![]() ![]() Rowling brought a magical Wizarding World to life for readers around the world in 1997 with Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone, the first entry in what would become a series of seven novels. The complete book series was adapted to the big screen not long after, with the final novel, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, being split into two films. ![]() Of course, a world as rich as Harry Potter’s went through some changes when making the jump to the big screen, but many scenes stayed true to the source material. Related: Harry Potter Movies Cut The Best Part Of Wormtail's Book Story Among those was the kissing scene between a false manifestation of Harry and Hermione as part of an apparition to torture Ron, courtesy of the piece of Voldemort’s soul kept in Salazar Slytherin’s locket. In The Deathly Hallows, when Harry opened the Horcrux-locket, the piece of Lord Voldemort’s soul kept in it began to torture Ron by mocking his greatest fears. Apparitions emerged from the locket, among them one of Harry and Hermione questioning his merit as a member of their friend group and telling him they would be better off without him. The pair appeared to be naked as they begin to kiss. Although this scene was a manifestation of Ron’s deepest fears and insecurities, it sparked a wave of controversy among concerned parents. The locket had always been the most troublesome of Voldemort’s Horcruxes since the trio had to protect it for months before finding a means to destroy it. Though the locket had a negative effect on all three of the protagonists, it was worse for Ron, who was more susceptible to it twisting his emotions. When director David Yates announced that part 1 of The Deathly Hallows would include Harry and Hermione’s “nude” scene, those who have read the books weren’t surprised, but those not familiar with it – specifically parents – did not approve of the notion. Many parents complained about a Harry Potter film featuring a nude scene, even though many were unaware of the context. Worst of all, the complaints (and even some boycott threats) were based solely on Yates’s comments, occurring before the film was even released. The scene in question was very brief, and the false Harry and Hermione were surrounded by dark mist from the waist down and plenty of other special effects. but not possible thanks to the fact that Hide Metatype for a UPDM::Capability is set to True in the MD Customization.Most importantly, neither of the actors were actually naked. In fact I think using UPDM::Capability to extend a UML::Behavior instance is probably better than using it to extend a UML::Class instance. Thus it should be perfectly allowable to apply the Block stereotype to them. This creates some real problems when using UPDM according to it's standard or when mixing custom profiles with built in profiles.įor example, Activities, Interactions and State Machines are all UML metaclasses that are specializations of UML::Class. Specifically, SysML and UPDM profiles have MD Customizations where the SysML and/or UPDM elements are targets of Customization Elements that have the Hide Metatype attribute set to True. One of the most annoys me with CSM 18.5 SP2 is how stereotypes are not completely implemented according to UML specification as a disjoint/orthogonal extension mechanism. ![]()
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