Toronto Star

These beasts should have been put down

- KATIE WALSH TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwal­d

K (out of 4) Starring Eddie Redmayne, Johnny Depp, Jude Law and Zoe Kravitz. Directed by David Yates. Opens Friday. 134 minutes. PG

The first Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them showed so much promise. The film crafted adark, edgy, jazzy world of magic populated by actual adults who showed the power of gentleness and understand­ing when it came to taming beasties both animal and human alike.

And yet, the sequel, Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwal­d, manages to be both messy and pointless. We’ve got the same writer (J.K. Rowling), and the same director (David Yates). So where did it all go wrong?

The problem with Fantastic Beasts: This Title is Entirely Too

Long is it’s fussily complicate­d with too many characters and too many flashbacks, but by the end of the two hours and 14 minutes, you realize no one — truly not a single character — has accomplish­ed anything in this movie at all. Not a single hero, not a single villain has affected change. The magical platypus does do something significan­t, but that is it.

The sweetness of the first film was a balm in November 2016, when we needed a hero who was empathetic and did the right thing because it was right, not for power or popularity. The notion of radical acceptance for all creatures great and small was deeply trenchant during that time.

The political comparison­s have been extended, a bit obviously so, in The Crimes of Grin

delwald, where Johnny Depp, in a blond coif, plays wizard fascist Grindelwal­d, who has a penchant for rallies to spout his cause of pureblood power. He touts “freedom” and “truth” as his goal, but truthfully, he just wants the freedom to kill nonmagic folks, or so other characters keep saying.

So our hero, the creature wrangler Newt Scamander (Eddie Redmayne), and his pals scurry around trying to stop Grindelwal­d, who wants to exploit pesky, uncontroll­able Credence (Ezra Miller), who turns into an apocalypti­c cloud of dust when he’s angry, because of child abuse. Credence just wants to know who his birth parents are and to escape the magical circus, so Newt and Tina (Katherine Waterston) set to the task of uncovering his parentage. Also, for some meaningles­s reason, muggle Jacob (Dan Fogler) and his witch love Queenie (Alison Sudol) are back, possibly because they were the most entertaini­ng part of the first movie.

Meanwhile, Newt’s old Hogwarts crush Leta Lestrange (Zoe Kravitz) and his brother, Theseus (Callum Turner), are engaged to be married, and in pursuit of Newt, who is travelling internatio­nally without a passport. Theseus is also a wizard cop trying to take down the Grindelwal­d gang, which he and other police are very bad at.

I haven’t even mentioned that Jude Law plays young Dumbledore, and there are not one but two scenes where babies are murdered. This may sound like alot, but amazingly, none of this has any consequenc­e on whatever the story is. Most of the exposition is expressed in long speeches, and coupled with the dim, dull visuals, the movie could not be less interestin­g, and that, in itself, is a crime.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Eddie Redmayne plays creature wrangler Newt Scamander in Fantastic Beasts.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Eddie Redmayne plays creature wrangler Newt Scamander in Fantastic Beasts.

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