Empire (UK)

FANTASTIC BEASTS: THE SECRETS OF DUMBLEDORE

- BEN TRAVIS

★★★ OUT NOW / CERT 12A / 136 MINS DIRECTOR David Yates CAST Eddie Redmayne, Jude Law, Mads Mikkelsen, Dan Fogler, Alison Sudol, Jessica Williams, Ezra Miller

PLOT Dark wizard Grindelwal­d (Mikkelsen) is gaining followers and making a bid for political legitimacy. Meanwhile, Albus Dumbledore (Law) hatches a plot to thwart his efforts with the help of a ragtag bunch of heroes — including Newt Scamander (Redmayne), muggle baker Jacob Kowalski (Fogler) and teacher Lally Hicks (Williams).

A HEAVY WEIGHT rests on Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets Of Dumbledore. In the four years since The Crimes Of Grindelwal­d arrived to muted reviews and underwhelm­ing box office, much has changed in the Wizarding World’s orbit. J.K. Rowling’s controvers­ial comments on gender identity have cast a long shadow over the beloved world she created in Harry Potter; Johnny Depp resigned from the threequel one week into production at the studio’s request, replaced by Mads Mikkelsen as the series’ big bad, Grindelwal­d; Potter adapter Steve Kloves was brought aboard to share co-writing credits with Rowling. Tellingly, the year preceding The Secrets Of Dumbledore has involved a concerted effort, via anniversar­ies and reunion specials, to recapture the magic — a tacit acknowledg­ement of how much of it has been lost in recent years. So comes the multi-million-dollar question: can The Secrets Of Dumbledore possibly hope to reconjure some of it?

The answer, just about, is a yes — if not a resounding one. This is at least an improvemen­t on The Crimes Of Grindelwal­d, in many ways a corrective to that film’s aimless narrative, garbled exposition and unearned character decisions. While chunks of Secrets still feel muddily plotted, there’s more fun to be had along the way, packing in some impressive wizard duel sequences, and a major beast-based set-piece that justifies the franchise’s overarchin­g title.

Some of that obscure(ial) plotting can be forgiven — often a feature more than a bug, since The Secrets Of Dumbledore positions itself as a spy thriller amid a brewing magical war. With the wizard-supremacis­t rhetoric of Grindelwal­d (whose new Mikkelsen-shaped appearance is no more remarked upon than that of Michael Gambon’s Dumbledore in The Prisoner Of Azkaban) gaining ground, Dumbledore (Jude Law) hatches a plan of counter-attack — and lest his pawns be captured, nobody is given the full plan. So it is that magizoolog­ist Newt (Eddie Redmayne), his Auror brother Theseus (Callum Turner), assistant Bunty (Victoria Yeates), muggle baker Jacob (Dan Fogler), Ilvermorny teacher Lally (Jessica Williams, a likeable newcomer), and the mysterious Yusuf (William Nadylam) are split into groups on intersecti­ng missions, mastermind­ed by the wizarding legend. How it all fits together is on a need-to-know basis.

It would be nice for the audience to know, too — but despite an overstuffe­d plot, Dumbledore’s game of wizarding chess is a mostly entertaini­ng one. Newt remains an admirably ambling hero, introspect­ive but good-natured, and his interplay with his cooler, calmer big brother is nicely played (“You’re not swivelling properly!” Newt chides when the pair are forced to dance for a crowd of murderous, lobster-like manticores). Fogler’s Jacob, too,

remains a franchise highlight as the outsider looking in on the Wizarding World —here given his own wand and stepping inside Hogwarts’ hallowed halls, wish fulfilment at its highest.

The MVP, though, is Jude Law’s Dumbledore. He’s not quite the central character (the film lacks one, splitting focus between Dumbledore, Newt and Grindelwal­d; Ezra Miller’s Credence features less prominentl­y than expected), but he brings much-needed sparkle to proceeding­s, his Gambon-esque, twinkly warmth offset by a sense of unknowabil­ity. His opening confrontat­ion with Grindelwal­d alone bears more chemistry and tension than the entire previous film — and yes, the pair’s former romance is now, finally, acknowledg­ed.

For all the charm here — fan-favourite Niffler, Teddy and Pickett the Bowtruckle get a heroic moment; the deer-like Qilin is totally adorable — The Secrets Of Dumbledore still feels a way off the heights of Potter. It’s tonally imbalanced, fantastica­l whimsy butting heads with Star Wars prequel-esque political plotting and moments of full Bambi beast-based brutality. Despite some stylish sequences, Yates’ direction (his seventh franchise entry) feels flat — embedding us in the Wizarding World often results in the magical being rendered mundane. But with answers regarding Credence’s lineage and a hopeful finale that sets a promising stage for a fourth (and perhaps final) chapter, Secrets offers glimmers of a phoenix-like resurrecti­on. Mischief more or less managed.

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 ?? ?? Above, top to bottom: Beastly goings-on; Ezra Miller returns as Credence. Left: Jude Law as Dumbledore. Below left: Mads Mikkelsen takes over as Grindelwal­d.
Above, top to bottom: Beastly goings-on; Ezra Miller returns as Credence. Left: Jude Law as Dumbledore. Below left: Mads Mikkelsen takes over as Grindelwal­d.
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