Voldemort :”Snape ,could u hold the elder wand for a minute ?” Snape *Takes the wand* : ”My lord ?” *sweats nervously* Voldemort *holding the other wand* : ”Expelliarmus” Voldemort :”Thats all for today ,thank u severus” Snape *Died of heart attack*
I think that Voldemort slit his throat because he had a sense of anger towards killing him, because he was so loyal and essential to him, it’s sick but I think he was almost angered at the inconvenience of having to kill snape, he also didn’t stay to watch him die, it definitely was heavy on his mind
- Dalcnori - as the books came out first, I’m going to correct you and say that the movies remove the depth of the character. The books didn’t add anything - they are the original canon. The movies robbed Voldemort of his depth and the ability for the viewer to actually pity him in HBP.
@@florathepagan Yeah I agree. You don't have to like him, but seeing Voldemort's earlier years at least helps you understand him, making him a way more interesting villain. In a way his story paralleled Harry's at least to start with. He grew up being abused by those around him, but then discovered he was not only incredible powerful but had an extremely prestigious lineage. He went from being a powerless nobody to as he saw it, the heir of Salazar Slytherin, almost Salazar reborn, but greater. However he then discovered this story he built for himself was a lie, as he discovered he was half blood. Voldemort's obsession with power comes from being traumatised at his most vulnerable, as well as extreme self loathing for his bloodline.
Oncat Forever Snape managed to kill Dumbledore with the Killing Curse because he needed to in order for Voldemort to be defeated. He didn’t want Dumbledore to die, but he genuinely wanted Voldemort’s downfall, which required him to complete the killing. Furthermore Dumbledore’s personally giving Severus permission to kill him almost certainly allowed his soul to remain intact, satiating that aspect of the latter’s concerns. It’s possible Voldemort using the killing curse would have worked because he genuinely wanted mastery of the Elder Wand, which he (wrongly) thought he needed to kill Snape to acquire. And of course, the Dark Lord had no qualms for his soul. Could this have overpowered his great distaste at the thought of killing Severus? Quite possibly, don’t forget his one true goal was immortality, for which he believed he needed the Elder Wand. However as rightly pointed out by Dean in this video, the movie version makes little sense, as Voldemort could have simply attacked Snape with a non-lethal curse to test its ability to harm him.
@@VulKus117 Fair points, both of you. I was simply noticing parallels between the two situations; neither executioner wanted to kill, both had a driving goal, both had great respect/trust for the person they're executing. I can certainly see and get behind the factor of Snape being desperate to bring down Lily's murderer and ordered by Dumbledore, while Voldemort is driven by planning his own potential gain and by his arrogance, which Snape had been very useful for (to his knowledge). Voldy logically should've tested the wand first. But the twisted idea of giving his trusted servant a more "meaningful" death rings true to me- that mentality when ordering Nagini to do it fits into his character. Thank you for discussing this, I always appreciate someone dedicated enough to this fandom (or any fandom) to type out a rationale for their view on a character or fictional event. My kinda people. Have a great day! P.S. On the off chance that any of you read fanfiction, would you happen to have any recommendations? I'm just getting into HP fanfiction and would love to see more that focus on a Snape & Harry mentor/mentee relationship. Those just make me soft, so happy to check any recs out! No shame in self promos. Okay, I'll stop rambling now. Thank you!
i disagree. voldemort may have been annoyed at having to kill one of most useful followers, but he would have wanted the elder wand more. if the killing curse didn't work, that would suggest that voldemort cared more about snape being a loyal follower than him having the elder wand and that i cannot buy
My explanation: Voldemort still had somewhat respect for snape, so he didn't kill him himself directly and gave him a slow death cuz he thinks nothing is worst than death. This is his twisted sense of mercy and the closest thing to compassion in him
Who ever wondered what if Voldemort just use a gun to shoot him when he was a baby and THAT IS IT. Lol. No need for 8 movies anymore. Or prob he use a knife to stab him.
Only now I realize how much Voldemort respects Snape. He actually didn’t want to kill Lily only because Snape told him not to considering the fact the Lily was a mudblood. It was Lily’s choice to die and protect Harry.
Yeah I think people forget this. Voldemort tried to spare Lily originally. The only person Voldemort ever actually spared. Lily only died because she refused to abandon her child. But Voldemort was willing to spare Lily out of respect for Snape. Voldemort wouldn't have done that for anyone else.
@@ZDtz1786 That argument doesn't make sense. The point was that it was someone's Voldemort had committed to kill then was convinced to spare them/show mercy. Bellatrix isn't a target he had ever committed to kill.
This was actually the beginning of his downfall. Lily's deaths only count as a sacrifice because he "tried" to spare her. In the PoA, he kept telling her to "Step aside, silly girl" He told told her like 5 times to step aside. That seems extremely generous coming from him. So he really wasn't gonna kill her. Hence she choose to sacrifice herself. And he was only gonna spare her, a mudblood, for Snape. So inthe end. The entire story, everything was all thanks to Snape love for Lily. And Voldemort favorable image of Snape.
But why would he respect him then? That was apparently the only time he’d done anything else significant as a Death Eater. By the end sure, but 20 years earlier, I don’t think so.
I believe Voldemort was blindsided by Snape because he felt a deep connection and respect for him due to all their similarities: coming from very humble origins in the muggle world, having deep resentment for their parents and having a cold, methodical approach on reaching their goals.
All that and they are both very powerful wizards. In his own twisted way (especially after dumbledores death) he had some extreme respect for snape. Voldemort respected snape. He feared Harry. And he hated how much he respected and feared Dumbledore. There really wasn’t anyone else who he even acknowledged and saw as somewhat equal to him.
I love how, unlike the other death eaters, Snape never cowered or debased himself before Voldemort, maintaining his dignity even in death. He could have begged for mercy, or revealed that Draco was the master of the elder wand, but he took it like a man, a very brave one at that. I think Voldemort would have admired that quality, perhaps making it more difficult to kill Snape. I agree that Alan Rickman's outstanding performance in this scene gave this pivotal moment the weight it deserved. Thank you, again!
Voldemort would have just killed Snape for being a coward if he would have ratted out Draco. Part of the reason Voldemort liked him so much was because he was brave and dignified.
Did everyone forget the movie version of the deathly hallows? Hermione stated: "That night. Another wizard took the wand and slit the brother's throat for good measure." Voldemort literally recreated the story believing he became the master of the elder wand. However, lets not forget that Voldemort loves killing people, simply watching their lives fade away gave him pleasure, but killing Snape gave him no joy at all. I wouldn't say that killing Snape angered Voldemort, but doing the deed definitely bothered Voldemort that it had to be Snape. I'm willing to bet that Voldemort would have instantly ended any other death eater except Snape.
But Voldemort didn’t know about the deathly hallows. Don’t forget that the resurrection stone was part of his grandfathers ring, which he made a horcrux, without realizing what it was. The hallows were supposed to make whoever had all three master of death, which Voldemort would have been obsessed with had he known. He simply knew that there was this wand out there that was supposed to be the strongest ever. So I don’t think he was recreating the story intentionally.
@@dwightschrute3721 People from the wizarding world know all about the deathly hollows and he's spent more of his time in there instead of the muggle world. Also not everyone knows what they look like. No one knew Dumbledore had the elder wand nor did they know that Harry had the cloak despite using it on several occasions. I think it was supposed to be a childrens story or something.
So basically you're saying; Voldemort Logic : Hate someone-kill them quickly; Like someone- Give them a "worthy" death aka making them suffer. It does work with his demented mindset.
True, if Voldemort really had any compassion then he would have killed him very quickly. Think of how much pain Snape was probably in those last couple of moments. Granted I will give it to him since if he truly hated Snape then he would have used the Cructias Curse on him first but that was still pretty torturous.
I mean, yes, but like i’d love it there was some in-universe reason that made sense. I thought he should have used Sectumsempra because I feel Voldy would like to kill someone with a curse they invented. Also, it would be slow enough for Harry
alnoor budhwani I would assume it’s slightly more complicated than that.. my theory is that I think it only works that way when you disarm the owner of the wand in an act of self defense.. so it has to be meaningful act not rehearsed either..
Voldemort's downfall was his arrogance not his "inability " to love and understand it ..he thought everyone was going to kiss his ass no matter what he did
He didn't think a 'regular" witch or wizard could be better at him at anything hence a part of the reason why he didn't realize that someone in his innermost circle has been lying to him for years and really working for the other side.
Hmm... respectfully, I don’t think they’re mutually exclusive. Arrogance is always a product of something. An effect, rather than a cause. Where does Voldemort’s belief of superiority, his arrogance come from? How does he justify it within himself? By objectifying the world and empirically evaluating worth along standards of his choosing. It is his inability (or refusal) to empathize and certain refusal to see intrinsic value - in short, an inability to love - that caused his arrogance; which caused his downfall.
@@4yze I disagree with u in every way, but who knows psycopaths aren't capable of love...yet they understand emotions and what people do for their "loved" ones ...Voldemort thought everyone was loyal to him no matter what he did...It doesn't take the abilty to love someone to understand that people do Selfless things for love, but anyways it's a children's book if Jk wants us to believe that love defeats evil well i guess let's buy into that
Sabrina Zanoletti 😅 I don’t think it’s a matter of believing it just because JK says so. More to the point, I didn’t say you were wrong; merely that I preferred the canonical explanation as a more complete explanation. Why? Because psychopaths do not care about loyalty outside of how it benefits them. They do not care about anything outside of how it benefits them. Everything is an object, a concept that either serves, does not yet serve, or opposes their will. Is that arrogant? Yes. Absolutely. But to call it just that is short selling it by a mile. Believe what you want. You’re entitled to your opinion. My thoughts aren’t the end all on Harry Potter. Just shared it for your consideration. Hope you’re well.
@@4yze correct i have my own opinion as you have yours so i didnt really see the point of your comment,but anyway we shouldnt get too much into it its a children's book and the author doesnt even understand what she writes,it also doesnt take the smartest person to know what people to for "love" but anyways thanks im good and i hope u r too
I just turned on the video my guess has always been because he believed Snape to be the most genuinely loyal and useful follower. It bothered him not because he cared for Snape clearly but because he could have proved invaluable. Again while Voldemort does not have compassion or care for anyone. I feel as though he didn't use the killing curse on Snape as sort of a twisted "thank you for your service"
A desire to kill certainly does help. Technically however, all you need to perform the move is a high enough level of magical skill and knowledge of it
@xXTenma'sShadowXx its the time snape got to come to terms with it, and it made snape's end meaningful. keep in mind voldemort is incapable of love, given that his family history had imbreeding, or so wikipedia has told me, and, like the vod said, he prides himself on killing quickly and callously
Harry Potter Folklore I believe Voldemort respected snape too much He could not kill him, he did not actually hate him he was his server ,yes but Voldemort felt like snape had served him too well to end his life like that Even tho it’s lord voldemort,he could not do it
Voldemort actually has a lot of honor. You can see that when Voldemort first returns in the Goblet of Fire instead of just outright killing Harry actually Voldemort insisted that they duel to have a fair fight.
I have never understood how Voldemort got so many followers by using the “We hate 1/2 Bloods,Mudbloods etc”.He was a 1/2 Blood and it wasn’t a Secret.Everyone knew his Father was a Muggle.
they knew tom riddle's father was a muggle, but in the years after he graduated, he worked hard to make a new identity for himself and to get away from the stain of his father's name. the general public didn't know (at least during the first wizard war) that voldemort was tom riddle. some of his closer death eaters probably knew his family history, but the majority of people, both followers and enemies, didn't
If Dumbledore knew from age 8 or whatever when he met him that he eventually became Voldemort,you think he(Dumbledore) kept it a secret?I think it was known by the Ministry of Magic.But yeah you have a point abt the 1st War.Only his Closest Death Eaters knew.
@@echochambers8418 I don't think it's ridiculous to suggest that Dumbledore would keep it a secret. I may be wrong, but I was under the impression that Dumbledore only ever truly figured out Voldemort's actual lineage after Riddle became Voldemort (again I could be wrong, it's not very clear when Dumbledore found out Voldemort's true parents, unless I missed something). But regardless, even if I'm wrong on that (which I mostly likely am because I'm honestly unsure of when Dumbledore found out Riddle's lineage) it still is definitely a possibility that Dumbledore kept it a secret. After all, he himself stated in the 6th book, after one of Harry's lessons, that Harry should only inform Ron and Hermione of what he'd learned because he (Dumbledore) didn't want Voldemort to find out about how much he knew of Voldemort's past.
It's clear in the chapter "The elder wand" of final book that he felt no remorse. 'I regret it, ' said Voldemort coldly. He turned away; there was no sadness in him, no remorse............................. Voldemort swept from the room without a backward glance, and the great serpent floated after him in its huge protective sphere."
He actually didn't want to kill him but he was so twisted as a being that he wasn't able to realise he had a choice or had another way to do this. Same with killing Lily Evans.
I believe that Voldermort has respect for bravery, power, and courage. Snape had bravery, courage, power, and loyal(from Voldemort's point of view at least), so he didn't want to lose it. He also has honor for Snape. He could've killed Harry directly in Goblet of Fire but he chose to have a duel.
I think it's because in his mind he knew that Snape knew so in order to punish him for not telling him he didn't make it easy for Snape and gave him a painful end instead.
I’ve got two more theory’s: 1: Would the Dursley’s of had a second child if they were not given the guardianship of Harry? 2: Would the Potter’s of had a second child if they were not killed?
I don't think the Dursleys would have had a second child because they would have believed they already had the perfect child with Dudley. But the Potters on the other hand,I think they absolutely would have had more children.
Fayth Osborn no, Rowling did not say that. Someone made it up and said Rowling said it and because no one does any research a bunch of people fell for it.
Voldemort liked Snape. He personally recruited Snape into the deatheaters even though Snape wasn't a pureblood. Snape, in his duel against all 4 Marauders, showed his magical skill and determination to be the best. This impressed Riddle. I believe Riddle regretted killing Lily, even though Snape asked him to spare her life. Yet Lily chose death instead. So when the time came for Snape to die, so that he (Riddle) could become owner of the elder wand (or so he thought), Riddle knew his didn't hate Snape enough for the killing curse to him. Therefore he had Nagini go it.
Did Dumbledore knew that Voldemort will kill Snape to get the Elder Wand? I mean Dumbledore had to know if Snape kill him then Voldemort will search the wand...
Idk why but in my opinion If Dumbledore even knew he would not do anything much because in his opinion anyone could die to bring peace even if there was no one left to enjoy the peace
Dumbledore actually ordered Snape to kill him, and Shape was not at all happy about it. Dumbledore was his mentor and best friend. But Dumbledore is very adept at getting other wizards to do what he wants.
Sometimes I wonder. If Dumbledore's plan had worked and the power of the wand died, then Voldemort would have understood Snape's treason and have killed him anyway. So even if not everything worked according to the plan, at least it had let Snape time to look after the students,... Imagine how Hogwarts would have been if Snape hadn't been there to temper Death Eaters. Snape wasn't happy about killing a man he respected and the only one who trusted him, first because of the respect he had for him then because maybe with the instigator of the plan it won't work and end up as it should and maybe even because he had a feeling that would lead to his own death.
Dumbledore didn't care as long as Voldemort was killed in the process. He was planning on letting Harry die up until the 4th book and he allowed Harry to live in an abusive household because it kept him alive. The Greater Good was Dumbledore motto.
There are several similarities between Lord Voldemort and Emperor Palpatine: • Both are near unparalleled masters of the dark arts with only a few capable of matching them. • Both are hungry for unlimited power and will kill or torture anyone to achieve it • Both are incapable of feeling sorrow, empathy or remorse • Both have loyal followers to achieve their goals; Voldemort with his Death Eaters and Palpatine with his Sith apprentices and dark side adepts • Both sought immortality • Both were brought down by outside and/or unforeseen circumstances; Darth Vader’s love and sentiment for his son led him to betray Palpatine and Harry being the master of the Elder Wand and the destruction of the horcuxes led to Voldemort’s death
I think Snape would become the greatest wizard of his age or even all time. I do think you underplay the good qualities within him, book and movie Snape are truly the most loving character and I think both learned to love Dumbledore and Harry and not just love Lilly. His love for Lilly actually enlightened him and he was able to choose the right path after being lost. There’s light and dark within us all. What matters is the path we choose to follow.
One thing for casting killing cruse you have to be willing to kill you have to. Mean it, but Voldemort didnot wanna kill. Snap. May be thats y he chose nagini
I really wanted to see or know the thing that If Snape didn't die then after knowing his truth how harry would react to him..and of course how Snape would react to harry..I really was very sad about the fact that Snape died in the end..and harry should have given a chance to say him "Thanks" for protecting his life..but harry got know the truth after his death..😔😔😔
I feel like Voldemort always seems to make things harder for himself. For example if he really wanted Harry dead he could have had one of the junior death eaters attending hogwarts poison his pumpkin juice or something. But his arrogance got in the way.
I feel like Voldemort was like Thanos getting the Soul Stone. Snape and Bellatrix were the closest thing to family he had and he could count on them... Which is the closest thing to love Volly could feel. So killing Snape was like cutting off his right hand, it had to be done but he didn't like doing it.
I think that Voldemort thought that the elder wand was Snape's and he couldn't kill the elder wand's owner so he used magic to simply weaken Snape and then order his snake to kill him. I think Voldemort made a plan before Snape was sent
I think Voldemort also respected Snape too much for the killing curse to be truly effective. Using another being to carry out his will would get the job done much better. This may have also played as a factor in his reasoning.
Voldemort to Snape: Avada kadabra! Rowling: wait, wait; if you kill Snape directly he won't be able to say Harry that he has to die. Voldemort scratches his head: Okay then, Nagini kill!!!
These videos are all we have until the next fantastic beasts could you imagine if nobody had fan theories that would suck having to wait to get our fix lol
The thing about the killing curse. You have to want it, and that was something he didn't want. He didn't WANT to kill Snape but he HAD to kill Snape in order to make the elder wand obey only him, but it never answered to Snape in the first place.
I think Snape only thought about Lily in those last moments (at least before Harry came in). How hard he had fought for her not to have died in vain, how he had given everything, even his life. How he could now finally see her again. How all of his fighting is finally done.
Voldemort was really stupid [ though he is from first ] to kill his most loyal servant [ he thinks ] for a wand [ though it is a very big thing for him ] . Love you harry potter folklore
i cry everytime I realized that snape died for nothing but then realized that Snape never wanted the world to know the best of him (he said this in the conversation with Dumbledore) that he rather die than ket the world knew about how hero is he. Snape could avoid that curse actually, he can do A LOT of things to escape and save himself but chose to die at the end. My man😢
I wondered that too but Occlumency masters like Snape can present certain thoughts without showing they are hiding something else. Weaker Occlumency users such as Draco make it obvious they are hiding something
Voldemort is insane :D what an honor! Thanks master for allowing me to die slowly and in pain... who would prefer it over Avada Kedavra??? Btw I thought he wasn't able to kill him with his old wand cause he wouldn't have been able to do so.... you need to mean it if you want to kill someone, but he probably didn't truly mean to kill Snape as he was a very loyal servant.... so the curse might not have worked...
About the elder wand, sliding snapes throw in the movie, maybe Voldemort didn’t know it couldn’t harm him. Maybe it wasn’t an oversight. Snape wasn’t the wands master anyway, Harry was. Snape kill Dumbledore, but Draco was already the master of the wand, because Draco had disarmed Dumbledore
I think it’s purely because of the storyline, as, if Snape had been killed with Avada Kadavra (AK), Harry wouldn’t of been able to get Snape’s memories, and this would have changed the whole story from then on completely. However, in terms of in the story why AK wasn’t used, this video answers it really well, I have never thought of this that much, thanks!
Voldemort values Snape, and would certainly keep him alive given his way, but he does not regret him dying. The book is very clear about this; 'I regret it', said Voldemort coldly. He turned away; *there was no sadness in him, no remorse. It was time to leave this shack and take charge, with a wand that would now do his full bidding.* This, more than anything, shows the mindset that Voldemort truly had. J.K Rowling makes a point of specifically, immediately contradicting his claims of regret; they are merely a courtesy he affords the servant he acknowledges as loyal, faithful and reliable. The likes of Lucius or Yaxley wouldn't even have been offered such. Instead, his thoughts instantly turn to how the wand is now his and the next steps he must take. He doesn't spare Snape another thought, and I have no doubt J.K made it this way to further emphasise just how inhuman and sociopathic Voldemort is; even his most devoted follower means nothing to him; deep down, nothing matters to him except himself.
I feel sorry for nagini now that I've seen fantastic beasts 2. Imagine going from person to snake, unable to communicate with anyone then along comes voldemort and suddenly she has someone to talk to. I think the reason she did the things she did was because she was simply grateful to not be alone anymore. Having part of voldemorts soul inside her wouldn't have helped either
You won’t actually see the views grow because RUclips doesn’t work like that, you would have to exit out of the video and then go back in to see the views grow
7:03 that makes perfect sense mate. Snape wasn't the master of the Elder Wand, so it could harm him, and Voldemort didn't understand it properly, so he wouldn't know that the wand can't harm it's master. Nothing is contradicted.
People tend to forget how much Voldemort and Snape had in common. I believe Voldemort saw Snape as like a little brother/son. He wanted to make a world where nobodies mother not his nor Snape's chose to mingle with a filthy muggle and pollute their magical blood. He was trying bring about an ideal for both of them.
But the snape wasnt the elder wand's owner as draco was the one that disarmed dumbldore then harry disarmed draco and i doubt that voldemort new about that as though the wand was harry's before he went and took it from Dumbledore's grave
The Elder Wand passed between too many people. Rather than spend time trying to figure that all out (because, you know, it was completely mental) Voldemort killed the first person he thought had possession of the wand. Unfortunately, that person ended up being Severus Snape. God-bless you Severus, I'm so sorry - : (
Yes, bcause 1 view is 30 seconds of watch time, so some people ( like me ) that dont have time to watch, click, like and leaves. Therefor 1 like and no views
Amazing video. I was wondering if you could do a video on how Ariana died and maybe what kind of spells were fired during the duel. (I don’t really think anyone fired the killing curse but that’s just me)
Because then the rest of the story couldn’t happen. Let’s face it; there’s no other reason behind that. If the Dark Lord’s reasoning was based on the technicalities of wandlore, why would he take that risk rather than using a wand to kill Snape? It doesn’t make any sense and only exists so the other scene can happen.
Voldemort kills Snape with Nagini in the book. He thinks it is enough to just order the death and not cast the spell himself. Navi i is for plot so Harry gets the memories.
The real reason is that JK Rowling didn't think this through, and if Snape had died suddenly there would have been no time to talk to Harry and give him the tears... that's the main reason, everything else is a post-justification
Should also look at it this way. He cared so much for Snape and couldn't use the killing curse because you have to actually mean it. And he couldn't because it was snape
What if Snape really didn't die. Can you think of a Better way to avoid ever being used and manipulated again by people in power Then to fake your own death so you can live out the rest of your life under the radar.
Just my theory, it was said before that a killing curse will only work if you truly want to kill the person. Maybe being seen as one of his most loyal subjects, voldermort didn't truly want to kill Snape, meaning that the curse wouldn't of worked. knowing this and not wanting to risk losing face, he killed snape using a different method.
@ Harry Potter Folklore : Another great video. If I may add something that wasn't mentioned in this episode, another possible reason why Voldemort chose not to use his favorite curse "Avada Kedavra" is because in order for it to work you have to MEAN IT, and because Snape was such a valued & respected member of his inner circle, Voldemort didn't want to risk the chance & personal chagrin that would come from that spell failing due to his own feelings for Snape.
Voldemort didn’t use the killing curse cause of like u said, it would’ve rebounded back to him so other means had to be taken, anything he could think of.
All in all a great video! I had been asking myself over and over again WHY Voldemort had to kill his most (?) loyal follower. Your video opened my eyes to the matter of the Elder Wand possession. If I have it correct the possession of the wand happened like so: Dumbledore won the wand from Grindelwalt, Snape had agreed to murder Dumbledore by the latter's instructions so Snape won the wand from Dumbledore. It would remain useless to Voldemort (having coveted the wand so desparately) and realised that he had to kill Snape to be the Elderwand's true master. Little did Voldemort understand what lay ahead for him. Because Harry, Hermione and Ron had killed 6 out of the 7 Horcruxes (including the part of Voldemort's soul that was attached to him since he was a baby, Neville killed Nagini with the Sword of Gryffindor and the final piece of the Dark Lord's soul was destroyed. Voldemort was now in a very weakened state even though he still possessed a physical body. When Harry killed him with the killing curse Harry became the new owner of the Elder wand. Personality traits that Harry shared with Dumbledore was that that neither were particularly vain or sought glory or immortality and certainly NOT power. Standing on the Hogwards bridge Harry snapped the Elder wand in two in front of Hermione and Ron rendering it useless should it ever fall into the hands of any other wizard.
@@abbottshaull9831 Yeah but he said Voldemort harming Snape with the wand in the movie was a contradiction because it shouldn’t have been able to harm him. Which is wrong. It can because he isn’t the master.
It’s already confirmed that bc of the way Wanda work he didn’t know Harry had disarmed Draco.or that Harry was the master.he thought snape was that’s why he had to kill snape 🤦♂️🙄
And battling prostate cancer throughout 2005. Alan Rickman (RIP) underwent his operation when they were casting for Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix. He contemplated whether to come back as Snape and ultimately did. He said in an interview, "The argument that wins is the one that says: 'See it through. It's your story." Although I'm still sad that he passed away, I'm at least glad that he got to see his story as Severus Snape to the end.
The title is really misleading. “Why it angered Voldemort to kill Snape” I read it and though I don’t remember being angry because hole killed Snape... he was barely even disappointed at all much less angry... so I clicked to figure out what you were talking about and you told us “Why Voldemort Didn’t Use the Killing Curse on Snape” well why didn’t you use that as the title then?..
True that Snape changed owing to Lily but it's kinda hard to believe that in the 17 or so years after her death and the years of working close to Dumbledore he didn't ever question his past behavior in service to Voldemort. That's doesn't make him a good person but one capable of consciousness and capable of living with himself and his past. Why else would he worry about his soul being damaged by killing Dumbledore? Why would (at least in the film) he question Dumbledore and say something like "has it ever occurred to you...that I don't want to do this anymore?" I think he's far more complicated that saying other than for Lily he's an unrepentant, evil guy, unchanged by time or experiences he wouldn't have had unless he became a double agent. How could he live in that space for all those years as if he lamented not being a real Death Eater or what? I think there's a lot more to him that isn't seen because, firstly, no one would know (certainly not Harry). I think he was playing a public/private role and even Dumbledore didn't fully see all of Snape. He took that with him.
Now I have to note, Severus wasn’t actually the elder wand’s master. That was Draco, the one who disarmed Dumbledore in the tower. So, technically it could’ve been used to harm Severus BUT Tom didn’t know Draco was its master and thus, wouldn’t have tried to kill Severus with it. (Now allow me to retreat back into my technicality cave until the next minor error appears)
@@abbottshaull9831 correct but Voldemort also didn't realize that it was Draco that was the master before Harry. No matter what Voldemort did short of killing Harry he would of never been the master as he would not of thought to disarm Harry first.
To use the killing curse the book says you really have to mean it and want it. Makes more sense that he did not want to really kill snape and was worried the curse would not work. At this point Voldemort had doubts
Stealing the life of his victims... in French the name Voldemort is the fusion of three words: vol de mort. You can translate this in two ways: flight of death or theft of death. So, yeah, very nice 👌
The major understated fact is that Voldemort knew what was happening and knew Snape had the key to the knowledge, his fear overpowered his cunning and his fear made him more dangerous
Thank you, another great video. The time and effort you put into these videos is awe-inspiring! Videos like these, going in depth, makes the whole HP-universe so much more meaningful and precious!! /*
Voldemort :”Snape ,could u hold the elder wand for a minute ?”
Snape *Takes the wand* : ”My lord ?” *sweats nervously*
Voldemort *holding the other wand* : ”Expelliarmus”
Voldemort :”Thats all for today ,thank u severus”
Snape *Died of heart attack*
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣that's hilarious but he could've done that if he didn't want to kill him
Appearantly voldemort didn’t know about the fact that you don’t have to kill the wands owner to become its master...
Oh my 😂😂😂
I was just thinking about that, but it just goes to show how sick Tom Riddle is
ahh, that was hilarious and made my day
Snape's death was brutal and so hard to watch.
@Nice Try what's not cannon?
I think the same too 😒
Yep
It was heart breaking intese
@Emily Sanefski Same. It was at that moment that I realized just how much that character meant to me.
I think that Voldemort slit his throat because he had a sense of anger towards killing him, because he was so loyal and essential to him, it’s sick but I think he was almost angered at the inconvenience of having to kill snape, he also didn’t stay to watch him die, it definitely was heavy on his mind
He never slit his throat in the book, that was in the film only. The snake did the killing all by herself.
- Dalcnori - as the books came out first, I’m going to correct you and say that the movies remove the depth of the character. The books didn’t add anything - they are the original canon. The movies robbed Voldemort of his depth and the ability for the viewer to actually pity him in HBP.
@@florathepagan Yeah I agree. You don't have to like him, but seeing Voldemort's earlier years at least helps you understand him, making him a way more interesting villain.
In a way his story paralleled Harry's at least to start with. He grew up being abused by those around him, but then discovered he was not only incredible powerful but had an extremely prestigious lineage. He went from being a powerless nobody to as he saw it, the heir of Salazar Slytherin, almost Salazar reborn, but greater. However he then discovered this story he built for himself was a lie, as he discovered he was half blood. Voldemort's obsession with power comes from being traumatised at his most vulnerable, as well as extreme self loathing for his bloodline.
@@ameliashephard2876 ohhhhhhh ok
@@wafflingmean4477 tom was never abused lol, he was the one abusing the other kids in the orphanage
Because the killing curse requires will of killing the person and he didn’t want to kill him, perhaps making the curse not working if he tried.
Good point, but wouldn't the same thing have applied to Snape and Dumbledore?
Well, killing dumberdore is planned, after all.
Oncat Forever Snape managed to kill Dumbledore with the Killing Curse because he needed to in order for Voldemort to be defeated. He didn’t want Dumbledore to die, but he genuinely wanted Voldemort’s downfall, which required him to complete the killing. Furthermore Dumbledore’s personally giving Severus permission to kill him almost certainly allowed his soul to remain intact, satiating that aspect of the latter’s concerns.
It’s possible Voldemort using the killing curse would have worked because he genuinely wanted mastery of the Elder Wand, which he (wrongly) thought he needed to kill Snape to acquire. And of course, the Dark Lord had no qualms for his soul. Could this have overpowered his great distaste at the thought of killing Severus? Quite possibly, don’t forget his one true goal was immortality, for which he believed he needed the Elder Wand.
However as rightly pointed out by Dean in this video, the movie version makes little sense, as Voldemort could have simply attacked Snape with a non-lethal curse to test its ability to harm him.
@@VulKus117 Fair points, both of you. I was simply noticing parallels between the two situations; neither executioner wanted to kill, both had a driving goal, both had great respect/trust for the person they're executing. I can certainly see and get behind the factor of Snape being desperate to bring down Lily's murderer and ordered by Dumbledore, while Voldemort is driven by planning his own potential gain and by his arrogance, which Snape had been very useful for (to his knowledge). Voldy logically should've tested the wand first. But the twisted idea of giving his trusted servant a more "meaningful" death rings true to me- that mentality when ordering Nagini to do it fits into his character. Thank you for discussing this, I always appreciate someone dedicated enough to this fandom (or any fandom) to type out a rationale for their view on a character or fictional event. My kinda people. Have a great day!
P.S. On the off chance that any of you read fanfiction, would you happen to have any recommendations? I'm just getting into HP fanfiction and would love to see more that focus on a Snape & Harry mentor/mentee relationship. Those just make me soft, so happy to check any recs out! No shame in self promos. Okay, I'll stop rambling now. Thank you!
i disagree. voldemort may have been annoyed at having to kill one of most useful followers, but he would have wanted the elder wand more. if the killing curse didn't work, that would suggest that voldemort cared more about snape being a loyal follower than him having the elder wand and that i cannot buy
My explanation: Voldemort still had somewhat respect for snape, so he didn't kill him himself directly and gave him a slow death cuz he thinks nothing is worst than death. This is his twisted sense of mercy and the closest thing to compassion in him
Muhammad Hashir exactly
Nah.
@@deadpanbarry5442 wut do u mean nah?
@@victorbergman9169 I wrote this before watching the entire vid so I know this seems copied, but I reached this conclusion on my own
Who ever wondered what if Voldemort just use a gun to shoot him when he was a baby and THAT IS IT. Lol. No need for 8 movies anymore. Or prob he use a knife to stab him.
Only now I realize how much Voldemort respects Snape. He actually didn’t want to kill Lily only because Snape told him not to considering the fact the Lily was a mudblood. It was Lily’s choice to die and protect Harry.
Yeah I think people forget this. Voldemort tried to spare Lily originally. The only person Voldemort ever actually spared. Lily only died because she refused to abandon her child. But Voldemort was willing to spare Lily out of respect for Snape. Voldemort wouldn't have done that for anyone else.
@@l.n.3372 prob wouldve done it for bellatrix
@@ZDtz1786
That argument doesn't make sense.
The point was that it was someone's Voldemort had committed to kill then was convinced to spare them/show mercy. Bellatrix isn't a target he had ever committed to kill.
This was actually the beginning of his downfall. Lily's deaths only count as a sacrifice because he "tried" to spare her. In the PoA, he kept telling her to "Step aside, silly girl" He told told her like 5 times to step aside. That seems extremely generous coming from him. So he really wasn't gonna kill her. Hence she choose to sacrifice herself.
And he was only gonna spare her, a mudblood, for Snape. So inthe end. The entire story, everything was all thanks to Snape love for Lily. And Voldemort favorable image of Snape.
But why would he respect him then? That was apparently the only time he’d done anything else significant as a Death Eater. By the end sure, but 20 years earlier, I don’t think so.
I believe Voldemort was blindsided by Snape because he felt a deep connection and respect for him due to all their similarities: coming from very humble origins in the muggle world, having deep resentment for their parents and having a cold, methodical approach on reaching their goals.
All that and they are both very powerful wizards. In his own twisted way (especially after dumbledores death) he had some extreme respect for snape. Voldemort respected snape. He feared Harry. And he hated how much he respected and feared Dumbledore. There really wasn’t anyone else who he even acknowledged and saw as somewhat equal to him.
“Nagini you’ve been a loyal servant”- Voldemort 2 hours later.
LOL!!
He wouldn't destroy his own horcrux
nagini be like- hisssss??
😂 his logic practically
Nagini: o_o -_- o_o
I love how, unlike the other death eaters, Snape never cowered or debased himself before Voldemort, maintaining his dignity even in death. He could have begged for mercy, or revealed that Draco was the master of the elder wand, but he took it like a man, a very brave one at that. I think Voldemort would have admired that quality, perhaps making it more difficult to kill Snape. I agree that Alan Rickman's outstanding performance in this scene gave this pivotal moment the weight it deserved. Thank you, again!
Snape wasn't there when Draco disarmed dumbeldore
He was shaking in terror and desperate to get away in the books.
Voldemort would have just killed Snape for being a coward if he would have ratted out Draco. Part of the reason Voldemort liked him so much was because he was brave and dignified.
@@abdirahmanidris290 was obvious though
never knew draco was the true master ty :)
Did everyone forget the movie version of the deathly hallows? Hermione stated: "That night. Another wizard took the wand and slit the brother's throat for good measure." Voldemort literally recreated the story believing he became the master of the elder wand. However, lets not forget that Voldemort loves killing people, simply watching their lives fade away gave him pleasure, but killing Snape gave him no joy at all. I wouldn't say that killing Snape angered Voldemort, but doing the deed definitely bothered Voldemort that it had to be Snape. I'm willing to bet that Voldemort would have instantly ended any other death eater except Snape.
except for bellatrix
It was supposed to be Malfoy
But Voldemort didn’t know about the deathly hallows. Don’t forget that the resurrection stone was part of his grandfathers ring, which he made a horcrux, without realizing what it was. The hallows were supposed to make whoever had all three master of death, which Voldemort would have been obsessed with had he known. He simply knew that there was this wand out there that was supposed to be the strongest ever. So I don’t think he was recreating the story intentionally.
@@dwightschrute3721 People from the wizarding world know all about the deathly hollows and he's spent more of his time in there instead of the muggle world. Also not everyone knows what they look like. No one knew Dumbledore had the elder wand nor did they know that Harry had the cloak despite using it on several occasions. I think it was supposed to be a childrens story or something.
But that doesn't make sense either, cause he believed that Snape was the owner cause he killed Dumbledore, but Snape didn't slit Dumbledore's throat.
So basically you're saying;
Voldemort Logic : Hate someone-kill them quickly; Like someone- Give them a "worthy" death aka making them suffer.
It does work with his demented mindset.
voldemort was letting snape accept his death instead of killing him right away
when I was watching it I thought the same thing, but it also makes sense because he is giving him time to have a final moment before death
Maybe he didn’t kill Severus instantly to give him a chance to save himself?
Wumbology No because Voldemort thought that Snape was the master of the Elderwand so to win it, he had to kill him
True, if Voldemort really had any compassion then he would have killed him very quickly. Think of how much pain Snape was probably in those last couple of moments. Granted I will give it to him since if he truly hated Snape then he would have used the Cructias Curse on him first but that was still pretty torturous.
He didn't kill him instantly, because then Harry wouldn't be able to take his memories 😎
Plot armor is hard to breakthrough
You would be amazing at cinimasins
@@Iamtoast73 😂
I mean, yes, but like i’d love it there was some in-universe reason that made sense. I thought he should have used Sectumsempra because I feel Voldy would like to kill someone with a curse they invented. Also, it would be slow enough for Harry
@@Iamtoast73 *cinimasins*
But why kill Snape? When you can take control of any wand by even disarming the master. So Voldemort could just disarm Snape and become the master.
because he doesn't understand stuff, so he thought he had to kill.
@@rohandas2616 just like Grindelwald said "the Elder Wand will never serve you, Voldemort!"
He just never understood stuff like this he thought that killing someone would always mean that he was left to win
He didn’t know he thought killing and murder was the only way to win and gain control.
alnoor budhwani I would assume it’s slightly more complicated than that.. my theory is that I think it only works that way when you disarm the owner of the wand in an act of self defense.. so it has to be meaningful act not rehearsed either..
Voldemort's downfall was his arrogance not his "inability " to love and understand it ..he thought everyone was going to kiss his ass no matter what he did
He didn't think a 'regular" witch or wizard could be better at him at anything hence a part of the reason why he didn't realize that someone in his innermost circle has been lying to him for years and really working for the other side.
Hmm... respectfully, I don’t think they’re mutually exclusive. Arrogance is always a product of something. An effect, rather than a cause. Where does Voldemort’s belief of superiority, his arrogance come from? How does he justify it within himself? By objectifying the world and empirically evaluating worth along standards of his choosing. It is his inability (or refusal) to empathize and certain refusal to see intrinsic value - in short, an inability to love - that caused his arrogance; which caused his downfall.
@@4yze I disagree with u in every way, but who knows psycopaths aren't capable of love...yet they understand emotions and what people do for their "loved" ones ...Voldemort thought everyone was loyal to him no matter what he did...It doesn't take the abilty to love someone to understand that people do Selfless things for love, but anyways it's a children's book if Jk wants us to believe that love defeats evil well i guess let's buy into that
Sabrina Zanoletti 😅 I don’t think it’s a matter of believing it just because JK says so. More to the point, I didn’t say you were wrong; merely that I preferred the canonical explanation as a more complete explanation. Why? Because psychopaths do not care about loyalty outside of how it benefits them. They do not care about anything outside of how it benefits them. Everything is an object, a concept that either serves, does not yet serve, or opposes their will. Is that arrogant? Yes. Absolutely. But to call it just that is short selling it by a mile. Believe what you want. You’re entitled to your opinion. My thoughts aren’t the end all on Harry Potter. Just shared it for your consideration. Hope you’re well.
@@4yze correct i have my own opinion as you have yours so i didnt really see the point of your comment,but anyway we shouldnt get too much into it its a children's book and the author doesnt even understand what she writes,it also doesnt take the smartest person to know what people to for "love" but anyways thanks im good and i hope u r too
What if Roald Dahl’s Matilda takes place in the Harry Potter universe and Matilda is a Muggle-Born Witch?
Holy chicken on the BBQ
You might be onto something mate-
Exactly Rando
Alex Downs wtf, I--
Okay but why does that makes sense
No roald Dahl is a much better writer he makes a better universe and that universe shows no connection
To use the killing curse, you have to want to see your victim die. Voldemort did not want to see Severus die
I just turned on the video my guess has always been because he believed Snape to be the most genuinely loyal and useful follower. It bothered him not because he cared for Snape clearly but because he could have proved invaluable.
Again while Voldemort does not have compassion or care for anyone. I feel as though he didn't use the killing curse on Snape as sort of a twisted "thank you for your service"
Also you need to hate the person for the killing curse to work, and Voldy didn't hate Snape, one his his most trusted lieutenants.
@@BroNapartay no, you just need to mean it
A desire to kill certainly does help. Technically however, all you need to perform the move is a high enough level of magical skill and knowledge of it
@xXTenma'sShadowXx its the time snape got to come to terms with it, and it made snape's end meaningful.
keep in mind voldemort is incapable of love, given that his family history had imbreeding, or so wikipedia has told me, and, like the vod said, he prides himself on killing quickly and callously
Because he thought that Snape was the master of the wand and couldn’t kill him that is why
not entirely...could've used his old wand to do it
@@HarryPotterFolklore hi
Harry Potter Folklore
I believe Voldemort respected snape too much
He could not kill him, he did not actually hate him he was his server ,yes but Voldemort felt like snape had served him too well to end his life like that
Even tho it’s lord voldemort,he could not do it
@@HarryPotterFolklore uwu. Hi.
Voldemort actually has a lot of honor.
You can see that when Voldemort first returns in the Goblet of Fire instead of just outright killing Harry actually Voldemort insisted that they duel to have a fair fight.
I have never understood how Voldemort got so many followers by using the “We hate 1/2 Bloods,Mudbloods etc”.He was a 1/2 Blood and it wasn’t a Secret.Everyone knew his Father was a Muggle.
they knew tom riddle's father was a muggle, but in the years after he graduated, he worked hard to make a new identity for himself and to get away from the stain of his father's name. the general public didn't know (at least during the first wizard war) that voldemort was tom riddle. some of his closer death eaters probably knew his family history, but the majority of people, both followers and enemies, didn't
If Dumbledore knew from age 8 or whatever when he met him that he eventually became Voldemort,you think he(Dumbledore) kept it a secret?I think it was known by the Ministry of Magic.But yeah you have a point abt the 1st War.Only his Closest Death Eaters knew.
@@echochambers8418 I don't think it's ridiculous to suggest that Dumbledore would keep it a secret. I may be wrong, but I was under the impression that Dumbledore only ever truly figured out Voldemort's actual lineage after Riddle became Voldemort (again I could be wrong, it's not very clear when Dumbledore found out Voldemort's true parents, unless I missed something). But regardless, even if I'm wrong on that (which I mostly likely am because I'm honestly unsure of when Dumbledore found out Riddle's lineage) it still is definitely a possibility that Dumbledore kept it a secret. After all, he himself stated in the 6th book, after one of Harry's lessons, that Harry should only inform Ron and Hermione of what he'd learned because he (Dumbledore) didn't want Voldemort to find out about how much he knew of Voldemort's past.
That's the same as saying how did Hitler gain a following while saying the Arian race was superior, while not possessing those physical traits himself
@@matthewzhang9950 Yes I think so. When he was trying to find the location of the the horcrux's
The only murder he ever kinda hesitated from was probably this one. He actually didnt wanna do it but felt that he had to
he was also prepared to let lily live if she surrendered harry to him
@@jhibbitt2896 Yupp, but I consider that more like a offer/deal haha
It's clear in the chapter "The elder wand" of final book that he felt no remorse.
'I regret it, ' said Voldemort coldly.
He turned away; there was no sadness in him, no remorse.............................
Voldemort swept from the room without a backward glance, and the great serpent floated after him in its huge protective sphere."
He actually didn't want to kill him but he was so twisted as a being that he wasn't able to realise he had a choice or had another way to do this. Same with killing Lily Evans.
@@priyadarshinithakur2546 That's cause he ruined his soul, but he can still regret having to do something necessary.
"Only i can live forever"
**gets killed by 17 year old (technically still a kid)**
yeah right how long did he live after uttering that? 3hours, three? talk about the ultimate "don´t jinx it"
i think in the wizarding world, 17 is considered of age internationally but i’m not sure
@@wheezenoises yup it is
@@wheezenoises no it is not only in hogwarts because you spend 7 years in there. It is considered teen-ish in Hogwarts and none other than Hogwarts
17 is an adult in the Wizarding World.
I believe that Voldermort has respect for bravery, power, and courage. Snape had bravery, courage, power, and loyal(from Voldemort's point of view at least), so he didn't want to lose it. He also has honor for Snape. He could've killed Harry directly in Goblet of Fire but he chose to have a duel.
He didn't use the killing curse because JK Rowling needed Snape to give his memories to Harry 👍🏻
Facts 😂😂😂
I think it's because in his mind he knew that Snape knew so in order to punish him for not telling him he didn't make it easy for Snape and gave him a painful end instead.
Hey he didn't use killing curse because a wand can't kill it's own Master that's how Harry survive
@@omgohil7191 harry survived once cause his mothers love and twice cause he was a horcrux pretty sure
@@sdoriginal18 he survived the second time because of the reasons you mentioned and also because he was thw true master of the elder wand
I agree 100% about Alan Rickman's acting skills as Snape an d many other roles he played.
I’ve got two more theory’s:
1: Would the Dursley’s of had a second child if they were not given the guardianship of Harry?
2: Would the Potter’s of had a second child if they were not killed?
I don't think the Dursleys would have had a second child because they would have believed they already had the perfect child with Dudley. But the Potters on the other hand,I think they absolutely would have had more children.
@@happymittens92 I actually think you are right and also Petunia might have thought that if they had a second child it would be like Lily
Fayth Osborn no, Rowling did not say that. Someone made it up and said Rowling said it and because no one does any research a bunch of people fell for it.
Can be! Love both theories
Voldemort liked Snape. He personally recruited Snape into the deatheaters even though Snape wasn't a pureblood. Snape, in his duel against all 4 Marauders, showed his magical skill and determination to be the best. This impressed Riddle. I believe Riddle regretted killing Lily, even though Snape asked him to spare her life. Yet Lily chose death instead. So when the time came for Snape to die, so that he (Riddle) could become owner of the elder wand (or so he thought), Riddle knew his didn't hate Snape enough for the killing curse to him. Therefore he had Nagini go it.
Did Dumbledore knew that Voldemort will kill Snape to get the Elder Wand? I mean Dumbledore had to know if Snape kill him then Voldemort will search the wand...
Idk why but in my opinion If Dumbledore even knew he would not do anything much because in his opinion anyone could die to bring peace even if there was no one left to enjoy the peace
nope, Dumbledore intended for the power of the wand to die with him. as he was being killed willingly he was never truely defeated
Dumbledore actually ordered Snape to kill him, and Shape was not at all happy about it. Dumbledore was his mentor and best friend. But Dumbledore is very adept at getting other wizards to do what he wants.
Sometimes I wonder. If Dumbledore's plan had worked and the power of the wand died, then Voldemort would have understood Snape's treason and have killed him anyway. So even if not everything worked according to the plan, at least it had let Snape time to look after the students,...
Imagine how Hogwarts would have been if Snape hadn't been there to temper Death Eaters.
Snape wasn't happy about killing a man he respected and the only one who trusted him, first because of the respect he had for him then because maybe with the instigator of the plan it won't work and end up as it should and maybe even because he had a feeling that would lead to his own death.
Dumbledore didn't care as long as Voldemort was killed in the process. He was planning on letting Harry die up until the 4th book and he allowed Harry to live in an abusive household because it kept him alive. The Greater Good was Dumbledore motto.
There are several similarities between Lord Voldemort and Emperor Palpatine:
• Both are near unparalleled masters of the dark arts with only a few capable of matching them.
• Both are hungry for unlimited power and will kill or torture anyone to achieve it
• Both are incapable of feeling sorrow, empathy or remorse
• Both have loyal followers to achieve their goals; Voldemort with his Death Eaters and Palpatine with his Sith apprentices and dark side adepts
• Both sought immortality
• Both were brought down by outside and/or unforeseen circumstances; Darth Vader’s love and sentiment for his son led him to betray Palpatine and Harry being the master of the Elder Wand and the destruction of the horcuxes led to Voldemort’s death
I agree
Except I have a nose.
Both killed by their spell/lightning rebounding on them. Also both have died twice
They both also had an old person that was stronger then them, in hp it’s dumbledore and star wars is yoda
Both killed by people weaker than them twice
I think Snape would become the greatest wizard of his age or even all time. I do think you underplay the good qualities within him, book and movie Snape are truly the most loving character and I think both learned to love Dumbledore and Harry and not just love Lilly. His love for Lilly actually enlightened him and he was able to choose the right path after being lost. There’s light and dark within us all. What matters is the path we choose to follow.
One thing for casting killing cruse you have to be willing to kill you have to. Mean it, but Voldemort didnot wanna kill. Snap. May be thats y he chose nagini
Even after all these years, Snape's death is still hard to watch...
Always
@@FLMKane 😭
I've always wondered why V couldn't have just had Snape hold the Elder Wand and then disarmed him 😯🙁.
he didn't know this fact and secondly, he never thought before killing someone.
Because draco was the true master and it has to be by force not willingly
If ur wondering about “it you read the title” the original title was “why didn’t Voldemort use the killing curse?”
For that matter, why didn't Snake turn on Voldemort when he had the chance. He knew Voldemort was going to kill him.
Daisy Brambletoes Because Snape wanted him to think that he had been loyal till the last minute.
oh! thanks
Why your prof pic is of glitch a roblox rat youtuber
I feel like this moment is the only moment that Voldemort has ever shown compassion. Before he had Nagini kill Snape, he hesitated.
I think a video about if Snape survived would he still be head of Hogwarts and what would his and Harry's relationship would be cool!
It would certainly improve. Now that Harry is being made to understand Shape, he's finally seeing that Snaps had been his friend all all g.
@@daisybtoes friend?
That's a bit far fetched.
That Snape wasn't all that bad, ok, but friend...
See I don't think Snape would be able to get over the whole James thing still and I think that it would still be frosty
@R O I love your head canon, it made me laugh out loud 🤣
I really wanted to see or know the thing that If Snape didn't die then after knowing his truth how harry would react to him..and of course how Snape would react to harry..I really was very sad about the fact that Snape died in the end..and harry should have given a chance to say him "Thanks" for protecting his life..but harry got know the truth after his death..😔😔😔
Couldnt Voldemort have just won it in a duel instead of killing Snape lol???
he wrongly thought you had to kill the owner
Don’t forget that snape wasn’t even the master of the Wand it was draco cause he disarmed him
It wouldn’t have worked , snape was never the master . Draco disarmed dumbledore not snape.
Alan rickman is such a legend 🥺
I feel like Voldemort always seems to make things harder for himself. For example if he really wanted Harry dead he could have had one of the junior death eaters attending hogwarts poison his pumpkin juice or something. But his arrogance got in the way.
Or he could of killed him right away in the grave yard instead of letting him free so he had a chance to leave the grave yard
I feel like Voldemort was like Thanos getting the Soul Stone.
Snape and Bellatrix were the closest thing to family he had and he could count on them... Which is the closest thing to love Volly could feel.
So killing Snape was like cutting off his right hand, it had to be done but he didn't like doing it.
I think that Voldemort thought that the elder wand was Snape's and he couldn't kill the elder wand's owner so he used magic to simply weaken Snape and then order his snake to kill him. I think Voldemort made a plan before Snape was sent
I think Voldemort also respected Snape too much for the killing curse to be truly effective. Using another being to carry out his will would get the job done much better. This may have also played as a factor in his reasoning.
In the books, it was revealed that if Snape had indeed been the master of the Elder wand, the wand would not have killed him.
Voldemort to Snape: Avada kadabra!
Rowling: wait, wait; if you kill Snape directly he won't be able to say Harry that he has to die.
Voldemort scratches his head: Okay then, Nagini kill!!!
*Avada Kadabra*
My favourite
These videos are all we have until the next fantastic beasts could you imagine if nobody had fan theories that would suck having to wait to get our fix lol
The thing about the killing curse. You have to want it, and that was something he didn't want. He didn't WANT to kill Snape but he HAD to kill Snape in order to make the elder wand obey only him, but it never answered to Snape in the first place.
I think Snape only thought about Lily in those last moments (at least before Harry came in). How hard he had fought for her not to have died in vain, how he had given everything, even his life. How he could now finally see her again. How all of his fighting is finally done.
I highly doubt he didn't use the Killing Curse because of the experience he had with it backfiring. I mean, he kept trying to use it ON HARRY.
Huh? He did once
Voldemort was really stupid [ though he is from first ] to kill his most loyal servant [ he thinks ] for a wand [ though it is a very big thing for him ] . Love you harry potter folklore
i cry everytime I realized that snape died for nothing but then realized that Snape never wanted the world to know the best of him (he said this in the conversation with Dumbledore) that he rather die than ket the world knew about how hero is he. Snape could avoid that curse actually, he can do A LOT of things to escape and save himself but chose to die at the end. My man😢
I sometimes wonder, if Voldemort could tell that Snape was blocking or clearing his mind,when they interacted.
I wondered that too but Occlumency masters like Snape can present certain thoughts without showing they are hiding something else. Weaker Occlumency users such as Draco make it obvious they are hiding something
Voldemort is insane :D what an honor! Thanks master for allowing me to die slowly and in pain... who would prefer it over Avada Kedavra??? Btw I thought he wasn't able to kill him with his old wand cause he wouldn't have been able to do so.... you need to mean it if you want to kill someone, but he probably didn't truly mean to kill Snape as he was a very loyal servant.... so the curse might not have worked...
Eeeexactly.
‘Always’ Snape’s most memorable line
About the elder wand, sliding snapes throw in the movie, maybe Voldemort didn’t know it couldn’t harm him. Maybe it wasn’t an oversight. Snape wasn’t the wands master anyway, Harry was. Snape kill Dumbledore, but Draco was already the master of the wand, because Draco had disarmed Dumbledore
I think it’s purely because of the storyline, as, if Snape had been killed with Avada Kadavra (AK), Harry wouldn’t of been able to get Snape’s memories, and this would have changed the whole story from then on completely. However, in terms of in the story why AK wasn’t used, this video answers it really well, I have never thought of this that much, thanks!
Voldemort values Snape, and would certainly keep him alive given his way, but he does not regret him dying. The book is very clear about this;
'I regret it', said Voldemort coldly.
He turned away; *there was no sadness in him, no remorse. It was time to leave this shack and take charge, with a wand that would now do his full bidding.*
This, more than anything, shows the mindset that Voldemort truly had. J.K Rowling makes a point of specifically, immediately contradicting his claims of regret; they are merely a courtesy he affords the servant he acknowledges as loyal, faithful and reliable. The likes of Lucius or Yaxley wouldn't even have been offered such. Instead, his thoughts instantly turn to how the wand is now his and the next steps he must take. He doesn't spare Snape another thought, and I have no doubt J.K made it this way to further emphasise just how inhuman and sociopathic Voldemort is; even his most devoted follower means nothing to him; deep down, nothing matters to him except himself.
I feel sorry for nagini now that I've seen fantastic beasts 2. Imagine going from person to snake, unable to communicate with anyone then along comes voldemort and suddenly she has someone to talk to. I think the reason she did the things she did was because she was simply grateful to not be alone anymore. Having part of voldemorts soul inside her wouldn't have helped either
You'd think Voldemort would learn by now to stop using the killing curse as it rebounds more then Dennis Rodman
Yo I’m like one of the first people to view this will be cool to watch the views grow
You won’t actually see the views grow because RUclips doesn’t work like that, you would have to exit out of the video and then go back in to see the views grow
Adrian Rodriguez I know that that’s what I mean like now it’s at 4.8k
7:03 that makes perfect sense mate. Snape wasn't the master of the Elder Wand, so it could harm him, and Voldemort didn't understand it properly, so he wouldn't know that the wand can't harm it's master. Nothing is contradicted.
I guess changing sides by risking one's own life, just for the sake of Love, if DEFINITELY a change of heart!
People tend to forget how much Voldemort and Snape had in common. I believe Voldemort saw Snape as like a little brother/son. He wanted to make a world where nobodies mother not his nor Snape's chose to mingle with a filthy muggle and pollute their magical blood. He was trying bring about an ideal for both of them.
But the snape wasnt the elder wand's owner as draco was the one that disarmed dumbldore then harry disarmed draco and i doubt that voldemort new about that as though the wand was harry's before he went and took it from Dumbledore's grave
Mimi_ Soso Yes it is mentioned in the books and movies that he thought you had to kill to master the elder wand
The Elder Wand passed between too many people. Rather than spend time trying to figure that all out (because, you know, it was completely mental) Voldemort killed the first person he thought had possession of the wand. Unfortunately, that person ended up being Severus Snape. God-bless you Severus, I'm so sorry - : (
@@therantingusher3930 voldemort mistakenly believed that in order to win the elder wand, you had to kill whoever owned it
Great video! This kinda content makes me fall in love with harry potter all over again.
Dumbledore literally said Voldemort did not care about anyone.
8 views, 19 likes, and 5 comments. Makes total sense youtube, total sense.
Yes, bcause 1 view is 30 seconds of watch time, so some people ( like me ) that dont have time to watch, click, like and leaves. Therefor 1 like and no views
@@sevgi6026 what if the video is shorter than 30 seconds
Amazing video. I was wondering if you could do a video on how Ariana died and maybe what kind of spells were fired during the duel. (I don’t really think anyone fired the killing curse but that’s just me)
I’m just glad this channel is growing so much.
Because then the rest of the story couldn’t happen.
Let’s face it; there’s no other reason behind that. If the Dark Lord’s reasoning was based on the technicalities of wandlore, why would he take that risk rather than using a wand to kill Snape?
It doesn’t make any sense and only exists so the other scene can happen.
I'm confused. What's the risk that Voldemort would have to take?
@Fifi Tim That not using the Elder Wand to ensure it “passed” to Voldemort meant risking it becoming ownerless.
Voldemort kills Snape with Nagini in the book. He thinks it is enough to just order the death and not cast the spell himself. Navi i is for plot so Harry gets the memories.
Technically Voldemort was the only LGTBQ character until Jk Rowling decided to change sh*t on Twitter. So asexual voldie is cool
What? Voldemort has always been asexual
Dumbledore is also gay.
@@ameliashephard2876 That's what Rando meant by "Jk Rowling decided to change sh*t on Twitter. -> She said on Twitter Dumblydorr is gay.
yeah and in the cursed child he apparantly has a child with bellatrix... but no, we all know he is asexual and would never have a child
Dare I ask What the Q stands for in LGTGQ?
The real reason is that JK Rowling didn't think this through, and if Snape had died suddenly there would have been no time to talk to Harry and give him the tears... that's the main reason, everything else is a post-justification
Voldermort: I kinda like you, thus I will kill you in a slower fashion 😐
The killing curse only works when the caster truly wants the victim to die. Voldemort didn't want to kill Severus, he had to.
Voldy: only I can live forever
Me: “who wants to live forever..” song
Should also look at it this way. He cared so much for Snape and couldn't use the killing curse because you have to actually mean it. And he couldn't because it was snape
I wonder if Voldemort would have still killed him if he knew he only had to disarm? Probably not, but it's a thought.
What if Snape really didn't die. Can you think of a Better way to avoid ever being used and manipulated again by people in power Then to fake your own death so you can live out the rest of your life under the radar.
Hey I love your videos stay happy and stay safe ❤️
Just my theory, it was said before that a killing curse will only work if you truly want to kill the person. Maybe being seen as one of his most loyal subjects, voldermort didn't truly want to kill Snape, meaning that the curse wouldn't of worked. knowing this and not wanting to risk losing face, he killed snape using a different method.
Sometimes i wonder, why Voldemort didn't just use expeliarmus 🤔🤔
because he thought that the elder wand would only recognise him as its master if he personally killed its current master
@ Harry Potter Folklore : Another great video. If I may add something that wasn't mentioned in this episode, another possible reason why Voldemort chose not to use his favorite curse "Avada Kedavra" is because in order for it to work you have to MEAN IT, and because Snape was such a valued & respected member of his inner circle, Voldemort didn't want to risk the chance & personal chagrin that would come from that spell failing due to his own feelings for Snape.
Voldemort didn’t use the killing curse cause of like u said, it would’ve rebounded back to him so other means had to be taken, anything he could think of.
All in all a great video! I had been asking myself over and over again WHY Voldemort had to kill his most (?) loyal follower. Your video opened my eyes to the matter of the Elder Wand possession. If I have it correct the possession of the wand happened like so: Dumbledore won the wand from Grindelwalt, Snape had agreed to murder Dumbledore by the latter's instructions so Snape won the wand from Dumbledore. It would remain useless to Voldemort (having coveted the wand so desparately) and realised that he had to kill Snape to be the Elderwand's true master. Little did Voldemort understand what lay ahead for him. Because Harry, Hermione and Ron had killed 6 out of the 7 Horcruxes (including the part of Voldemort's soul that was attached to him since he was a baby, Neville killed Nagini with the Sword of Gryffindor and the final piece of the Dark Lord's soul was destroyed. Voldemort was now in a very weakened state even though he still possessed a physical body. When Harry killed him with the killing curse Harry became the new owner of the Elder wand. Personality traits that Harry shared with Dumbledore was that that neither were particularly vain or sought glory or immortality and certainly NOT power. Standing on the Hogwards bridge Harry snapped the Elder wand in two in front of Hermione and Ron rendering it useless should it ever fall into the hands of any other wizard.
In the book, Voldemort showed no anger or remorse. His only words were "I regret it", meaning not a syllable.
Love the new logo!
Snaps wasn’t the Wanda owner it was Draco who was the owner of the Elder Wand so that’s why he COULD kill Snape and Harm him
But Voldemort didn't realize this.
@@abbottshaull9831
Yeah but he said Voldemort harming Snape with the wand in the movie was a contradiction because it shouldn’t have been able to harm him. Which is wrong. It can because he isn’t the master.
It’s already confirmed that bc of the way Wanda work he didn’t know Harry had disarmed Draco.or that Harry was the master.he thought snape was that’s why he had to kill snape 🤦♂️🙄
Rip Snape tho
Absolutely brilliant actor, Alan was in this roll. Miss him so much. 💐
I add maybe Voldemort had real respect for Snape.
And battling prostate cancer throughout 2005. Alan Rickman (RIP) underwent his operation when they were casting for Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix. He contemplated whether to come back as Snape and ultimately did. He said in an interview, "The argument that wins is the one that says: 'See it through. It's your story." Although I'm still sad that he passed away, I'm at least glad that he got to see his story as Severus Snape to the end.
The title is really misleading. “Why it angered Voldemort to kill Snape” I read it and though I don’t remember being angry because hole killed Snape... he was barely even disappointed at all much less angry... so I clicked to figure out what you were talking about and you told us “Why Voldemort Didn’t Use the Killing Curse on Snape” well why didn’t you use that as the title then?..
Thank you so much for uploading this video. It is helping me get through the pandemic!
True that Snape changed owing to Lily but it's kinda hard to believe that in the 17 or so years after her death and the years of working close to Dumbledore he didn't ever question his past behavior in service to Voldemort. That's doesn't make him a good person but one capable of consciousness and capable of living with himself and his past. Why else would he worry about his soul being damaged by killing Dumbledore? Why would (at least in the film) he question Dumbledore and say something like "has it ever occurred to you...that I don't want to do this anymore?" I think he's far more complicated that saying other than for Lily he's an unrepentant, evil guy, unchanged by time or experiences he wouldn't have had unless he became a double agent. How could he live in that space for all those years as if he lamented not being a real Death Eater or what?
I think there's a lot more to him that isn't seen because, firstly, no one would know (certainly not Harry). I think he was playing a public/private role and even Dumbledore didn't fully see all of Snape. He took that with him.
Your videos are absolutely fantastic! I can't stop watching them. I've subscribed!. Thank you!
Now I have to note, Severus wasn’t actually the elder wand’s master. That was Draco, the one who disarmed Dumbledore in the tower. So, technically it could’ve been used to harm Severus BUT Tom didn’t know Draco was its master and thus, wouldn’t have tried to kill Severus with it.
(Now allow me to retreat back into my technicality cave until the next minor error appears)
By this time Harry was it true master.
@@abbottshaull9831 correct but Voldemort also didn't realize that it was Draco that was the master before Harry. No matter what Voldemort did short of killing Harry he would of never been the master as he would not of thought to disarm Harry first.
To use the killing curse the book says you really have to mean it and want it. Makes more sense that he did not want to really kill snape and was worried the curse would not work. At this point Voldemort had doubts
Stealing the life of his victims... in French the name Voldemort is the fusion of three words: vol de mort. You can translate this in two ways: flight of death or theft of death.
So, yeah, very nice 👌
The major understated fact is that Voldemort knew what was happening and knew Snape had the key to the knowledge, his fear overpowered his cunning and his fear made him more dangerous
wow i’m early since the time i arrived in the world😂
Thank you, another great video. The time and effort you put into these videos is awe-inspiring! Videos like these, going in depth, makes the whole HP-universe so much more meaningful and precious!! /*