Occasionally, you'll come across long passages of babble about Chaos and Order and Balance and the WhiteDragons that bind them, but such things are easily forgiven when April's baffled response echoes exactly what was running through your own head.
The Apple in this contretemps is no longer the adventuresome White Knight jousting with establishment dragons on behalf of an innovation-hungry public.
Yes, the digital effects are phenomenal -- midget dragons, oversize dragons, a flying coach drawn by seven white birds, a fully rigged ship rising from beneath a lake, aerial shots of the Hogwarts campus that truly put the fanciful buildings on the map -- but they're so skillfully interwoven with the main action that you take them for granted as casual magic.