Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1 (2010)
Movie · 2010 · Adventure, Fantasy · 2h 26m · PG-13 · English
Curator score: 6.2/10 (2.5M ratings)
Nowhere is safe.
Overview
Harry, Ron and Hermione walk away from their last year at Hogwarts to find and destroy the remaining Horcruxes, putting an end to Voldemort's bid for immortality. But with Harry's beloved Dumbledore dead and Voldemort's unscrupulous Death Eaters on the loose, the world is more dangerous than ever.
Ratings
Curator score: 6.2/10
IMDb: 7.7/10
Letterboxd: 3.73/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 76%
Metacritic: 65
TMDB: 7.7/10
Director
David Yates
Production
Warner Bros. Pictures, Heyday Films
Cast
Daniel Radcliffe, Emma Watson, Rupert Grint, Toby Jones, Helena Bonham Carter, Alan Rickman, Ralph Fiennes, Bill Nighy, Simon McBurney, Rhys Ifans, Evanna Lynch, Andy Linden, Guy Henry, Jason Isaacs, Brendan Gleeson, John Hurt, Robbie Coltrane, David Thewlis, Richard Griffiths, Julie Walters
Where to watch
Peacock Premium, Max, Peacock Premium Plus
Curator Review
Verdict
A darker, more transitional Harry Potter chapter that trades school-year wonder for road-movie tension, grief, and survival. It’s less self-contained than the best franchise entries, but the mood, performances, and the animated Three Brothers sequence make it a standout setup for the finale.
Best for
fans of the Harry Potter series
viewers who like fantasy with a bleak wartime tone
audiences interested in character-driven ensemble adventure
people who enjoy franchise entries that slow down and build atmosphere
Skip if
you want a complete story with a big payoff in one sitting
you prefer the lighter, more whimsical side of fantasy
you’re not already invested in the characters or lore
you dislike long stretches of travel, hiding, and emotional fallout
Overview
Deathly Hallows: Part 1 is the rare blockbuster middle chapter that feels intentionally unfinished, using that incompleteness as part of its suspense. Hogwarts is gone from the center of the story, and the film leans into isolation, mistrust, and the exhaustion of being hunted. That shift gives the movie a colder, more adult texture than earlier installments.
Worth noting
What lingers most are the small, human moments: Harry and Hermione’s quiet companionship, the trio’s fraying bond, and the way the film pauses for grief before returning to danger. The animated Three Brothers sequence is the movie’s most elegant flourish, turning exposition into a genuinely memorable piece of storytelling.
Bottom line
It’s not the most satisfying Harry Potter film on its own, but it may be one of the most atmospheric. As a bridge to the finale, it works because it understands that the cost of the war matters as much as the war itself.
Top Letterboxd reviews
anna (4.5★) · 10747 likes
the tale of the three brothers’ animation? that’s cinema at its finest !
cinéfila... 🕯️ (4★) · 8515 likes
i always manage to hold it together until dobby says "such a beautiful place to be with friends", that's when i completely lose control of my tear ducts
adambolt (4★) · 8030 likes
wait so how many points is this to Gryffindor
David Sims (3.5★) · 5368 likes
dancing scene so good
diana (4.5★) · 5332 likes
imagine asking a girl to go to the ball with you and then a few years later she marries your older, hotter brother. fleur delacour really is THAT girl