Autumn darkness is upon us and I’m in movie mood. Over the last five days I’ve been (re)watching the first five films based on the Harry Potter books. Two more to review and then I hope to finally get the very last one (part 2 of The Deathly Hallows) on DVD next week when it is released. However, since I’ve ordered it from the same company that mixed up my last DVD order, I might just possibly end up with another copy of The Condemned instead. (See recent post Trick or Treat.) Ah well. What is life without a bit of risk-taking! (I only placed the order with them again because of a discount they gave me to compensate for previous mistakes…)
Anyway, not too surprising that the first Q-word which swooshed through my mind for the ABC Q-challenge was - Quidditch. However, I already wrote a post on that in the last ABC-round. Not on this blog but on my Harry Potter blog. (Follow the link if you want to read.) Just about the only sports game for which I know the rules… The main advantage from my point of view though is that since I can’t fly a broomstick, I can’t be expected to play!
Next to mind came Quills. As far as the use of those is concerned, I think I could have been accepted as a Hogwarts student. (Where no pens or pencils are used – only quills.)
In The Order of the Phoenix (which I watched yesterday), there is a nasty Quill in use (as punishment) which does not need dipping in ink because it uses your own blood instead…
… Somehow through the twists and turns of my thoughts, I was reminded that back in my childhood or teens (long before Harry Potter first popped up in J.K. Rowling’s mind), there was a bottle of red ink in a drawer in my grandfather’s old desk. I used to pick feathers outside (frequently scattered about by the crows fighting over the left-over potatoes that my grandmother used to put out for them to feast on), sharpen them into quill pens, dip them into that bottle of red ink, and practice my quill-writing…
Another famous quill from the Harry Potter books and films is the Quick Quotes Quill used by reporter Rita Skeeter in The Goblet of Fire. This is a magical quill that automatically twists whatever you say into sensational newspaper stuff. I’m not so sure those aren’t secretly used by Muggle reporters as well!
11 comments:
I read the first Harry Potter Novel and indeed saw the film, but never went any further. A good story, loved it.
Great ABC Wednesday post.
Denise ABC Team
you are blessed with talent since you can write with a quill, my writing with pen/pencil is barely legible, so imagine what i would do with a quill. i saw the guy who plays Harry Potter in the movies on a BBC talk show last week, he is very nice and personable and has made a fortune on these stories. you did well with Q and now I am Quitting typing LOL
You MADE your own quill pens??? I'm impressed!!! Even as a youngster, you were an extremely literary child!
LOL ... I guess I had read about people writing with quills before there were modern pens and pencils, and wanted to try out how it worked. Can't claim to have reached any extraordinary calligraphy skills with the feathers though ;)
imagine writing about quidditch with a quill! quite a task!
ROG, ABC Wednesday team
Wish I'd thought of quills - I might pinch those for the next round of ABC Wednesday if I'm still around.
But Quidditch is out - I keep falling off and landing on my head, which explains a lot.
Quills and quidditch. Perfect and quaint !
Pheno, ABCW Team
Oh I need to get a box set and do HUGE marathon of these movies again. Once i've reread the novels. What fun!
I had the opportunity to watch TDH Pt 2 on the plane - and part 1. I gave it a miss though. I don;'t think I've caught up with the fourth one yet. I really enjoyed the early ones because I took the daughter of Friend Who Knows Too Much because FWKTM doesn't care for HP. Seeing the films on my own doesn't seem quite the same.
I've now watched the next two as well and just waiting for the last. I really recommend the experience of watching them all in one week, with the previous ones fresh in mind.
I have a quill of ostrich feather, my students love it.
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