Paisley Daily Express

Sequel treads familiar path

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Michael Gambon delivered in the Potter series, Law is a charismati­c, mischievou­s presence.

But a barely recognisab­le Depp doesn’t serve up the same level of unnerving malice Colin Farrell did in the previous flick, although he’s not helped by limited screen time.

Everyone else gets rather lost in the shuffle as Rowling’s story crams in a cavalcade of plot strands that even the two-hour-plus running time struggles to maintain.

It’s nice to see Tina (Katherine Waterston) and Jacob (Dan Fogler) – and at the darker end of the good-evil scale, Credence (Ezra Miller) – back but they are inferior to the well-developed characters featured in the sequel’s predecesso­r.

I feel slightly churlish complainin­g about the fact too much is going on as you’ll never be bored and most of the set-pieces are thrill-aminute stuff.

The array of “beasts” involved are a step up too, with glorious seaweed-skinned Kelpies and a lion-esque creature capable of travelling 1000 miles in a day.

Yates’ and Rowling’s crowd-pleasing decision to head back to Hogwarts was very wise as it pushes all of the right nostalgia buttons, while eagle-eyed Potter fans will spot a few Easter eggs planted on screen.

The Crimes of Grindelwal­d is a fun ride, then, but not the upgrade on the original I was hoping for.

With three more entries already confirmed, I suppose Yates and Rowling have to hold a few things back; it’s just a shame they can’t dripfeed a little more quality onto their journey’s first couple of steps.

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