^Ditto. The opening is hard to top, but that scene, the ending with Carl showing up for the ceremony, and the final epilogue all get me too.
Hot take: I don't care for any of the Harry Potter movies. At best they're mediocre, at worst they annoy the crap out of me, and all in all they're a hodgepodge of wonky pacing, tonal dissonance, and bizarre adaptation choices (Lets burn down the Weasleys house! Lets have the main trio be responsible for the death of an innocent goblin!). In terms of performances and direction a lot of it didn't connect with me either; I don't need the movies to match the books exactly, but stuff like playing down Dumbledores goofiness and upping his aggression just feels off. I love Alan Rickman, but movie Snape is pretty much an entirely different character. The most aggravating moment for me was in Prisoner of Azkaban, where the intensely dramatic revelation in the Shrieking Shack turns into a Benny-Hill esque chase scene, and the pitiable coward Peter Pettigrew gives a cartoonishly evil wave and grin before he escapes, what the hell. And that is supposedly the best one!
Also, the blatantly obvious downprioritization of Rupert Grint in favor of Emma Watson just got on my nerves.
They do absolutely nail the sense of wonder of the wizarding world, and I can't speak for how non-book readers experience them, but they always seemed like an abridged, lesser version of the books to me.
Which is all to say that Fantastically Profitable Franchises and How to Extend Them might actually turn out to be my favourite HP-world movie.