And the kids are all just fine, though here they're mostly called upon to look either astonished or resolute. Alan Rickman provides shivers as potions master Professor Snape, and the brief glimpse of Julie Walters (an Oscar nominee for Billy Elliott) will make you glad you'll be seeing more of her in future movies. Richard Harris turns in an excellent performance as headmaster Albus Dumbledore, Maggie Smith (whose on-screen teaching roles extend from The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie to Sister Act) brings just the right dry asperity to Professor McGonagall, and Coltrane is a half-giant with a heart to match as Hagrid. An orphaned boy enrolls in a school of wizardry, where he learns the truth about himself, his family and the terrible evil that haunts the magical world.
The adult actors are simply and completely perfect. Hermione struggles while getting tied all over, Ron gets wrapped in the neck to his torso as the tentacles wrap him from behind, and Harry is seen being pinned down when getting covered.
The settings manage to be sensationally imaginative and yet at the same time so clearly believable and lived-in that you'll think you could find them yourself, if you could just get to Platform 9 3/4. Harry, Ron and Hermione fall into a pit full of plant tentacles called Devil's Snare. It's only fair to say that Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone is truly magical.
This first film in the Harry Potter series is filled with visual splendor, valiant heroes, spectacular special effects, and irresistible characters. He also learns some important lessons about loyalty and courage. Throughout the year, Harry adjusts to his magical life and begins to come to grips with his famous status in the wizarding world and what he represents to the darker forces there. When school begins, things really get exciting, with classes in Potions and Defense Against the Dark Arts, a sport called Quidditch (a sort of flying soccer/basketball), a mysterious trap door guarded by a three-headed dog named Fluffy, and a baby dragon named Norbert. 1.022 billion 5 Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone (released in the United States, India and the Philippines as Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone) is a 2001 fantasy film directed by Chris Columbus and distributed by Warner Bros. On the train to Hogwarts, Harry meets his future best friends, Ron Weasley ( Rupert Grint) and Hermione Granger ( Emma Watson). It turns out that the letters were coming from Hogwarts, a boarding school for young witches and wizards, and Harry is expected for the fall term, so Hagrid whisks him off to begin his new life as a wizard in training. But they're found by Hagrid ( Robbie Coltrane), a huge, bearded man with a weakness for scary-looking creatures. Letters keep coming, and the Dursleys panic and hide away on a remote island. On his 11th birthday, Harry receives a mysterious letter, but his uncle destroys it before he can read it. When HARRY POTTER AND THE SORCERER'S STONE begins, Harry ( Daniel Radcliffe) is an orphan who lives with the awful Dursleys, his aunt, uncle, and cousin.