I don’t think most people—even hardcore fans—actually want a full season of Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone, even if they think they do.
Part of what made the original films work so well is that they were complete, contained experiences. The first movie, especially, delivered whimsical worldbuilding, light storytelling, and emotional payoff in a tight two-to-three-hour format. It became something you could return to—something people built traditions around. Watching it at Christmas, doing full marathons in December… it worked because it was compact and repeatable.
And a huge part of that wasn’t just the visuals or the cast—it was the music.
John Williams didn’t just score those films—he defined their emotional identity. The sense of wonder, whimsy, and mystery is carried as much by the music as it is by anything on screen. You can hear a few notes and immediately feel that world. That kind of melodic, atmosphere-setting composition—something that becomes instantly recognizable and emotionally grounding—is what makes the experience stick.
Without that, I honestly think the first film risks feeling much flatter. Because at its core, a lot of it is exploration and worldbuilding. “Look at this magical place, look at this system, look at this wonder.” The story itself is relatively light. The music is what elevates that into something immersive and memorable.
And that’s why the shift to Hans Zimmer matters more than people are acknowledging.
Zimmer is incredibly effective at what he does—but what he does is very different. His style leans heavily on texture, repetition, and tonal buildup. It creates mood, tension, scale—but it doesn’t usually create those distinct, whimsical melodies that define a world in the same way. A lot of his scores, across films like The Dark Knight, Inception, and Interstellar, share a similar sonic language.
That approach can be powerful—but it’s not the same as what Harry Potter originally relied on.
If the show is largely built on extended worldbuilding and exploration—and it probably will be—then it needs that kind of musical identity to carry it. Without it, I don’t see the same sense of whimsy landing. I don’t see the same emotional hook forming. And without that, the experience risks feeling thin over a longer runtime.
And that ties into something deeper when you compare it to A Wizard of Earthsea by Ursula K. Le Guin. Both stories center around wizarding schools—but they approach power and growth in completely different ways.
In Earthsea, magic is inherently consequential. If you use it selfishly or carelessly, the consequences are immediate and unavoidable. Ged learns not just from mentors, but from his own failures—especially from confronting his own darkness. Power demands alignment with the world, with balance, and with something larger than yourself.
In Harry Potter, J.K. Rowling presents magic as something more playful and exploratory. There are authority figures who guide and punish, but consequences are often external. Learning is structured. Characters are told what’s right, and growth happens within that system rather than emerging organically from the nature of power itself.
Le Guin’s world teaches that power demands responsibility. Rowling’s world teaches that responsibility is enforced by authority.
And I don’t think that difference—or that kind of story—scales well into long-form television. Harry Potter’s strength has always been experience: tone, spectacle, atmosphere, discovery. The films worked because everything—music, sets, performances, pacing—came together to create a complete, almost ritualistic experience.
Once you stretch it out, you start to see that the stakes are relatively small and the arcs are fairly simple, especially early on. Without that tightly constructed, sensory-driven experience, it risks feeling like a very expensive prologue.
Honestly, I think people have already gotten everything they really want from this world. The films covered it. Even Hogwarts Legacy showed that while there’s still massive interest, that interest doesn’t necessarily translate into lasting cultural engagement. It spikes—and then it fades.
If anything, it would make more sense to explore new territory—stories before or after the original timeline—rather than retelling something that already feels complete.
But for me, this isn’t just theoretical.
I’m trans, and I’m not interested in supporting this franchise at all. And that’s not something abstract in my household. My kids used to love Harry Potter. It was part of our traditions. But when they grew old enough to understand who J.K. Rowling has chosen to be in the public sphere—when they saw her using her platform to target people like their mom, and people they care about—that changed things for them. It wasn’t something I had to explain or push. They felt it on their own.
So when I say I won’t be watching, it’s not just about disagreement. It’s about something that already broke.
And honestly, that contrast with Le Guin’s work makes it even harder to ignore. Earthsea is built on the idea that power carries real, unavoidable consequences—that it requires humility, balance, and care. Watching someone use their real-world influence in ways that cause harm feels like the opposite of that philosophy.
So no, I won’t be watching. And even setting that aside, I don’t think this kind of adaptation is likely to hold people the way the original films did.









.png)
.png)

