Person#11 wrote:In the first film, there's James Potter as seeker on the Gryffindor shield, so was he in Gryffindor and Lupin in Slytherin?
Don't trust that, Rowling says he is Chaser.
In my school, a private American school, you can be Head by without being prefect.
This could also be a sign of how people were exaggerating to Harry in the other books. For example Hagrid say that all the dark wizards ever were in Slytherin and at that time it appears that Sirius is evil, and Sirius appears to have been in Gryfinndor, I don't think this is mistakes as much as a change in atomosphere.
I didn't realize *any* American schools had prefects and head boys/girls, so I learned something new today.
I never really got *why* James' quidditch position was changed for the movies...that seemed like an unnecessary change, and for those who had read the books, a bit jarring. Unless the movie was trying to make some sort of point about how James and Harry are similar, but I still feel it was unncessary.
I bet, like Harry, the sorting hat wanted to put Sirius in Slytherin, and Sirius chose Gryffndor (if he was, in fact, in Gryffndor). I say this because Sirius came from a pure-blood family, and unlike Ron (who comes from a pure-blood family), Sirius was the exception to the rule in his family who believed all pure-bloods were superior...in fact, wasn't Sirius's brother a Death-Eater? I'm getting off-topic--sorry! I guess it makes more sense that James and Sirius were in the same house, and Snape was in Slytherin. I didn't realize you could be a head boy/girl without being a prefect, but I guess it is possible, and it means James changed from who he was at 15. Did Lupin have to leave school before his 7th year? My memory is going blank...if he did, perhaps when he did (which would be after James 'saved' Snape from being harmed by Sirius's prank involving Lupin), James stepped up his maturity and became Head Boy.