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Harry Potter TV series’ first trailer is out and it feels like a replay I didn’t ask for

HBO had a chance to reinvent Harry Potter, but this feels like a visual rerun.

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Well, HBO has finally dropped the first trailer for its Harry Potter TV series, set to premiere this Christmas, and it brings you right back to the beginning. That’s broadly the only source of a vague intrigue for me, and I’m being generous here. Yes, it sets the stage for what should be a bold reinterpretation of the Harry Potter world. The trailer, however, settles for a safe, almost unimaginative retread.

Alright, so what am I looking at?

Let’s get the intros out of the way before we dig into the meaty (if any) bits. HBO is reimagining J.K. Rowling’s seven Harry Potter books, with each season dedicated to one novel. The first season will adapt Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone, essentially restarting the story from scratch for a new generation.

A new cast is stepping into some of the most recognizable roles in modern pop culture. Dominic McLaughlin takes over as Harry Potter, while Arabella Stanton and Alastair Stout play Hermione Granger and Ron Weasley. Lox Pratt appears as Draco Malfoy, John Lithgow steps in as Albus Dumbledore, and Janet McTeer plays Professor McGonagall.

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Paapa Essiedu, who has been cast as Severus Snape, has already faced significant backlash online, including instances of racist abuse and threats. While speculation continues around who will play Voldemort, HBO has confirmed that they have not yet found “He-Who-Must-Not-Be-Named.”

The Harry Potter series trailer leans on nostalgia instead of offering something new

I have seen this world before, and what disappoints me most is how little it seems to have changed. The trailer walks you through the same visual language the Harry Potter films established years ago, almost beat for beat. Harry is back in the cupboard under the stairs, staged almost exactly like the movie.

The Hogwarts letters arrive in the same handwritten, persistent way that defined the original moment. When you finally see Hogwarts, it carries the same towering, gothic aesthetic that has already been etched into our minds. Even the costumes look nearly identical, as if they were designed to reassure you rather than surprise you.

There is a scene in the trailer where Hagrid is shown from behind. He looked so similar that for a second, I genuinely thought it was Robbie Coltrane again. The hair, the coat, the silhouette, it’s all so close that it feels like it’s copying the films instead of reinventing them. And it is not just one or two moments. The Dursleys’ house looks the same. The Hogwarts Express looks the same, even down to the way Ron and Hermione meet Harry in that compartment, playing out almost exactly like it did before.

A reboot should not exist just to remind you of what you loved.

Meanwhile, the hallways of Hogwarts feel like they have been lifted straight out of the Harry Potter movies. That sense of deja vu builds quickly, and not in a good way. It does not feel like the series is interpreting the books differently. It feels like it is carefully retracing steps that were already perfected. That is where my frustration kicks in. A reboot should not exist just to remind you of what you loved. It should offer a new lens, a new tone, or even a new visual identity. Here, I struggle to find any of that.

This was supposed to be deeper, but where is that depth?

The biggest promise of this series was not just retelling the story but expanding it. A television format allows for more time, more detail, and more room to explore characters and subplots that the movies had to leave behind. I really hope HBO has taken at least some of the unexplored moments and smaller character beats from the books and woven them into the series. That is the one advantage this format has, and it would be a wasted opportunity not to use it.

However, the trailer does not communicate any of that ambition. It does not offer new perspectives or deeper character work. What I see instead is a production that seems hesitant to break away from the films. It leans heavily on nostalgia, almost as if it does not trust itself to stand on its own. Recognition seems to have replaced curiosity, and it risks making the entire project feel unnecessary.

A reboot that feels like a rerun

At this point, the Harry Potter series feels like a replay, and that is a much harder sell than HBO might think. I am not saying the series cannot prove me wrong. There is still time for it to reveal something deeper, something bolder, something that justifies its existence. But first impressions matter, and this trailer does not make a strong case.

If anything, it raises a simple but uncomfortable question. If this version looks, feels, and moves like the one we already have, why does it exist at all? I have already experienced similar pain with Amazon’s “The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power” TV show, and the upcoming “Lord of the Rings” movie with comedian Stephen Colbert as a writer sounds like another heartbreak cooking in the pits of creative regurgitation.

Manisha Priyadarshini
Manisha Priyadarshini is a tech and entertainment writer with over nine years of editorial experience.
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