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FantasyAdventure

Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald

- Fate of one. Future of all.

Gellert Grindelwald has escaped imprisonment and has begun gathering followers to his cause—elevating wizards above all non-magical beings. The only one capable of putting a stop to him is the wizard he once called his closest friend, Albus Dumbledore. However, Dumbledore will need to seek help from the wizard who had thwarted Grindelwald once before, his former student Newt Scamander, who agrees to help, unaware of the dangers that lie ahead. Lines are drawn as love and loyalty are tested, even among the truest friends and family, in an increasingly divided wizarding world.

Release Date : 2018-11-14

Language :EnglishFrench

Adult : false

Status : Released

Production Company : Warner Bros. PicturesHeyday Films

Production Country : United KingdomUnited States of America

Alternative Titles : Fantastic Beasts 2Fantastic Beasts 2: The Crimes of GrindelwaldFantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald 3DFantastic Beasts։ The Crimes of Grindelwald 3DFantastic Beasts II: The Crimes of Grindelwald

Cast

Eddie Redmayne

Character Name : Newt Scamander

Original Name : Eddie Redmayne

Gender : Male

Katherine Waterston

Character Name : Tina Goldstein

Original Name : Katherine Waterston

Gender : Female

Dan Fogler

Character Name : Jacob Kowalski

Original Name : Dan Fogler

Gender : Male

Alison Sudol

Character Name : Queenie Goldstein

Original Name : Alison Sudol

Gender : Female

Johnny Depp

Character Name : Grindelwald

Original Name : Johnny Depp

Gender : Male

Jude Law

Character Name : Albus Dumbledore

Original Name : Jude Law

Gender : Male

Ezra Miller

Character Name : Credence Barebone

Original Name : Ezra Miller

Gender : Male

Zoë Kravitz

Character Name : Leta Lestrange

Original Name : Zoë Kravitz

Gender : Female

Callum Turner

Character Name : Theseus Scamander

Original Name : Callum Turner

Gender : Male

Claudia Kim

Character Name : Nagini

Original Name : 수현

Gender : Female

Carmen Ejogo

Character Name : Seraphina Picquery

Original Name : Carmen Ejogo

Gender : Female

Jessica Williams

Character Name : Eulalie Hicks

Original Name : Jessica Williams

Gender : Female

William Nadylam

Character Name : Yusuf Kama

Original Name : William Nadylam

Gender : Male

Ingvar E. Sigurðsson

Character Name : Grimmson

Original Name : Ingvar E. Sigurðsson

Gender : Male

Ólafur Darri Ólafsson

Character Name : Skender

Original Name : Ólafur Darri Ólafsson

Gender : Male

Kevin Guthrie

Character Name : Abernathy

Original Name : Kevin Guthrie

Gender : Male

Brontis Jodorowsky

Character Name : Nicolas Flamel

Original Name : Brontis Jodorowsky

Gender : Male

Derek Riddell

Character Name : Torquil Travers

Original Name : Derek Riddell

Gender : Male

David Sakurai

Character Name : Krall

Original Name : David Sakurai

Gender : Male

Fiona Glascott

Character Name : Minerva McGonagall

Original Name : Fiona Glascott

Gender : Female

Wolf Roth

Character Name : Spielman

Original Name : Wolf Roth

Gender : Male

Victoria Yeates

Character Name : Bunty

Original Name : Victoria Yeates

Gender : Female

Poppy Corby-Tuech

Character Name : Rosier

Original Name : Poppy Corby-Tuech

Gender : Female

Cornell John

Character Name : Arnold Guzman

Original Name : Cornell John

Gender : Male

Claudius Peters

Character Name : Nagel

Original Name : Claudius Peters

Gender : Male

Bart Soroczynski

Character Name : Stebbins

Original Name : Bart Soroczynski

Gender : Male

Danielle Hugues

Character Name : Irma Dugard

Original Name : Danielle Hugues

Gender : Female

Alfie Simmons

Character Name : McClaggan

Original Name : Alfie Simmons

Gender : Male

Isaac Cortinovis Johnson

Character Name : McClaggan's Friend

Original Name : Isaac Cortinovis Johnson

Gender : Male

Olivia Popica

Character Name : Receptionist

Original Name : Olivia Popica

Gender : Female

Alfie Mailley

Character Name : Child in Bubble

Original Name : Alfie Mailley

Gender : Male

Simon Wan

Character Name : Chang

Original Name : Simon Wan

Gender : Male

Andrew Turner

Character Name : MacDuff

Original Name : Andrew Turner

Gender : Male

Linda Santiago

Character Name : Credence's Aunt

Original Name : Linda Santiago

Gender : Female

Alfrun Rose

Character Name : Red-Haired Witch

Original Name : Alfrun Rose

Gender : Female

Maja Bloom

Character Name : Carrow

Original Name : Maja Bloom

Gender : Female

Olwen Fouéré

Character Name : Melusine

Original Name : Olwen Fouéré

Gender : Female

Simon Meacock

Character Name : Krafft

Original Name : Simon Meacock

Gender : Male

David Wilmot

Character Name : Portkey Tout

Original Name : David Wilmot

Gender : Male

Ed Gaughan

Character Name : French Policeman

Original Name : Ed Gaughan

Gender : Male

Jamie Campbell Bower

Character Name : Young Grindelwald

Original Name : Jamie Campbell Bower

Gender : Male

Toby Regbo

Character Name : Young Dumbledore

Original Name : Toby Regbo

Gender : Male

Hugh Quarshie

Character Name : Mustafa Kama

Original Name : Hugh Quarshie

Gender : Male

Isaura Barbé-Brown

Character Name : Laurena Kama

Original Name : Isaura Barbé-Brown

Gender : Female

Keith Chanter

Character Name : Corvus Lestrange Senior

Original Name : Keith Chanter

Gender : Male

Jemima Woolnough

Character Name : Gryffindor Girl

Original Name : Jemima Woolnough

Gender : Female

Hollie Burgess

Character Name : Gryffindor Girl

Original Name : Hollie Burgess

Gender : Female

Thea Lamb

Character Name : Young Leta Lestrange (13-16 Years Old)

Original Name : Thea Lamb

Gender : Female

Joshua Shea

Character Name : Young Newt (13-16 Years Old)

Original Name : Joshua Shea

Gender : Male

Isaac Domingos

Character Name : Yusuf Kama (12 Years Old)

Original Name : Isaac Domingos

Gender : Male

Ruby Woolfenden

Character Name : Young Leta Lestrange (3-6 Years Old)

Original Name : Ruby Woolfenden

Gender : Male

Christopher Birks

Character Name : Young Auror-Auditorium

Original Name : Christopher Birks

Gender : Male

Sabine Crossen

Character Name : Mrs. Lestrange (uncredited)

Original Name : Sabine Crossen

Gender : Female

Morrison Thomas

Character Name : Old Carnie (uncredited)

Original Name : Morrison Thomas

Gender : Male

Johanna Thea

Character Name : Ministry of Magic Witch (uncredited)

Original Name : Johanna Thea

Gender : Female

Liv Hansen

Character Name : Ministry of Magic Witch (uncredited)

Original Name : Liv Hansen

Gender : Female

Israel Ruiz

Character Name : Ministry of Magic Wizard (uncredited)

Original Name : Israel Ruiz

Gender : Male

Jag Patel

Character Name : Senior Wizard (uncredited)

Original Name : Jag Patel

Gender : Male

Deepak Anand

Character Name : Wizard (uncredited)

Original Name : Deepak Anand

Gender : Male

Andrew Blackall

Character Name : The Rowdy Frenchman (uncredited)

Original Name : Andrew Blackall

Gender : Male

Phil Hodges

Character Name : Prisoner 001 (uncredited)

Original Name : Phil Hodges

Gender : Male

Michael Haydon

Character Name : Shopkeeper (uncredited)

Original Name : Michael Haydon

Gender : Male

Tim Ingall

Character Name : Spectrum (uncredited)

Original Name : Tim Ingall

Gender : Male

Stephen McDade

Character Name : Cirque Arcanus Worker (uncredited)

Original Name : Stephen McDade

Gender : Male

Jeremy Oliver

Character Name : Circus passerby (uncredited)

Original Name : Jeremy Oliver

Gender : Male

Dave Simon

Character Name : Muggle at Circus (uncredited)

Original Name : Dave Simon

Gender : Male

Jason Redshaw

Character Name : Chef (uncredited)

Original Name : Jason Redshaw

Gender : Male

Callum Forman

Character Name : Doorman (uncredited)

Original Name : Callum Forman

Gender : Male

Ryan Hannaford

Character Name : Sailor (uncredited)

Original Name : Ryan Hannaford

Gender : Male

Donna Preston

Character Name : Circus Compare (uncredited)

Original Name : Donna Preston

Gender : Female

Nasir Jama

Character Name : Macusa Prison (uncredited)

Original Name : Nasir Jama

Gender : Male

Aykut Hilmi

Character Name : Shafiq (uncredited)

Original Name : Aykut Hilmi

Gender : Male

Natalie Lauren

Character Name : Parisian Woman (uncredited)

Original Name : Natalie Lauren

Gender : Female

Deano Bugatti

Character Name : Muggle (uncredited)

Original Name : Deano Bugatti

Gender : Male

Adrian Wheeler

Character Name : Party Guest (uncredited)

Original Name : Adrian Wheeler

Gender : Male

Annarie Boor

Character Name : Wand Seller (uncredited)

Original Name : Annarie Boor

Gender : Female

Sean Coleman

Character Name : Teenager in House (uncredited)

Original Name : Sean Coleman

Gender : Male

Ana Cilas

Character Name : French Muggle (uncredited)

Original Name : Ana Cilas

Gender : Female

Pierre Bergman

Character Name : Bird Seller (uncredited)

Original Name : Pierre Bergman

Gender : Male

Grant Crookes

Character Name : Cafe Owner (uncredited)

Original Name : Grant Crookes

Gender : Male

Sarah-Jane De Crespigny

Character Name : Amphitheatre Witch

Original Name : Sarah-Jane De Crespigny

Gender : Female

Reviews

G

geekr

@geekr

2021-06-23

_By JD Phillips, geekr.org_ The Harry Potter movies are great but one of the main flaws of the original franchise was the struggle the films had condensing the lengthy novels into movies under three hours. Despite the Fantastic Beasts sequel not being based on a book, it still somehow feels like its stressing to condense a five hundred page book into a smaller narrative. The movie runs from scenario to scenario so quickly that it’s hard to remember what all happened in its muddled story. That’s not to say the film is terrible at all, surprisingly. For a movie that has serious pacing problems throughout and has more interest in setting up sequels than it is at finding a memorable plot of its own, it’s actually very entertaining. The returning cast members are all back and while none leave quite the impression they did before they’re all still entertaining in their own way. Newt is back but the movie doesn’t seem nearly as interested in him and his magical monsters than it is with all of the new elements. Redmayne is still terrific in the role, however, and makes the character much more interesting than the script does by itself. Jacob and Tina are back as well though both of their stories are shelved for most of the film and completely forgotten in the final moments. The biggest surprise though is that Queenie gets the best arc of any character in the movie. She was one of the more interesting characters in the original and while many of the twists in the film fall flat, the one involving her character was my favorite moment of the entire movie. I’m more excited to see her story resolved than I am most of the other elements. It shouldn’t surprise anyone who has seen the trailers that the new characters kind of take over the film from the returning players. Jude Law and Johnny Depp’s Dumbledore and Grindelwald are what this film is more focused on than any other plot element. Both veteran actors shine so much that the movie loses energy when they aren’t on screen. Law effortlessly settles into Dumbledore’s twinkly-eyed wise, yet manipulative schtick. Depp also kills it as Grindelwald. In fact, it pains me to say this because of how much of an ass the actor is in real life, this is the most I’ve liked Depp as a performer since his first time playing Jack Sparrow. He avoids most of the oddball antics he’s been milking for so many years and delivers a subdued, terrifying performance as Grindelwald. He more than holds his own against Ralph Fiennes, which is saying something. Other new players are a mixed bag. Zoe Kravitz’s Leta Lastrange is an interesting character but none of the others really stand out. Newt’s brother Theseus is a particularly big missed opportunity. The film never adequately explains what caused the rivalry between the two Scamanders and it all gets resolved before there’s a chance to go into it more. Claudia Kim’s Nagini may have caused a big stir when she was announced in one of the trailers but very little is actually done with her character. It feels more like a stunt than anything else. The biggest stunt comes from the big reveal in the end featuring Ezra Miller’s Credence. There’s a huge twist that not only breaks established history but feels extremely forced. For one, the movie never really explains how Credence came back to life in the first place. It feels like Ezra Miller became a bigger commodity for DC since he is the Flash so now the franchise is committing more to him than initially intended. There was no hint at all in the first movie that he was secretly connected to existing characters in a big way, so it seems out of left field. Regardless, I love Ezra Miller and hope the twist gets him better material in the future. The movie doesn’t feel much like a Fantastic Beasts franchise anymore but when it does focus on its titular magical creatures, it really shines. The design and concept of the creatures lead to some of the best visuals of the entire Harry Potter pantheon. In fact, it feels like a real shame that we can’t get a smaller franchise that is just about Newt’s magical zoological adventures. The quieter moments of the movies where Newt is just connecting with a magical animal on its own terms are truly beautiful. Unfortunately, these moments get overtaken by the larger story around them. I feel like this franchise is straining to be two different franchises at the same time. It would almost make more sense to separate them into a smaller scale “Fantastic Beasts” franchise and a larger scale “Crimes of Grindelwald” franchise. This mishmash of different ideas is feeling a little too much like the Hobbit films. Somehow though, despite all of the messiness of the movie’s screenplay, I still found myself entertained throughout. While it may never hit the heights of its legendary predecessors, this film easily proves that the Wizarding World still has lots of magic left. Maybe the executives at Warner Bros should consider other avenues like television or other films so that Newt’s film series doesn’t carry the weight of one of the most magical film series ever. “Fantastic Beasts: Crimes of Grindelwald” may not rise to the levels one would hope for, it still proves itself to be worth your time, if even just for one viewing. **7.0**

P

Per Gunnar Jonsson

@Dark Jedi

2024-05-16

The first Fantastic Beasts movie was excellent. It was a bright and magical adventure. This one is going down another path and I cannot say that I was overly thrilled by that. This movie is putting emphasis on political machinations, division between the wizards and the non-wizards, betrayals etc. etc. Take away the magic component and you really have a fairly regular racial-differences, humans are bad and all that, movie of the kind that Hollywood is all too eager to mass produce these days. Sure it is not as blunt, preachy and totally ridiculous as a lot of their creations but still … not the path I wanted these movies to take. At least there are plenty of magic and beasts around in this movie to make the dark and, at times, boring story a bit more compelling. The magic and the beasts, i.e. the special effects, are really the most enjoyable part of this movie. I was not too keen about Newt already in the first movie and he is not any better in this one. He is simply too nerdy and insecure for my taste. I prefer main protagonists that are more assertive and active. Having said that he is still a likable chap in general. Queenie is still annoying as hell though. I was very positively surprised by Johnny Depp as Grindelwald though. I was not at all sure that his normal half crazy and comical acting style would make for a good main bad guy. However, he worked very well in the role. The end is pretty much a big cliffhanger and not exactly on a good note. This is actually a fairly sad movie overall which is perhaps one reason that I, personally, did not feel overly impressed by it. That is not too say that it is not a good movie. It is just that is is not the kind of story I hoped for.

P

Per Gunnar Jonsson

@Dark Jedi

2024-05-16

The first Fantastic Beasts movie was excellent. It was a bright and magical adventure. This one is going down another path and I cannot say that I was overly thrilled by that. This movie is putting emphasis on political machinations, division between the wizards and the non-wizards, betrayals etc. etc. Take away the magic component and you really have a fairly regular racial-differences, humans are bad and all that, movie of the kind that Hollywood is all too eager to mass produce these days. Sure it is not as blunt, preachy and totally ridiculous as a lot of their creations but still … not the path I wanted these movies to take. At least there are plenty of magic and beasts around in this movie to make the dark and, at times, boring story a bit more compelling. The magic and the beasts, i.e. the special effects, are really the most enjoyable part of this movie. I was not too keen about Newt already in the first movie and he is not any better in this one. He is simply too nerdy and insecure for my taste. I prefer main protagonists that are more assertive and active. Having said that he is still a likable chap in general. Queenie is still annoying as hell though. I was very positively surprised by Johnny Depp as Grindelwald though. I was not at all sure that his normal half crazy and comical acting style would make for a good main bad guy. However, he worked very well in the role. The end is pretty much a big cliffhanger and not exactly on a good note. This is actually a fairly sad movie overall which is perhaps one reason that I, personally, did not feel overly impressed by it. That is not too say that it is not a good movie. It is just that is is not the kind of story I hoped for.

T

trineo03

@trineo03

2021-06-23

First of all, just like in the last movie the acting in this film is excellent but with a few exceptions. Eddie Redmayne was still excellent as Newt but I think he did a better job in the first film. Same thing with Dan Fogler who didn’t seem as funny but useless and could have just been written out of this film. But I did really like Jude Law as a young Dumbledore and Joshua Shea who plays young Newt. Joshua played younger Newt so well that he actually looked like a younger version of Eddie. Jude Law brought the same kind of attitude towards Dumbledore that we all know and love. The special effects and set designs still looked marvellous. The creatures special effects just like last time were great and looked like if we saw them in real life that’s what they would look like. The sets looked directly like they got taken directly out of a history book. Now with this film being a sequel, you would think they would fix the problems they had in the last film but for this one, they didn‘t. The main thing that bugged me was Johnny Depp. He didn’t do a good job of playing the main villain. It could be because of the writing or just because of his acting. Next is all of the subplots. I counted there are around four of them. But seeing how I couldn’t really figure out the main plot one of those subplots could have been the main plot. The last thing is the pacing in this film. Some scenes just seemed like the plot stopped for this one scene that could have just been taken out. The entire film felt really slow and only in the action scenes did it seem to pick up. At least the music was good. In the end, Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald just seemed like a cash grab film. I give Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald a 5.5/10.

G

Gimly

@Ruuz

2021-06-23

I re-watched the original _Fantastic Beasts_ today to prep for _Crimes of Grindelwald_ and it made me realise that the only reason I gave that first film a positive review was because of Queenie Goldstein. She's just **such** a sweetheart. Her character wasn't the **only** thing I liked about that movie, but without her, it still gets pushed down into Rotten. So when they took her in this one and first made her a rapist and then a Nazis, I was uh... Not exactly stoked. But that's a personal thing, and I try to, at least partially, put that aside and review on things like technical aspect. And in that Avenue, _Crimes of Grindelwald_ is an **abysmal** failure. This is not the outright worst film of the year, but it was definitely the worst one I've seen in cinemas for a long damn time. _Final rating:★½: - Boring/disappointing. Avoid where possible._

R

r96sk

@r96sk

2022-05-12

Better than its predecessor, even if I still didn't really dig it. 'Fantastic Beasts: The Crimes of Grindelwald' has more of a vibe about it, especially early on, and is marginally better paced. Overall, though, I'm kinda split on how I feel about this second instalment. It is a definite improvement, and yet I don't have any noteworthy positives to share about it. The cast, despite names I like, are just so forgettable to me in this. As such, I don't feel like I can give it any more than a 6/10 rating - which feels harsh, but 7/10 feels too high. With that said, I still plan to check out 'Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets of Dumbledore'. It just needs that little extra oomph and these would be films that I'd enjoy, so hopefully that 2022 release will produce.

M

Martha

@MonsterMartha

2022-07-26

Confused, lost, Johnny Depp always awesome. I think the days of me playing in the Harry Potter world are over.

G

GenerationofSwine

@GenerationofSwine

2023-01-14

Well, there was one too many twists here and I only say that because it was unnecessary. The plot would have been cleaner if they just let that one go...and don't worry, you'll know what is being mentioned when you watch it. It would have worked in a novel, but in a screen play it just made it a bit messy and loose. And, unfortunately, that is what the critics are going to focus on. But then, J.K. is a novelist and it got a bit lost in translation from one writing style to another. But, beyond that you have a wonderful cast and the film as a whole is delightfully fun. Eddie Redmayne is once more the lead, and he does a decent job...but what is better is how generous both Johnny Depp and Jude Law were in the film. Each have, in their day, stolen a show or two. They are both fully capable of stealing the spotlight...but instead they took a step back rather than hogging any of the limelight and, as a result, it allowed for everyone involved to deliver a solid performance. It could have easily gone the way of a Russel Crowe film with Law and Depp involved...however they didn't do the Crowe-hog and because of that the film ended up with more balance than it should have with the unnecessary plot turn. In other-words, they helped bring it back from being truly over blown. So what do you get? You get to walk into the weird world of Harry Potter again, and that is always fun. You get adventure and mystery and, again, that is always fun. You get decent performances and a solid (if bloated plot) and you walk away entertained. It's worth viewing even if it is unbalanced. It's still entertaining and fun and, after all, that is the point of making a movie.