''Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix'' is a 2007
fantasy film directed by
David Yates and distributed by
Warner Bros. Pictures.
It is based on
J. K. Rowling's
2003 novel of the same name. The fifth instalment in the
''Harry Potter'' film series, it was written by
Michael Goldenberg (making this the only film in the series not to be scripted by
Steve Kloves) and produced by
David Heyman and
David Barron. The story follows
Harry Potter's fifth year at
Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry as the
Ministry of Magic is in denial of
Lord Voldemort's return. The film stars
Daniel Radcliffe as Harry Potter, alongside
Rupert Grint and
Emma Watson as Harry's best friends
Ron Weasley and
Hermione Granger. It is the
sequel to ''
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire'' and is followed by ''
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince''.
Live-action filming took place in England and Scotland for exterior locations and
Leavesden Film Studios in
Watford for interior locations from February to November 2006, with a one-month break in June. Post-production on the film continued for several months afterwards to add in visual effects. The film's budget was reportedly between £75 and 100 million ($150–200 million).
Warner Bros. released the film in North America on 11 July 2007 and in the United Kingdom on 12 July, both in conventional and
IMAX theatres; it is the first ''Potter'' film to be released in IMAX
3D.
''Order of the Phoenix'' opened to a
worldwide five-day opening of $333 million, twenty-fifth of all-time, and grossed $942 million total, second to ''
Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End'' for the greatest total of 2007. The film was nominated for two
BAFTA Film Awards in 2008. It has been noted as a case of
Hollywood accounting, because Warner Bros. claimed the film lost $167 million, despite its total grosses.
Plot
The
Order of the Phoenix, a secret organization founded by
Albus Dumbledore, informs
Harry Potter that the
Ministry of Magic is oblivious to
Lord Voldemort's return. At the Order's headquarters, Harry's godfather,
Sirius Black, mentions that Voldemort is after an object he did not have during his previous attack.
Back at
Hogwarts, Harry learns that the Minister for Magic
Cornelius Fudge has appointed a new
Defence Against the Dark Arts professor:
Dolores Umbridge. She and Harry immediately clash, and she punishes Harry for his "lies" by forcing him to write a message with a magic quill, scarring his hand. When Ron and Hermione notice Harry's scars they are outraged, but Harry refuses to go to Dumbledore, who has distanced himself from Harry since the summer. As Umbridge's control over the school increases, Ron and Hermione aid Harry in forming a secret group to train students in defensive spells, calling themselves "
Dumbledore's Army". Umbridge recruits the
Slytherin students to expose the group. Meanwhile, Harry and
Cho Chang develop romantic feelings for each other.
Harry has a vision involving an attack upon
Arthur Weasley, from the point of view of Arthur's attacker. Concerned that Voldemort will exploit this connection to Harry, Dumbledore instructs
Severus Snape to give Harry
Occlumency lessons to defend his mind from Voldemort's influence. The connection between Harry and Voldemort leads Harry to further isolate himself from his friends. Meanwhile,
Bellatrix Lestrange, Sirius' deranged
Death Eater cousin, escapes from
Azkaban along with nine other
Death Eaters. At Hogwarts, Umbridge and her Inquisitorial Squad expose Dumbledore's Army. Dumbledore escapes as Fudge orders his arrest. Umbridge becomes the new Headmistress. Harry's relationship with Cho falls apart, as he believes she betrayed Dumbledore's Army to Umbridge. Harry discovers through Snape's memories why Snape hated Harry's father James, who often ridiculed him.
Harry has another vision, this one of Sirius being tortured by Voldemort. Harry, Ron and Hermione rush to Umbridge's fireplace to alert the Order via the Floo Network, since hers is the only fireplace not being monitored, but Umbridge stops them before they can do so. As Umbridge tortures Harry, Hermione tricks Umbridge into entering the Forbidden Forest in search of Dumbledore's "secret weapon". She and Harry lead her to the hiding place of
Hagrid's giant half-brother,
Grawp, only to be confronted by
centaurs who kidnap Umbridge after she attacks and insults them. Harry, Hermione, Ron,
Luna,
Neville and
Ginny fly to the Ministry of Magic on
Thestrals in an attempt to save Sirius.
The six enter the Department of Mysteries where they uncover a bottled prophecy, the object Voldemort was after. However, they are ambushed by Death Eaters including
Lucius Malfoy and
Bellatrix Lestrange. Lucius reveals that Harry only saw a dream of Sirius being tortured; it was simply a ruse to lure Harry into the Death Eaters' grasp. Harry refuses to give Lucius the prophecy, and a fight between Dumbledore's Army and the Death Eaters ensues. The Death Eaters take everyone except Harry as hostages, threatening to kill them unless he surrenders the prophecy.
Harry obliges just as Sirius and
Remus Lupin arrive with Order members
Nymphadora Tonks,
Kingsley Shacklebolt and
Mad-Eye Moody. As they attack the Death Eaters, Lucius drops the prophecy, destroying it. Just as Sirius overpowers Lucius, Bellatrix kills Sirius. Voldemort appears, but Dumbledore arrives through the Floo Network moments before Voldemort can kill Harry.
A duel between Voldemort and Dumbledore ensues, destroying much of the Atrium, while Bellatrix escapes. After the two prove evenly matched, Voldemort possesses Harry to try to get Dumbledore to sacrifice Harry, but the love Harry feels for his friends and Sirius makes it impossible for Voldemort to remain in his body. Ministry officials arrive before Voldemort
disapparates; Fudge is forced to admit that Voldemort has returned and resigns as Minister in disgrace. Umbridge is removed from Hogwarts and Dumbledore returns as headmaster. Dumbledore explains he distanced himself from Harry throughout the year hoping it would lessen the risk of Voldemort using their connection. Harry comes to terms with the prophecy; "Neither can live while the other survives."
Cast
*
Daniel Radcliffe as
Harry Potter: A 15-year-old British
wizard famous for surviving his parents' murder at the hands of Voldemort as an infant, who now enters his fifth year at
Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry.
*
Rupert Grint as
Ron Weasley: Harry's best friend at Hogwarts.
*
Emma Watson as
Hermione Granger: Harry's
Muggle-born best friend and the brains of the trio.
*
Helena Bonham Carter as
Bellatrix Lestrange: one of Voldemort's most loyal
Death Eaters and the cousin of Sirius Black.
*
Robbie Coltrane as
Rubeus Hagrid: the half-giant Gamekeeper and
Care of Magical Creatures teacher at Hogwarts and a member of the Order of the Phoenix.
*
Ralph Fiennes as
Lord Voldemort: leader of the Death Eaters, a dark wizard intent on conquering the Wizarding World.
*
Michael Gambon as
Albus Dumbledore: the legendary Hogwarts headmaster and leader of the
Order of the Phoenix.
*
Brendan Gleeson as
Mad-Eye Moody: Ex-
Auror and a member of the Order of the Phoenix.
*
Richard Griffiths as
Vernon Dursley: Harry's Muggle uncle.
*
Jason Isaacs as
Lucius Malfoy: a falsely pardoned senior Death Eater.
*
Gary Oldman as
Sirius Black: Harry's godfather and a member of the Order of the Phoenix.
*
Alan Rickman as
Severus Snape: the
Potions teacher at Hogwarts and the Head of
Slytherin
*
Fiona Shaw as
Petunia Dursley: Harry's Muggle aunt.
*
Maggie Smith as
Minerva McGonagall: the
Transfiguration teacher at Hogwarts and a member of the Order of the Phoenix.
*
Imelda Staunton as
Dolores Umbridge: the new
Defence Against the Dark Arts teacher and a plant from the corrupt
Ministry of Magic.
*
David Thewlis as
Remus Lupin: Harry's ex-Defense Against the Dark Arts teacher and a member of the Order of the Phoenix.
*
Emma Thompson as
Sybill Trelawney: the
Divination teacher at Hogwarts.
*
Julie Walters as
Molly Weasley: the Weasley matriarch and a mother figure to Harry, also a member of the Order of the Phoenix.
Differences from the book
At 766 pages in the British edition and 870 in the American edition, ''Order of the Phoenix'' is the longest book in the ''Harry Potter'' series, however the film is the second shortest.
Screenwriter
Michael Goldenberg described his task to cut down the novel as searching for "the best equivalent way to tell the story. My job was to stay true to the spirit of the book, rather than to the letter".
Goldenberg said that Rowling told him, the producers, and Yates that "she just wanted to see a great movie, and gave
hempermission to take whatever liberties
heyfelt
heyneeded to take to translate the book into a movie she would love".
Cutting down the book to meet the time frame of the film, Goldenberg explained, became "clearer when
efigured out that the organising principle of the screenplay was to narrate Harry's emotional journey".
He and Yates "looked for every opportunity to get everything
heycould in there. And where
heycouldn't, to sort of pay homage to it, to have it somewhere in the background or to feel like it could be taking place off-screen".
One cut Goldenberg had to make, which he "hated" to do, was the absence of
Quidditch, the Wizarding sport.
"The truth is that any movie made of this book, whoever made it, that had included the Quidditch subplot would have been a lesser film", he said.
In the book, Ron grows as a character by trying out for the Quidditch team. "Ron facing challenges and coming into his own in the same way that Harry is, we tried to get that into the film in other ways, as much as possible. So, you feel like, if not the details of that story, at least the spirit of it is present in the film".
The change disappointed actor
Rupert Grint who had been "quite looking forward to the Quidditch stuff".
In a significant scene in the book, Harry sees a memory of his own father humiliating Snape in their school days, and Snape insulting his mother after she stood up for him. In the film, it is abbreviated to an "idea", in Goldenberg's words. "It's an iconic moment when you realise your parents are normal, flawed human beings. ... Things get trimmed out, but I kept the meat of that in there – and that was what really gave me the coming-of-age story."
Young
Lily Potter did not appear at all, but promotional screenshots show unknown teenager Susie Shinner in the role.
The scene at
St Mungo's, the hospital where Harry and friends run into classmate Neville Longbottom and learn that his parents were tortured into insanity by Bellatrix Lestrange, was cut because it required the construction of a new set.
The main purpose of the action of the scene was relocated to the
Room of Requirement after one of Dumbledore's Army's lessons. Also, to speed up the film's climax, several events in the Ministry leading up to Harry's battle with Voldemort were removed, including the brain room.
Mrs. Weasley's encounter with a boggart at
Grimmauld Place, Ron, Hermione and Malfoy becoming prefects, the appearance of Mundungus Fletcher, and Firenze teaching Divination followed suit.
The character of Kreacher the house-elf, who was included in the script only at Rowling's request, has a larger part in the book than the film. In the novel, he is seen saving some of the Black family's artefacts which the Order of the Phoenix throw away, including a locket that ends up being extremely important in the seventh book. "It was kind of tricky to raise that in our story, because it's for so much later", Yates said. "We figured we can probably introduce it later, and that's the approach we took".
Whilst Kreacher remained, all scenes involving
Dobby were cut, and his important actions given to other characters.
Rita Skeeter, the journalist played by
Miranda Richardson in ''Goblet of Fire'', was also removed. In the book, Hermione blackmails her into writing an article that supports Harry as the rest of the Wizarding world denies his claims.
Richardson noted that "it's never gonna be the book on film, exactly. ... They'll take certain aspects from the book and make it something that they hope is going to be commercial and that people want to see".
Production
Development
British television director
David Yates was chosen to direct the film after ''
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire'' director
Mike Newell, as well as
Jean-Pierre Jeunet,
Guillermo del Toro,
Matthew Vaughn and
Mira Nair, turned down offers.
Yates believed he was approached because the studio saw him fit to handle an "edgy and emotional" film with a "political backstory", which some of his previous television projects including ''
State of Play'', ''
Sex Traffic'' and ''
The Girl in the Café'' demonstrated.
Producer
David Heyman supported Yates' comments about the film's political theme, stating that "
'Order of the Phoenix''is a political film, not with a capital P, but it's about teen rebellion and the abuse of power. David has made films in the UK about politics without being heavy handed." On the film's political and social aspects,
Emma Watson stated that "somehow it talks about life after
7 July, the way people behave when they're scared, the way truth is often denied and all the things our society has to face. Facing the fact that the authority is corrupted means having a non-conformist approach to reality and power."
Steve Kloves, the screenwriter of the first four ''Potter'' films, had other commitments.
Michael Goldenberg, who was considered to pen the first film in the series, filled in and wrote the script. Kloves subsequently returned to write all remaining instalments of the series.
Mark Day was the film editor,
Sławomir Idziak was the cinematographer, and
Jany Temime was the costume designer. Choreographer
Paul Harris, who had previously worked with David Yates several times, created a physical language for wand combat to choreograph the wand fighting scenes.
Casting
Casting began as early as May 2005, when Radcliffe announced he would reprise his role as Harry. Across the media frenzy that took place during the release of ''
Goblet of Fire'', most of the main returning actors announced their return to the series, including Grint, Watson,
Lewis,
Wright,
Leung, and Fiennes.
The announcements of the casting of the rest of the new characters to the series was spanned across 2006.
Evanna Lynch won the role of
Luna Lovegood over 15,000 other girls who attended the open casting call, waiting in a line of hopefuls that stretched a mile long.
Saoirse Ronan auditioned for the role but was considered too young.
Persistent rumours linked
Elizabeth Hurley to the role of Bellatrix Lestrange, although
Warner Bros. asserted there was "no truth whatsoever" to reports that she had been cast. As early as August 2005, rumours began linking
Helen McCrory to the role. On 2 February 2006, it was announced that McCrory had indeed been cast as Bellatrix. However, in April 2006 she revealed that she was three months pregnant and withdrew from the film because she would not have been able to perform the intense battle sequences in the Ministry of Magic in September and October 2006. The announcement that Bonham Carter had been recast in the role was made on 25 May 2006. McCrory was subsequently cast as
Narcissa Malfoy from ''
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince'' onwards.
The inclusion or cutting of some characters sparked speculation from fans as to the importance of the characters in the
final book of the series, which was released just ten days after the film. In April 2006, representatives of
Jim McManus said he would be playing
Aberforth Dumbledore, Albus' brother and the barman of the Hog's Head, in which Harry and his friends found Dumbledore's Army. A week later WB announced that the role was "very minor", allaying some of the speculation to the significance of the role, which, before the final book, was not even a speaking part. MTV reported in October 2006 that
Dobby the house elf, who appeared in the second film, ''
Chamber of Secrets'', and in the fifth book, would be cut, opening up "plot questions" as to how the role of the elf would be filled. MTV also reported about a month before the release of the final book that
Kreacher, the Black family's house-elf, was cut from the film in one draft of the script. Rowling prodded the filmmakers to include him, saying, "You know, I wouldn't
ut himif I were you. Or you can, but if you get to make a seventh film, you'll be tied in knots", he was added back into the script.
Other minor roles were cut with subsequent drafts of the script. At the US premiere of ''Goblet of Fire'', series producer
David Heyman said that former Hogwarts professor
Gilderoy Lockhart, played by
Kenneth Branagh in ''
Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets'', was in the first draft of the script for ''Phoenix''. Neither Branagh nor the character of Lockhart appears in the final version.
Tiana Benjamin was scheduled to return for the film in the role of
Angelina Johnson, the captain of the
Gryffindor Quidditch team, but she had to withdraw due to a commitment to playing
Chelsea Fox in ''
EastEnders''. The character, as well as the entire Quidditch subplot, was ultimately cut from the film. Johnson did record sound clips for the
''Order of the Phoenix'' video game.
The family of footballer
Theo Walcott made a
cameo appearance in the film. They were signed on by director
David Yates, who is the partner of Yvonne Walcott, Theo's aunt. Theo himself was due to appear alongside his family, though his commitments to
Arsenal Football Club forced him to pull out.
Set design
Stuart Craig returned as set designer, having designed the first four films' sets.
There were a number of notable new sets in this film. The
atrium in the
Ministry of Magic is over 200 feet in length, making it the largest and most expensive set built for the ''Potter'' film series to date.
Craig's design was inspired by early
London Underground stations, where, he said, architects "tried to imitate classical architecture but they used ceramic tile", as well as a
Burger King on
Tottenham Court Road in London, where "there's a fantastic Victorian façade which just embodies the age".
The set of
Number Twelve, Grimmauld Place contains the
Black family tapestry spread across three walls; when the producers told Rowling they wanted to visualise the details of each name and birth year, she faxed them a complete copy of the entire tree. The set of the Hall of Prophecies was entirely digitally built. During a fight scene which occurs there, prophecies crash to the ground and break; had it been an actual physical set, the reset time would have been weeks.
The set used for
Igor Karkaroff's trial scene in ''Goblet of Fire'' was doubled in size for Harry's trial in this film, while still protecting its symmetry.
New professor Dolores Umbridge, though she teaches in a classroom that has appeared in films two through four, inhabits an office vastly different from those of her predecessors. The set was redressed with "fluffy, pink filigree" and a number of plates upon which moving kittens were animated in post-production.
A 24-hour photo shoot was held to photograph and film the kittens for use on these plates. The quill which Umbridge gives Harry to write lines is designed by the set designers.
Filming

Rehearsals for ''Order of the Phoenix'' began on 27 January 2006, filming began on 7 February 2006 and finished at the start of December 2006.
Filming was put on a two-month hiatus starting in May 2006 so
Radcliffe could sit his
A/S Levels and
Watson could sit her
GCSE exams. The film's budget was reportedly between GB£75 and 100 million (US$150–200 million).
The largest budget of the other films in the series has been the £75 million it cost to make ''Goblet of Fire''. Though the producers explored options to film outside of the UK,
Leavesden Film Studios in
Watford was again the location on which many of the interior scenes, including the Great Hall,
Privet Drive and
Number Twelve, Grimmauld Place were shot.
Locations in England included the
River Thames, for the flight of the Order of the Phoenix to Number Twelve, Grimmauld Place, and the flight of Dumbledore's Army to the Ministry of Magic. This sequence also includes such landmarks as the
London Eye,
Canary Wharf,
Big Ben,
Buckingham Palace, and . Filming at Platform 9¾ took place at
King's Cross Station, as it has in the past. A
red telephone booth near
Scotland Yard was used as Harry and Arthur Weasley enter the Ministry, while the crew closed the
Westminster tube station on 22 October 2006 to allow for filming of Arthur Weasley accompanying Harry to his trial at the
Ministry of Magic. Other scenes were filmed in and around
Oxford, specifically at nearby
Blenheim Palace in
Woodstock.
In
Glenfinnan, the
Hogwarts Express crosses a viaduct, as it has in the past films.
Aerial scenes were shot in
Glen Coe, in Clachaig Gully,
and
Glen Etive, which, at the time of filming, was one of the few places in Scotland without snow, making it ideal for a backdrop.
Director
David Yates stated in an interview that he had originally shot a three-hour film of ''Order of the Phoenix''. However, some material had to be cut out in the final edit, as the movie was 45 minutes too long. Therefore, several locations which were used for various scenes do not appear in the final cut of the film. In
Virginia Water, scenes were shot where Professor McGonagall recovers from Stunning Spells, and
Burnham Beeches was used for filming the scene where Hagrid introduces his fifth-year
Care of Magical Creatures class to
Thestrals. Harry skips stones in front of the
Glenfinnan Monument in
Glenfinnan in another cut scene.
Visual effects
The film required over 1,400 visual effects shots, and the London-based company
Double Negative created more than 950 of them. Working for six months on previsualisation starting in September 2005, Double Negative was largely responsible for sequences in the
Room of Requirement, the
Forbidden Forest, the
Hall of Prophecies, and the
Death Chamber.
A new character in the film,
Grawp,
Hagrid's giant half-brother, came to life by a new technology called Soul Capturing, developed by
Image Metrics. Instead of building the character from scratch, the movements and facial expressions of actor
Tony Maudsley were used to model Grawp's actions.
Music and soundtrack
Nicholas Hooper was the composer for the
soundtrack of the film, following
John Williams, who scored the first three films, and
Patrick Doyle, who did the fourth. In the new score, Hooper incorporated variations on "
Hedwig's Theme", the series' theme originally written by Williams for the first film and heard in all subsequent ones.
In March and April 2007, Hooper and the
London Chamber Orchestra recorded nearly two hours of music at
Abbey Road Studios in London. The score, like the film and book, is darker than previous instalments in the series. To emphasise this, the two new main themes reflect the sinister new character Dolores Umbridge, and Lord Voldemort's invasion of Harry's mind. A Japanese
Taiko drum was used for a deeper sound in the percussion.
The soundtrack was released by
Warner Bros. Records on 10 July 2007, the eve of the film's release. For his work on the film, Hooper was nominated for a World Soundtrack Discovery Award. The trailer prominently features the cues "Divine Crusade" by
X-Ray Dog and "DNA Reactor" by
Pfeifer Broz. Music.
The film also featured the song "
Boys Will Be Boys" by
The Ordinary Boys which played during a scene into the Gryffindor common room (at min. 31:35).
Release
Marketing
The first
trailer was released on 17 November 2006, attached to another WB film, ''
Happy Feet''. It was made available online on 20 November 2006, on the ''Happy Feet'' website. The international trailer debuted online on 22 April 2007 at 14:00
UTC. On 4 May 2007, the US trailer was shown before ''
Spider-Man 3''.
Three posters released on the Internet that showed Harry accompanied by six classmates, including Hermione Granger, generated some controversy by the media. They were essentially the same picture, though one advertised the
IMAX release. In one poster, the profile of Hermione, played by Emma Watson, was made curvier as the outline of her breasts was enhanced. Melissa Anelli, webmistress of noted fan site
The Leaky Cauldron, wrote:
The
video game version, designed by
EA UK, was released 25 June 2007.
Lego produced
just one set, a model of Hogwarts, the lowest number of sets for a film so far.
NECA produced a series of
action figures, while a larger array of smaller figures was also produced by PopCo Entertainment, a Corgi International company.
Theatrical release
The film was the third ''Harry Potter'' film to be given a simultaneous release in conventional theatres and IMAX. The IMAX release featured the full movie in 2D and the final 20 minutes of the film in 3D. According to estimates in March 2007, by
Warner Bros., the film would debut on over 10,000 theatre screens during the summer.
The film was released in most countries in a two-week period starting 11 July 2007. WB has tried to stick with day-and-date releases for most countries, except the Middle East and a few minor markets which were to be in holidays at that point. The set of summer releases, even though the films are typically released in the winter, "really maximises our opportunity", said a representative for WB.
Previews of the film began in March 2007 in the Chicago area. Under tight security to prevent piracy, WB had security guards patrol the aisles, looking for cell phone cameras or small recording devices, at a preview in Japan. The world premiere took place in Tokyo, Japan on 28 June 2007. MySpace users could bring copies of their online profiles to gain free admission to sneak previews in eight different cities across the country on 28 June 2007. The UK premiere took place on 3 July 2007 in London's
Odeon Leicester Square, during which author
J. K. Rowling made a public appearance. The US premiere took place on 8 July in Los Angeles. After the premiere, the three young stars of the film series, Radcliffe, Grint, and Watson, were honoured with a ceremony where their handprints, footprints, and "wandprints" were placed in the cement in front of
Grauman's Chinese Theatre.
Originally, Warner Bros. set the Australian release date as 6 September 2007, nearly two months after the majority of other release dates. However, after complaints from the Australian community, including a petition garnering 2,000 signatures the date was pulled back to 11 July 2007. The release dates of the film in the UK and US were also moved back, both from 13 July, to 12 and 11 July, respectively.
Even though the book is the longest in the series (over 700 pages), the film is 138 minutes long (2 hours and 18 minutes), the second shortest in the entire film series.
Home media
The DVDs included additional scenes, a feature showing a day in the life of
Natalia Tena, who played
Nymphadora Tonks, an
A&E documentary about the films and books, and a featurette on film editing in ''Phoenix''. The DVD-ROM features a timeline and a sneak peek of the next film, ''
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince'' (2009). The HD DVD and Blu-ray contain additional features, such as the "in-movie experience", a video commentary in which members of Dumbledore's Army share their favourite moments from the production of the film, and "focus points" featurettes on how certain scenes of the film were made. The
HD DVD also includes an exclusive feature called "community screening", which enables owners of the
HD DVD to watch the film together over the Internet. ''Order of the Phoenix'' was the seventh best-selling DVD of 2007, with 10.14 million units.
The high-definition DVDs had combined sales of 179,500 copies,
with more units coming from the Blu-ray version.
There was also a third DVD with extras featuring a behind-the-scenes look at the sets of the movie. This can only be found in those purchased at
Target stores (
Future Shop in Canada) since it is a Target exclusive. The package included a one-time-only code that activated a
digital copy of the film, which may be played on a computer with Windows Media Player. The digital copy is not playable on
Macintosh or
Apple Inc. iPod devices. This issue was partially addressed, with the film being made available on the
iTunes Store in the UK but not the US.
Reception
Box office
The film opened to a
worldwide 5-day opening of $333 million, the fourteenth-biggest opening of all time. In the United States, tickets for hundreds of midnight showings of the film, bought from online ticket-seller
Fandango, were sold out, making up approximately 90% of the site's weekly ticket sales. In the US and Canada, midnight screenings (very early morning on 11 July) brought in $12 million from 2,311 midnight exhibitions making the showings "the most successful batch of midnight exhibitions ever". In one-night earnings, ''Phoenix'' is behind only ''At World's End'', which had debuted four hours earlier on its date. In studio documents leaked in July 2010, it was revealed the film "lost"
Warner Bros. about $167 million.
In North America, ''Phoenix'' earned an additional $32.2 million on Wednesday, post-midnight showings, making it the biggest single-day Wednesday gross in box office history, with a total of $44.2 million from 4,285 theatres. That amount topped
Sony Pictures' ''
Spider-Man 2'', which held the record since 2004 with its $40.4 million take on a Wednesday, until this record was broken in 2009 by ''
Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen'' with $62 million. It was also the fifth-biggest opening day for a movie in history, at the time, surpassing ''At World's End's'' $42.9 million. It earned $1.9 million from a record-breaking 91 IMAX screens, the highest opening day ever for any IMAX day of the week, beating ''Spider-Man 3's'' $1.8 million. In the UK the result was similar. The film made £16.5 million during its opening 4-day run, breaking the UK box office record for the biggest 4-day opening weekend ever.
''Phoenix''s gross was at $292.4 million in the US and Canada, making it the fifth-highest-grossing film of 2007 in these regions, and at £49.2 million, or $101.4 million in the UK Internationally, it has grossed $648 million, the seventh-highest grosser ever overseas, for a worldwide total of $942 million
making it the second-highest-grossing film of the year closely behind ''
Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End''s $963 million gross. It became the sixth-highest-grossing film in history at the time, the second-highest-grossing ''Potter'' film worldwide, and the second ''Potter'' film to break the $900 million mark, as well as the fourth-highest-grossing ''Potter'' film in the franchise behind ''
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part 2''s $1.341 billion,
''Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone''s $974 million, ''
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part 1''s $960 million and the highest-grossing 2007 film in Australia and the UK. IMAX Corporation and Warner Bros. Pictures announced that the film has made over $35 million on IMAX screens, worldwide, with an impressive per-screen average of $243,000 making it the highest-grossing live-action IMAX release in history. In South Africa the film opened at number 1 with a total of $944,082.00, being screened at 87 theatres.
Critical response

On review aggregator
Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 77% based on 257 reviews, with an average rating of 6.9/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "It's not easy to take the longest ''Harry Potter'' book and streamline it into the shortest HP movie, but director David Yates does a bang up job of it, creating an ''Order of the Phoenix'' that's entertaining and action-packed." On
Metacritic, the film has a score of 71 out of 100, based on 37 critics, indicating "generally favourable reviews" Audiences surveyed by
CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "A–" on an A+ to F scale.
Roger Ebert gave the film 2.5 of 4 stars saying "Harry no longer has as much joy." The review by Charles Frederick of ''
The Telegraph'' was headlined "Potter film is the best and darkest yet". Colin Bertram of the ''
New York Daily News'' gave the film four out of four stars, calling it the best ''Potter'' film yet and wrote that "die-hard Potter addicts will rejoice that Yates has distilled J. K. Rowling's broad universe with care and reverence". Mark Adams of ''
The Sunday Mirror'', while giving the film four out of five stars, called it "a dark and delicious delight
nda must-see movie". Rene Rodriguez of ''
The Miami Herald'' gave the film three stars out of four and wrote that the film "is the first installment in the soon-to-be series-of-seven that doesn't seem like just another spinoff capitalizing on the money-minting Harry Potter brand name. Instead, Phoenix feels like a real 'movie'".
Imelda Staunton's performance as Dolores Umbridge and Helena Bonham Carter's as Bellatrix Lestrange were widely acclaimed; Staunton was described as the "perfect choice for the part" and "one of the film's greatest pleasures", "coming close to stealing the show" by ''The Guardian''. Bonham Carter was said to be a "shining but underused talent" by ''The Times''.
''
Variety'' praised
Alan Rickman's portrayal of Severus Snape, writing that he "may have outdone himself; seldom has an actor done more with less than he does here". Newcomer
Evanna Lynch, playing Luna Lovegood, also received good word from a number of reviewers including the ''New York Times'' who declared her "spellbinding".
Peter Travers of ''Rolling Stone'' also lauded the three principal actors' achievements, especially Radcliffe: "One of the joys of this film is watching Daniel Radcliffe grow so impressively into the role of Harry. He digs deep into the character and into Harry's nightmares. It's a sensational performance, touching all the bases from tender to fearful". ''Rolling Stone''s review also classified the film as better than the previous four instalments in the series, by losing the "candy-ass aspect" of the first two and "raising the bar" from the "heat and resonance" of the third and fourth.
Peter Travers of ''Rolling Stone'' called the film "the best of the series so far,
iththe laughs, the jitters and the juice to make even nonbelievers wild about Harry".
Leo Lewis of ''
The Times'' (London) expressed disappointment that the three main actors were not able to fully advance the emotional sides of their respective characters, weakening the film.
The ''
San Francisco Chronicle'' complained about a "lousy" storyline, alleging that the first twenty minutes of the film, when Harry is put on trial for performing magic outside of school and threatened with expulsion, but is cleared of all charges, did not advance the plot.
Kirk Honeycutt of ''
The Hollywood Reporter'' wrote that ''Phoenix'' is "quite possibly the least enjoyable of the
eriesso far", and that despite "several eye-catching moments", "the magic – movie magic, that is – is mostly missing". The review also criticised the under use of the "cream of British acting", noting the brief appearances of
Helena Bonham Carter,
Maggie Smith,
Emma Thompson,
David Thewlis,
Richard Griffiths, and
Julie Walters.
Accolades
Before it was released, ''Order of the Phoenix'' was nominated in a new category at the
2007 MTV Movie Awards, ''Best Summer Movie You Haven't Seen Yet''. On 26 August 2007, the film won the award for Choice Summer Movie – Drama/Action Adventure at the
Teen Choice Awards.
The film was also nominated for several awards at the 2007
Scream Awards presented by
Spike TV, in the categories of The Ultimate Scream, Best Fantasy Movie, and Best Sequel. Daniel Radcliffe was nominated in the Fantasy Hero categories, respectively. The film won for Best Sequel and Ralph Fiennes won for "Most Vile Villain". The film picked up three awards at the inaugural
ITV National Movie Awards, taking Best Family Film, Best Actor for Radcliffe and Best Actress for Emma Watson. The film was one of ten nominees for a 2007 Hollywood Movie of the Year. It was also nominated for Best Live Action Family Film at the
Broadcast Film Critics Association Awards and won the 2007
People's Choice Award for "Favorite Movie Drama". The production was also nominated for six awards at the
13th Empire Awards, organised by ''
Empire'', including Best Film,
David Yates won Best Director. Yates later received the
BAFTA Britannia Award for Artistic Excellence in Directing for his four ''Harry Potter'' films, which includes ''Order of the Phoenix''.
Nicholas Hooper received a nomination for a World Soundtrack Discovery Award for his score to the film. Imelda Staunton was nominated in the "British Actress in a Supporting Role" category at the
London Film Critics Circle Awards. At the 2008
BAFTA Awards, the film was nominated for "Best Production Design" and "Best Special Visual Effects". ''Order of the Phoenix'' was also nominated for the awards from the
Art Directors Guild and
Costume Designers Guild, and was awarded for "Outstanding Special Effects in a Motion Picture" by the
Visual Effects Society out of six nominations.
The
British Academy Children's Awards (BAFTA) nominated ''Order of the Phoenix'' for Best Feature Film in 2007 and the
Hugo Awards nominated the film for
Best Dramatic Presentation (Long Form) in 2008.
References
External links
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