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Fantastic Beasts And Where To Find Them -

In the end, Fantastic Beasts 1 is like Newt himself: awkward, kind, deeply wounded, and far more interesting than it first appears. It just couldn’t carry the weight of an entire cinematic universe on its suitcase straps. Featured image credit: Warner Bros. Pictures / 2016

Meanwhile, the Magical Congress of the USA (MACUSA) is on edge. The dark wizard Gellert Grindelwald has been attacking Europe. American wizards live under strict segregation—no fraternizing with No-Majs, no marriage, not even friendship. Leading the hunt for magical breaches is auror Tina Goldstein (Katherine Waterston) and her mind-reading sister Queenie (Alison Sudol). Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them

The first film’s modest promise—“Let’s explore magical creatures in 1920s New York”—was abandoned for an epic about the 1945 duel between Dumbledore and Grindelwald. By the time the third film arrived, the creatures were afterthoughts. The Niffler got a cameo. The heart was gone. Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them is a film of two halves. One is a gentle, melancholic story about a lonely man who loves monsters because monsters are easier than people. The other is a grim parable about child abuse, fascism, and the horrors of magical segregation. In the end, Fantastic Beasts 1 is like

The MACUSA headquarters is a soaring, gilded chamber hidden inside the Woolworth Building. The Speakeasy (a magical speakeasy where goblins serve cocktails) is dripping with jazz-age hedonism. It’s a world of cloche hats, secret handshakes, and wands concealed as walking sticks. Pictures / 2016 Meanwhile, the Magical Congress of

In 2016, five years after the final Harry Potter film cast its last spell on audiences, Warner Bros. and J.K. Rowling attempted something unprecedented: a return to the Wizarding World not through a prequel or sequel, but through an expansion. Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them promised a new corner of the globe, a new era (the roaring 1920s), and a new kind of hero—not a boy wizard, but a magizoologist named Newt Scamander.

Fans of creature design, 1920s aesthetics, and bittersweet endings. Worst For: Anyone hoping for a lighthearted Pokémon chase or a simple Hogwarts reunion.