Harry Potter And The Chamber Of Secrets -
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.
The film’s comic highlight. Branagh plays Lockhart as a peacock in wizard’s robes: vain, incompetent, and dazzlingly insincere. His smile never reaches his eyes. Every scene he’s in—obliviated by a rogue charm, signing photos of himself, fleeing a classroom full of Cornish pixies—is pure gold. He’s the perfect foil to the earnestness of Harry and Ron.
Chamber of Secrets is a transitional film: still cozy and colorful, but with shadows gathering at the edges. It lacks the lightning-in-a-bottle charm of Sorcerer’s Stone and the emotional punch of Prisoner of Azkaban , but it’s the most complete mystery of the series. It respects its young audience enough to be genuinely scary (the basilisk’s gaze, the writing in blood on the wall) and genuinely sad (the revelation of Hagrid’s past, Hermione’s petrification). Harry Potter and The Chamber of Secrets
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.”
For fans of the books, it’s a comfort watch. For newcomers, it’s a solid fantasy thriller that earns its runtime. And for anyone who doubts Dobby’s importance—watch his final scene with Harry on the beach, then try not to tear up. For 2002, the basilisk is impressive—but it hasn’t
Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint, and Emma Watson are visibly more comfortable. Grint gets the best physical comedy (vomiting slugs, crashing the car), Watson’s Hermione is sharper and more vulnerable (she hides her fear behind logic), and Radcliffe begins to show Harry’s trademark reckless heroism. The Polyjuice Potion sequence—where Harry and Ron become Crabbe and Goyle—is a delight of awkward performances.
Mystery lovers, fans of gothic school stories, anyone who wants to see a teenage Tom Riddle be terrifyingly polite. The film’s comic highlight
The overly long and unfunny Gilderoy Lockhart “remedial magic” class with the Cornish pixies.