Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire Made a Major Change to Its Harrowing Finale

Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire has always been a pivotal part of the Harry Potter franchise, with the book and its movie adaptation both being a major turning point in the series. The franchise’s fourth installment not only changed the magical story of Harry Potter from a children’s tale to a narrative aimed more at young adults, but it was also the host of some very important events that would have major significance in Harry’s story moving forward. This included the more formal — and fatal — introduction of the Wizarding World’s malevolent main antagonist, Voldemort, in his true resurrected form and the thrilling but treacherous Triwizard Tournament that led to the Dark Lord’s return.The Goblet of Fire’s Triwizard Tournament was the central focus of this fourth part of the franchise, as Harry himself became one of four competitors who must undertake three perilous trials to try and win the prized Triwizard Cup. The book did an excellent job of portraying each and every harrowing task the 14-year-old Harry Potter must go through, and while the first two tasks were decently done in the movie adaptation, the third task — the Triwizard Maze — left a lot to be desired, especially for those who had read the book prior to seeing the movie. Although it would be impossible to include everything from the pages of Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire into a movie adaptation, especially with the movie already having a runtime of almost 160 minutes, the changes the movie made to the third task did not do justice to the Triwizard Tournament and the final events that followed.Every five years since the late 1200s, the three largest European schools of witchcraft and wizardry — Hogwarts, Beauxbatons, and Durmstrang — would get together and compete in the Triwizard Tournament. One student from each school was chosen as their school’s champion and would partake in three tasks that would test the strengths, smarts, and spellcasting abilities of each participant, with the winner receiving the Triwizard Cup and holding onto that honor until the next tournament. The Triwizard Tournament was created as a means to initiate camaraderie and a little bit of friendly competition between the three schools, with each one taking its turn to host the event, but due to the number of deaths that occurred during these tournaments, it was eventually canceled around 1792. That is until Harry Potter’s fourth year at Hogwarts in 1994, where the Triwizard Tournament would once again resume, but at the cost of more tragedy than anyone could have ever imagined.RELATED: Max’s Harry Potter Series Will Only Succeed if It’s Animated

Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire has always been a pivotal part of the Harry Potter franchise, with the book and its movie adaptation both being a major turning point in the series. The franchise’s fourth installment not only changed the magical story of Harry Potter from a children’s tale to a narrative aimed more at young adults, but it was also the host of some very important events that would have major significance in Harry’s story moving forward. This included the more formal — and fatal — introduction of the Wizarding World’s malevolent main antagonist, Voldemort, in his true resurrected form and the thrilling but treacherous Triwizard Tournament that led to the Dark Lord’s return.

RELATED: Max’s Harry Potter Series Will Only Succeed if It’s Animated

The Goblet of Fire’s Triwizard Tournament was the central focus of this fourth part of the franchise, as Harry himself became one of four competitors who must undertake three perilous trials to try and win the prized Triwizard Cup. The book did an excellent job of portraying each and every harrowing task the 14-year-old Harry Potter must go through, and while the first two tasks were decently done in the movie adaptation, the third task — the Triwizard Maze — left a lot to be desired, especially for those who had read the book prior to seeing the movie. Although it would be impossible to include everything from the pages of Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire into a movie adaptation, especially with the movie already having a runtime of almost 160 minutes, the changes the movie made to the third task did not do justice to the Triwizard Tournament and the final events that followed.

Every five years since the late 1200s, the three largest European schools of witchcraft and wizardry — Hogwarts, Beauxbatons, and Durmstrang — would get together and compete in the Triwizard Tournament. One student from each school was chosen as their school’s champion and would partake in three tasks that would test the strengths, smarts, and spellcasting abilities of each participant, with the winner receiving the Triwizard Cup and holding onto that honor until the next tournament. The Triwizard Tournament was created as a means to initiate camaraderie and a little bit of friendly competition between the three schools, with each one taking its turn to host the event, but due to the number of deaths that occurred during these tournaments, it was eventually canceled around 1792. That is until Harry Potter’s fourth year at Hogwarts in 1994, where the Triwizard Tournament would once again resume, but at the cost of more tragedy than anyone could have ever imagined.

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