After a lonely summer on Privet Drive, Harry (Daniel Radcliffe) returns to a Hogwarts full of ill-fortune. Few of students and parents believe him or Dumbledore (Sir Michael Gambon) that Voldemort (Ralph Fiennes) is real...
After a lonely summer on Privet Drive, Harry (Daniel Radcliffe) returns to a Hogwarts full of ill-fortune. Few of students and parents believe him or Dumbledore (Sir Michael Gambon) that Voldemort (Ralph Fiennes) is real...
The film critiques governmental denial, propaganda, and authoritarian overreach through the Ministry of Magic's actions, championing grassroots resistance and truth-telling against an oppressive establishment.
The movie maintains a largely traditional cast for its main characters, consistent with the source material, while including some visible diversity in supporting roles without explicit race or gender swaps of established white roles. The narrative focuses on a struggle against a fictional supremacist ideology, framing traditional identities neutrally or positively without explicit critique or making real-world DEI themes central to its core message.
The film 'Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix' does not contain any explicit or implicitly depicted LGBTQ+ characters or themes. Therefore, its net impact on LGBTQ+ portrayal is N/A due to a complete absence of such content.
Female characters such as Hermione Granger, Ginny Weasley, Luna Lovegood, Nymphadora Tonks, Minerva McGonagall, and Bellatrix Lestrange participate in combat. However, all combat depicted for these characters is exclusively spell-based, not physical close-quarters combat.
The film adaptation faithfully portrays the genders of all established characters as they appear in J.K. Rowling's source novel. No characters canonically established as one gender are depicted as a different gender in the movie.
All major and supporting characters in "Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix" are portrayed by actors whose race aligns with their established depiction in the source material and previous film installments.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources