other, related and perhaps more shocking, news Harry Potter can’t find a girlfriend. (You can almost hear the shrieks of muggle girls everywhere.) 

David Hardenberg/Getty Images

Rebecca Frankel was an editor at Foreign Policy from 2013-2018.

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