warner is a really big company and the fact that the exception of HP+PoA exists means they can turn out a good adaptation. it was them who put out my favourite film/adaptation every by the same director (cuaron) in a little princess in the mid-90s. likewise, chris columbus made the goodnies, he's not all bad.Am I the only one who doesn't want Warner to make the rest of the trilogy? At least, not after those awful Plodder movies (with the exception of Azkaban). They'll put a time limit of under two hours for the remaining HDM flicks and they'll certainly love Peter Honess' editing...New Line's foreign distribs would certainly snap up the sequels, if offered. If Warner gives the greenlight, the overseas indies won't get a look-in, but should Warner put the rest of the trilogy into turnaround, there's a ready-made independent market for the pics.
Heck, they might even mistake directors and give the movies to the other Chris - you know, the one whose ancestors first discovered America.
even though the special effects neccessary for TGC won't exist on the same magnitude TSK, i still think it'll be a pretty expensive production and it'll be difficult to sustain the franchise from an "independent" studio. also, warner bros. isn't consistent in the way it chooses to take adaptations. i think it was established from very on what the goal of the harry potter film franchise should be with no qualms at all from rowling and that has informed the manner in which it has been made. it could very well be a different case with HDM depending on what they plan to do with it once the box office numbers and the fate of the new line merger are settled. looking at WB films since 2000 it looks like there have been many co-productions with independent studios as well as WB's own independent wings (since the 1990s also): http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Wa ... ilms#2000s
i think it's more a matter of the producers who are assigned to the project, especially those with a creative role (otherwise an interfering role as it may be the case), than simply the name or commerical, profit-oriented nature of the studio.