Harry Potter and the Cursed Child - Review
This review assumes you’ve either read Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, or are not that fussed on it. For obvious reasons, then, expect
spoilers in this one. HUGE spoilers.
I want to make two things
clear at the outset.
The first is that I was a massive fan of Harry Potter.
Tremendously massive. The books guided me through late childhood and my teenage
years with more verve and influence than both the Old and New Testaments
combined. I saw all the movies on opening night, even though most of them were
of questionable quality. The only things I bought on a trip to MovieWorld when
I was 12 were a wand and a Quidditch baseball cap.
But my fan response to Harry
Potter differs substantially from the majority. I’m not a ‘shipper, nor am I a consumer
of alternate universe fanfiction where certain characters don’t die/hook
up/cross over with other franchises. As much as I adore Harry Potter’s
scholastic adventures, my love for the series does not extend to the
proliferation of fan debates and considerations on what might’ve happened if
Snape had been open about his love for Lily Potter, or if Cedric Diggory hadn’t
died, or if Voldemort had had some child with Bellatrix Lestrange.
Do those quibbles at the end
of the above paragraph sound a bit too specific? Well if they are, it’s only because
Harry Potter and the Cursed Child
goes through all of these alternate universe and character relationship choices,
and more besides.
Which brings me to the second
thing I want to make clear: Harry Potter
and the Cursed Child is not a good story. At all.
I acknowledge up front that
comparing Cursed Child to its bookish
brethren might not be fair, since it’s a script rather than a prose novel.
There’s a certain freedom in imagining settings, blocking and visual effects in
your head without them being spelled out on the page, so I wasn’t opposed to
the idea of a dialogue-heavy story relying on the ol’ thinker box to make the
magic happen. That’s why I say it’s not a good story, rather than a good book;
in that respect, it can’t wholly be measured against the preceding seven
volumes of bildungsroman that J.K.
Rowling could’ve comfortably retired on.
No, Cursed Child is just a bad story, beginning to end, top to bottom.
It’s the worst fears of an anti-shipping and alternate universe-phobe made
manifest, simultaneously a sycophantic slab of fanservice and an anvil-subtle
fix-fic whose effects are wholly disposable and blatantly insulting. I’m
doubtful that a live-action stage performance of the story could fix the inane,
cringeworthy morass of the script, but I guess miracles do happen.
Nineteen years after
Voldemort’s defeat at the Battle of Hogwarts, Harry Potter sends his angsty son
Albus Severus Potter off to wizard school. Harry and Albus don’t quite see
eye-to-eye, largely because Harry’s overprotective and Albus doesn’t like
living in the shadow of his famous father and his own older siblings. While
Albus deals with the perceived shame of being put in Slytherin House and makes
friends with Draco Malfoy’s son, Scorpius, Harry deals with his general
unhappiness with life, his relationship with Albus, a recurring pain in his
scar, and some strange dreams about Voldemort.
That’s where the story
starts, at least. As to where it goes after that… well, my housemate has an XKCD poster of the narrative paths of main characters in several well-known stories,
and where they both intersect and stay separate from each other. The poster’s
assessment of the film Primer also
handily represents what Cursed Child’s
character trajectories look like:
In other words, it’s a mess.
Thanks to the advent of time
travel and some truly moronic impetus, Albus and Scorpius set about trying to
“fix” the present by preventing events in the past from happening. Most of
these centre around trying to save Cedric Diggory by altering the outcome of
the Triwizard Tournament from Harry
Potter and the Goblet of Fire. That means the story is effectively saying
it wants to “fix” one of the best books in the series by undercutting the
second-most affecting dramatic climax of the whole thing, after Sirius’ death
in Order of the Phoenix.
Which would be bad enough a
premise on its own, if it weren’t for some simultaneously insulting and pandering
fanservice moments peppered throughout. Cursed
Child goes out of its way to attempt to satisfy both the shipping/alternate
universe crowds and the other veteran fans of the series who just want to, you
know, experience a wonderful story. In the attempt, it most definitely succeeds at the former while failing miserably at the latter.
Ron and Hermione are meant to
be together, no matter what universe they happen to be in; the play has
multiple moments where, even in other timelines where they are with other
people, the universe conspires to make sure they end up together. Snape is a paragon
of virtue who, though misunderstood, was really a true-hearted hero of a man;
his mid-act appearance has Scorpius, a character not even present for the events of the series, recap Snape’s
career, extol Snape’s virtues and constantly emphasise how awesome Snape is.
Wild fan theories from the ‘shipping crowd had previously thrown around the
possibility that Voldemort was Harry’s real father; Cursed Child takes that inspiration to instead say that Voldemort
did have a child, but with Bellatrix Lestrange.
Ironically, that last one is
both the big twist of the story and the single thing which cripples it
entirely. Throughout Cursed Child’s
first act, there’s a lot of foreshadowing that Mouldy Voldy might not be entirely
dead and could be planning a return. Delphi,
who initially masquerades as the niece of Cedric Diggory’s father but is later
revealed as Voldemort’s bastard child, is then grandly presented in the middle of the third act as the real
villain of the story; all that Voldemort renaissance stuff was a barrel full of
red herrings. Delphi unveils herself to the characters, hinting that she may
have surpassed her father’s power and could be the most deadly threat the
wizarding world has ever faced. Then there’s some time travelling to Godric’s
Hollow in the 1980s to prevent Voldemort’s death after killing the Potters,
Harry and co. show up and battle Delphi, then…
That’s it. She gets defeated,
captured, and thrown in Azkaban. Everyone goes home. History goes back to
normal. The end.
What was intended as a
tremendously huge plot twist instead becomes a fractional bend which snaps back
into place almost as quickly as it happens. It also doesn’t help that Delphi’s
absent for most of the story’s second and third acts, with little to no indication
that there’s anything to her besides being a Diggory. It also doesn’t help
that her casual mention of her parentage, during a villainous monologue which
would make Megatron groan in annoyance, was such a jarring, left-field reveal
that it literally made me stop and close the book for a minute. The resulting
partial aneurysm was not fun.
There’s also no lasting
consequences from Albus and Scorpius’ Excellent Adventure. Everything they set
out to do gets undone, and there’s only the vaguest indication that Albus and
Harry’s conflict has been resolved because of the story’s events; most of their
disagreements could’ve been settled with a pot of tea and an honest chat,
rather than a J.K.’s Wizarding World production of Back to the Future. By adding little that’s meaningful in any way, Cursed Child just emphasises how
ultimately disposable and extraneous it is.
Now, I’m not saying we
couldn’t have had a Harry Potter story that exists in its own little bubble.
Hell, a plot focusing on a non-Voldemort bad guy who gets defeated over the
course of a single story sounds like a fantastic idea in theory, and would
serve new fans of the franchise well when they come to see it. But Cursed Child doubles down on how
monumental its revelations are, how it recontextualises seven books’ worth of
stories you thought you knew. It wants you to know the story is a big deal,
that its reveals and twists are huge, that it will linger in your mind whenever
you go back to reread the other, better Harry Potter stories.
Thing is, it’s not that big.
It’s not even medium-sized. Cursed Child
is just an annoying, insulting, utterly meaningless addition to a series that
had already been gifted with a solid conclusion. We didn’t need this; I know I
certainly didn’t. I could’ve been content to just leave Harry where he was,
many years later with no more Voldemort to deal with, living a peaceful, if
maybe a bit less exciting, life with his wife and kids. This doesn’t add
anything to the larger Harry Potter series the way The Force Awakens did for Star
Wars (though with the focus on the kids of Harry Potter's previous main characters,
you could be forgiven for thinking it was trying to).
At the end of the day, Harry Potter and the Cursed Child
aggravates me. It reads like a story made specifically for the ultra hardcore
crowd, but even amongst them I would have to question how well it works. Is it
ultimately satisfying that you have your insistence on Ron/Hermione shipping
overwhelmingly affirmed by Rowling herself? Do you like the notion of an
alternate universe which shows Cedric Diggory would've been a Death Eater had he lived? Can you now
feel sated that Snape was given enough accolades on his heroism to his face?
For myself, I can’t say I feel any of those things. I'd just like to read something else, now.
- Chris
Harry Potter and the Cursed Child is available in bookstores now.
Review copy kindly supplied to Geek of Oz by Hachette Australia.
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