[identity profile] pacoman.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] deathtocapslock
I had updated my original post back on Sunday, but LJ didn't recognize it. So here's the second (and most important) half, coming a bit late:


- Meet Romilda Vane. Her name can be construed as an anagram for either "A Random Evil" or "I'm A Dan Lover". She's what I like to call a Mary Satire (or Parody Sue): you know you've seen characters like her in many a fic, so an author places them in a reality where they don't have the odds stacked in their favor. Unfortunately, Romilda isn't randomly attacked by large animals, and so isn't as entertaning a Mary Satire as Nanami Kiryuu from Utena.

- Romilda's introductory scene was intended by Rowling to show how much Harry had grown since his dark, year-long night of the soul, now considering Neville and Luna as his friends and not feeling ashamed of them. Never mind that last year, his first crush had caught him at the business end of Neville's phallic plant, while now some girl he had never seen before was distracting him from ogling that part of Neville's anatomy that gives meaning to his surname.

- And now, of course, comes the part we've been dreading since Rowling mentioned it on her homepage. No, Ginny doesn't appear, backed by an Elven chorus, to make out with Harry on the train seats. I mean the part where he wonders if Alice would have given her life for Neville as Lily did for him. Now granted, maybe JKR meant that, since Lily was an ace at charms, it was a combination of Motherly Love and Charms Proficiency that summoned the ancient magic, and so Alice wouldn't have been able to cut it with Motherly Love alone. Of course, had Voldemort simply killed Lily without giving her a chance to stand aside, no Pure Love would have protected Harry, so maybe Harry means that V only spares hot redheads.

- Hee, Draco gave Ron the finger. Or the two-fingered British salute, whichever is more appropriate.

- Neville timidly wonders what the new teacher would want with him. Harry feigns ignorance, fully aware that Slughorn wants to sample the Longbottom Family Derriere.

- Cho makes a cameo to reminds us that Harry can fancy women too. She backs away from him, though, because she's still convinced that he's a self-centered, self-entitled little psycho ashamed that she's not dating the One Who Will Bring Balance to the Force.

- Marietta is there too, still not recovered from Hermione's Counter-Hex of Spite. "Good", thinks Harry, as he enters the adyacent cabin full of first years and slaughters them all. They would have ended up in Slytherin, anyway.

- Taking a quick look at the other students in Slughorn's train cabin, Harry sees that Sluggy has already collected the Requisite Gryffindor A-hole, the Soon-to-be Discarded Fool, the Controversial Minor Character and the Second Coming of Lily.

- Seriously, I don't get the huge deal about the Zabini wank. Blaise has a femme fatale for a mother, is friendly in his way with Draco and seems relatively uninvolved with the Death Eaters. Admittedly, my planned Future!HP fic was going to feature Blaise's son, so I naturally like what I'm seeing, but really, who cares if he's black and not albino?

- Why is Ginny here? Because Slughorn saw her cast the Bat Bogey hex. Why was she casting the Bat Bogey No-Show? Because Zacharias Smith was asking too many questions about what happened at the DoM.

...

Why won't anyone hex her for asking too much/getting too involved/making stupid names/breathing loudly? Oh, because she's the Designate Heroine? All right, then.

- Blaise scoffs at the whole Chosen One nonsense; after all, anyone with enough training and knowledge of the occult can take on the Forces of Darkness. He's also not too impressed with the Bat Bogey No-Show, as well he shouldn't.

- Watching Blaise walk back to his compartment, Harry gets the wonderful awful idea of engaging in some Tactical Espionage Action so he can get his Hogwarts Express trip-required dose of Draco (no visit to Harry's cabin? What is it, his breath?). Unfortunately, he takes his Invisibility Cloak with him and not a cleverly inconspicuous cardboard box, thus ensuring his eventual capture.

- Embarrassing confession time: when I first read the book, I thought "trainers" meant underwear and not tennis shoes. This led to a line near the end of the chapter seeming a bit more suggestive. Anyway, Draco goes "?" at the sudden flashing of tighty-whiteys, but lets it go for now.

- Goyle/Zabini OTP? Or is Blaise trying to break Crabbe and Goyle's one true love?

- The debate of the book: which comic is Crabbe reading? [livejournal.com profile] mike_smith believes that to be New Thunderbolts, but 1996 is a bit early even for Not-so-new Thunderbolts (oh Jo, maths). My guess, going by year, would be that Crabbe is reading the then-latest issue of Preacher, chuckling at Garth Ennis' portrayal of Americans and wishing he had the Word of God and actual lines so as to tell Harry to go fuck himself... and watch him do just that.

- Aww, Pansy is stroking Draco's hair. The "as though anyone would have loved to be in her place" part could be construed as projection in Harry's denial-filled mind, or literally saying that everyone in the room would love to have Draco in their lap. Feel the HoYay.

- At Draco's wondering of why Slughorn would invite Ginny, Pansy suggests that it might be because She So Pretty (GSPC: 2) and He So Pedo. Not that Draco would care how a Weasley looks, let alone a female Weasley (and the D/G shippers begin fanwanking). Blaise denies any interest, as he has standards, and Harry is all "Ginny Who?"

- Man, Draco can actually sound halfway impressive when he's not falling on the "My Father" crutch.

- Pansy was gazing down at Draco as though she had never seen anything so awe-inspiring.

And neither had Harry, apparently, as he doesn't notice Goyle standing from his seat. The gasp of pain makes Draco go "!", but as he's not a genetically-enhanced, VR-trained soldier, he chooses to give his quarry a false sense of security instead of sounding the alarm.

- Aww, Pansy wants to hold Draco's hand.

- Now Harry and Malfoy were alone in the compartment. People were filing past, descending onto the dark platform. Malfoy moved over to the compartment door and let down the blinds, so that people in the corridor beyond could not peer in. He then bent down over his trunk and opened it again.

The sexual tension is so thick, you could cut it with a chainsaw.

Needless to say, Harry stiffens in anticipation, wondering what Draco might pull out of his trunk. And then he literally stiffens, for what Draco pulls out is his wand... to paralyze him. What?

- For what it's worth, Draco would never have noticed Harry had he entered the compartment under the cleverly inconspicuous cardboard box. Never underestimate the importance of the cardboard box, young Potter; it has aided grizzled spies and girly wannabes alike on many a mission.

- "You didn't hear anything I care about, Potter. But while I've got you here..."

Here the American Edition exhorts you to turn the page. H/D slashers are therefore invited to imagine any number of things Draco does to a paralyzed Harry before stomping his nose.

- As Harry is left alone, paralyzed, with a broken and bloody nose, covered by his own Invisibility Cloak, he comes to the grim realization that karma is truly a bitch. And that somewhere, someone is laughing at his predicament.


Next week: Snape declares Bictoly!

Re: More later...

Date: 2005-10-08 03:15 pm (UTC)
ext_6866: (Maybe I'm wrong.)
From: [identity profile] sistermagpie.livejournal.com
That's what I thought about Romilda too. It's like JKR had to produce a grotesque version of a fangirl so maybe we'd think that this wasn't exactly what was going on with Ginny in the first 3 books only we were supposed to think it was cute because she was shy about it.

She is still a parody of a fangirl, though, as I think is Myrtle a little in the scenes about Draco. I don't know if this is JKR saying anything about fans of the movie actors so much as her usual judgment of how stupid women are. We're all always haring off after celebrities or cute guys, making stupid judgments, throwing ourselves at people. The good people in her universe are sort of the exception to the rule.

Re: More later...

Date: 2005-10-08 06:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] anaid-rabbit.livejournal.com
It's like JKR had to produce a grotesque version of a fangirl
I bet she took the thirteen year olds who idolize her and her books, love the movies and have the hots for either Dan or Tom as an inspiration for Ever So Evil Romilda. Niice.

Re: More later...

Date: 2005-10-08 07:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] merrymelody.livejournal.com
Naw, people having the hots for Dan is only natural, since he plays such a Heroic Character.

But yeah, thankfully there'll never be a fanboy pisstake (Emerson being a walking talking one; if JKR's struck for inspiration) since males are so much smarter/more dignified/less easily fooled by appearances.

Re: More later...

Date: 2005-10-09 09:48 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] go-back-chief.livejournal.com
Well, Colin is a fanboy, isn't he? But we haven't heard much of him in latter books, maybe he grew up and became a man. Or maybe he's gay. That might make you as stupid as a woman, you know. ;-)

Re: More later...

Date: 2005-10-09 09:56 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] merrymelody.livejournal.com
He's in the DA, isn't he?...

Oh well, yeah, good point.
Still, when I eventually do some chapters myself again, I was gonna count up every time in the books that an anonymous group of girls were portrayed as being giggling bitchy morons; but like trying to count up the 'snarls' in OotP (I stopped at thirty - for real) or the pretty counts in HBP (since pacoman has bravely taken on the mantle *salutes*), I just don't have the spirit! ;)

Re: More later...

Date: 2005-10-09 10:04 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] go-back-chief.livejournal.com
It's true, CColin is sort of an exception, whereas you have giggling groups of girls everywhere. I remember in GoF, when Harry was all "why do girls always have to come in groups, and giggling should be forbidden", when he asks out Cho, but is completely oblivious to him and his friends certainly being no better when a third-year-girl asks him (to which he says "no" without even thinking about it. Harry has the best social skills.) "She walked away with a rather hurt expression (ya think???), and Harry had to endure his classmates teasing him about him for the rest of the day." So, yeah, why is it that only girls are described as giggling, catty and gossiping, when we have proof right there, that the boys are just the same?

Re: More later...

Date: 2005-10-09 10:30 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] merrymelody.livejournal.com
Harry has the best social skills.

Especially since we get chapter and verse on the OMG PAIN of Cho turning him down. (And naturally it has to be because she has a date already, rather than a no motivated by someone not loving Harry 100% - blasphemy!
Much like how Cedric's allowed to beat him at Quidditch, but only because it was an accident and not down to any skill on his part.)
I know JKR's very into having all her characterisation motivated by plot, so there's no sign of say, any Quidditch loving in Ginny until she needs to put it in (and much as I loved Draco getting a larger role in HBP, and thought that for once, she'd done a great job of laying the hints throughout the book so that nothing was OOC; the sudden 'Ok, you're suddenly allowed to be competent' was a tad unrealistic and must be kinda shocking to some); and I suppose it must cut down the books considerably, which is a boon considering how flabby the last three were; but it doesn't do her characterisation, which is always kind of a weak spot; any favours.
Like how she'd presumably never write someone actually having an unrequited crush (except of course, Those Type of Girls, who probably aren't even intended to have actual feelings, but are just chasing after people for looks/fame) because it would be a waste of time and purposeless to the plot, which I get; but it might actually a) be something audiences could identify with (unlike H/G: Meeting of the Mary Sues) and following from that b) increase audience sympathy, which is something she clearly has issues with, since apparently having ninety zillion fans of her 'favourites' isn't enough - why doesn't everybody love them?

Re: More later...

Date: 2005-10-09 08:57 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] go-back-chief.livejournal.com
And naturally it has to be because she has a date already, rather than a no motivated by someone not loving Harry 100% - blasphemy!

Yeah, how could anyone not love Harry? *cough*

and much as I loved Draco getting a larger role in HBP, and thought that for once, she'd done a great job of laying the hints throughout the book so that nothing was OOC; the sudden 'Ok, you're suddenly allowed to be competent' was a tad unrealistic and must be kinda shocking to some

Much as I can understand that, I have to make a point of Draco having been shown as capable before. Remember in CoS, the duel, in which he threw the Sectumsempra? Snape just whispers it to Draco, and he pulls it off at the first attempt. Which must be interpreted as Draco either being incredibly good at throwing hexes at the first time, or him knowing a lot more hexes then the second-years have learnt in school. Both options implies that Draco indeed can be competent. Though, I agree that he's usually shown as incompetent. ;-)

Like how she'd presumably never write someone actually having an unrequited crush (except of course, Those Type of Girls, who probably aren't even intended to have actual feelings, but are just chasing after people for looks/fame

I really hope you're right about that, because it would spare us both from unrequited Snape->Lily and Draco->Ginny. *prays*

Re: More later...

Date: 2005-10-10 07:28 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] merrymelody.livejournal.com
Oh, yes. I mean more that while it was fairly clear Draco had the basis for competence - imagination, social skills, etc. - but authorial intervention bad luck meant the plans always failed; but even that is kind of a shock to the system after five books - like, why is he now allowed to be a person rather than a kicking bag? I mean, this fairly obvious from his first introduction - he's even allowed to be 'tall' which as we all know, makes you morally superior to shorties (much like being thin over being fat) and have 'handsome' robes rather than ridiculous ones Harry mocks in his head.

Ew, I hadn't thought of that! I was thinking in terms of the Gryffindors! And now I can totally see how The Slytherins Jealousy Over Such Perfect Women could occur. Especially Snape's. *makes sign of the cross at JKR and backs away*

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