The horcrux anchors the soul in the body to the living world. When a person with a horcrux "dies", the part of their soul still in their body abandons the body and takes a formless existence.thaluikhain said:So, when he dies, the soul goes into the Horcrux temporarily, or a bit is already there, and only the part still in the body gets killed?NooNameLeft said:Not exactly.
When a normal person dies his soul "move on" and there is no way to get it back. but when a person with a horcrux dies his soul stay in the world and can be placed inside a new body when certain circumstances are met.
so basically all voldemort need is to have at least one horcrux, a few loyel wizards and he can be resurrected every time he dies.
Still if Voldemort did killed Harry he would have no more reasons to fear death so I'm not sure what motive he will have to continue living...
And why would Harry being dead stop Voldermort being afraid of death?
Oh, right, that makes sense.DaWaffledude said:The horcrux anchors the soul in the body to the living world. When a person with a horcrux "dies", the part of their soul still in their body abandons the body and takes a formless existence.
Ah, I see. Though, does anyone else think that's a stupid interpretation? Just cause you know you will die if someone else doesn't is no guarantee that something else won't kill you anyway. Take alot of the tension out of the books if it was revealed Harry was playing on god mode, except against Voldemort.DaWaffledude said:To answer your second question, according to Voldemort's interpretation of the prophecy, Harry is the only person who has a chance of killing him. If Harry dies, then no one can challenge him. Therefore, he feels has no reason to be afraid of death.
Oh my word, I heard of the Abridged Yugioh series before, and knew it was a piss-take of the series, but I never saw it because I don't follow Yugioh and thought I wouldn't have gotten any of the jokes. That was AMAZING! I was in stitches throughout, thanks.badgersprite said:This reminds me of a certain scene from Yugioh: The Abridged Series.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XL5E70NLqZ4#t=22m38s
My thoughts exactly, *salutes fellow Yugioh Abridged watcher*badgersprite said:This reminds me of a certain scene from Yugioh: The Abridged Series.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XL5E70NLqZ4#t=22m38s
It's like, shit, what does destroying everything actually accomplish?
You read my story!!!!!!!!!!Nachtmahr said:Don't you read facfiction? Voldemort, who is actually a handsome man with red eyes (the no nose thing was just a disguise to fend off hordes of women), will marry Harry, whom he always loved. Trying to kill Harry was just his way of getting attention.
Anyway, Harry Potter will become Voldemort's Queen, and bear him many red-eyed children.
Honestly, I think people are a little hard on Harry. Sometimes we forget that the story started when he was 11. What's the most heroic thing you've done between his ages through the movie? If I had to choose between hiding out from psychopathic Death Eaters, Werewolves, and Dementors, or just staying at home you guys would be screwedExterminas said:You are probably asking too much of Rowling's writing skills if you want something as complex as a motivation.
While we are busy asking stupid questions:
Why exactly is Harry considered a hero? He doesn't achieve anything for himself. There is always someone to help him, some magic loophole that fixes stuff, or someone who dies for him.
The actual Hero in he Harry Potter movies is Snape. Possibly Voldemort himself.
The sad thing is I could actually see that.MiracleOfSound said:I always think those evil guys trying to achieve infinite power would get really bored when they actually get it.
The thrill is in the chase, and all that.
He'd probably just get really bored and spend his time looking at My Little Ponies on 4chan.
You have to take into account all the benefits Harry got: He got a vault full of gold, a reputation as the wizardkind's jesus and instantly is the best pal of the world's most powerful wizard.rancher of monsters said:Honestly, I think people are a little hard on Harry. Sometimes we forget that the story started when he was 11. What's the most heroic thing you've done between his ages through the movie? If I had to choose between hiding out from psychopathic Death Eaters, Werewolves, and Dementors, or just staying at home you guys would be screwed
But they do. They have squads, specializations. Specifically, aurors hunt evil wizards, then there's those that retrieve artifacts that fall into muggle hands, people who are trained in wiping memories and restoring the area after accidents etc. But there aren't all that many wizarding folk. Besides, who are they going to war with? If you mean war with Voldemort, that's why both times he operated behind the scenes until it was too late, and both times it was wizards outside the Ministry, mostly the Order Of The Phoenix, who were instrumental in holding him back.Esotera said:It would have been brilliant if he had won. Mainly because I'd like to see Voldemort get completely pummelled by the Royal Marines.
The biggest problem the Harry Potter universe has is that their government is not maintaining an active military. What, like, 100 wizards managed to take over the entire wizarding world? That shouldn't be happening. Why aren't people fighting back with killing curses when the death eaters are killing everyone around them? The Ministry of Magic should just train some of the guys from Durmstrang (they look strong and obedient) in basic millitary tactics, then ship them off to war.
Snape, eh. He was heroic, absolutely. Great character. Certainly not the hero, but a hero yeah. And I'm always telling people Dumbledore was the hero, dude set every single detail up. Voldemort though? You gotta be trolling. But why hate on Harry? Sure, most of his life was in fact already mapped out, but he still chose to do a lot of things. In the seventh book especially, he and Hermione destroy four horcruxes by themselves, with some minor assistance from Dobby/Aberforth. And why does everyone seem to hold Rowling's writing in contempt? I thought she created a charming world, great story with some brilliant characters. Of course, if you've only seen the movies, well maybe I'd understand.Exterminas said:The actual Hero in he Harry Potter movies is Snape. Possibly Voldemort himself.
I thought it was Neville, personally.NooNameLeft said:edit:Snape I understand but Voldemort?Exterminas said:The actual Hero in he Harry Potter movies is Snape. Possibly Voldemort himself.
Aurors are more bounty hunters than anything. Most of the time they operate individually or in small groups. Wizards who wipe memories etc. aren't really related to any form of military. I refuse to believe that (1) they don't have a decent intelligence network in place to prevent abuses like this from happening, and (2) they don't have even a few wizards trained specifically as cannon fodder. Or if they really don't have enough, and it looks as if evil will prevail, draft the populace. This would at least protect the population at large events (such as the Quidditch world cup in the fourth film. The Death Eaters would have a fun time storming that with 500 highly trained wizard commandos guarding the grounds.)brunothepig said:But they do. They have squads, specializations. Specifically, aurors hunt evil wizards, then there's those that retrieve artifacts that fall into muggle hands, people who are trained in wiping memories and restoring the area after accidents etc. But there aren't all that many wizarding folk. Besides, who are they going to war with? If you mean war with Voldemort, that's why both times he operated behind the scenes until it was too late, and both times it was wizards outside the Ministry, mostly the Order Of The Phoenix, who were instrumental in holding him back.Esotera said:It would have been brilliant if he had won. Mainly because I'd like to see Voldemort get completely pummelled by the Royal Marines.
The biggest problem the Harry Potter universe has is that their government is not maintaining an active military. What, like, 100 wizards managed to take over the entire wizarding world? That shouldn't be happening. Why aren't people fighting back with killing curses when the death eaters are killing everyone around them? The Ministry of Magic should just train some of the guys from Durmstrang (they look strong and obedient) in basic millitary tactics, then ship them off to war.
I'm of the impression that magical creatures have resistance to magic, otherwise it would be hideously easy for a wizard to kick the ass of anything out there. However, muggles would have no such protection, and in a conflict where a wizard can teleport anywhere, control the mind of anyone, assume anyone's identity, bend the fabric of reality, fly, go invisible, create living fire, incapacitate anyone with a flick of the wrist, turn back time etc etc completely unhindered, do you really think any human would be able to put up resistance? The only hope would be resistance fighter wizards to use counter spells, but they all but lost in the books so without a Harry around to get everyone going it would be game over, man.thaluikhain said:I'd have thought that if a wizard could create a bulletproof shield, they'd be protected against all supernatural but not magic using creatures the same way. Centaurs firing arrows, for example, wouldn't have frightened anyone, a troll or giant has nothing more than brute force, etc.
I wrote another post on the Voldemort-Buisnes, a few posts up. You can check that out, if you are interested.brunothepig said:snip
Esotera said:Aurors are more bounty hunters than anything. Most of the time they operate individually or in small groups. Wizards who wipe memories etc. aren't really related to any form of military. I refuse to believe that (1) they don't have a decent intelligence network in place to prevent abuses like this from happening, and (2) they don't have even a few wizards trained specifically as cannon fodder. Or if they really don't have enough, and it looks as if evil will prevail, draft the populace. This would at least protect the population at large events (such as the Quidditch world cup in the fourth film. The Death Eaters would have a fun time storming that with 500 highly trained wizard commandos guarding the grounds.)
I know why it's written the way it is, it just irritates me slightly when good characters die needlessly..
Exterminas said:I wrote another post on the Voldemort-Buisnes, a few posts up. You can check that out, if you are interested.
Here are some reasons why Rowling's writing sucks. I will not go into detail to not derail this thread too much.
And please don't start with the claim "Good and bad are subjective, this is only your opinion." While this is technically true there are established norms and standards regarding fictional works that come as close as possible to being absolute truths.
- One dimensional characters.
Everyone in the Potter Universe is either good or evil. Sometimes there is a mask in place, someone who appeared good, turns evil or vice versa. But there is no moral gray zone, faking an allignement is not the same as being a morally complex character. If you are Slytherin, you are bad. If you are Griffindor, you are a hero. etc. If you want examples of well-written Characters:
Darken Raal from Godkind's books: Fancies himself the good guy and is not ashamed to act according to that
Everyone from Song of Ice and Fire
I can give Rowling partical credit for snape, but he is part of a different problem, which leads me to point two:
- Shoehorning things in on the go.
Don't predent you don't know what I am talking about. Rowling just made up crap as she went on and clearly has no sense for consistency. She didn't have a plan for the whole story and it really shows. Of course this in itself is not a complaint, it just becomes a complaint when it causes Inconsistency. Here are some examples from shoehorned things that cause problems:
Disarming a wizzard gives you his wand. Throughout the books dozens of people get disarmed. Their wands don't act up.
There are other schools for witchcraft in the world? Since when?
Dumbledore has a family? That comes in handy. Strange that stuff like this doesn't stand on one of these collection cards they throw around.
What hapened to the philosopher's stone? Why didn't Voldemort just pursue that plan again? Sure the alchemist from the first book was dead, but certainly with all his evil manpower it musth ave been possible to create such a thing again.
Snape. He basically got rewritten into being a good guy. Sure, this one was actually good writing, because you did not see it comming. But combined with all the other crap it just seems like an accident to me.
- "These books are meant for children"
Not so much a problem with Rowling's writing as with the way these books are read. Everytime I bring up one of these complaints, one or two morons tell me "Dude, these are books for children, not shakespeare. You can't hold simple narrative standards to them."
If I see the Potter-Books as books for kids, I have to vomit.
Because they teach kids horrible lessons. Here are a few examples:
"No matter how much you work in life, or how great the danger is. Something will pop up and save your ass."
"Friends are more important than academic succes."
"Go and form a clique at school. Outcast and ignore anything with different values." (See Syltherin / Griffindor)
"You can not fail at school."
In a really romantic fashion these things are really great. But there is just no way any of the stuff from the Potter Books works as good children's literature, which generally is supposed to have some teaching value.
To kill all "lesser" muggles and have wizards rule. Your typical Hitler/Magneto-type.Yoshisummons said:He had a plan? Thought he was the equivalent of a Saturday morning cartoon villain.
Griffolion said:Hi everyone, I won't claim to know much about the HP universe but I have a question for you Potter fans. SHOULD Voldemort had won the big battle at the end, what was next for him? Was he going to invade earth or something?
Thinking on that rhetoric, wouldn't it be silly to do so? I get he's all magical, but I'm pretty sure that .50 Calibre Bullet > Wand.