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FANTASTIC FEATS AS MOVIE CASTS SPELL TO WIN BACK FANS

▶ Boasting a stellar star cast, the third instalment in J K Rowling’s five-film story has some missteps, but is still worth a watch,

- writes James Mottram

Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets of Dumbledore Director: David Yates Actors: Jude Law, Mads Mikkelsen, Jessica Williams ★★★☆☆

Fantastic Beasts is back. Four years on from The Crimes of Grindelwal­d, it’s been a difficult period for these prequels to the Harry Potter books and films. Author J K Rowling has been pilloried on social media for her views on gender. Johnny Depp, who played the notorious Dark Wizard Grindelwal­d, had to step away after ugly revelation­s about his marriage to Amber Heard followed a very public libel case. Even the 2018 film was called a critical and commercial flop.

Yet, rather like Grindelwal­d erasing a memory from someone’s head with a single wave of his wand, Hollywood has a great way of making us forget.

Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets of Dumbledore continues on the story seamlessly, helped by returning director David Yates (this is his seventh film in the Potter/Beasts franchise).

Depp is replaced by Danish star Mads Mikkelsen, who dials it down to play Grindelwal­d, but he’s still very menacing. “With or without you,

I’ll burn down their world,” he tells his one-time friend, the wizarding supremo Albus Dumbledore (Jude Law), as he plans to lay havoc to the non-magical universe.

As Dumbledore gathers a team to stop Grindelwal­d at all costs, it’s not going to be easy. The Dark Wizard can see snatches of the future, making him almost impossible to defeat. The only way is to hatch a series of plans to confuse him.

Central to this will be Newt Scamander, the Magizoolog­ist played by Eddie Redmayne (Pickett, the “stick-bug” that sits in his top pocket, and the fluffy Niffler that hides in his suitcase, are ever present).

Also a part of the crack team to take down Grindelwal­d are Newt’s brother Theseus (Callum Turner) and besotted assistant Bunty (Victoria Yeates), as well as wizard Yusuf (William Nadylam) and Professor Eulalie Hicks (Jessica Williams, playing the role with swagger).

It is Hicks who is tasked with convincing Jacob Kowalski (Dan Fogler) to join them on this risky quest. The baker from Queens – a so-called “muggle” with no magic powers – had quite the time in the earlier films, not least losing the loveof-his-life Queenie (Alison Sudol) to Grindelwal­d’s army. Reluctantl­y, he has no choice but to join Newt and co to bring Queenie to her senses.

Scripted by Rowling and regular Potter scribe Steve Kloves, The Secrets of Dumbledore is quite a downbeat film in many ways. Perhaps it shouldn’t be any other way. With scenes set in Berlin, Grindelwal­d’s amassed forces and fascist-like rhetoric (“the world will hear our voice and it will be deafening,” he claims) boast less-thansubtle allusions to pre-Second World War Europe. Filming in muted colours, Yates does little to play down the comparison­s.

Early on, Dumbledore implores Anton Vogel (Oliver Masucci), the German Minister of Magic, to “do what is right, not what is easy”, but “insufficie­nt evidence” is found to convict Grindelwal­d of his crimes, thus clearing the way for him to stand for election as the Head of the Internatio­nal Confederat­ion of Wizards – a position that will facilitate his grasp for power. Alongside him is Credence (Ezra Miller), who – like Queenie – has lost his way, left spellbound by Grindelwal­d.

With such a gloomy atmosphere enveloping the film, it’ll come as no surprise to learn the standout scene is one of comic relief – as Newt and Theseus evade some scorpion-like critters in a cavernous space by adopting the sort of pose you might see in Egyptian hieroglyph­ics. More of this would’ve been welcome, but instead, Rowling and her team take us into a sombre second half that doesn’t do the usual Hollywood trick of cranking up the pace to relentless speeds.

As the middle chapter of Rowling’s intended five-film Fantastic Beasts arc, this latest instalment feels like the calm before the storm. It may well make narrative sense in the context of the entire series, but seen in isolation, it feels underwhelm­ing. Even a brief sojourn to Hogwarts, the wizarding school from the Harry Potter stories, doesn’t quite bring the desired chills when we’re spirited back into the Great Hall.

Yet for all its missteps, there are still delights to behold – not least the arrival of the Qilin, a deer-like creature that is said to root out purity in a person’s soul, which will become crucial to the story.

Rowling hasn’t forgotten that this series is called “Fantastic Beasts”, after all, and it’s these scenes of magic and animal wonder that play best. In a film that’s sometimes an uneasy mix of politics and fantasy, The Secrets of Dumbledore at least does enough to steady the ship and get fans back on side.

Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets of Dumbledore is in cinemas across the UAE

 ?? Warner Bros ?? From left, Jessica Williams, Callum Turner, Jude Law, Fiona Glascott, Dan Fogler and Eddie Redmayne
Warner Bros From left, Jessica Williams, Callum Turner, Jude Law, Fiona Glascott, Dan Fogler and Eddie Redmayne

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