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  • For millions of people around the globe, the Harry Potter book and film series were the

  • closest they'd ever come to experiencing actual magic. The journey of the young wizard, from

  • an orphan who lived under the stairs at his cruel aunt's home into the legendary hero

  • who defeated the world's darkest villain, was nothing short of epic.

  • The final installment of the story was as complex as it needed to be to wrap up seven

  • chapters' worth of sorcerer storytelling. So, to make sure you caught everything important

  • at the end, let's shed a little lumos light on what happened in the conclusion to the

  • Harry Potter saga.

  • "Wicked!"

  • Snape's true side comes through

  • In the beginning of the final film, dementors loomed over Hogwarts. Professor Snape observed

  • from on high how much devastation the Dark Lord's looming presence had caused his school.

  • But he had to carry on because it was all part of the plan no one else knew about.

  • See, Snape might've seemed like a terrible person throughout the whole series, but his

  • true loyalties became clear in his final moments. He was ultimately expelled from school and

  • killed by Voldemort's snake, just so the Dark Lord could take true ownership of the Elder

  • Wand.

  • Some friend Voldy was.

  • Harry overheard everything and tried to rush in and help Snape as soon as You Know Who

  • was gone, but it was too late. Instead, Snape used his last moments to give his least favorite

  • student a teardrop full of memories.

  • In them, Harry discovered the gut-wrenching backstory of Snape's unrequited love for Harry's

  • mother Lily.

  • "After all this time?"

  • "Always."

  • As it turned out, he'd been crazy about her since childhood and was also looking after

  • Harry the whole time by feigning allegiance to the Dark Lord. The only reason he murdered

  • Dumbledore was because the headmaster was already dying and didn't want Draco Malfoy

  • to be forced to do the deed.

  • Snape's open contempt for Harry at Hogwarts was still pretty real, since he looked so

  • much like his dad James, but he was trying to protect Harry all the while so he could

  • fulfill his destiny to defeat the Dark Lord.

  • It probably didn't hurt Snape's feelings too much that Harry Potter was always meant to

  • die in his big battle with Voldemort, though. Speaking of which

  • No Resurrection Stone required

  • There's a reason Dumbledore had his eye on Harry Potter from day one and helped fan the

  • flames on Harry's "chosen one" persona in the wizarding community. He was one of the

  • few people who knew that Harry was predestined to die in a battle against Voldemort.

  • "You have the grim."

  • Harry finally realized the truth about his fate once he saw Snape's memories and found

  • he out he himself was the final horcrux.

  • "A part of Voldemort lives inside him."

  • After Helga Hufflepuff's cup was destroyed, and the Diadem of Rowena Ravenclaw was done

  • for, Harry left Hermione and Ron to deal with the snake while he set off on what he knew

  • was a suicide mission to face Voldemort in the Forbidden Forest.

  • "So when the time comes the boy must die?"

  • "Yes."

  • He didn't exactly know what would happen after that, of course, but he trusted the late headmaster

  • enough to follow his lead, even to his own death if necessary.

  • "The Boy Who Lived, come to die."

  • Upon going gently into that good night, Harry awakened in what appeared to be a milky white

  • vision of King's Cross Station, where he'd hopped onto Platformso many times before.

  • Dumbledore awaited him with news that he'd successfully killed off the part of Voldemort

  • that remained inside of him in the process of dying. So, Harry had a choice to board

  • a train back to the realm of the living or to just move onto where, he didn't say.

  • Harry, knowing his battle wasn't done, opted for the former. He left behind the scaly,

  • tiny version of Voldemort that had infected his mind for so long, and used his perceived

  • death to gain an advantage. Hagrid carried him back to the school just as an unknowing

  • Voldemort started bragging about his conquest to garner new recruitsand got an unexpected

  • surprise.

  • The Elder Wand was his all along

  • No matter how many horcruxes Harry and his friends successfully destroyed, Voldemort

  • was still a more powerful wizard than all of them. So, when Harry arose from the dead

  • to pick a final fight with the Dark Lord, he was very quickly overtaken by You-Know-Who.

  • But Voldemort still couldn't kill him with the wand again, even after he'd taken ownership

  • from Snape. Why? Well, it turned out that Snape wasn't the one who'd gained control

  • of the Elder Wand in the first place, so it didn't actually pass to Voldemort upon Snape's

  • execution.

  • While Snape had indeed killed Dumbledore and taken possession of the wand in Half-Blood

  • Prince, it was Draco who'd originally disarmed Dumbledore, and thus received the allegiance

  • of the Elder Wand. Then, when Harry disarmed him in their subsequent duel, it was Harry

  • who'd laid claim to the Elder Wand.

  • So, while the Elder Wand was successfully used to strike its master down in the forest

  • when Harry had surrendered himself to the Dark Lordhe still wasn't disarmed

  • of the wand in that battle. It remained loyal to Harry, instead of Voldemort. And it wasn't

  • the only magical instrument that came into play to take ol' Snakeface down.

  • A key weapon presented itself

  • The Sword of Gryffindor had been an instrumental tool in destroying horcruxes throughout Harry

  • Potter lore. Dumbledore used it to destroy the Gaunt family ring. Harry retrieved it

  • from the frozen lake, and Ron used it to destroy the locket that was causing his buddy so much

  • mental anguish. Despite knowing its powers, Harry offered the sword to Griphook in exchange

  • for his help to get them into Bellatrix Lestrange's vault at Gringotts.

  • Griphook returned to villainy soon after, though, and left Harry and his friends in

  • the lurch by abandoning them in the vault caverns with no promise to get them out. Hermione,

  • always with a clever idea up her sleeve, led the trio to ride a dungeon-bound dragon out

  • of the bank, with Griphook perishing in the fiery skirmish that ensued.

  • "That's unfortunate."

  • The sword then disappeared from his grip, to present itself to a more worthy pair of

  • hands.

  • "That was brilliant. Absolutely brilliant."

  • Later on, when Hermione and Ron were back at Hogwarts trying to lure Nagini away, the

  • Sword presented itself to Neville Longbottom so he could slice the snake's head off and

  • deal Voldemort one last crucial blow as he fought his ultimate battle with Harry.

  • Unlike other similar weapons in the Harry Potter-verse, the Sword knew no master, and

  • simply chose whoever was worthiest at the time. And few were more worthy than Neville.

  • "People die every day!"

  • "He didn't die in vain. But you will."

  • After that, the Elder Wand returned to Harry and left Voldemort falling to pieces. Literally.

  • The Deathly Hallows come together at last

  • There was an interesting Easter egg contained in Harry's first shot of the last film. As

  • he mourned Dobby's beachfront grave, he looked in a triangular fragment of a mirror the elf

  • had possessed. Thanks to the circular nature of his glasses, it created the symbol of the

  • Deathly Hallows in the reflection as a wink to how all three elements would eventually

  • be his.

  • As explained in The Tale of the Three Brothers in the second-to-last movie, the Deathly Hallows

  • consisted of the Elder Wand, the Cloak of Invisibility, and the Resurrection Stone.

  • When combined, they gave a wizard untold power, the ability to disappear from Death's purview,

  • and a means to bring back lost souls. Voldemort got his hands on onethe Elder Wandwhile

  • Harry had been casually given the cloak in his earliest days at Hogwarts, not knowing

  • its strength. He eventually recovered the Stone, too, after kissing his Snitch goodbye

  • with the intention of sacrificing himself.

  • Unlike Voldemort, however, Harry didn't aim to use these items for world domination once

  • he came into possession of all three. Instead, he snapped the Elder Wand in half and dropped

  • the Resurrection Stone in the Forbidden Forest to be trampled into the dirt by a centaur.

  • He did keep the cloak for himself because, it had once belonged to his late fatherand

  • who'd give up an invisibility cloak? He'd later pass the Cloak down to his own son,

  • James Sirius Potterand James' younger brother, Albus Severus, who would later swipe

  • it in the events of The Cursed Child.

  • Speaking of which

  • The next generation

  • In the 19-years-ahead epilogue to Deathly Hallows, we met Harry Potter's trio of children

  • with Ginny Weasley. Particular attention was paid to Albus Severus Potter, his second son,

  • as he prepared to board the Hogwarts Express for his start at the school. The boy was contending

  • with the possibility that he might not make it into Gryffindor, and Harry consoled him

  • as best he could.

  • "Let's just say that I am."

  • "Then Slytherin house will have gained a wonderful young wizard."

  • Little did we know at the time of this movie's release release, but this was ushering in

  • a new generation of wizarding journeys, which plays out on the stage in Rowling's Harry

  • Potter and the Cursed Child.

  • Was it all in his head?

  • There's a popular fan theory that everything that happened to Harry Potter outside of Privet

  • Drive was a mental making of his young, abused mind, and Deathly Hallows did little to dispel

  • that theory.

  • In fact, the movies seemed to give a wink to that possibility by having Harry ask his

  • late Professor if his crazy adventure was all just happening in his head.

  • "Of course it's happening inside your head Harry. Why should that mean that it's not

  • real?"

  • So, was the entirety of the Harry Potter universe fiction coming from the imagination of a desperate

  • boy who lived under the stairs and who wished for something more?

  • "Actually if I think about it, it doesn't seem curious at all."

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For millions of people around the globe, the Harry Potter book and film series were the

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