Would that DiCaprio were as good, but for all the fire of murderous rage that he's supposed to be carrying with him, he generates little more than a bad
case of teenage angst, and not as well as he did in Baz Luhrman's ROMEO + JULIET.
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1 features everything from an indestructible necklace that induces
teenage angst, to the clichéd argument in which one
of the characters runs away in tears and the other (in this
case, Harry) is left staring blankly at the ground, contemplating his fate.