JK Rowling’s has returned to the wizarding world of her
successful Harry Potter franchise with her first screenplay for David Yate’s
new film “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them.” Part Potter prequel and
part expanded-universe filler, the origins of this film come from a fictional
bio written for a series of magician’s textbooks mentioned off-hand in
Rowling’s original novels. While it’s not uncommon for filmmakers such as
George Lucas and Peter Jackson to go back to the well for creative inspiration—and/or
more money--“Fantastic Beasts” avoids the stench of calculated, corporate cash-grabbing
by finding a new way to enter this well-established world.
Recent Oscar-winner Eddie Redmayne plays Newt Scamander, a British
magician who’s travelled to early 20th-century New York to find
suitable homes for the magical creatures he keeps in his wizard
suitcase/terrarium. After a few of these animals escape into the city, he and a
local muggle factory worker named Kowalski (Dan Fogler) must find and capture
them before Newt blows his cover and breaches important magician’s secrecy laws.
Kathrine Waterson plays MACUSA agent Tina, who tries to help Newt navigate his
search without exposing himself.
In the background of this light set-up, Rowling gives
us a much darker story element involving Samantha Morton as a wizard-phobic
street-corner kook named Mary Lou who’s secretly running a witch’s conversion
center, where she abuses and shames young children who come from magical
parents. One such teen is played by the always intriguing Ezra Miller, who’s living
a double life as a secret agent trading information with a nefarious rogue
member of the MACUSA (Colin Ferrell).
Yates and Rowling’s previous collaborations resulted in some
of the darker and more menacing Potter sequels that came later in the series, and
that tone is returned to here, sometimes appropriately, sometimes not. The whimsical monster-catching stuff is
treated with childlike awe and magical wonder, while other scenes are treated
as light-horror or mystery and intrigue. The other films in this franchise
could mitigate these same tonal-shifts within the framework of a rather
standard Campellian hero’ journey. There’re multiple competing plot threads
running simultaneously through the feature and without a central hero such as
Harry Potter to follow—Redmayne’s performance as Newt is treated more as a
cypher or conduit rather than a fully-fledged character—it’s sometimes
difficult to find a narrative track to travel through this installment. After
forty minutes of setting up everyone’s individual situations and establishing
the illusive stakes of the plot, the movie then condenses into something relatively
streamlined and tangible.
Despite a wobbly narrative foundation and an over-stuffed
screenplay, Yates still captures the period scenery and production values that
are both completely immersive and fully realized. Newt’s computer imagery
creatures are always imaginative and memorable and Yates proves again that he
can handle special-effects moments in a way that serves rather than
overwhelming the story.
“Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them” is peripheral and marginal
compared to the previous nine films that built towards an epic story over a decade,
but the choice to avoid the high-school dramas and the overused good versus
evil myth that defined the original Harry Potter films makes for a different and
sometimes idiosyncratic blockbuster experience. The film’s ensemble is spread too
thin along peaks and valleys of the plot and because of this none of them get a
lot to do, but they’re still able inform their characters with enough
physicality to ground and realize their performances. Certainly, as a kick off
to a somewhat unnecessary prequel expansion, so far this is more enjoyable and
substantial than either Lucas’ Star Wars episodes I-III or Jackson’s bloated
Hobbit trilogy.
Grade: B-
Originally Published in the Idaho State Journal/Dec-2016
Listen to this week's episode of Jabber and the Drone to hear more conversation about "Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them"
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